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& j | on do 1307 Seventh Ave. Near Untom St. T OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSrarnns Telearaph News Service of the Untted Frees Association Entered at Seattin Wash, Postoffice as Second-Class Matter math out of 40¢ per month; 3 montha, $1.15) 6 “ Year, $250. Ry carrier, city, J0e & month ity montha $2.00 Main 600, Private ™ ss ‘ - e » Remember the Tuscania! Let us resolve to end the war as speedily as possible by giving entire sup- port to the government, Investing in thrift stamps ts one way. — -| ds, It’s Up to You! Ome of the great novels of the war period records. “Mr. Britling Sees It Through,” by H. G ‘And one of the reasons it is a great novel, in our oplr according to critics and Wells on, im that and a son during these days Many of us fathers have failed, We've been too bury Mevelop the true standard of comradeship with our sons And now many of us realize it Next week Seattle and the whole country will make an effort to & larger responsibility for understanding between father and son Wf you are a dad, plan to take your son—your best pab—to the And son banquet at the Masonic Temple Monday night | Tickets for the dinner, at 50 cents per plate, are obtalrmble from ‘Chamber of Commerce, the Y. M. C. A., the Newsboys’ unton, the ‘Temple, the Boy Scouts, the Knights of Columbus and Hebrew ‘They are also on sale at the Arctic club, King Bros.’ store, @ Taft's and Swift's Prarmacy. too small State Food Administrator Hebberd and Local Ad- istrator Beck have put themselves on record against fiteering in wheat substitutes. Let the good work up. Even the landlords may yet be tamed. e for Bolton for the Council years ago, when T. H. Holton was a candidate for the coun f ( Ewords to that effect, who was seeking merely to create turmotl “Bolton has now completed one term's service. That he has dis pved the mayor's vitriolic characterization of him goes without saying Tm many re«pects Bolton has been a force for constructive good in eouncil. He has ably assisted many worthwhile projects. As man he has taken the broad viewpoint of the general publ (Or i labor made no mistake in giving bim unstinted support years ago. Today his candidacy deserves the support not only B element, but of good citizens generally, for his services covered mcope of general city welfure almost, three years ago. It is glad to recommend him ton and reelection this year "Spirits were rumored to be working upon Police Gordon in a petit larceny case against a woman 7 The $50 fine he imposed upon her indicates for once the well known Seattle Spirit failed. y That Nonpartisan Bill If this state is to have an opportunity to decide the question of ly minor propositions, a bill to that effect should be filed in at ance. the coming few weeks, prior to the city election. Thousands 3 #o sign a plain, uncomplicated bill, Are there the right men ead thie campaign here? If so, they must get busy at once ae tomach Upset? Stop Indigestion, ‘Gases, Sourness—Pape’s Diapepsin Relief! Neutralize stomach acidity and stop dyspepsia, pain, heartburn, belehing. Try it! what upset your stom- have dyspepsia. A little Diapepain fich portion of the food did occasionally keeps the stomach jo you? Well, don't sweetened and they eat their favor: If your stomach is in a re- ite foods without fear. t; if sick, gassy and upset, and = If your stomach doesn’t take care ey ited of your liberal limit without rebel. id | lton; if your food is a damage tn belch gases and acids and stead of a help, remember the undigested food; breath| quickest, surest, most harmless re- , tongue coated—just take a/lief is Pape’s Diapepsin, which le Pape's Diapepsin to help neu-| costs only fifty cents for a large acidity and in five minutes case at drug stores. It's truly won "Wonder what became of the derful—its stops fermentation and n and distress. acidity and sets things straight, so M of men and women to-| gently and easily that it ts really Know that it is neediess to | astonishing Ee was never better demonstrated than right now when the order of things seems to be “giving as little for as much as the trade will stand.” 1,000 pairs Women’s and Girls’ Dress and Street Shoes and Evening Slippers. 500 pairs Men’s Work and Street Shoes. While they last $49.95 Per Pair ‘This is not a Clearance Sale of | old styles or broken lines. It is a | special offering to the public thru gar Boston wholesale house of geome splendid staple Shoes. Pon't overlook this opportanity of stocking up at old-time prices. Black Shoes, all of them. Practical, staple styles that everyone should have. Exchanges and Returns allowed within time limit of 7 days. | BOSTON SAMPLE SHOE 3 Second Floor Pitel Bldg, Second Hoe. Opn 9 A.M. Close 6 P. M, ong Maye bare the true basis of comradeship that should exist between | De was Ditterly assailed by Mayor Hiram Gill as a rabid “red,"| Star is proud that {t supported him—made the fight for him|" elections, without having that issue involved by other com | THE SEATTLE STAR] !unsGiveO. . . Continued From Page One oy AN cap | spurion ver lifeboats with him. sized. ‘That was wenkt Ger porn explained | that # ou Verwonkt was a juntl fiable polley when the matter first] came up in the empire Merely to sink a ship and permit those on board to reach land in| afely Was not productive of the ter ror (he Germans hoped to inspire by thelr submarine warfare ' | It wan still easy to get crews for | munition an@ food ships, both in| J neutral and belligerent ports. Spur low versenkt would change all thie le Yet Known | The adoption of the spurlos ver renkt polley was not attended by r promulgations and notices te foreign nations, Little in known about this policy in America. Yet much has been printed on the sub- ject in Germany It seems that the policy did not} have its origin In the navy or among the professional militariats, but among the that always has been regarded as in the lead in hu manitarianiam in every nation—the unt ity professor group 1 most “credit” seema to go to Professor Oxwald Flamm, a man of the highest standing in German educational ctr In explaining the policy of spurlos versenkt, Pro- fessor Flamm wrote in Berlin “Woe thin “If neutrals were destroyed so | that they disappeared without leaving any trace, terror would soon keep seamen and travelers | away from the danger zones.” | | Of course, the operation of the policy is not yet In full swing, ow- Ing to the fact that not all U-boats are equipped for retail murder. Tor | pedoes too expensive and too | precious to be used on lifeboats | | Special guna are needed for this work The newer types of submarines, | |however™are “prope equipped. It is thelr operations that you see recorded In the newspapers Doubtless the near future will eee a large increase in the U-boat bar barity directed against the victime of torpedoed ships | Germans Human Beings “But the German people—they are n beings lke the rest of u»—| ey acquiesce in these policies af | | horror?” ‘This question is frequently | asked. | The German people have not been |decetved about spurlos versenkt They understand the policy and they approve it The fooling of the German people is a fundamental thing, and it has continued thru many, many years, The German state of mind ts such now that all the | | militarists have to de is to tell | the people that a thing Is right | AND THAT ENDS IT. The kaiser maid the sinking of the! fa an opportunity to secure enough signatures tn Seattle | Lusitans was right and immediate month an ly it became right. Hence, we find a clergyman, Baumgartner, on page seven, in “Deutache Reden in schwerere Zeit,” saying | “Anyone who cannot bring | | himself to approve from the | bottom of his heart the «inking p of the Lusitania, who cannot conquer his sense of the mon: strous cruelty to countless per. . pectly Inmocent victims o- and give himself up to honest joy at this victorious exploit of German defensive power—auch | & one we deem no true German.” 1 | Remember What Lincoln Said | | Lincoin said that no one could| fool all the people all the time The/| | kaiser, however, fools all the Ger-| man people all the tim | Firwt he fooled them into mad-| ness—megalomania, to have an ex aggerated notion of oneself, Under | the spell of this madness it has been easy for him to weld the whole Ger. man ple Into a compact foree, with the conquest of Europe, and the conquest of the world, as its reasons | for existence. He has fooled them tnto belteving | that he is the chosen of The Al mighty, that In his hands, they, too, are the instrument of The Almighty and that It is for the good of the world that all creations should come under German sway THE GERMAN PEOPLE RE LIEVE TODAY THAT VERDt WAS A GERMAN VICTOR HAT AMERICA THEY BELIEF 3 > F EFFECTIVE EF WAR. HAV X E KAISER AND HINI I TOLD THEM 807 the cheapest methods of Qerman to prisoners from one people ts camp t na en rou nd ma ce be lieve that the prisoners have been recently n A British officer in an internment Switzerland told, me that by cams this system he had become f. with eight different prison camy Our group seemed to be the chosen one for exhibition purposes said he There were about a thou sand of us, all taken in the latter #14. First we were held in om” camp in Westphalia, In 1915 the began to move us. The moves always were made after the people had been given word of troop activity in the west. Paraded Thru Streets the fighting a went 1 was im into the com muniques, we were moved eastward a notch. At the first town of any size we would be taken off the train and paraded thru the streets In this way they ing from camp to camp eastward and then southwestward, till final we reached Mannheim, which wan the last of the eight prison “ it was only thus paraded, The Ger mans seemed to prize us as prison highly than the men nationalities had supposed to be the mans were mak west. ys our parades took place thru crowded streets, ‘The whole civilian population turned out to us. They would line the sidewalks almost within touch of us, calling us i nd yelling, ‘Gott strate portant kept us mov I was in f course | who were ers more other headway in th: lw “Most of us had been and some of us not very steady on our pins. Sometimes when such | @ one would lag he was helped back |into line by a «wift kick, implanted by one of the men from the crowd.” The government Pools the peo- ple in regard to German losses in the war, No one except the military bosses of Germany knows what Germany's losses are. The newspapers are not wounded, STAR—FRIDAY, FER, 8, 1918. black dros one seeq at every turn tn K. to Policy of Barbarism PAGE 6 You Can Defy Disease | If Your Blood Is Pure permitted to print the names of Jinovements, ‘Thr newspapers | the killed and wounded. were suspended in Germany for dar After a battle the newspapers are| ine to print the fact that the | that keepn the system in perfect con: | : permitted to toll what troops were | eral strike in Vie nna MIELE JV?) Don't Invite Attack by Slug-| dition to resist the attacks of dineane Early Showing of engaged. If any one wishes to) te an ¢ evo! jon. - y ‘ that everyone ts subject to. . A won was killed or wounded, he must print ‘thing abou ori ropey n , J . a whedg 28 Austria, hunger-typhold in Keeping your blood supply up to|the circulation strong and vigorous, lal & 0 A sa tuberculosis in both countries like building an impregnable fort | ease done by every Z caun the 6 pacing og Sond The fecerd of underncerishiment| reas around the system, to protect it| body by the use of & few bottles of 425 Union St. cone akonk ta aay ee tut ic| however, ean be found in medical|'Thus you are asqured of a strong| medicine, 8. 8. 8, routs out all im Bae te ta wnat hes | Feports circulated #olely among doo-| and vigorous vitality that means per-| purities and revital blood | ee Tae [are not censored as other periodicals| When impurities creep into the vigorous ae @ 4 information may come to it by /00 blood supply, there is a loss of en-|your drug store and get a bottle to oO e +4 chance e a WILE THE GERMAN PHOPLED | rey, & failing of the appetite, you you need any medical 7 4 No Mourning Permitted lan R WAKE UP? ure eam 1 and find the body obtain same without Fourtl—W estiake—Pine 3 THE WOMEN ARE NOT PEr-|"Y te kening with come | “eekening under ordinary tasks, all | cont by to Chief Medical Ad Cabaret—Dancing $ MITTED TO WKAR BLACK, so bored pe awakening of which means that you are losing | viner, Swift Specific Co, 6271 Swift World's Largest Dry Cabaret ry < me our American boys hat y f e that not even in this way may the Fea tn | that strong, virile, robust vitality | Laboratory, Auanta, Georgia 3 people be reminded of their «rief, or /. be given a key to the extent of the 5 4 f be given a key 10 the arent of the Seattle’s Largest Upstairs Clothes Shop ae France that give that country #o de- | pressing an aspect to foreigners. The German people have been fooled about thetr food supply. In the days when cow beets and straw bread were the only fare for the poorest classes, they were kept in heart by government promises of food supplies from conquered terrt tory, east and west. The German people fooled Into believing that Engian searcity Is greater than Germany’ and the suffering of her people, therefore, more terrible. ‘The government keeps the people in the dark concerning conditions in Austria and) Hungary, particularly | facts concerning strikes and peace | G have been » & D, IK.'s.”. COLYUM Now that Ralph Horr has shaved off his mustache, and all the may- oralty candidates are beardleas, | whom will the barbers knock? | cee Ry the way, what has become of Doc Matthews? Doesn't seem like election time without a word or two fro: 1 trils and alr passages in the head, = ” ieee the tallest minister tn the atege naaty Grecharge oF n0s0 fen to wear. av si a : eee ning, relieves sick headache, dull-| If we gather his recent remarks correctly, we judge that Gov. Lister gives full approval to the following: The state public service commis «ion All Lister appointees. AD Lister plans. i And Ernest Listor eee police department, who'll j shoes as captain? He wears No.| 14's, ‘tie entimated } Can a married man live on $100 a save for thrift stamps? Yes, but the landiords don’t let him ANEMIA CAUSES | DY SPELLS | Building Up the Blood! Often Corrects This Annoying Affliction. A Lynn Woman Tells How Lack of Blood Affected Her Entire System and How She Found Relief. Thin blood is the caune of many troubles that are often att other sources. The blood throughout the entire when it Is at fault the rewulting din comfort may make itself felt in any organ of the body. The nerven be- come undernourished and neurigia| in a frequent accompaniment of an-| emia. Good digestion without ric red blood is almost impossible and sufferers from anemia are frequent: | ly dyspepticn In the case of Mrs. | Chute of No. 93 Hanover! Lynn, Ma severe dizzy | spells were an annoying result pf| anemia, She says | “I suffered for nearly a year from anemia & result of overwork M stomach became out of or der and I had no desire for food Every morning I had severe dizzy In and I could hardly keep from ng. I had neurale pains which started in my head and ran down all through my body These paine wore me out until T was A complete wreck. I was confined | bed for two weeks at one| enrn'asoof'ucc BREAKS \Pape’sColdCompound” | ispleasantand affords A dose taken every two hours un-| tl three doses are ta grippe misery and break up a cold. It promptly opens clogged-up nos- news, aneeting, soren Don't stay stuffed up! ing and snu! bing head! wor comts only a fow cents at any drug | tore. If Charlie Sullivan gets that ap-| tastes nice, causes no Pointment to an inspectorship in the | lence. fill his; Don't accept something eine. ested: — Pe cccccccoccovcconvccccccegzoccs | A Very Noticeable Advance— COLD AHURRY There is bound to be a very noticeable ad- vance in the price of clothing, and you will realize the truth of this statement in the very near future. Money invested in Suits and Overcoats at this time will earn unusual dividends. Partic- | ularly is this true here in Seattle’s Largest Upstairs Clothes Shop, where at all times we | offer you a saving on the finest clothing “ready InstantRelief. | en will end feverishness, sore throat, and stiffness. Don’t wait until it happens and then say, Berane, oe sce: “Why didn’t you let us know?” Now is the Nothing else in the| [| opportune time, while we are still selling the g ld gives such prompt relief as|{! - * * Cold Compound,” which same Wonderful Values at our upstairs | prices— $15 $20 $25 The _all-wool, heavy-weight worsted and serge Suits which we show now at $20, in our opinion, will never be sold at that price again. Separate Trousers at a Great Saving Upstairs. 1t acts without assistance, inconven- Be sure you get the genuine, HOW TO GET RELIEF FROM CATARRH If you have ontarrh, catarrh- al deafness or head noises, go to your druggist and get 1 ox of Parmint (double strength), take this home, add to it hot water and just a litte sugar, as directed in each package. ‘Take 1 tablespoonful 4 times a day This will often bring quick relief from the distronsing head noises. Clogred nostrils should open. breathing become onay and the mucus stop dropping into the throat It is cary to make, tastes plearant and costs ttle. Every #| one who has catarrh should # give this treatment a. trial Store Open 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. . You will probably find it is # Fs Just what you need. 5 © nee TAILORED READY CO. | ¥:& e OW S$ ap oye 3 Bo Dependability i=: aout —that’s what you de- 401-403 Pike Street A ps mand in a suit, and that’s what you get in all —Fi less, knee to 1 —Be ribb . ror eeping, Open the 4 Lines of Communication ESTERN transportation systems, such as the Chi- cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, are proud in their privilege to add a new chapter to the splendid record of ~~ in the development of the nation. They first blazed the trail—surveyed the wildernesses and the uncharted prairies—pushed back the frontiers year by year— unk Seder sab palgg As cs opened up a great new empire and took out sturdy settlers to wetig ion ¥ cng RS populate od build it. They kept open the “lines of communi- poss ct th ionic cation” between the old and these advance forces of mended to me. ‘The pills began to| pioneers; carried supplies to them, and brought back their tach Wau fanned dae ta eee crops, and cattle, I , ore, and manufactured products to | health now, but ‘occastonally take} the markets for trade. | ’ ow pare woe of Dr. Willams’ Pink | bat They wove the fabric of the West into the greater economic i © sOperatir do'Liiky Uke thine Gan thar Wy ib eek and industrial fabric of the nation, and very soon the West, H Rosia thay are fot this rensoo si inva which they o —_ =~ beeps: pony ve essential to the 1 BD stock bad or deficient t Phenma-| economic well-being of Europe as well as America. | _ now acti tam, mew a 0 re i York cur inl savers sabia And now, when the very life of all free nations depends upon {Wire or soy baat Aria’ and eantot iors bed py and efficient distribution of those vast supplies of | Beda the most delicate system: ee and material which the West so lavishly produces—now, | ‘ De Panes Fink FAs 98 eile when it is not too much to say that the continuance of self- i mall, postpaid, on receipt ef price,| government in this as well as in the European democracies | the Dr. Willisma. Medicine Csr depends upon the unrestricted flow of foodstuffs, and the H 66 Rchenestaay: (OM) YA bcblal ' sterner materials of war to our various seaports and su ply | “Bullding Up the Blood." will be depots—the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Com- | auest | ‘RECIPE ‘FOR MAKING BREAD | To Readers of this Paper 1 wilt rend a Valuable Recipe which wil | make Bread, Wholesome, Di e, free from Fermentatioi > buttermilk. ‘The Bre hen baked consists of ordinary flour, water and salt. Any Flour can be used ‘akes & quarter of an hour to “raine,”” and then one hour in oven, Numerous leited ‘Testimonials from Medical Men, ete, I have noth ing to sell, Just cut out this notice, and enclose P. O. for 26 cents and addressed envelope for Recipe. J. T. BYRNE, 33a, Grafton Street, Dublin, Ireland with solemn pride, the great responsibility of giving itself and its full measure of experience, equipment and loyal service to the greatest cause in history. With this frank statement that the needs of the govern- ment must be considered first, this company wishes to assure its patrons that it will continue to serve them in the charac- teristic “Milwaukee” way, and that everything possible will be done to insure their comfort and convenience. CLOTHES Made to Order Built to fit your figure | | i} \ pany, in common with other transportation systems, accepts, | | f | | Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. a F. OB CITY PASSENGER AGENT—SECOND AVE. AND CHERRY ST. . SRPMS TENCE