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BEMNeR oF scrurrs NonTHWwesT 1b we oF Newsrarens Telearaph News Service of the United Prean Association Bntered at Seattle Wash, toffice as Second-Class Matter * BLS: 6 ow ¢ Star Publishing Co, Phone Main 600, Prt ange connecting all departments, of elty ntha $2.00 By mail ovt per n Da 40 0. Ry ed Dally by T ox ites is willing to be shown that the suUggE t not the best and > President Wilson yesterday, in his reply to Austria. And until those settlements are made, we must keep doing our bit. Today we can help by buying a war thrift stamp. Unite he “The settlement most endu said has ted ar It’s the Lumbermen’s Move Northwest lumber operators face a national responsi- bility that bears directly on Americ: rt the war If they continue to sullenly fight reforms demanded by their workers, there will be another strike in their in- penty next spring , is is the verdict of President Wilson's mediation ission, after a searching investigation of the situa The report is now in the hands of President Wilson A strike will delay America’s aircraft production pro- It might even upset the whole plan of military tions of Gen. Pershing’s forces Unrest, according to the commission's report, is focused 0n the eight-hour day. The government has urged that the eight-hour day be L ted. This measure has geared up, rather than re- i farded, efficiency, according to government investigation. What wil! the Northwest lumber operators do? Will they march forward The president is waiting to know. The nation is waiting to know. A verdict of public opinion hangs over the head of the Northwest lumber “operators. Peace with Austria sure kaiser’s front tire. ith Malice Toward N None “With malice toward none.” So spoke the great liberator, Abraham Lincoln, whose the American nation is today celebrating. He it during the heat of battle, as it were. While the) of war still raged, Abraham Lincoln found ‘ ‘malice (rd none.” : The spirit he thus evinced, the American people are exemplifying. His words are being echoed now thru e world in the messages of President Wilson. At war with the central powers, we bear them no The people of the Teutonic empires are not the against whom we have any permanent quarrel. We g mo hymns of hate against them. We war upon their system. We intend to crush that—and in so doing, ‘shall liberate instead of enslave the German people “With malice toward none. i As Lincoln served humanity in his day, the American n is dedicating itself to the same cause today. n on the Light After all the fault finding as to details, the country knows that Uncle Sam did a big job in a big way— would be a nail in the didn't shout it from the housetops while he was! it. it appears now that instead of being negligent in the’ tter of making heavy artillery, we are playing the game cording to agreement with our allies—letting them make big guns for us, As shipping is the crucial thing in winning the war, tonnage saved for other purposes, by having the allies our big guns, is vastly important. It means more supplies and more American soldiers transported. It is enough to know, however, that our part of the , allied program has been and is being completely formed. We are doing what our allies want us to do, > a they expect us to do and the way they want us| it. We believe it will be good policy in the future for the ir department to make public all the information it pos- ‘sibls can about the conduct of the war. Yes, it wotild be to give the public information even if some of it does oe Germany. The cond are well united in support of the president. want to back him up to a victorious finish. But they) ght to know enough absut the war to enable them to the snares laid for their judgment by any who want| to play politics with the war. If Secretary Baker persists in the policy of frankness in his last appearance before the military affairs mmittee, the people themselves will attend to the poli- ns, no matter what party claims their allegiance. Austria must be getting tired of having the kaiser deal off the bottom of the deck all the time. ; . ‘Comes Easy When You Think 3 “A half-dozen of your nice white wheat cakes, Mother, Dad, sitting down to breakfast. “Wheatless day; but here’s some hot corn cakes,” Mother. And, on the way down to the office, orn, like this: Corn was the pioneer American crop and is still the ‘ome cereal crop in which America leads the world. The early voyagers took back to Europe ears of corn as curiosity. Our Pilgrim fathers almost lived on corn. Corn ‘was the first crop planted in all the virgin soil as it was settled, from the Atlantic to the broad prairies and beyond. “Those who cleared off the forest and brush put in corn first thing, and so it goes to this day. There is hardly a domestic animal but it thrives best -@ncorn. In mush form, it is better for even pups and kit- tens than meat. As a life-saver, or a flesh-builder, it comes next to milk, which alone is both meat and drink, And it will help win a world’s war! ; “Mother, some more of those hot orn cake Ym beginning to eat with my brain says Dad, breakfast time. A lot of fellows who have been hobbling around town on flat feet and complaining because the draft board turned them down, now will be given a chance to prove their mettle in the army. says Dad thinks on next | Why pay our soldiers anything if we're make them spend it all on income tax and keeping up clothing and barher expenses? It’s like giving your young son a quarter to put in his bank so that he can buy his own shoes. going to | taxi driver al P , please!) F iw STAR—TUESDAY, FEB, 12, 1918, PAGK 6 es Ee ID. IK.’s.". COLYUM eee. wavy refuned Now th pane strated hould leggers fled. That bootlegers | Mr submit titled r 1 Everett COHEN ISN'T HITHER JOR | GOING, | | We that Ole Hanson wi ' Baptiat Sw under the it Fordundet Anna Swanson wi Mine Piiida Eddenho. notice by « ‘ontemporury epeak at the hb church ausploes of rut night Mins tation and Miss Hattie Westland will bers When interviewed Kelly of Renton said yuay to attend Andgren and Mine al n = “Naw, sir! musi um eee today, Hugo he was too Roy ¢ ° married in F er day and and Viola Potts were Jorado, Kaa, the oth-| Ralph Dilley and Irene n Decatur, It By J. W. T. Maso: ke Albrecht of Wurtemburg mmand of the German forces Three hundre New York have orga the poor how to economise defense, the poor should organize to) french teach the rich how to spend money. | society women ng the American troops who sector of Mibiel. of two German generals 1 who have m the war | Prince Feu) ve not} | Ravar recht was mY! thie tuken over a the front near 8t All Portland's ball team's players} 14 tic are to be vaccinated. We regret it great * recet lens than carda, ing, “Not n ‘They couldn't catch anythi because a dogen postal mary when de the 13th the He army corps at St ee and was one of the leaders of thru Heigium. He com 1 the German army that sub- BOXES PER YEAR : ted 5 jerm joge guns Best, safest cathartic for liver)'* and bowels, and people war broke out mar art the drive new type of After the battle of the Marne, in Analysis of the War Moves y’ Written for MM) °l° The United Press § 03) which Albre ht is not known to participated, he was reported to have been given command of the German Helgium. This post 1 for long. One year 1 from the kaiser the Pour Le Merite, on of the fall of Mau tid not he order. nivernary beug Albre German | hts se to command mite the Ameri tre that in to guard the road to Mets, the great fortress in Lorraine. Under Ameri Metz may prove to Maubeuge, and Al brecht may euffer the same fate be inflieted upon the French and I inh, which gained his feputation the destroyer of modern forts Albrecht 63 years old and widower. wife and his mother were born Austrian princesses, He belong to the ruling Nne the Wurtemburg dukes, but is the | non of the head of the Wurtemburg ducal Catholion the ne opp an * means he an hammering be Germany's does not THE SHIP Uhat led to the abandonment of fort ress warfare in the present struggle know it. 4 the substitution of trench fight They’re fine! Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy or constipated. 1, 1917-—~allied, tonnage Includes wh uld be diverted to oc on or elgh lion ton: the British army channel ¢ or submarine in 19 t m! mtraity ‘ Engliad Bunk by m 1918 n 191 ving on Jan sary 1, hips seized from German Total available January 1, be built Hurle WORK WHILE you SLEEP) clean with Cascarets. Take one or two night and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Wake up| feeling grand. Your head will be lelear, your tongue clean, breath |right, stomach sweet and your liver and thirty feet of bowels active Get a box at any drug store and straighten up. Stop the headaches bilious spell«, bad colds and bad days—Brighten up, Cheer up, Clean Jup! Mothers should give a whole caret to children when cross bilious, feverish or If tongue {s|make sacrifices immeasurably great |eosted they are harmless—never |r than doing without wheat bread gripe or sicken or beefsteak a day or a me But there are others who do com plain, Mainly the pampered jand pe who dwell in comfortab! and r be fore had to < e #t st re |straint upon their etites Before Jon the person inside rmany clain sunk ‘This is ne observe meations days without realize that ¢ fighting the Huns Mont nd whi ining “over there persons com pl boys PAINLESS nev ghte you nympathy waste any who complains be a few wheatless and werk Abraham Lin. ‘aune there |meatiesn meals a their lot with that of ntury ago ndred years ago today ine For breakfast, dinner and sup- per he had nothing but potatoes. It tess, porkless, candyless, coalless, lard less day for him Abe was 9 year her had brought uthern Indiana and not mach of a harvested that summ were plenty of potatoe: compare beefless, His into old that day the family the year before, crop had been r, Fut there Once m a some Abe nig ant while the father brought home wild gan When he didn't | the rest ate potatoes Meals began and ended with potatoes, and often with nothing else on the bill of fare DR. P. Ls AUSTIN, Pres. Be A , . ‘ot only w ney (potatoes) a 608 Third Ave., Cor. James! ine Lincoins had for dinner some I have severed my connection with times, but," says Ida M. Tarbell, in at the corner of Third and toes, pared and washed, were pas h larger and around instead of apples or oth fice at the corner of fruit when neighbors called even erm an well an fi and inapect our new Most reasonable. prices con- Is morning and Ate 'Em Kaw Austin and the National her “Life of Lincoln,” “raw pota and we Iinvit he sistent with high class dentistry then nor afterwa am Lincoln complain be didn’t have wheat bread, beef ak, pork chops, and plenty of in his coffee in those early days of bia Ste His trousers w tanned deer skin wnimals were for his head nother The family r candies out of tt imals, disease called PYO RBA, or Riggs’ Disease. If tre bled with sore and shrinking guma, all today and aes me, Consultation nd examination free, United Painless Dentists 608 Third Ave., Cor, Hours; #:30 a. m. to Sundays, 9 to 1 one Willett 363%. o wet to the right place, made of i The skins of wii made into paatindin and his feet by his James 8:00 p, m jo its own soap ani A be r srease of wild an- jo sure tal avaflable tonnage for North Atlantic ocean neutral and enemy | coastal or Gulf of Mex | | in ate potatoes. | SITU; ATION Gross Tons. January This 0 tonnage wan traffic, and includes a used by the r for traffi ships seized 600,000 a7 000 © extimate) . Brazil, Siam ) 8 71,750,000 000,000 tonnage over 10.0 00,000 tons 4 tons groan ‘DID ABRAHAM LINCOLNEVER HOOVERIZE? YOU BET HE DID Wt Senator Mason Says— The Lincotna did: t complain peer die be have kro rubbed » «um oducing a was > wasn't an complain about. Abe of corn grown in a gritter, 7 a re eal from which br baked, ‘The gritter was a plece of ond tin with nail holes all over it The firet few months of 1818 were tough ones for the Lincoln family After the summer's crop was in and ripe, the daily menu began ing leas monotonous, They they an having corn bread . at least ¢ a day, and on Sundays had wheat br to ear ry the on E, N. FURMAN WII Teach You the Shortest Way to a Good Position Northwestern Shorthand Reporting School Shorthand Civil Service Bookkeeping Advanced ‘ammar NIGHT SCHOOL Monday, Wednesday, Friday Arcade Bldg. — Elliott 1581. pre OF Bathe ii) ‘Polygamy im France? Never! _ Declares Noted JF emi mise ry editor of the Cle ed he land I 4to} fm On In Ger mpa 6 busbar were te Going reelf women. BDITOI HY MES. VICTOR MORGAN the Pr the war—what an after will it without wifehood and in polygamous marring Or tree love, an of Ger my urged to 1 of the puzzles being worked out now by Mme, Avril Ste. Croix, whose p . hold word in Fran Pankhurst’s is in & Adda such as the wom is already being as Mra h America Mme. Av of France by the leading feminint man named interior to f morals in th minister for out of white around after t nald ew only f the and wiping wlavery husbands to will epough war taker vril at her h in Paris she shelters war mothers Hut th th ere will un all the n de for Fra men real nd women more generation or which and gravey #0 has ard rebullding been both batt for the whole 1 Women to Work and Thousand thousands in Franc to that work schools in the they are mx and beginning to robed wid have ated them on There Fran south of atudy! where reconstru Mone. Avr ferent kind ar I went on to te fw 1 of a dif rk that these wom. en doing under her leadership “We bring traintoads of girts from the north of France, where the German soldiers are,” sald, “These ‘war mothers’ of boche babies, Some of them are only 12 and 13 years old. Some of them are nuns, taken from the French vents. “We have m large ch aide of the iris who are too ed for. The similar homes in Here they taught trades, that they can support These girls all want boche despite the fact that they received the most brutal treat ment from the boches themselves One girl salto me: “My child had « German father, but it is net a German baby And when it ts old enough to be told of its parentage, it will hate Germany } as I do. | teau just this French lines, where the 1 to travel are car are brought ar are no their babies babier. | Ought to Be Made Every Nervous, Anaemic Man, | Child. ‘Opinions of Dr. York Dr. Ph Wo Ferdinand to keep their | All Do Work There's nearcely a Vrar tal or MME.AVRIL DE STE. CROIX | wort r hi “Four women wasn't ar could enroll oni Parisian ing uffrage club that now numbers 150,000. ¢ French womanhood has had th in munitions factori ‘ons hospi and farms only by women’s hands, It demand 4 the govern ment beca itself @ strong Part ed a bank farming, ho d-training me economics ot whe added. suffrage ue in Franc tor I work women in working women have open where y put their sa ings ing m what they fter the war. weren't supposed And of bother they'd e they ing much get husbands. will—the ye Many of the wor keep their jobs. Econ: a new thing for the French and she'll not part with it than American busiess women “But most of the planning to get into of reconstruction work removing the German st |face of Fr “With diers maimed and the trenches, half the France will fall on her So they're themselves for it “And they have seen thelr woman. hood outraged by the Germans too many Um French women will er accept the further outrage of polygamy and free love.” n waid they'd mie Mberty is¢ woman any more! n will women were some branch | the task of in from the | many of Fr cris nol burden of women's | shoulders. bracing Harry Carey made a killing movie actor at the last week, but in \ "ue suicide. asa Mission theatre Japan he'd sound and man King, New Physician and Medical Author; James Francis Sullivan, formerly jan of Bellevue Hospital (Out- door Dept.) New York and the West- chester County Health Commissioner Wm. Hospital; Former R. Kerr, of the City of Chicago, and others. € Gentlemen 1 have often said I belle after the medicine of any kind. v place. However hard: paign of my life, without a chan I had been starting to court every that horrible tired feeling one Nuxa and drug an advert al friends, I so benefici ecanne 1 Iron, «i was advised to tr in the pure first loath to tr ndvising with my me The resul I m about it statement if y age, and I feel that up the strength and durance of one at my the world at have been up my und you a u cane, y te wo denire a remedy wh increase the age, should Wm. F Senator Masor without iron Anne n of anaemic ule; the fle ack’ tone; the memory fa weak, nervous ancholy Dr merly despondent and mel James Francis Physician of pital (Outdoor Dept.) and the Westchester Ce pital, said ‘Senator Ma commended on pending si nt on Nuxat |lic print, ‘There |men and what there i noth iron—Nuxated [ron the blood and helping the strength and ¢ » rapidly strenu business tition of the day.” Former Health Commissioner Wm. Ry Kerr, of the City of Chicago, says have taken Nuxated Iron myself experienced its health-giving and strength-building effect, and in the interest of the public welfare I feol it my duty to make known the eaults of its use. I am well past hy three-score years, and want to any that [ believe my own great physical activity is largely due to- I would neve! sed reme Iam no Thicago, Ml. r recommend that the doctor's al cam, a vacation, morning with I As a pioneer on, TI was at but after gave it a test in my own fends know > publish this years of ich will build power of en be known to ot describe. Yours very truly, . Mason, of Nuxated my own _ experienc 4 Iron 1 feel it is remedy that it ough in every hospital and pre by every physician in this RB Sauer, a Boston physict ed ordinarily n the cas f T would » not to mention it myself and with most those who wish quick! their strength, pe will find it a'r wonderfully eff ss in my duty L have taken V t to my. patie surprising results NoOTK Nuxate nt whi INCOME TAX PUZZLES The Bb Que Him Star’s “Income Tar” Will Anewer Your Mail Them to litor tions of P ould like to kn this tax. A.—As the boy of age and is inde . mone out. spending must pa in 0 pendent pees si pen if his 0, However, nt bim head of t tax purposes a emption of $2,000 and would have ne tax to pay, altho he must go on reoey ord as such by filing the proper statement on Form 10XOA. BRITISH KEEPING EYE ON RUMANIAN AFFAIRS BY LOWELL MELLETT United Pr Correspondent LONDON, Feb. 12.—How Rumania will accept the reported Teutonic ul- timatum, which was to have expired EC was the question that oc ed British offictaldom today. st reports from the provisional at Jassy were that no new t has been formed to succeed er Bratiano’s cninistry, which resigned Friday, after a rapid suc cession of meetings. The ultimatum, which is said to e been issued by Field Marshal kenzen on Wednesday, provided at Rumania must begin peace ne tiations within four days, Mean. time, the armistice providing cemmsae tion of hostilities has expired. incom: if his folks he then becomes family for income Former United States Senator Mason, Pioneer jin Pure Food and Drugs Legislation, Father of Rural Free Delivery Systei Says Nuxated Iron Increased His Power and Endur- ance so Much, That He Feels It Known to Run-Down, From the Congressional Direc- tory published by G ernment—"Wm. Bp on, S t 1 was elected to in 1887, to the defeated 2 1892 eted Sen 5th Con- gress 1897 t Senator now Con State 0! Mason’s championship especially f pure ation by Senator Mason rmended above , enaful and entirely sath It ls dispensed by Pharmacy and all good druggists, refund your money does y ato manufacturers guaran purchaser they will wi Drug Co, Bartell Drug Co, Swift's 4 is entitled to an exe