The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 7, 1918, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEA 307 E STAR atom, St. TTL LBAGUB OF NEWS! Sevemen nited Press Assectation Batered at Seattle, Postoffice a Ty mail out of city year Waar, Clase Matter ¢ montha $2.00; a month. me Main @00, Private ee per month; 3 months $1.15 $3.60. Ay carrier, city, 30¢ Published Daity by The § The war savings stamps have the best guarantee in the world—Unele Sam. Your money will draw in- terest, and at the same time help to kick the kaiser out of business. | Father and Son Week 5 Every father of attle, put a big cross on your calen War at Saturday, February 16. That will represent to you one of the very biggest of the year. On the afternoon and evening of that , you are going to stop chasing the almighty dollar and pursuit instead of the sacred confidence and com- fionship of your young son. It is going to be just your holiday alone with your y. And you are going to do the things he has always ranted his daddy to do with him. The nice part about it, ‘too, is that you are going to have a bully good time. | Saturday the 16th and the following Sunday will mark/ © the close of the “Father and Son Week” that begins Mon-| * day with a dinner in the auditorium of the Masonic temple. week is to be observed not only thruout the United but also in Canada, Australia and probably in | Its object is to bring father and son together in a r bond of understanding, sympathy and comradeship. much this will mean to the boy, only the grown man! ows who never knew his father closer—in those old days| than as the chief boss of the household or the family) wy bag. | What an opportunity it will be to the father can only! understood by the one who has already sent a son or) “over there.” He perhaps never felt he had the time} n business to get right next to the heart of his boy.) left that for mother to accomplish. | And now how he looks back on those school years of) far-away soldier Jad, and wishes he had had a bigger in that young life. So, just for such as he, and the others who are learning how to play with their there will be seven days given over to various enter-) ents thruout the city. It is a great, big, worth-while Gov. Lister doesn’t favor an investigation of the cape public service commission. Well, maybe it wouldn't very safe. We're Some Matchmaker Roosevelt hadn’t been in Washington an hour before seized the leadership of the fight on Wilson, says had : | —— from the capital. ow according to the rules of all fight games, there be something like equality in the combatants. Al eight is not matched with a bantam. The line be- mn amateurs and professionals is sharply drawn, in, class of sport. Even in duelling there must be equal-) ty of rank. Roosevelt is a private citizen. Wilson is com-) der-in-chief of the United States army and navy.| , these two cannot be fairly matched. President) ex-president is not fair, under the game's rules. | But, we have in our country a man the equal of Roose-| This man has stood for all patriotic effort as loyally has Wilson. This man has, during the past few years, n public utterance to opinions and purposes that proved im to be a thorough patriot and non-partisan in the gov-| ‘ernment’s time of emergency. } We positively demand that William Howard Taft go ‘to Washington and, in an hour, or less, if he likes, seize _ leadership of the opposition to Roosevelt. | Whisky is siz times as high as it was a year ago. Good! The higher it is, the less it goes down. There are fewer hogs than ever before in farmers’ smoke-houses, says an alert contemp. But as many as ever in the street cars A London cable says Trotsky is suspicious that Am- bassador Dave Francis is a reactionary. Why, the very idea! Dave Francis is one of the most progressive men America ever turned out—as progressive as Elihu Root, | Henry Cabot Lodge or J. P. Morgan. iam SHOW SEATTLE’S CHARM tanding forth as realistically as to Magnificent Reproductions |/ in Color Depict City and Environs. jected as to be To the north, netting of beauty, is Manor, half way ‘be- Seattle and Everett sa birdseye showing Weat nd the business district de Alderwood xt THOUSANDS SER EXHIBIT th Puget Mill Company Presents thot Work of Famous Birdseye | 2'0h* Artist—To Be Exhibited Then All Over United States. fanor demon f the Alderwood Ma r dis trict fulfilling its destiny as one of the mont important poultry rnis- ing sections In America, and as @ center for Filbert nut cultivation re-| unequaled on thin side of the At- ub- | antic ‘ape All these paintings Just above! own dominant color anged down the side of Uful repr of the tration Al IEATTLE is seeing itself as oth- ers see it in a truly wondertdl exhibition of paintings that cently opened its doors to the He at 411 Pike st, Fourth ave Already thousands geen this art exhibition, more the immediate future, as its strikingly interesting features come to be known. It is Seattle and Seattle's beautiful surroundings in minia- ture, ax the bird or airpla ould Of beautiful colored paintings, each @ study in itself, and each « rare work of art worth of the 1 ‘These paintings are the work of | tieity uld p Gibson Catlett, a California art For th ° whore ‘ork is known all over the Pug America. Months ago he accepted | large citien commission from the Puget Mill| starting just as soon as Seattle lompany, owning Alderwood Manor|gets a good view. The pletures and much other property in Se-| will be shown in a properly lighted Aitle and vicinity, to paint these|exhibition hall in each city” and Pletures, and he has just completed | accompanying them will be lectur= this imposing work. The pictures|ers who can do the subject ¢ are 12 by 15 feet length and|attle and the Puget sound co three feet in depth full juatice First comer an ¢ Don't fail to eye, taking in all From two to four thousands vie backsround of the » Ore are t every day. There extending from Mt. Ka if no admission charge. Reme Baker. This shows all the city in ber the address, 411 1 at. The } & most graphic and telling way, paintings are on view from 10 a. m. every one of Seattle's big buildings to 10 p. m. ae each with ite the exhi- entific light- that bring out wings with marvelous fidel brilliance, while a mural nat the end 6 exhi n hall reflects the wart effect of a Little L h at Alderwood Manor. This in admittedly the moat am bitious effort ever made por- tra ttle and the country the paintings are to thousands of dolla vost Valuable pub bly receive y be exhibited by t Mill Company in all the of the United Staten, of people have |b m, under ing arrangements and many | {pe . tly ~ in the 1 sands will see it nder's te ht |'round, and give Seattle in ntry pansive birds- eattle, with y Cascades, rto Mt see this exhibition | more food than the homes STAR—THURSDAY, FEB, 7, 1918. PAGE 6 Let Us Have a Nonpartisan Bill-A Plain, Uncomplicated Measure « The Star is heart and soul for rtisan elec tions, Years party sl nonpa against the id the cry against sounded against rty fetish, that party stands country, city, state. This paper has, in all seasons, prayed and fought for the day when men and women might go to the polls and vote for the best candidates regardless of party labels. When first nonpartisanship, thou sands of men voted the republican party ticket for no other reason than that their fathers grandfathers voted it. And they voted it, no matter who the candi- date was, or how bad his record. The democrats did the same, Little by little, The Star ground. Came the time when parti removed in cities. In the next few weeks, § choose a mayor, and councilmen—and not even of asking to what party they belong. Nonpartisanship in city elections has spread to ago, The Star avery, above we espoused its fight gaining n elections were eattle will think saw ETRE SE POLE TIA Fe ‘ 2» Ee ID, I's". | | COME COLYUM WORSE LIBRE Our € We have a At He's black Wh He's me me than a Handful of hangnaila Would be to Paderewnki And hin tail Are always just Where I set my Foe wn. Our Hallway is kind Of dark at night And this cat Is the original Camoufiage in The hallway, and I always fall over Him. At night He doesn't want To go out until I'm in bed Fifteen He Of course I have To get up from The buaks and Let him out I wish I were An Eskimo. They Have it pretty When it comes to Putting Our for the Night—#ix months SPEAKING OF ONE THING AND ANOTHER Mra Daisy Lingerie, of Dewagiac, whe has been (he guest of friends im the ity for at ya, went Friday to spend the week-end with friends in Rattle Creek Kalamsoo (Mich) Gasette, our house with whiskers and © trouble Ne pout minutes, then ects up & squawk. eany DIES OF CAMP LEWIS LIFE At the stretcher practice: .“Say, Injured Man, you'd better hike across this icy spot ‘fore we make this trip a reality.” such an extent that there is hardly a community now in the state of Washington which still adheres to party lines. Now approach the time when partisanship should also be wiped out in state and legisla tions. There is no reason why a governor should be elected as a democrat or as a republican. There is no reason why a member of the legislature should be a party man, We want these officials to be thoroly in- dependent of party affiliations. We want them to pass on bills and policies strictly on merit, not for party advantage. ive elec and In this war period, it is more imperative than ever that we should be free of party feeling. IT IS TO THE INTEREST OF LABOR ME} Is TO THE INT T OF BUSIN MEN, IT IS TO THE INT “VERY ONE WHO IS NOT A PRO SIONAL POLITICIAN TO HELP THE NONPARTISAN MOVEMENT ALONG. | TEUTONS TRY TO x Continued From Page One « German officers, that wan to throw the Hiritist guard and to make them easy tims in an attack | We in America something about and propmganda—but you should Visit Switzerland! That tiny epub lic is the Whirlpool Rapids of E | pean politics Undoubted | remain thelr ¢ n oft think we know German intrigue Switzertand wants to neutral, T we that it allies remain entent should atral But Germany dors not want Switzeriand to remain neutral. She wants Switeeriand on her nide—at least, passively on her wide, and from one end to the other of the little republic the snakes of German intrigue and propaganda are acrawl language people A ! of origin Berne, Zurich and with native Germans | naturalized an Swinn [it is emtimated there | native Germans | A majority of the newspapers are printed In and some of them are owned in Germany. These up a but persistent paganda, calculated to influence Swine in interest of Ger | many There are 700 taches in the German Berne, The American legat 20. Twenty ts sufficient for ordinary purpone of a legation in Switzeriand. What are the duties of the 680 surplus in the German lega- tion? In addition there are thousands are The of Rasel are filled most of them In Basel alone are 60,000 German pr the dincreet the acknowledged at legation at nm bas GARTCONET ‘Catarrh Distorts \Facial Expression Spreads the Nose, Blurs the Eyes, Puffe the Face, Dries the Lips. How to Get Rid of Ca TRY TH rth, j HOME TREATMENT rRER. | makes one feel thie effect in \ peremives | cataren not | miserable, It shows jthe features. and it usually grows Pout thanks & remarkable home treatment. there. is recovery in store for every sufferer by the lremarkable Gauas #elf home treat-/ |ment, which you can try free in our own home. only SECY, BAKER DOES SOME, Wie-WAGoIN A restaurant man taurants of thin country mys the ren-| are saving We can ime we eat havi Kever what easily believe it in one we wonder done with the food they Wey Away William, the well-known Christian A red nose that dribbles with) kainer, has written another letter|mucus in an unsightly misery. A thank the Almighty for help,|breath tainted with the odor of ca We're afraid William in sending his| {Sth i= an offense against all health and dec y A sto filled with! thanks in the wrong direction pings from diseased nasal cav- | see MAY cause untold minery, and the complexion. The bowels ed with strings of ropy mucus a body literally reeking catarrh rimpl Blotehes and skin. eruptions: The blood, awarming with millions of catarrh rermp, entails upon the kidneys a labor that may break them down; the lungs and. bron nial tubes ed with the de structive of systemic cx tarrh, can anemia and the most’ serie om why th misery? 8 ur name dress today a free trial of Mr treatment. Mall it 411 Main et, Mar I not coat’ you a and urely will tn wonderful ef. mail it Some more winter sporte— Trading recipes with the neigh bors. Reading the weather predictions in the almanacs and marveling at their accuracy Reading the weather bureau's pre. dictions and knocking them. clog Indicate with fn fy lead to “What.” aks Houne, “has become of the old-fashioned winters that set in about the middle of January and let up about the middle of March? Hen thin 00d al and to C ahali, Mich : penny: to have you Inspected | astonish y Noite pected | Pect.. Fill Neither have we, | {Guy but the county commissioners and the sheriff are certainly using plenty of SOFT soap It w 1 with Good evening the county jail? FREE * for a MBINED EATMENT, ‘nent Simply fill tn r non dotted tines . and matt t B OAUSS, 2411 Main st., Marshall, Mich. Eh ? Ambrom att "Tis reported by some of our most reliable jailbirds that the county commissioners who visited the jail the other day passed up Joe Am brose—didn't even speak to him Even roommates become snobbish at times—yen? Name R, F. D. o- | Authorities are working on the clue that an enemy of James de Moreo b up his fireworks factory If the authorities are wrong was a friend, some one t done a grave injuatice _e @ Maybe it was simply meant a| practical joke | (We know it is not right to interrupt you. But we also Know that it is right to remin every man in the U.S, serv that he owes it to himself, fan ily and country to take out in- surance. This is the last week to apply to Un Early Showing of Spring Materials and Styles 425 Union St. |to provide at | provid impe | dren's outer | Against infection in the schools | Health Questions Answered | F. T. asks Is tuberculin a eure | cure for consumption?” ©, but under certain conditions ‘ separa | the same time of German agents not identified with the Iegation, doing their furtive best to bring Switzeriand in on the side of Germany. Switzerland and } SANITATION | School authorities and teachers ws [Pro German well as others charged with looking | ben the United States put into ef after the health of | feet the embargo to prevent the ship of school children,|™ent of foodstuffs to neutrals. will do well to| The food pinch upon her, Switzer memorize the | 4nd listened eagerly to what her standards of German “friends” had to say. school hygiene| False Reports Spread and sanitation| American troops were reported on ich have been | the Alsace-Lorraine front the New York city | Swiss line. ‘This meant, said the Ger s bureau of child propagandists, that America ¢ an follows mplated an invasion of Switzer 1d be large enough in an effort to reach Germany. least 300 cubic feet of embargo, they said, was equival air space for ench pupil. an act of war. Fach room should have direct sun.| While the Swiss were in this mood Meht at some period of the school! Germany produced a treaty made in day time of peace with Switzerland, Each child should have an indivf@.| Which ft interpreted as giving to ual desk, with ninies at least two feet |Germany the right to Swiss wide between the rows tunnels and sections of the railroad Dry sweeping and dusting must be | "Ystem leading thereto in certain prohibited and proper ofl dressings |@™mergencies, Such an emer 1 for the floors. argued the Germans, was at bh A. Id be Germany at this time was send tat the end into Italy The of troops was a hard one, com pelled, ax they were, to go over the mountains. The of the tunnels would much ship and speed up and simplify getting of troops into Italy Feeling against America at this period was intense. Even some of the newspapers printed in French bitterly criticised us and our embargo. “America is trying to star and then she will invade one heard at every hand, repeat ed, no doubt, after the German agents. Never had for seed rich soil American became ar w near entabliahed by the health departmer hy They a Clansroome ab ene ney rho! ndividual and each day, in|! at «manila enveloper the name of the child, | that distribution may made each morning Adequate the perature troops way be une Swiss hard. the obviate 4 free ventilation, with n of air at the right tem. nd degree of humidity is the with In school building ndividual hooks pl cloak ventilated anced at wide that the chil garments shall not be in contact, are essential. | Drinking cleanly totlet | and washing facilities and the elim ination of the cc “l to further nougt inter puntains nmon rmany been so near towel are ire protection it im beneficial in the treatment of | the dinease | Mra, R. W one to rnore The soft ate is responsible. It hangs at the back of the mouth and the latter from passage. When b force thru th asks: “What causes the nasal | one athes with | mouth and nose at the soft palate is vio- lently shaken or vibrated, snoring sound results Appendicitia primarily due t the poisons formed by in the bowels, It tsa 1 aused bowel ve only f th ed war cross in the ttalion, in recog: | ent exemplary con: | tant investigation patrols near the Ger- (Sorry to interrupt, but it ts Important that men in the U. 8 service be reminded that this the last week to apply for U. g. v s and a|by improper and insu t as age in the ¢ ik le the U. S. SERGEANT FUSSED with oid, state, “formen matter BY WAR CROSS GIFT ox77¥,.a8% BBs {Eis nota complete movement, and the old, stale matter stays in the aye S ferment and IN FRAN Feb, 6.—(Delayed.—| such. unclean bowels cause head What shall I do with my warjaches, atomach trouble and 90 per crosi ia the question which jg|cent of all other sickness. The old, ge he howels often stays in for months N pcisoning the body and causing that He received the flations, tired fecling known as “auto presence of a t now TO AVOTD 1 duct in an impc he way to ayold sickness and to carried out by keep feeling full of ambition is to man lines. | Keep the outside of your body clean, |you should also KEBP THE INSIDE the Rochester sergeant put the war| CLEAN. It is even more important croas in his pocl Some time later . keep your body washed, because he waadered back to his trench, His |the millions of pores in the 30 feet of bowels quickly absorb poixc but it was still bashfully nest! x his pocket y nestling in easly in the wells, Don't al- low the old, fermenting, filth to stay in your bowels for i out filth bowels are the most kre no stom~ oh, liver or any other organ can do elimination, Many y may have a bowel nt WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY SERICAN ARMY | Sitte trouble * appendicitis: agitating @ sergeant from Rochester, [fol matter sticking to the sides of intoxleation,” nition of his r watch your bowels, Just as you After the impressive ceremony, Keep the bowels clean than it is comrades looked for the war cross, generated by decay food left ‘T and keep it ita work with @ foul cesspool send- the | And because The Star i it is jealous of any measure s so heart and soul for it, that does not present non- partisanship in the very best light possible. It is for that reason that it believes a nonpartisan bill should be initiated at once that will present to the voters no other question exc It is for that reason tha No. 33, which contains som and embodies at least a half nonpartisanship. onpartisanship is enti jected by the voters on its any side issues, such as ma ays holidays, or presidentia The Star is confident t beside: be a r this paper will figuratively its sleeves, and work like a al nonpartisan bill filed. t nonpartisanship. t it opposes Initiative Bill 1cthing like 13,000 words, a dozen other propositions tled to be accepted or re- own merits—and not on king primary and election al primaries, etc. hat before long there will When that is done, take off its coat, roll up Trojan to put it “over the top,” despite the snarling and the howling of every political ward heeler in the state. GET THE SWISS | TN WAR THRU DELIBERATE LIES to getting what she wanted of Swit- zerland. At this moment President Wilson odified the food Switzerland, the as as crinin embargo ana ny @id not win the use of the Swine tunnels, but her propa gandists have not gone home, They never despair, A time will yet come ny reaches the French ha newspaper. It is print in French and is full of pictures and std about the war. It hints that England is saving herself at the expense of the French and that when peace is declared, she will have most of the gains and the French most of the losses. Needless to may, the propaganda | has no fruit. As regularly ae the newspapers come showering down from the balloons upon the « they are gathered into The French un y that for would no borne Cngland there now be Fran be Germans believe that the dif ferences in blood and nationality among the allies cannot be over- come. Briton, Latin and Slav they regard as an impossible combina ton. Pritieh officer who had been a prisoner in Germany three years whom I met in the ternment camp in Switzerland. me testa were made in tempt establish this fact among the prisoners “They put English, Irish gian, Russian, French and Serbians all in the same prison. “When they assigned us to our places to sleep, each prisoner was surrounded with men of other na- tionalities, whose language he could not peak. | “They believed that this contact would develop the racial differences and would be an filustration of the insurmountable difficulties in the way of unity among the allies. Fortuna: all of us saw thru this scheme from the beginning. I think we should have gotten along very well together anyhow, but knowing that we were under the bell-glass, we oll put forth a special effort at living In harmony. A told how an learned afterwards that our Jailers were psychologists from the various universities. They hoped to be able to say to their kaiser that racial differ- ences among the allies could not be overcome and to offer as proof the quarrels among the prisoners.” German intrigue was responsible for the Italian defeat. Not that commanders or troops were bribed. Thousands of German agents, “planted” in Italy before the war, and passing as Italians, were oper ating in Italy and among the troops, spreading a that En) France had met with rever: north, that Am only about England and Franc and that Italy was to be left to her fa s in the Newspapers were printed in exact facsimile of Rome papers, and they contained matter that seemed to the German spies. If the French and British are about us, why haven't nm us co-operation?” these say. “And America has even declared war on her en- She is still at peace with Aus- She does not care what hap- ens to the Italians.” The American Red Cross saved the day in Italy. Major Murph concerned they giv spies wo! not Even if ach day, There must t LOUGH, complete r of all 4, decaying TO 1 MOS k buckthorn other ingredients, put up in ready |prepared form under the trade name of Adler-i-ka. This mixture is so powerful a bowel cleanser that it ALWAYS does its work properly and thoroughly. It removes foul and| poisonous matter which other ca thartic or laxative mixtures are un able to disiod Tt does a COM PLETE job, it works QUICKLY Jand without the least discomfort « trouble. It is so gentle that on forgets h Ken it until the THOROUC tion starts, It is aatonishin great amount of foul, poisonous matter a SINGLE SPOON of Adler-i-ka draws from the alimentary canal—matter you would never have thought. wa: in your system. ‘Try it right atte a natural bowel movement and no- tice how much MORB foul matter Will be brought out which was pol- soning your ays In slight dis- orders, such as oc 1 constipa , as on th headache, on , brings relief almost IN STANTLY. Adlor-i-ka is the MOST: THOROUGH bowel cleanser and an= cepticizer ever offered in read: prepared form. It is a constant sure in t gases and pc that is not enough an ly s QUICK xture ¢ and 10 in-| Bel-| and and| was concerned | bear out stories being circulated i | at the head of ‘sal | «in France, digs ber of hed C | we Italian front at @ time the fighting became seve They arrived while the retreat in progress Marching under the Ameria flag, they gave the lie in the effective manner to the preval that America would do noth Italians Gold Is Fight Faetor They lieved to be the fe runner of military assistance, as, deed, proved to be the case. lowing them came British French troops, The Italians regain ed their morale and fought with Gel ame spirit and determination @ had characterized th earlier forts America’s declaration Austria, Ukewine, served to heart into the Italians and to o vince them of our friendship and determination to fight the war to clone When the history of the Hi burg campaign in the East is ten, it will show that GERM GOLD, not German valor, DID THE. WORK. It will show that Hinden- burg’s men marched against a bares handed Russian army, who, betrays ed by th ureaucrats at Petrograd,” had no option but to fall back, : | It is aaid that no foreigner enter Switzerland without receiving the attention of the German spies, |The day | arrived in Berne, French | Journalists warned me against leave ing anything of a private nature ig) my gage at the hotel Pf n spies, 1 they, “am have «potted you as and in their own try to find out all American Red patched a large the nu rkers to were be ot war G doubtedly American will ‘That afternoon when I retu |to the hotel I carried with me | package of French official There was nothing con about them. I placed the lin my bag, first making a mark on the cord that would be ognizable only to myself. This I made at @ point where the a | crossed one of the end edges of @ package. Then I left the hotel. Spies Work on It When I returned a few hours later, everything in my room seem. ed to be exactly as I had left it. Zinfl |bag was in the same place. The package was in the same place im the bag. But the mark on the cord, instead. of being at the edge of the p was on the opposite side, mid between the two ends. My German friends had been it The incident illustrates the tho ness with which the spies operate. COLD GONE! HEAD AND NOSE C First dose of “Pape’s Co Compound” relieves all grippe misery. Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! |dose of “Pape’s Cold Compo: taken every two hours until thi doses are taken will end gript | misery and break up a severe jeither in the head, chest, body oF | limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up n trils and air passages; stops nasi | discharge or nose running; relievel jS8ick headache, dullness, feverish- | ness, sore throat, sneezing, sore | ness and stiffness. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest retief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores, It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no incon- venience. Don't accept a substi tute. g TO PREVENT APPENDICITIS, © to people who have used o1 jordinary bowel and stomach me |cines and the various oils waters. f REPORTS FROM PHYSICIANS | Dr. James Weaver, Loa, Utaht “T |have found nothing ‘in my 50 years® Practice to excel Adler-{-ka.” Dr. Wo A s “Louse Ad in my prac have found to excel it F. M. Prettyman, Mallardls “T use Adler-i-ka in all bowel and have been very successful Some cases require only” st D. Hawks, Goshen, Ind.z eading doctors has used n cases Of stomach tro' with wonderful suce He h lost a patient and saved nay ions. Puckett, Gillham, Ark: “T ' yRtomach | troubh After ng Adler-i-ka better than for 20 years. Haven't langu. ge t0 express the awful tmparities which ber > el ae from m system,” ‘ Cora Noblett, Sageeyah, Of Thanks to Adler-icka T can el all night now, somethin, ‘ do for years. Ddiin of ereyhs A. Austin, Ausland, Mini could not eat a thing, my sto: el was so weak. Adler-icka made me feel better, and am now work and gaining i, paca Adler-i-ka 1s sold only b ~ ing druggist in each Hit bt Seattle only by Bart Switt i)

Other pages from this issue: