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The latest is brought business, by unnamed, are quoted on Every once in so often somebody that has something to do with ship: —either Hurley or Piez or a subordinate with a threat to labor, promising “dra horrible things in the case of tie a strike THE SEATTLE STAR is reported as coming thru measures” some small strike somewhere, forth “Emergency Fleet officials,” STAR—SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1918. PAGE 6 What do the actually did go in for an utterance of that words “drastic measure mean, ort and all sorts of set for bloody riot Baltimore. in connection anyway? with issued vein Hurley the late lamented Sparrows Point carpenters’ strike, and had the stage all until the president a of 185 caulkers, and ea ap ied aid the iron hand clear and definite statement, appealing to labor in a human Why all this waving the red flag in the face of patriotic American .'. 1 D. IX’s.". ‘Telegraph News Service of the Entered at Seattle, mail out of city year ash, Postoffice $2.50 Save a quarte ¢ your quarters nele Sam buy bull with sand on tobacco?” The idea! —_ -y | * (yf j | BY G. CHARLES HODGES He in a liberal statesman of first # Ly | Of Washington College | rank H | Authority on Par Bast Affairs | p2usron Tahiti whe recalled from ted Press Amsectation To heep 1 in the war, the | France, where he repre Nip : Greetings: Today's payday. How] United States has had to supply ' t has mika Second-Class Ma many stamps are you buyh | her as well os the rest of the | ire tha, $1.15: ¢ montha, $2.00 eee workd | bs . hat 20e a month Francia 0400 -tbenindve In return, America has asked | days Okuma's war He pre hon | took the a f Kato e the Main €08, Private! ave. NW. says this happened in| Pacitio’ elses er gg “4 | boomerang of Jepan’s 1916 demands his family 1 " m a . " aise ——————l | enn nights, Mothe Ave esp dith persuasion. | Frankness Makes Appeal aaathene War, aies Japan is making every effort | The nar of thin exforelmr You'll uy qo to have this lifted or modified. | | minister tant N shan eheetes ah vay sce ti agtate 9+ gai gee Therein lies the answer to the only is 1 ‘ nin Jap oe tnege on rest, help ad it wet. | wlniment of Viscount Ishil as polite aligne ultivate the habit of saving. Nippon's new ambassador to the the of t t a HEAR AnOUT THE WAR WE'RE ted States. { echt gove ) , peencenaneiciilll HAVING? growth and prestige have inter of for f t And now let us hear from the Se.| «dvarfoed bly since the out J caliber that he has bee 4 attle Dally Bulletin, Says Thursday's break of the wor, She ha» assumed represent insure o duty of the Far Kast. Her! | The « Japar F “Mayor of Seattlo—tItiram ©. Gill rteries are swelling with | mizion to t antry ta “Chairman Finance Committees of | Kolden corpuscles. She's become, | Ine ue to ond -visioned Councii—Will H. Hanna.” with ease, the shipping mistress of statemmanship “ee Pucifi he's gained a great} Of a thoro! ) STILL, MeADOOING nt lost practically nothing by Baron Ishil’s frar Leaving aside all Jokes and fan, | *, confilet Src se these I wish I'd did what MeAdone, Ipping iy today her greatest pos | painted of the mun To him I'll have to lift my Hd— | “b!6 contribution to America and comen out of the mili let 1 could not do what MeAdid. er allied friends—the seven-league Bown iy ote of war | made a at n the kiddi their lungs. don’t you know? This is the sort of thing to eternity— ly to cut his throat— of the victim— lic do so in sections set in reason that he may want. xer uprising. ed him as follows: will be given. This Makes Us Mad Editor The Star: Some people ask, “Why doesn't Hoover or Gets the Credit A Star subscriber of German birth has written to the| 1307 Sevewth Ave, Neer Untem St. SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE oF NiEWwSrarens a day for Thrift Stamps “When you come upon the enemy * No prisoners will be taken. the Huns under their king, Attilla, a thousand years ago, a name for themselves which is still a mighty tradi- and story, so may the name of Germany in China be Kept alive thru you in such wise that no Chinese will ever * # Why conserve on the unnecessary things of life when it is such pleasure to blow the nasty filth in ple’s faces, and see them dodge as tobacco juice rted around. : ; ' By all means, conserve on the necessaries of life people go hungry; but conserve on tobacco? s go hungry and empty their h pennies to send to the soldiers for tobacco to burn. since they have the habit, it’s such pleasure to have stench arise, and for other people to breathe the filth ete’ Suppose it does injure their health and them of all decency toward others, why should they for the rights of others, when it’s such a pleasure to Sc A. M. S., Sawtelle. that makes us mad! | If the writer of this letter had to live for weeks at) T a) time in a dug-out, wade thru mud knee-deep, never know- A when a bursting shell or a sniper’s bullet might send| - - | \ Ce J If he had to charge thru smoke and barbed wire en- flements or face a howling boche with a trench knife he had to carry his best friend, a shattered, bleed Temnant of what was once a man, to the nearest Red relief station, and had to listen time after he ee pleadings for a cigaret or something to smoke) to take the edge off the terrible soul and body racking Perhaps the writer of this letter would display a little judgment and have a little more of the well known) Z of human kindness in his system. "~~ Our experience has been that the men who smoke aside for them, And if he wants to smoke on the streets or at his that is his own particular business, and we doubt ‘@ny woman or any man ever gets smoke in his or her unless it is deliberately invited. We never knew anybody who was unable to get away tobacco smoke, and we never heard a man refuse to ' smoking if a woman asked him. The majority of women in this day and age do not! to a man’s smoking, and if a man has no worse vice ape n smoking his wife has much for which to be thankful. | Give the soldier cigarets or tobacco or anything else He’s going thru enough in the trenches to earn and de-| seded by Abe Martin's report that in anything he desires that will make him no less a If our correspondent craves a good job of reforming, him find something actually worth while. On July 27, 1900, he addressed his troops at Bremer- n, just before they sailed for China, to help quell the The Norddeutsche Zeitung on the following day re- Again attempt to even look askance at a German.” To Sell Out the Hyphen The proposed trade boycott of Germany, after the war, impossible proposition, but er bill, just unanimously passed by the senate, is an entirely different matter, both as to prospects and effective- be an unsound, an May Palm vings banks! sent from ~ that the time to . 1 re ¢ 4 the ¢ ade more here It feels to go won ‘ iow Stepping up the ow uld be the rescue of Highway in a toy nocracy ,from Germany's War regalia @nd wt } Pass a real U. 8 f America were to show relu no quar- ag « what * probable the Kussiang would turr pe The Sammy thinks to the Germans for The When it passes. | jb SAME WITH US : ever! Builds Feverishty “You give us ships and we'll give Dear EB. D. K: Is khaki a cloth or ar } you steel,” says Uncle Sa: a color? I have asked a hundred!" “When Nippon seemed inclined to People, and the vote is 6060. |bem and haw, we declared an om- barko on ‘steel and other supplies ad | vital to Japan's growth L SAY so New, the ‘Tekio goversmndnt ‘hes next door said to Vincount Ishii, her moet cap-, always got some|abie and adroit statesman, “Vis-| body else by the ne count, you go and talk this matter Jover with Uncle Sam and let's get | 5 | it ntraightened out.” } > ome shington The new envoy from the mikado | faces a hard task Cleared Up Sores 7 t place of Sato, re circles nay-—be. | ot b wuccensful n of America’s ion needed by Nip- The new ambanna « with Secretary | f Be eared up chal-| lengir ¢ sony | me expect ave (ates anese ambassador to the at the seas from a | ter: Leeeecccovceccccccccscccccooce ° . rs KEW BRAND EVERY Day! - : By J. W. Written for ca's po The old newspaper office Joke! with the tu about the roller towel that fell on the satified of patience an anding Amer! Viscount Kikujire Ishii, new Jap United States, and wife (above) and daugh Analysis of the War Moves T. Mason -:- The United Press e ° by the new move t " { der acy exclusty floor and broke In two is now super rograd to seek an agree | America ne is t k at the United States con: | internatic roblema un the East one of these towels went an, 5 of dip prejudices 10,000 miles without » puncture This ‘:. the first evidence the Bol and more becoming appar ims ral nheviki have given of trustfulnens | ont t America n rescue THE COUNTERFEIT toward any foreign nation. It may! mocracy ‘The other day we be the beginning of the end of Mus er e Germans t mpt Saw a young | sla’s present {wolation, The peril * into starting a pre | Flapper strutting | which the Russian plieve would major offensive this spring | Up the atreet exist for them thru Japanese in. | bave b | | in one ef is forcing the Bol-| The Germans have ceased to en We wonder how that impatience t The chief concern of all the allie “OK RELEE FROM == EONSTPATN Get Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That is the joyful cry of thousands Rut mpatient di must ne indebted to ¢ wed to be-| arises to strike y for free-| fore ever LETTERS FROM SOLDIERS the From Sammies New spr e the need for im. | n exten ‘e raid T Bditor objecting to the name “Hun” as applied to Teuton i gg Ph _ It In or y thru ne. | aband ing trenc ; According to reports, the kaiser, too, objects to “Hun” run Sebete, hens vie ip ares ig by anade a term of reproach leveled at his troops by the rest of All over the f gr - rs nl staff world ever since the war began. pt lat tor. 1 yt mpre that the German m For many years the German socialists used the word Weaeeine- Wc watts understanding with the ee eau, un” in attacking the militarists, but old Kaiser Bill him- Doesn't he crawl into a bie mcg goers gia Pt) with larg if gave us all the original hunch. The real article? of Ruarian interests or not. In reality Hindent The Star Will Gladly Publish Interesting Communications are and Germans be since Dr. Edwards produced Olive) _, is Tablets, the substitute for calomel. (This lctter was written. by J. Ki.) «tee! stened to This Palmer bill, authorizing the sale of all enemy PB po mos A igioraeen 3 Physician Douglas, former Beattie and Alsska| tho 5 started a $ ‘, . Tes ie” wlan satin | for years and calomel’s old-time . You may i wty in this country, is the first great step toward UD- | enemy, discovered the formula for Olive ave. V iden of the epeed at whick ig German influence and interests in America. It fits|Tablets while treating patients for|! n training camp at) we ed when I tell you that this into the general crusade for elimination of the German chronic consti ation and torpid livers, tee nder, filled with water, left language, products and social and political organizations. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do not : e and came floating up past of peace. P The Palmer measure does not interfere with the prop- _ erty of Germans or Austrians living in this country. _ erty holding is one me erican citizens. hen. law. We have not yet got to hating Germar to calmly deciding that her influence iberately taking steps to cut it out. i ities that Germany has fully earned by her war polic | .and it is a penalty which she must pay thru the long y: We cannot begin to raise all the crops that are | We must augment the in- dustrial forces we have with men and money if we are going to obtain the food which is necessary to win the Over 500,000 men have left farms to join our Over 2,000,000 men have been drawn The government will find it necessary, I believe, to list all these men who are able to do farm work and demand that they return to It has been suggested that the farmers in the cantonments be furloughed, provided they do farm work,—By John M. Baer, Farmer's Nonpartisan Con- needed in the next crop year. war. army and navy. from farms into war industries. the farms. gressman. bad It is one of the | ns of causing such to become good But it is going to be a cold day for the The German-American this, that or the other ing is going to be made disreputable, by public opinion , but we and contain calomel, but ahealing, soothing °°"" eached up fav r ive and pulled vegetable laxative, the Just as you would are | No griping is the “keynote” of these)! lke the country here much better catet n ttle _sugar-coated, olive-colored tab. | tan the border lr mu Paibhor 8. They cause the bowels and liver to Am going to < lay and) thay H act normally, They never force them the aff I » cram ‘om ‘ : vd sgesMbbe to unnatural action, plicated Here is a sample 1 am ongnt sabh rage psricees ain when If you have a “dark brown mouth”—a| out for a spin up over the lines,| We had dropped 3,000 feet and no bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick | trav 150 miles per hour, I have|sign of a stop. He began and Prop, headache-torpid liver and are consti- gun, muzzle velocity of | straightened her out at 60d ‘ OP- pated, you'll find quick, sure and only| bullets 2.460 feet per second. Along on nee leasant results from one or two little| comes the festive Hun, joyriding n we “wore aaliiie along ‘on thy ir. Edwards’ Olive Tablets at bedtime. | past at 180 miles. 1 © him at el. He took the ship back up and Thousands take one or two every| 200 yards and must figure how to stood her on one wing, and we elt night just to keep right. Try them.| pot him. No guessing goos. ‘There cled around and around o _ 10c and 25c per box, All druggists. | iw 1 certain spot ahead of him that... Ae et ee eee Pe wl _____ | I must shoot at. When the planes| "li 1 was #0 dizzy that I could not are flying at different angles, or one | %** | is diving, Hun's range ise He kept it up for minutes, and I weat out with one of our crack | then got tired and camé in, 1 was | fliers Tueaday. When we atarted he|# sick that I could hardly walk. 1 | | told me, “I am going to pull some | hd to He down for three hours, then | tunts, When you get enough, raise| they sent me back up, but we did| your hand and I will come down,"| Ret do any trick I do not want ™ T waid to myself, “If 1 raise my hand| PY more of that stuff le I never will get to come up again.”| rep & line when youvean, I may Away we went and he pulled two dT may be here lI ee vertical banks before we were 60 sabe?" Love to| || “Order Your Easter | tn vie ne een Then. he| Hl and o kiss to Tommy from | | . ” zoomed” up and we climbed to 4,000 BARL | Suit Now feet, turned her -nose dawn. and’ we | dror engine running full ‘speed J, J. Constantine, aged 31, died| 425 UNION ST. | I was in the front seat, strapped | Thursday night. He will be buried} |{p. TET had not been T would have| Sunday afternoon at 4 from the I floated eff into mp There was a! terworth chapel, | gotiats | the Pacific the ta F ot food cc that a it notice. cube beside the you ¥ in « sugar out of ten | | three or fou | more or lem In most cubes are few dishes an a 1 cur | or rittt While this seems to be a small waste, If it is prevalent over the entire country the waste must be enormous. JOHN C, SMITH Kingston ' can eanily b U. S. WILL NEVER STAND FOR LASOR CONSCRIPTION IN INTEREST OF PROFITEERS What Japam lexpects im U. S, “coments OF CAMP LEWIS LIFE He has laid th | Japanese: Amer tente of 1917 men of both exforeign mir has the unus | atatesman tion work be jing of our wt | Editor's Mail | | WASTING SUGAR Miter The Bt . waste ur « vd to mplll) w coffee Into the saucers. | restaurants three small| people use over two, é a great mar Were this.sugar ‘ The president has iterated and reiterated his entiments in re- gard to labor and the winning of the war. The president realizes that if the world is to be made safe for democracy the United States is a mighty good pl to begin keeping it safe. . What is ‘s ant by Sirastie bal Wo ” is the old and flabby gas-bag bugaboo of labor conseription in the interests of profit that Americans have, and never will stand for. labor? do not, never 14 The future or of Over thegphone: “Did we hit the barn?” Podserver; “1 don't know. It’s not there any more, Walt handling | % * Operation to Resign Position—Has Gained 10 Pounds “T am indeed glad ancey contract department of the Atlanta said N. M preciate Jost it, and 1 man in Georgia today and woman in this office general man: ticed the tion and is talking many of my friends are tal@ng lac, and my comp Tantae | Drup ative—Adver If you want a rellable watch, go! Next to Liberty Theatre, Advertisement. | to Haynes. ain 149 W SUPERINTENDENT OF TELEPHONE CO. | NOW A WELL MAN Y Telephone and Telegraph Co., At Have not their sufferings appeased } nta, Ga., when the repre | ‘The Hohenzollern pride?” | tative, in response to an invita-| “Tut, tut! such little things must be 1 from Mr. Yancey, entered his That I should win MY victory.” offices Continuing, Mr. Yancey | t said | ‘Our ships now rotting day and night { I have been Intending to call you| Once sailed on every sea, ; up for some time and tell you how| And yet you tell us that we fight j *| grateful I am for what Tanlac «| To make the ocean free?” ; «| done for me, as I think it is some-| “Ah, yes, our U-boats, too,” said he, ve thing every one should know about | “Are helping in MY victory.” : I had been in very poor hi for over two years “Our colonies are gone and none : aKO my condition Are left us far or near, i and my suffering so in that I The place you promised in the sun : practical ave u i he and pre Is blighting us each year.” : pared to resign my posit i our “Well, let us all rejoice,” said he, erwent an operat which seemed “That Gott has given us victory.” » do me a je good, but after a short tine, I began to decline and “We once were proud of German trade, Just’ went from bad to w Which brought the land delight; I was oper on for gall stones Now what we send, as German-made, bu y four this was not my Are Blood and Schrecklichkeit.” troubl My principal trouble was in| “And necessary both,” said he, my kidneys and bladder, and for “To win a German victory.” ij months I would have to get up at 2 1 houre of the night and never| “Our paper clothes are wet with blood, f L vf what it was to get a good Our black bread wet with tears, 3 nights rest My d jon was poor, | Our German word is smirched with mud I hae diy any appetite, I was For years and years and years.” feverish and nervous most of the “Well, wh n you expect?” said he, 1 Ume and could hardly muster up “I tell you it is victory.” enough energy to attend to my du nd no medicine did me any | “We've used all forms of vice there are; Bite’ winnie | “We've murdered and we've maimed; wethie ndition when I And thru the world and wide and far . wan taking uc. 1 have taken Shall Germany be ashamed.” four bottles, have gained ten pounds “Oh, yes, but shame {s sweet,” said he, PY nde clothes are too tight on “When it is mixed with victory.” Fa me. bed at night I leop and wake up in! But what good comes?" again the wail F the morn and refreshed Of Little Peterkin ly app returned and ever They took the Peterkin to jail Le 18 to agree with me about s under rection of a special Tanlae repr FREE DOCTOR Ex-Government FL ser at change in my condi: | ybody ~ LITTLE PETERKIN PRATTLES ON (Continuation of Southey’s Fameus Poem) “But what good comes of it at last?’ Quoth Little Peterkin The kaiser stared and looked aghast, Then answered with a grin: “What good? What good? Why, don’t you see It is a famous victory!" ured to dine on sweets and fruits And sausage cooked in lard. Now all my foods are substitutes Apportioned by a card.” “Your hunger doesn't hurt,” said he, — | ‘As long as I have victory.” you called,” manager of the Failed; Prepared “The blind, the crippled, the diseased, The millions who have died, And rudely thrust him in | “Rot there, du Schafskopf, till you see It is a famous victory! ht, 1918 the Newspaper Enterprise Association) SHANGHAI RESTAURANTS {Phone Hlifott 2247 or Main 3086 for Chop Suey, Noodles, Chow Mein and all Chinese Dishes Served Hot at your Home. Quick Delivery. VOur Chop Suey and Noodles have become famous, Bring your family or friends and try our excellent Sunday Chicken Dinner and Turkey Dinner, 106 Second Ave. S. Near Yesler Way New Branch 711 Pike St. knows how alth until s I'm the Every man from the has no by (Copyr on down, in the building Tanlac. Eve an » on n to health,” ttle by Bartell the personal di nt ngratulating 4 aut lin s ement, | Phystetan