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ar hin bate neo THE MEMBER OF SCKIFrs NORTHWEST LEAGUN OF NEWSrArERs od Press Asscciation “SEATTLE STAR ID0T Seventh Ave, Near Union st. ib Velearaph News Service of the U ae gi { Seattle, Wash, Postoffice as Second-Clase Matte’ By mati, out of city, with Oo per month; 3 months, $1.15; 6 montha, $200; $3.50." Ky caprier, city, 300 @ month, ‘ _ Keeping Russia Posted Dr. Frank Billings, just back from Russia where he was head of the American Red Cross Special Commission, says one of the greatest present necessities is to get the truth into Russia. j ‘Sam prio of that country are almost totally befooled pro-German news agencies. Little American news that is worth while comes to the Russians. What does seep in is skillfully colored by interested agencies, which see to it ‘that the mass of the Russian people believe this country has gone into war solely for pecuniary gain. They believe We are vassals of England, and that England wants to rule ' the world. We sit back comfortably and think all the nations on _ the earth know why we went into the war, We think Presi- - dent Wilson’s masterly presentation of the unselfish reasons _ that moved us to action are known by heart wherever men i for freedom. But not so. ussia is just one instance. The Russian people even today have not heard a true word as to why we are in the war. They do not know we announced we were fighting for no pecuniary and no material gain. They do not know announced our high altruistic purpose right at the out- set “aa — = hed ee from it. mn ey do not™know the vast preparations we ate making i ercsh the kaiser who is re enemy to free Russia, as he ' is an enemy to freemen and to free peoples everywhere. Nothing better could be undertaken by the American _ government than to keep the Russian people informed. The _ Yeal news should be disseminated among them. Only in this way can the lies of the pro-German agents of those former East Siders playing the kaiser’s game it down before they do the cause of freedom and irreparable damage. Dawn of Lumber Peace : In the vote of the Western Pine association for the institution of the eight-hour day, the dawn of peace in this industry is approached. If the West Coast Lumber association follows suit, as _ is fondly hoped by Secretary of Labor Wilson, now in Se- ‘attle, it will be a blessing, indeed. It will not only benefit the workers, but also the mill ' and camp operators. But more than either of these, the _ government is depending more and more upon the North- west, and for that reason alone, the eight-hour day must come. Eight hours is the standard day for government “work—and the lumber industry today must be laid in the palm of Uncle Sam's hand to be used exactly as needed by him in the successful prosecution of the war. * eo It seems apropos to bet a few golden simoleons on Gen. Kaledines. Gen. Kaledines has not thus far got the promi- that results from judicious advertising, but the cable- assure us that he is a Cossack, has got hold of the bread and coal supplies, and proposes to starve and freeze the Bolsheviki out of business, Two things you can see, without a personal introduc- tion to Gen. Kaledines. First, when a Cossack gets hold | of a thing, it’s his. Secondly, any man holding the bread _ and coal supplies can finally put Bolsheviki out of business, > in Petrograd, Ohio or any other territory. Q We cling to our previously expressed opinion that, final- ly, the form, shape and complexion of Russian government “will largely depend upon the condition of Russian stomachs. It Is a Pointer A New York jury has indicted Sweeney, head of the program of that Army and Navy bazaar which took in _ $71,000 and turned out $750 for the soldiers and sailors. q Better yet, the aldermen have passed an ordinance _ under which all entertainments given in the name of charity must obtain permits from the department of licenses and be under its control. There’s a pointer in this for every community in the country not similarly safeguarded. HAVE YOU bought « thrift stamp yet? a JOIN THE Red Cross. TOMORROW'S MEATLESS day. es MEATLESS DAY won't be hard to observe in Seattle if we wait CHRISTMAS IS coming. But State Rank Examiner Hansen ts still holding tight to that present for the Northern bank depositors. GILL IS. denounced in the pulpits. But we'll bet our jitney to a hamburger sandwich on meatless day that Hiram will stick to the chair until March, Then, good night! WILL SEATTLE help the Halifax sufferers? Sure it will. Head quarters are at 263 Empire building, or you may send your subscription to any newspaper. a DR. P. L. AUSTIN TO OPEN NEW OFFICES Owing to my extensive practice I have been compelled to open up larger and more sanitary offices. Therefore, have taken a long lease on the northeast corner of James St. and Third Ave., opposite the City Hall. These offices are being remodeled and equipped with the latest and most up-to-date equip- ment known to the profession. Would be pleased to have all my former patients call for examination, and if any of my work has given out | will gladly repair or make over free of charge. Wifl open on or before January 1#t DR. P. L. AUSTIN Former manager of Painless Austin and National Dentiats. N. E. Cor. James St. and Third Ave. Opposite City Hall. me / orate “Who gore there?” HoT or “Pass, friend. ‘Er I'll come up there an’ paste you.” .. & D. K's.". A Smart Turkey LOST—-Young turkey. Was seen coming towards town, Pieane give information to C. D, Smith.Adver- tisement in Rapid City (8. D) Jour nal . . Rest, says Col. Lil Ruswell, makes the hair more beautiful. Where do you rest your hair. the back of a chair or the top of a dresser? . . “Piattsburg Graduates 2333 Stu dents,” says @ headline in the Pitty burg GazetteTimes. If Plattsburg can keep up that average, what pos nible hope can Germany ha “I shall follow Hoover's advice and keep a pig.” writes Hl. G. “liow long must I keep it? And if I becon tired of it, what shall I do with it? Will I have to pay taxes on it™ Gen. Kaledines holds all Russia's gold and food. We pretict a busy if not @ brilliant future for him. What Do You Suppose Gladys Under Her Hat? Mins Gladys Paddock has gone again, and this time she ts located at Machias, Matne, right chose to New Brunswick. Miss Paddock did not tell us what her business was down in this quaint old piace, neither did we ask her, but there is no doubt that she has something under her hat, and for ought we know she may be gathering data for a book which she has in mind to publish — Prophetstown (lil) Echo. see The discovery of hollow stemmed pipes was hit upon when a man broke the solid stem of his pipe and substituted a plece of macaroni. Has Editor's Mail | EAitor The Star: In these days of emergency war demands, whan ev: | ery ounce of energy ts demanded from every human being to insure vietory in the great world war for humanity, it is gratifying to know that the Seattle Star, while using Its columns to stand by the president and all war measures, also devotes me of its attention to the demands the masses that they be permitted to live out their lives and not be ground to powder in the mill of prof. iteers. In line with this great work, I de sire to suggest thru The Star that President Wilson and the national administration need at this very moment the aggreasive and hearty backing of the people of Seattle in problema for the people. The railroad masters have fallen down in the administration of that great national utility in this the pressing hour of the nation's pertl They have sown to the wind, and |the people are now compelled to suffer with them while they reap |the whirlwind In posseasion of properties which annual Income of more than $3,500. 000, they have come to the United | States government, and are now beg ging for a $1,000,000,000 war bonus in cash, They want the rates raised and they want all regulatory laws | muspended While the financial brains of the enemy were being used to perfect a railroad machine in the hands of the enemy overnment, the railroad owners in America were cutting mel ona, floating vast imues of watered |while men in congress were voting |to them land grants and privileges. | Now we are in a pitiable condition | Freight is congested. Those who have enjoyed the profits and have been permitted to loot the revenues of the great railway systema admit that the great railway utility is out of fix, inefficient not able to perform. Only one adequate remedy can be suggested—complete commandeering of the entire railway system of the United The president | plist all of this the railway 1 ernment trugeling to accom nd he is opposed by sters with all their tremendous resources I suggest that tion In elvic institu olution k ttle pase rn nt and urging com plete government control and opera tion of the railroads. All our allies have taken this step. Wall street alone is in the way in the United States, t us put Wall street out of the way J W. BRYAN It should be a ¢ meat on meatlen ing the strike, day. h to go without s day in Seattle dur Tomorrow's that they value at $20,000,000,000, with an| stock and stealing from the people | ‘WHITLOCK TELLS OF HUN CRIMES IN _ STRICKEN BELGIUM « 1| Continued From Page |e l———— them work for the Kaiser, in many Inwtances actually compelling them to labor tn munition factories, Hard to Judge Calmly On January 16, 1917, while #tiM tn Frumele—even tho It was occupied by the Germann—Whitlock made a report to the state department say: jing among other things “Ir have it in mind, and I might |my, on my conscience, since the | Germans began to deport Pelgian | workmen In November to prepare jfor the 4epartnent a detalied re- port on the latest tnstance of bru: tality, but there have been so many Jobstacles in the way of obtaining evidence on which a calm and judt ctous opinion could be based, and one is no overwhelmed with the hor ror of the thing itself been and even now im difficult write calmly and justly about it Would Pay Unemployed “In order to understand fully the situation {t In necesmry to go back to the autumn of 1914. At the time we were organizing the retief work to organization) proposed an arrange |ment by which the Belgian govern ment should pay to Ms ewn om ployes left in Belgium, and other unemployed men besides, the wages | they had been accustomed to recatve. | “The Helgians wished to do this both for humanitarian and patriotic | Purposes; they wished to provide the unemployed with the means of live hood and, at the same time, to pre vent their working for the Germans. | I refused to be connected in any way with thie plan and told the Belgian committee that it had many possi. bilities of danger; that not only would It place a premium on idle neas, but that It would ultimately exagperate the Germans Tempted German Cupidity “However, the policy was adopted. and has been continued In practice, and on the rolls of the Cotnite Na | tonal have been borne the names of [hundreds of thousands—#ome 790,- thi m Gole, distributed thru the com unes. “The presence of these unemploy. od, however, was a constant tempta | on to German cupidity Many times they sought to obtain the lets of the chomeurs (men on the pay rolia), but were always foiled by the claim that under the guarantees cov ering relief work, the records of the Comite tional and ite various | suborganizations were immune. } Military Deports "Em “Rather than risk any interrup tion of revictualling, for which. while loath to own any obligation to| America, the Germans have always the settlement of the great railway | been grateful, since it haa had the| leffect of keeping the population |ecalm, the authorities never pressed the point other than with the burgo-|excited by this measure all over Beh | war, but, except in special instances, | masters of the communes. “Finally, however, the military party, always brutal, and with an astounding ignorance of pub- tie opinion and of moral senti- ment, determined to put these idle men to work. Von Bissing and the civil | portion of his mntourage had always | been, and even now are opposed to this policy and, I think, have sincerely done what they could, first, |to prevent its adoption and, second jly, to Hghten the rigors of its ap- | plication.” | With regard to the above by Gen Whitlock, the Germans had sol- emnly assured Cardinal Mer: cler that young * Belgian men need not fear being for: Into the German army or being em ployed at forced labors. This was in the autumn of 1914. All | thru 1915 there were reported | cases where the military forced workmen to labor in various fao- | tories in Belgium. Later this | was followed by an order legal izing this and in October, 1916, a brutal order was promulgated | which paved the way for the | deportations that tt has} the Comite National (Relgian reitef | 000, I believe—of die men receiving | DEC. 10, 1917. PAGE 6 (Kditor’s 3 article, the first of « » “The War in the Holy Land, an suthor recognized ax the most learned authority on the subject In the United States, ks particularly timely today, when fall of Jerusalem into the hands of « Christian army bs re ported ' m the earliest days of the Christian era, Jerusalem had been held, except for short perk ods, by powers foreign both to the Christian and the Jewish re- gions. The Crusaders waged brave but vain campaigns to take the Holy City for the Cross away from the Crescent, Today that has been done. What place in the sun will Jerusalem now hold? Herman Bernstein's articles will help you to keep in touch with this tre- mendously interesting question.) BY HERMAN BERNSTEIN Editor of The American Hebrew (Copyright, 1917, by the News paper Enterprise Association.) A recent cablegram from Alexandria, Baypt, qtated that refugees fre Mice re report that the 1 » cooperation with the German:, are commit ting fearful atrocities upon Jew tah colonies in Palestine During October, all the leading m) f the Jewish oolony at Jaffa were accused of emplon- age, and on false evidence, or on confessions extorted by torture, were convicted by a German courtmartial and hanged with many members of their fam ies To extort confeasions, many men and women, INCLUDING SOME AMERICAN CITIZENS, were stripped and beaten in pub- le, some oO severely as to cause death. But the end of this reign of terror ts in sight ‘The triumphal onward sweep in Palestine of the Hritish, un der Gen. Allenby, resulted in the capture of Jaffa, the princtpal Mediterransan seaport of the Holy Land, and with it the Jaf f~Jerusalem railroad, which brought the allied forces almost to the very gates of Jerusalem. The brilliant operations of Al enby’s army has attracted the |- Amertean banker, who wan working to ameliorate cond in Belgium and Poland) Men Are Seleed Whitlock gives thin picture of the actual deportations “They began in October at Ghent and at Mruges, as my brief telegrams Indicated. The policy spread; the lrich tndustrial districts of Hainaut the mines and steel works about Charlerot were next attacked now they are seizing men tn Hrabant even in Brussels, despite some indi cations and even predictions of the civil authorities that the policy was about to be abandoned. During the last fortnight man have been impressed here in Pro» sols, bat their setsures here are made evidently with much greater care than in the provinoss, with more re gard for the appearances. There was no public announcement of the intention te deport, but suddenty, about ten days ago, certain men in towns, whoae names are on the let ot chomeurs, received summons notifying them to report at a given | day; penaltion were fixed for failure to respond to the summona, and there was printed on the card an offer of employment by the German government, either in Germany or in Belgium. On the first day, of about 1,500 men ordered to present themselves at the Gare du Midi. |about 75 renponded. These were ex lamined by German physicians and | 200 were taken. There was no dis order, a large force of mounted Ublans keeping back the crowds and | barring access to the station to all |but those who had been summoned to appear Cold Adds to Suffering “The Commission for Melief tn Reb | gium had secured permission to give |to each deported mana loaf of bread, and some of the communes provided warm clothing for those who bad none and, in addition a jamal! financtal allowance. “As by one of the ironies of life, the winter has been more excessively cold than Beigium has ever known it, and while many of those who presented themselves were adequately pro- tected against the cold, many of them were without overcoats. The men shivering from cold and fear, the parting from weeping wives and children, the barriers of brotal Ubtans, all this made the scene a pitiable and distress ing one. ‘The rage, the terror, t | he despair |gium were beyond anything we had witnessed since the day the Germans poured into Brussels, The delegates All Fat People The world owes « debt of grati- jtude to the author of the now mous Marmola Prescription, and is atill more indebted for the reduction of this harmless, effective nity remedy to tablet form. Marmola Prescription Tablets can now be ob- tained at all drug stores, or ting direct to Marmola Co, Detroit, Mich. f reasonable price (76 cent ree cane) leaves no excuse for dieting or violent exercise for the reduction of the overfat body to normal proportions ~ FOR LUMBAGO Try Musterole. See How Quickly It Relieves ‘You just rub Musterole in briskly, and usually the pain is gone—a delicious, soothing comfort comesto takeits place. Ludendorff's Inspiration In his report, Whitlock continues Then, in August, Hindenburg was appointed to the supreme command He is said to have criticized Von Bis. sing’s polley as too mild; there was a quarrel; Von Bessing went to Berlin to protest, threatened to resign, but did not. He returned and a German official here said that Belgium would {now be subj to a more terrible regime —W D LEARN W WAR WAS. THE PROT HAS BEEN VINDICAT Re- cently I was told that the drastic measures are re inspiration; I do German officers sa. ly of Ludendorft's ot know, Many Ko | ertheless doing so openly in a | conversation with I. C, Walcott, an deportations wing defended the! Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster. Will not blister. Many doctors and nurses use Muster- ole and recommend it totheir patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it gives from sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum- bago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest. Always dependable. 30 and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. =, 'Should Know This) attention of the whole etvilized WOMEN FLOGGED IN HOLY LAND BY TURKS American Citizens Were Stripped and Beaten to Death in Public, Says Hebrew Edite mortally wounded by land from world, which, while watehing Europe only in one piace them with sentimental regard, Keypt. The lows of Keypt wou has been not a little mystified mean for England not only th by the enormous expenditure of end of her dominion over th men and military equipment in ® wartheatre #0 far removed tions with India and the Far from the weatern front Kast, but would mean also the neanon compelled him to halt um It is not generally realized lows of possensions in Cen til fall that the Palestine operations tral and Wast Africa. The con TAKING OF HOLY CITY are no mere #ide-venture on the quest of Egypt by « Mohamme A MATTER OF DAYS part of Great Britain, but that dan power, like Turkey, would they have @ tremendous bearing also ate {1 England's hold over Meanwhile, Gen, Allenby had on the ultimate result of the her 60,000,000 Mohammedan been sent from the west front, war. subjects in India, besides preju- and bis successful operations An « matter of fact, there dicing her relations with Af- have been conducted according can be no enduring peace unless ghanistan and Persia.” to the etrategy outlined by his Palestine and Mesopotamin shall Here we have the explanation predecensor. be torn from Turkey and ite of Germany's interest in Tur- (Mr. Bernstein will tell more masterally, Germany. key, and the German-planned, about the War in the Holy Land 1 , : Turkini led campaign againet The Star tomorrow.) BAGDAD.TO-BERLIN SCHEME the Suez canal in 1916. This mage — A MENACE T0 THE WORLD Anything short of this would mean that, even tho Germany is completely defeated in Europe, her pretentious Bagdad to Bertin scheme would remain intact to menace the world, with its ever lasting threat against the Bue canal, Egypt and India. None have realized this better than the Germans themacives, who are thoroly alarmed over the success of the Uritish arma They have always realized the great importance of Palestine in connection with their own plans for the military domination of the world, and German publicists have given a great deal of at tention to the “Near Eaat™ ques on. ‘The overefficient Dr. Paul Rohrbach, writing for the edu eation of the German mind and in preparation for the launch ing of the Mittel-Europa project, pointed out that a direct attack upon England, across the North nen, s utterly out of the question Another combination, which would strike England at its most vulnerable point, was needed, and this combination, he reveal ed, existed tn Germany's rela tions to Turkey, It was to er ate just these relations that Wi! helm visited Constantinople and Jerusalem, that he worshipped at the shrine of Mohammed, that | he played the role of protector of Turkey against all Europe. “England can be attacked a: m! nd of the Comminaion for Relief in Bel gium returning to Brussels, told the moat distressing stories of the scenes of communication between the Ocew selsures. And daily, hourly almost aince that time appalling stories have been related by Belgians to the legation. Breweries Rew “Tt te impornible for us to verity them, first, because it is necessary for us to exerch all possible tact In dealing with the subject at all, and. secondly, because there is no means of communication between the occu the pations—Gebiet and ctappen Gediet | “Transportation tn Belgium is difficult, the vicinal rail ways scarcely operating any more because of the lack of ail, while all| the horses have been taken. The people who are forced to go from one village to another must do so/ en foot or In vans drawn by the fow | miserable horses that are left. The! wagons of the breweries, the one In- | stitution that the Germans have | scrupulously respected, are hauled | by oxen.” | The well-known tendency of sensa- tional reports to exaggerate them selves, Whitlock points out, gives oo casion for great prudence In believ- | ing rumor, but he adds that even If a) modicom of all that ts told ts true there still remains enough to stamp this deed as one of the foulest that history records. | 1 am constantly tn reosipt of re | ports from all over Belgium that) tend to bear out the stories one con: | stantly hears of brutality and cruel: | ty. A number of men sent back to | Mons are said to be in a dying condi: | | tions, many of them tubercular. At/ | Malines and Antwerp returned men | have died, their friends asserting that they have been victims of neg lect and cruelty, of cold, of exposure, of hunger.” | Whitlock and the Spanish and Dutch ministers protested against the deportation of men who were at| |Work already, because they clearty | did not come within the brutal Ger-| man order that all unemployed men | should be deported. The Spanish le | gation lodged protests concerning | about 200 men a day, and the Dutch |about as high as 1,500, Whitlock “at! | that time estimated that 100,000 per |eons had been deported, of whom jonly 2,000 were returned. | Huns’ Cruel Blanders Belgian burgomasters asked Whit-| lock to obtain permission to send | packages of food to the deported. rimilar to those sent to prisoners of | this was refused Whitlock concludes his follows | “Ono Interesting result of the de | Portations remains to be noted, a re-| |mult that once more places in relief |the German capacity for blundering, Almont as erent as the German capa city for cruelty. Until the deporta tions were begun, there was no in tense hatred on the part of the low. or that is and the peasants. The old Germans | of the Landsturm had been quar tered in Flenish homes; they and the inmates spoke nearly the same lan guage; they got along fairly well hey helped the women with the k, the and the humble hay-| ing none of those hatreds of patriot ism that are among the privileges of | the upy report as classes the workingmen | we poor ires of Hate Lighted | “It tn yncelvable that the Fiem. | ish population might have existed under German rule; it was Teutonic | in ite origin and anti-French always. | But now the Germans have} 1 that, They have dealt a mortal blow to any prospect they may ever have had of being toler. ated by the population of Flanders; in tearing away from nearly humble } » the land a hush: and a father or a son and brother, they have lighted a fire of hatred that will never go out; they have brought home to every heart in the Jand in a way that will impress its horror indelibly on the me of three gefterations, a realization of what German methods tm not, as with the early atrocities, in the heat of passion and the first Inst of war, but by one of those deeds that | make one despair of the future of | the a deed coldly studiously matured and liborately and systematically exe: | a deed so cruel that German | Idiers are sald to have wept in its ute ' monstrous that | fficers are now said | Suez canal and of her conneo- campaign, led over three routes the desert of the Sinal peninsula, was planned by Col Kross Von Kressenstein and led by Djemal Pasha mal rannic governor of Palestine. Victorious at Ismail, 15 miles below the canal, at Kantara, 30 Port Said, the Firitinh failed to realize the op- portunity then presented for the utter rout of the Turkish forces: But the early mistakes were quickly repaired when Gen. Sir Archibald Murray assumed com. cron who later became the ¢: ies south of wesct mane ote | Complete line the fam ware comprising Covered Casseroles, Baking Dishes, Pie Plates, Famous Hotpoint Electrical Appliances Full line, including Headlight Heaters, Percolators, Toasters, G Set, Fu Sa Sets, Bei actly with ard, cord rose, blue shad Othe from Sole NION-MADE RANGES AND HEATERS BUCK’S U THE OSTERM *ULLM. 'M:A:GO SEATTLE.S PO PUL the mume Djo- Christmas Gift Suggestions Practical and Pleasing Things ‘or the Home Fine Showing Table Hotmes & Edwards’ 26-Piece holiday gift; upward from... Community ware, etc., Casseroles, China ware, Floor Lamp Specials $23.50 up ing Stands, fitted with glass ash receivers and nickel match box and cigarettes, upward FURNITURE CO. mand of the British forces, following Kitchener's tactics, began bullding @ railway along the Mediterranean seacoast. Im the spring of this year, Gem Murray had advanced to Gaza, where the ending of the rainy: 1d 6 Red Cross Santa Reaches Camp Lewis, Btaf{ Correspondent * CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Chaplain BE. P. Esterbrook, repre senting the American Red Cross, by authority of the war department, has arrived to supervise the distribution of Fed Cross Christmas gifts among | the men of the camp, Hach man will | ve a bex containing tobacco, cards, confectionery, a writing tablet and tollet articles, y- That Please Fun for the Boys Joy for the Girls in our big assortme:i of popular suagges- tions. We welcome the children to our Toy Section. 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