The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 15, 1917, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR 1307 Seventh Ave, Near Union #t. MEMBER OF sCHIVrs NonTUWKST LEAGUN OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Service of the United Press Assectation Entered at Seattia, Wash, Postoffice ae Second-Clase Matter By mail, out of city, 400 per month; 2 montha $1.15; & montha, $2.00; Year, $3.50. Ry cayrier, etty, 306 a month. a Publtebed Dally by __# Stnr Publishing Co, Phone Mais 600. Private ¢ conmecting all dep FREEDOM, FOR KUL, FOREVER Buy One for Sammy, Too ; rhaps you already belong to the Red Cross. Surely, ‘the appeal of this great humanitarian organization in its Christmas drive has not been in vain. Every American, in whom beats the heart of humanity, must be a member or lose his own self-respect. But it is quite possible that a great many of our Sam- mies may not be members—unless we at home come to the - front. ; What a splendid Christmas present then to buy a Red ‘Cross membership for a Sammy. If you don't know one " yourself, the local Red Cross organization will supply the name. NG Fill out the accompanying coupon and send it to Red “Cross headquarters, 1424 Third ave., together with a dol- Jar, and your friend, the Sammy, will get a certificate of bershsip similar to this: *. RED CROSS MEMBERSHIP Tare the courtecy Of... .ccecsccccccsceccseses £11) in Your Own name and addreas) (name of friend) is hereby made a Christmas member of the American Red Cross. the Tax Books ery labor organization whose wage agreement is about cost of living. Employers admit the increased cost|gnd will spend more. ‘of living, but each employer answers that the new Excess Profits tax will be so heavy that no increase in wages is ' figure within 50 per cent of the amount of tax which any e - neern has to pay. One-half of the force of the law is put|/“4S % ith the m. 4 ei it by the personal interpretation and regulations of men|mumber of kiddies at “at perfect liberty to guess as high as he pleases as to the “amount of war tax which he will have to pay. Shall Santa pass them a SSOLUTELY SECRET. Labor can never know what any ployer pays. Anyone who prints or publishes anything of this city must bring aes oom oe me $1000, or imprisoned not} 5 sme to lose. - NOW, AUSTRIANS and Hungarians, who have found a home with | ia ‘@& are ye for us or for German autocracy? as honor will permit. TACOMA “CLEAN™? THE ARMY advertises that it wants 150 phone girls. To look _ after the Hindenburg line? Editor The Star: Please give me epace in your paper to state how I I aining at} |Camp Lewis, and he says moat of GOLF BALLS are higher, and we expect every day to hear the! know things to be in Tace game thing of fish balls. |nave a brother who ts WHEN CONGRESS had convened, it was found one congressman | Dnee piety tetls teten |the boys would rather stay in Taco ‘i WHILE THE choir is singing we will pass the hat for the poor | find it easier and cheaper to get allways. | boom, RUMANIAN TROOPS, ‘tis reported. Uke La Fotlette? 4 = ad | bottle, and labeled, “Take two ta fe GILL IS against France. Ha! Maybe that’s why the military police|blespoonfuls in water 1 | st Camp Lewis think this is a hotbed of proGerman activities. Diskivered,| morning.” The fc turday Sa Dy heck! night had thr he oe AND THEN, again, maybe the special session of the legislature will “Just take over some of these industries where labor troubles occur thru | This I know, a1 have the shortsightedness of “some employers. Maybe ehies tor’s name, which turn over to the r EMPLOYERS’ ASSOCIATION of state wants special semsion of legis cine more thing o my brother Jature to pass a law to force everybody to work. Of course the law munt|and a friend were waiting for a car Be 80 worded that the work must be done for them, at non-union wages, | one night. a woman Yan non-union working conditions. Otherwise, what's the use? Oh, you | nolicited them right ithe up and ‘patriots |think Tacoma, also better clean up. ———_——_—. | MER THE LONDON press is puzzled over Lansdowne’s outbreak as a Editor's Note—You should Pacifist. Say, he gets the income from 143,000 acres of land, and maybe| turn over your ence to the prosecutor at rma. ‘They ask Germany not to send her forces from the Russian front to r r f 2 © mineral water are now the fronts of Russi allies during armistice. W 7? You've guessed it Middle Aged [== . - ‘ Women We Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles. Freemont, 0.—‘‘I was passing through the critical period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes, Mervousness, and was in a general run down conditio: fo it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pini ham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me the best gong Oo my troubles,which it surely proved to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since taking it, and the annoying symptoms have disap- Pyare "—Mrs. M, Goppex, 925 Napoleon 8t., Fremont, at does North Haven, Conn — ‘Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound restored my health after everything else had failed when passing through change of life. ere is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms.” —Mre Fionesce Isniia, Box 197, North Haven, Conn. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND has the greatest record for the greatest good LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS, Shall Santa Miss Even We know you have been free with your purse of late. You couldn't be human and do other- wise. You Have given to the Halifax sufferers. You have contributed for the relief of Belgtan\ children, and for Armenian relief. You have| to expire has asked for increased wages on account of the|Spent money on the Girls’ War Relief Bazaar, We know all that—and yet— ; 4 We cannot forget our own little ones who} _, No one can take that law as passed by congress and| pay miss a merry Christmas unless we are gener- here are, for instance, a good And the raw thing about it is that what he pays is AB-|;jg¢ must not be. Good- Let not a single child's prayer be in vain. In to baw F a am HE will keep us out of war with Turkey and Bulgaria as Editor's Maal |ma than come to Seattle, for they isin a | On one of his trips home he m in & reserved and dig-|brought a suit case of beer and a Mifled attitude, and reject fraternization.” Now doesn't that sound just | quart of whisky home with him, with |® prominent doctor's name on the in the street. 1/ Iu THE BOLSHEVIKI put some humor Into the bloody business More than 6,000,000,000 gallons of |™man or a Tammany aasemblyman coinage, EH STA AN URI NRE EE ne <repsiencennipinn rs pegreme wenn came Wi same epee STAR—SATURDAY, DEC. 15, 1917. PAGE 4 MEANING, OF COURSE, JOHN SMITH DISC Ann Arbor How long do take the Germa Americans to work? | Oh, no, not that long a camouflage for celebration | HOOVERITES | Never throw away an |bone, Paint a face on th it, put a doll it away as a Christmas present A little lime scattered er old Never throw aw rubber hose. Cut and let the child jot ordinary ch ing Kum jbut te especially valuable in & turnip before boiling it TODAYS ¢ Mother Ryther's home,| the internal revenue offices, so that Mr. Employer is| pay Denny way, who need our help. : up this year? No, no;| De | hearted men and women} ere ar Santa to them this vear,| ODE TO CHARLES RAY Chas Tay ding the return of any particular concern shall be| just as they have done in the past. And there ts| X movie ae He's to the movies What Ty Cobb Water ts to A fish, and Porterhouse or Payday to all Of uw» Sirloin, Madam? Why all thie You my? Hearken Rend rey When it comes To looks, an la no slouch And when « And gent's furnished Magazine clothes Ads, but With those He tan't like 2 out 10 Of the movie Heart Pull this “every Move a picture Stuff, when they Perform in a film He dora, act. in Capital letters Whether hia hair In slicked: up Or nv Th | If all these mos “Romeos” with the | Exception of a Couple were Chas. most o Us wouldn't go To the movies to Sleep—speech! shern” whe MeMenomy tant an alder. HAM AN‘ He has recently celebrated the ¢ en anniversary of his wedding to meat n one of the largest of San Frar vm markets. Ye | this is his working uniform He wears the silk hat while he's cuttiog 7 steaks, Just as he did when he opened his ata years ag e can saw bones to beat the Despite his 76 years, he's at the we enone nee Greek aie food value HE food value of cocoa has been proven by cen- turies of use, and dietitians and phy- Church Problem Solved by Simple Use of Telephone SHREVEPORT, La, Dec. 15. Ke lgion by telephone ta being dispensed auccessfully here by the Rev. 5. M sicians the world ee re Se eR over are enthusiastic Dr. Dodd has had a desk phone in in their endorse- etalled on his when he j i preaches at receiver | ments of it. It is taken off his church said to contain more mon at their homes by calling the beef, in a more number of the church. j i i An unlimited number’ of persona readily assimilated can be connected with tho telephone form. The choice, a ie Vago yt ang gp Fe andl however, should bea mon high-grade cocoa,— “Baker's” of course. Dime Taken As Half. a Franc in France It is delicious, too WITH THE AMERICAN Expr DITIONARY ARMY, France, Nov.| {By Mail)—The little old thin poeeuas lime has taken its place on every package mem of t coin fraternity in| France, Likewise the nickel, but the meant arfare coin hasn't the ready circula tion of the dime Walter Baker In the American area Sammy tn-| fi & Co, Ltd, sintod that his dime was worth halt] « franc 1 the Freneh people now ae Enablished 1780 Dorchester, Mess, t it, along with the French, British, Belgian, Italian and Swiss xD TH of the war st import | - BY HERMAN BERNSTEIN — | greater outrages, including 1917, by the Newspaper | destruction of the colonies. Faikent erprine Associatio up @ brave fight while MISSISS: It is the bliegoat and ant thing that has happened in thin pountry since the Pilgrim fathers wet their feet upon the rock Jamestown in 1620, and well might the kaiser and his minions net and take notice—Lake Chartes, La, American Prens of famine and starvation, | in memory of the great withstood all the blandish- | movement, was stripped of over|atormny scene betw © trees. general and the Turkish But before he could carry out his| which resulted in the removal utrage,| Djemal from his office as military However, A. M. Nightly lives tn by the cruel | 60,000 1 muppone It would to put interned| At the fortunes of war, they have| more u Int, expecially Chicago announces it will have # jot New Year celebration. That's its organizations tn save Jewish Pates | mittee in Huge sume of gold end of wae on it and give Oriental rug will keep out the mothe in order that they might give em- ployment of thousands of Jews who preferred death by starvation to loss f self respect Orders Kvacuation Archibald | what the new religion that is to from | An Akron chemist has invented rubber porch It can be uned Jelther the front or back of a house, back, where the garbage can stands Always remove jhe feathers from to give Palent reached the coloniats, who could not | that th control their soy. worrying God—they have gotten ) military away from the notion, as Coningsby tenons, “which later he explained Dawson, the novelist—and now a¢ °° *'? HAVE You FiIrLtd THAT EMPTY STOCKING |to mean a desire to save them from jieutenant in the bombardment by sea and air Jows to evacuate Jaffa by the first telephone and with wi of the following month. ender came during the midst not answer their call right away may remain in the when Jews They no longer believe that it is When lying in the hospital cov- Uberation by Moses up to God to explain Himself to them, |¢red by bed clothes, one cannot tell |from the cruel bondage of I’haraoh, “ef which of the soldiers has lost leg or Jand this feast of rej: | formed into a cs of the Passover holidays elebrate their ng was (ran® | ‘The religion of the trenches shows ened to nake of Palest Armenia On the heels of the fleeing ame Turkish Jews | ous piece of work there ts an im 40UIN | mediate reeponse, no matter what who pillaged the deserted |the hardship, the suffering or the he house | tinal consequence may be. houses and carried off all er refugees, an hem tn These of these men. paternal eye « were met by several men, who, risking ence of Djemal Pasha's decree, jeopardized thetr | to the Jewish colonies | campaign. And when their plans|” ano men, /are completed, it is the soldiers’ 4 harassed by sol. | duty to he ' * and marauders, and many thelr |has confidence in his superior offi which they were then harvest. cers. He does what he is told with hundreds of wagons out question. This epirit is sure to Kaussia is about 20 times larger inking than Germany and France put to gether, having an area of 8,505,000 The soldier has learned that (square miles, and ‘s larger than all at Jeruse-! his body is not the supreme of North America refugees to | af Shomerim : a The Illinois Manufacturers’ ansoc! ation is to give a banquet in Chi At A cont of $7 a plate. Maybe going to eat ham and eggs. (ge tn SE ORR ON SR lam ana ell ln ii gal aadaahaceiaiaaa St it. TURKS SLAUGHTER JEWS AS BRITISH ENTER PALESTIN (This is the last article by Mer lam, Dr, Otto G, Glazebrook, Je [in the Holy Land noted Hebrew | with other neutral diplomats in a| The tidings reached the Germam in formal protest to Djemal, who made Zionists, who were fighting & show of yielding. But it soon de Wilhelm’s fing in the | veloped that he was planning even Velgium and Wianders, and from out the |the “trenches came a Editor of The Amertean Hebrew | evacuation of Jerusalem and the |strong that it reached the ears of yn, who had | Indeed, he had already begun to | monstrated with Djemal, have pul/ destroy the new forests which had| When word came to Falkenhayn waiting for/been planted by the Jewish farm-|of the protest by the German Zion thetr deliverance from the Turks by |ers, and the Harzi forest, planted i*ts, he sent for Djernal and ordered |by Zionints from all over the world him to take his hands off bitlous program of the |p courier who risked his life a hun |rovernor of Palestine general | dred times, and whose name must| As this is being written, the Union operating from New| not yet be disclowed, made his way Jack is floating over a score of Jew- was drawing upon the re-|out of Palestine and cabled the|ish colonies, thru which the Turkish own to the Provisional Zionist com-| army, with the Eiritish forces at tts lew York heels, fled so precipitately that they Renembering Armenia, the civil. dared not pause for loot or vand were gotten | tzed world raised a tremendous out ism, and “the bride has welcomed means that can- | cry against the impending massacres | the bridegroom war in| — - isin"? ** “On the Surface Men in Trenches Seem .cturers unt farmers reerved ans) = tO” Have Lost Religion, But It Is | Only That They Have Higher Form | BY REV, CHARLES STELZLE ; thing after all. He has become | Religious Editor of The Star quite Indifferent to physical things. SPIRITUAL ESTS ARE SUPREME. come out of the trenches will be like Peninsula 6 ghown by what the men in the And when a man is gripped by His proclam® trenches are now doing and how this conviction he must believe wland’s Intention they jook upon the religious life in God. But it ts not the God buck to the Jews, On the surface it would appear! who is at the other end of the soldiers in the tre have lost all reli for the orthodox ways of show is counted Sanadian Fi the body who may be om they have 8”. The soldiers a right to become angry if he does | tend not to be wou! arm—there a Dje by the ability of the men to letely suppress themeeclves n there ix a call for a dan t is when religious pec selves too # @ religion There is an almost absolute lack eee Highwaymen pursued the wealth: | of cowardice. Selfishness makes a Men are everywhere tired of the ardiy. But selfishness petty life. It is the call to supreme lace in the lives sxerifiee that will rally them. this ts the religion of the trenches. It is merely a coming ity of the men ret gave us the best there is in religion today. man ¢ sick, seems to have no F-FORGETFUL-| and the 8 DOMINATF ither is there the consciousness | p.q/) that they have exhibited bravery or Aviv | herolam in the trenches to the simp and women who was invaded by marauders, but they | The fact is, everybody Is a hero at young |the front. And so it very rarely for dinobedt happens that one man stands out WATER BTS MUST asain | above another Sn. thio reapest FRO mim ure or yarn is nerxo BE WELL PROTECTED ¥ were reinforoed by other young | DEVELOPED. The soldiers in the hed down | trenches do not see much beyond the | the United States m and they set up &/ trenches {n which they live. They over | know—or believe—that many miles | Turkish soldiery and | awny there is a general or a “board to mave this eee Waterfront owners m jof strategy” mapping out the entire cerice tha’ ntification every entrance to carry them out died) It is the height of treason for a roldier to rebel. The true soldier at { men's spiritual t der of the| It is reported that there was @ n the German ‘on telephone line. It ts the they seldom who is living with him in the smiled | bray and they care practically noth enches. But the aaturnine in aaha flushed ing their piety and he prepered to pun They way that they have stopped lah the jubilant Jews when a man sees how of the 4 ar Under these circumstances he ig Djemal ttiery—puts it, that God is some ready for any sacrifice od up on the t stay in the fight as long as the front ed no that they nches. « of Inughter and lying, could be car- je take them: that they make ing thing. written statement describing their provisions against fire according to inetructions received Friday at that instructions further provide spectors, offe for ty. must be tmmediately appointed and maintained by the owners. Bevo is a great favorite in the Army Canteens, where none but pure, soft drinks may be sold. After drill or march, you are sure to see a long line of hot and dusty-throated soldier boys making a bee-line for Bevo, They know that there lies complete satisfaction, full refreshment and pure wholesomene: At home or abroad —at work or play—between meals or with meals, you will appreciate what we have done for you in making this triumph in soft drinks, You will find Bevo at inns, restaurants, groceries, depart- ment and drug stores, picnic grounds, baseball parks, soda fountains, dining cars, in the navy, at canteens, at mobili- zation camps and other places wh i % ela by) ere refreshing beverages Bevo—the all-year-round soft drink Guard against substitutes. Have the bottle o ou, first seeing that the seal is unbroken and Ai ears the Fox, Sold in bottles only, target in front of jat the crown t and bottled exclusively ci ANHEUSER -BUSCH—ST. LOUIS Schwabacher Bros. Co., Inc. Dealers—Seattle, Wash,

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