The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1917, Page 6

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|THE SEATTLE STAR “EB D. K's. | COLYUM — OF NEWSPAPERS | Ee | aaut 1,000 WOULD PLEASE BK. M, I the head « Aberdeen py per " Man n Pet rograd Riot that be 1 ‘ ‘Teledraph News Service of the United Press Association Batered at Seattle By mail, ove of city year Wash, Postoffice as Second-Class Matter following pped fe . 4 month $2.00 2 month ty, 30 400 months, $3.50. Datly by The Star Publishing Co. exchange connecting all dep — ate — HE STEEL PLANT AND ITS MEANING SE Considered as a single project, the steel plant which) [in OU to be located somewhere on Puget sound, ‘according to)in the No Pon announcement of Bart L. Thane, will be an imdustry . major importance. It will support another army of a om id wage earners. It will make a phenomenal penne mpaad Rte rsa sl aydorn rfl nh Puget Sound shipping. It will develop the iron mining} her cousin, Misa Alma Wavering on the Pacific syppe and in countless other Ways |Gamos were played, at wh the general industrial activity. Adelaide neaiag Se & croc Any big plant will do these things, but the steel plant meres, B The Star's opinion, gives the Puget sound country, and) yow fact the whole Pacific slope, a new degree of industrial water ence, and this independence means the establish- he was of scores of other industries. . - Once Puget sound can supply pig iron and the various steel-plant products, there will come factories of one! dn oeter and another, which always cluster about a steel ae = 2 center. selves to make It is more than probable that these allied industries kinds of pie ch will follow the steel plant will, within a few Lemon. oy twice the number of men that the steel plant i Pumpkin Squash Cranberry *ustard. per month Ny carrier 5 one Main €00, Private men expecte | tremely in to om 7 meters nent ve a mu pleasanter job the poata ma women al cards have get to re al are Wiping engines WE'VE SEEN MANY A ONE Joe ti Quincy York's r new for John D. waited maye oo” earth a bey efore engaging same busin . appeal ho nd Seattle to need. All in all, the establishment here of a soundly financed an ex rtly-managed iron plant is the biggest and ing industrial development that Seattle could do not require a cover saving in wheat. AS RARE AS THE IRON © IN GERMANY Mra. Simmons of the [E LUMBER SITUATION wn: eee elas Ten thousand men will be put to work in Northwest week that whe hg ber : to produce 10,000,000 feet of spruce every month, momber of the Natio “We want to the work to civilians,” declared Col. a. who is investigating lumber conditions in this |. . it sen! high tice th ted a oxraph if we can’t get civilians, we will get the spruce , for that is what the government wants.” Gilson Gardner, The Star's correspondent at Washing- in a dispatch yesterday, also gave warning of the gov- An Bverett man te pots it’s intention to take heroic measures in the lumber for 4 vacation be fieles. He figures in the United States t And he made it plain that when men are to be con-)). any ett in u d for the camps and the mills, then also will the ty of the lumber companies be seized. The whole lumber industry will be operated by the onal government without any “ifs” or “bu The government had given the lumbermen the thance eet! aay, by urging them to adopt the eight-hour gov-) |= and thus insure themselves with enough [)/—7 ‘ *., failed. Lumber production then failed. * So Uncle Sam will soon be on the job unless our lum-|; 4 fmen soon take a tumble to the to themselves. J PEAKING OF THE WEST _ Eastern meg who accompanied Secretary of the Treas- y McAdoo on his recent speaking trip on behalf of the Liberty Loan returned not only with their eyes but wide open. For weeks they had been handed es ak” that the Es East might be all right, so far as this ‘was concerned, but that the Middle West and the Far| had not yet awakened, and were, as a consequence, | stepping in time with the balance of the nation. Of course this was sheer rot, but a lot of people didn’t) it. Now they do. The trip has done them good. y realize that north and south and east ahd west we ll Americans, al! loyal to the flag, all bent upon push- the war to a victorious end, that democracy may be safe for the world. No section has any monopoly There is no Bavaria pitted againgt Prus- in our American domain. We are loyal to the govern-| tr» a cinch Gen. Sherman because WE ARE THE GOVERNMENT; because it) lived in the Kenwood dintr ponsive to our desires, our demands, our aspirations |'"* ® t's our hopes. recetved.—Graett la nger to Hawall uke une he hates . t the THES le 3 Be! TONS DUBIN sees 13 is2b3 Poe past never t dur strike WELLINGTON LUMP $9.60 Next to the Relgians v trodder oal dealers WITH TURKEY at 40 cents a pound, its patriotic elimination from) the poor _comaonang festal board is a duty unusually } | | We'll Wager She Finds One A working girl, a about 40 years, HALF OF the gasoline for autos used in the United States is con in pleasure riding, ‘tis reported. Pleasureless days next! — and Japan seem to have agreed to run the Pacific 0 long as Germany is the ixsue, and maybe they'll be found on Job when the almighty trade dollar becomes the issue. » Become right fond of those money taeking daps. YOU CAN almost hear Bob La - Follette’s pompadour quiver as figures out why the big American cities didn’t go anti-Wilson. young woma) would like to meet young man lor would Uke Sv 40 years of or German if the We're likely) n fe enough to und no ob nartied soon if multe ried Advertisement | AFTER LOOKING him over, the kaiser’s doctors say that he. needs Isa yea for Haig. The latter is sincerely anxious to give) + Lo. what he needs. | proaches! THAT GREAT war conference, ‘tix reported, is discussing unity Ar Command, with a commander-imchief of all the antiGerman armies. that 1 Save personal modesty can possibly prevent Col. Roosevelt's) wasted himself for that job. jcountry must | THE KAISER has very kindly, given Poland a constitation, on All that the Poles will have to do will be to adopt a certain re belief and creed and support a new lot of royalty, with the job buffering for Germany thrown in for good measure. | bi What became of the USE YOUR CREDIT The Smartest Styles of the Season are represented in the BEAUTIFUL WINTER COATS FEATURED AT $24.50 A spiendid assortment of garments are here for your selection at a very material saving Materials are seys, pormpoms, zibelines. Cloths, etc, in the most popular shades of the season. [chly trim med with large collars of fur and Plush. fome of our most SUITS AND DRESSES are included in this Somebody has figured it takes be |tween three and five tons of metal |to kill a man on the western front | And to think you can do it with a one-ton n flivver in a city street wool ours, attracti special price IF THE SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL VOTED TO OUST WI It Would Be Just as Sillyas When the Petrograd Council of Soldiers and Workmen The | werd » | while ‘These are all opentaced pies and| the oeth th Thus the] rena ¢ STAR—FRIDAY, NOV. 16, 1917. PAGE 6 By CHARLES FDWAKD RUSSEL) Three of Staff Member Who Months in Hussia With ficial United States Ce lot's Spent the Of pminsion ed in this country days if # wimplert facts about FR | mused wp long and other rry by milyons comieal hyate of ot 4 at American news practice of mom nd news from to in Rue nfu ate W rely dixtinet and separ Ate int of both would | ference agencies | two | ity the Petrograd Coun rhmen’s delog nd the ork men Town Counell be and Congress | au There t tween the the tation sll that and more The Petrograd Counci! of Soldiers’ and) Workmen's d@tegates ts the ly that has been raising all the ruction in Petrogra v He ing t There the streets, and Uy But RUBALA has not re The Boleheviki are it congress of the | | xtreme KI f Lenir 1 eo fightir will be mo dincred the reat of oe \ They Letters to the Editor PRO.GERMANS vT In Seattle here on Wash would hardly veh prot tot tar Amer ington think man talk no ere that f Bert will you hear America in this crisis ca's alfies are held up to One wonders if Sam did not make a mistake admitting thead into the ¢ and who doing all they ¢ Do ther o forget took tn becoming eftt- » country, or, are their naturalization papers merely scraps of paper like the Kaiser's Treation’ It's about time Seattle woke up to curb some of these anthAmericans They are making their living here and hand that is feeding them JA. & were a suburt Hardly aid f Amer rid ule and abuse, n nemy HER BOYS NOT “SISSI Star: I would lke for this proteat mp Lewin, they take the * out early In the morning with at their t drt! them until the ) perspiration then they order all biow oft » hand and arm wet with pe a nen on and re U. S. to Fix § BY BASIL M. MANLY WASHINGTON Nov. 16. Federal authortties respon for the industrial end of war prepare ne are greatly concerned over the of unrest amo 4 D, ©. th ndustrial kors ere ne an propacand agitators but recently a growing recogni chief cause of unrest pat of living. The it now t= also awake to the tuet that the imyfort ant thing ia not to settle strikes, but prevent ther. The Ounce of Prevention the schemes { wage fixing Great Britain Mr u consid readjust wages, emily thruout t of living, eo that orkers ving of the ined unit stalled. ma: for effect ling this wage rea | There a complicated wage boasds listri the on and te ot all the standards _ tral be considered in wage board makes po fr t merely 1 of the Jotermined investt imends nt of hments under dt ahments of w venta Not Siakeoam Waces . ft general re ndus HY BERTON BRALEY r your muscles your work Don't like a lazy old Tabby Fatter day after day out of and puraler condition for “doing whatever your be ready for Keen and alert v 1 your chances arr Don't be nervous Heavy 1 fumbling and half way weakling w loggy and in} them up. drill does not warm result t# that kainer’s treatte hand and arm The of paper | ye up. not raised my be: ‘They are not that they wre tr but It seeme the right 1 have ninny boy They aay both but I do not want them to eapectally with pneumonia MRS. L. D. J TKANSPORTATION TO CAMP Editor The Star; We have been reading in the daily papers that Be attle people have been doing various things for the boys coming from Se- | attle to Camp Lewis, but as yet the majority of ua have failed to find snything that has been done, such | care to the lake, am stat *, to take us to Seat like it wet mic k | ' as bringing ed in the pap ue Also, as & great many of a came from Seattle, and live in Seattle not wee why some means of trans ct to Beattle is not in all of us, and & great de boys, would far rather go to Beatle than Tacoma, as they do not Nke the way they have been and are treated in that city SEATTLE BOYS portation as STUFF® LOSE, PLAN WAGE BOARD SLEEP ( andards on Living Cost Basis tries and districts ta ‘left to the local | They are empowered to take eration any local cond yoh as an extraordinary ease in rents, which may riet or industry with dealing The wages fixed t standard wages ply the boards int t in affect t ne ¢ wh re not minimun intended to « average mar apation or womar Minis been abandoned | waee fixdr Great I n since the beginning of the war, because {t was found to be of practically no effect. Employers are permitted to pay either below or above the standard scale In case of inexperience or exceptional skill, but only when specific perminsion has been granted by the local board Must Limit Profits Nobody in Washington believes that anything lke the elaborate ma « the Hritish wage boards | = has be put jnto effect until Amert ndustry has been brought under ontrol similar to that of Gres Hritaln as regards limitation profits Hut it is certain that as soon as| congress meets, and probably be fore, the administration will take steps to assume a far greater con phases of the labor one dreamed of in days, with the object of pre industrial unrest and fore CROSS, , FEVERISH fl CHILD IS BILIOUS, OR CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! ‘See if ccnguel is coated, breath hot or | ‘stomach sour | “California Syrup of Figs” can't harm tender stom- ach, liver, bowels. or | your | mother realizes, after giv r children “California § of Figs,” that this is their ideal iaxative, because they loye its pleasant taste and it thoroughly ve COMEDIES “Cramps your fingers, don’t It? “Vd BAY SEW! 5 OF Voted CAMP LEWI Moscow and a few in Odeana. Strong in Petrograd j insanity, and can't be made to like | them LSO Kerensky Bolsheviki carry them, and set up have Remove Suppone the erything before the kind of a government they indicated they want The first thing in to have @ gen eral a new national woldiers’ and to election and nell of workmen's nia’ ¢ new pe ational council will be, like the present national council, sever-eighths anti Bolsheviki Anyway they may choone, they must proceed by the farma of elee and whenever they come up sgainet the rest of the country in am election they will get a wallop an@ the in a minority, ag are tion. vey today Only 119 Bolshevik Of the 820 detegaten, are Holwhevikt It is, of course, different in the Petrograd council, the body that hag made all this row. The Petrograd council in componed of Bolshevikt, and has been from the first But the Petrograd council req sents nothing but the Petrograd trict, and even in ard to that # has today but a very questionable right to speak It wan created in the first days of the revolution as the Soldiers’ Coun- cll of the Petrograd district. Soon afterward {tw name was changed, and workmen were alleged to be rep resented in it, but by what means they were admitted has never been clear, From that time forth it was the Soldiers’ and Workmens’ Council of Petrograd, but if an election were to be held today it is certain that most of the men that roar around in the present council would be ousted When this Petrograd body votes to | depose Premier Kerensky {t is ex- actly as if the Seattle city council , should vote to depose Presiden® Wilson Outside the cities they have neither numbers nor power nor influen In Petrograd they are very strone They can seize the telegraph offices: the bridges, the palaces, or anything else Tereateh can grab before he can get away the streets They can arrest nko or anybody else they Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Gases, or Hut when they have done all this they haven't seized Russia or greatly changed any éxisting condition ‘There will probably be hard flieht ing before they can be dislodged and beaten, but Russia is @ country the major of the people will have their way, and the majority in dead against the Bolshevial, will be. where y Peasant Control The controlling clement in Russta 4).| 1" and will remain the peasants, who it Lenine have no use for London Botahevikiam. believed, attempt may be cunning ne their to over. Aint! ke cutting up the public he will not BERGMAN LOGGERS 101nch, spring heel, caulked; heavy double m. $11.00 pair BERGMAN LOGGERS 10-inch, plain heel, heavy double sole, rr. $10.50 BERGMAN LOGG Binch year welt a w ® sewed, Good $9.00 Gambier Veal Work Shoe, Goodyear welt; ex ceptional value at $4.00 Catt heavy a pair offering the lands wet, They don’t please hin bellowing or his pepsin Upset Stomach—Pape’s Diapepsi Instant Relief! Neutralizes stomach acids so food A ® indi- gestion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you eat ferments into gases and upsets you; your head aches and you fee! sick and miserable, that’s when you realize the wonderful acid neutralizing power in Pape's Diapep in. It makes all such stomach mis ery, due to acidity, vanish in five minutes: If your stomach is in a continuous if can't get it regulated, for your sake, try Pape's Dia It's 20 needless to Sour ny, Upset stomach, revolt can digest properly —harmless, pleasant, antacid. acid stormach—make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take @ lit tle Diapepsin. There will not be any distross—eat without fear. It's be catine Pape's Diapepsin “really does* sweeten out-of-order stomachs tha® gives it {ts millions of sales annually. Get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any érug store. It is the quickest, surest ante acid and stomach relief known. It acts almost lke magico—tit is a acien-! tific, harmless and pleasant stomach preparation which truly belongs ig every home We Cater to the Man Who Works Zimmerman & jouble sole to heel aterproof and wear like a pair.. SCHERMER'S teel SHOE DEPARTMENT Lowest Prices in Seattle UNION-MADE DRESS SHOE: $3.50, $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00 Best Makes—Latesb Styles Degen’s Double Vamp French Calf Work Shoes. with rawhide insert. .. $6.50 LOGGERS 104nch, spring heel, cauthed, double sole veet.. $11.00 CURRIN LOGGERS 10-inch, light weight, caulked, a pair at $10.50 CURRIN LOGGERS 10-inch, heavy double ro with heel, a ". $10.50 Brown Stag Work Shoes, inch top, double Goodyear welt sole to heel; extra quality; $6.00 & pair. . + Best Makes — Largest Assortments Ss Schermer’s Wonderful Values Suits and. Overcoats Union Label Clothing, with the “Hall Mark” of Qua $15 lity in Every Garment. EXCEPTIONAL QUALITIES AT $18, $20, $22.50 and $25 SCHERMER’S $20 SPECIAL BLACK CRAVENETTE OVERCOAT offering of $24.50. hould be! cioanses the tender little stomach, All the distinction and c! the season's best styles » ture of these garments elude both semi-taliored models, and the Dre the very est modes and braid trimn values at $24.50. NEW BLOUSES We are displaying some most of fective Blouses for dressy wear, in Georgette, crepe and lace; charm ingly trimmed in braid, embroidery and beading USE YOUR CREDIT We will be glad to arrange for you the most liberal terms —a small ent down and the balance to it your convenience. “Westberg & Childs, Inc. “THE CREDIT STORE” 1312 Second Avenue arm of a ter Suits in. and dressy * shown are embroidered exceptional E. N. Furman first. in de- |his students from the That’s why they are mand, Shorthand Civil | Bookkeeping Advanced Grammar Service Northwestern Shorthand Reporting School Arcade Bldg. \ Half the builds business personality in} Brighte Primed is It's your « efficl Doing style Blaming th omni When its the ture Then the their Get into tr doet You are fit The Gert chutzeng nobile their we wht Where they still think the Germans are efficient, liver and bow harp as . When or look whatever the give nless at ‘ou do not| co va few hours all rld's people waste, sour t re half-way ¢ food pas 1 you have gain full of cold achache, "At colle remem cleansing first Millions of fornia Syrup know a teasp |mick child ruggist for ¢ \Syrup of tion for bi ages and gro in| bottle. Hews sold here, #0 genuin puttering a r state on some ent their own silly power fault, all should follow Dame Nw the mocked her have grumt grit ining and laugh at the dat losing 1 slacker unles nan name for a tank rabenvermichtung aut o there folk who|the Pig cross breath is “fruit la os out of the Figs. els without griping . feverish, ach sour, tongue, mother! If a teaspoonful of this tive,” and in a the foul, constipated bile and undigested bowels, and well, playful child When the little system is throat sore, has stom- indigestion, good “inside always be the jarrhoes, ber, a hould treatment given mothers keep “Cali of Figs” handy; they poonful today saves a tomorrow, Ask your a bottle of “California which has diree. » children of all ups printed on the are of counterfeits don't be fooled, Get made by “California aut Syrup Company.” | \ Stylish and Dressy—Union Made—a Remarkable Value at Twenty Dollars in rough weave fancy and brown plaid effec collar; slash pockets. “Some class” at Heavy Overcoats mixtures; blue ts; convertible $20 ais Ss. Army c wool, rare value at..... Norfolk Suits in heavy weight, “olive drab, regulation loth; strictly .. $20 Full Line Celebrated Leopold, Morse & Co. Union-Made Suits and Overcoats Big Line of Mackinaws, with a very special offering at ............... .$7.50 10 Steps from Yesler CARL SCHERMER 10 Steps from Yesler Largest Union Store in Seattle 103-105 FIRST AVENUE SOUTH

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