The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1918, Page 6

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ec nee THE SEATTLE STAR 1807 Revemth Ave. Near MEMBER OF SCRIPTS NONTHWHST LEAGUE OF NEWSrAPENs jon St. Telegraph News Service of (he United Press Association s Matter Entered at Seattin Wash, Postoffice a Second-C By mail, ovt of city $1.15; 6 months, $2.10;) year, $4 hy « a month Main 00. I'rivate . If you knew that a Liberty Bond would save the life of your boy in France, would you buy one? It may be your son who will perish if the bonds are not all sub seribed. Can you afford to take the chance? © “strenuous citizen” in the mayor’s chair—one who ap- ‘ tly knows how to get things done. Mayor Hanson, _ Many distinct results. And today, the city is assured of steam train service to sleep on the job. He refused to let Seattle's request shipping board and the railroad bureau at the national ital were kept jumping and wondering what next the blame to Secretary McAdoo if the latter would not espond to the emergency. With the same characteristic energy, the mayor tackled | Chinese gambling situation yesterday-—and put the fear pf rtation into the hearts of some of them. The same lay, he got the council to relieve Engineer Thomson from) cilmanic duties for expert investigation of various | sites. The mayor is evidently tackling the power situation with the same disregard for red tape as he d in the steam train proposition. He is getting Thomson his regular councilmanic salary of $8 a day to give expert rin g work, for which he usually gets $25 to $50 ‘Good work, Mayor Hanson. Keep it up. “Pedestrians have right of way,” says Judge Jurey, in recent ruling. Yes, but you can’t argue the point when one of those aggressive little Fords of one of those huge seven-passenger Packards dash at you. sy-Going Patriotism that to all intents and appearances is the real thing, it that does not appear to good advantage when contrasted a as it really is. oe pertieslar brand takes growth in moving picture theatres, when the flag is flashed on the screen, wt the vision. It consists of cheers and noise, and much forgetfulness : patriotism is rarely effective, to say the least. It is first to be manifest at the presence and deeds of the heroes that do things, but it is the last to do things 4 Tt likes to see the boys in action, the flag unfurled; it ously applauds the utterances of orators, it buys bonds ad stamps in a careless, good-natured way, its intentions re of the best, but— Ts it real, serious, downright patriotism, vitally inter- in the outcome of the paramount issues that are con- ng the nation? Tt is to be feared that it is not. _ This, in a way, is no reflection on the American people. ‘They are schooled in ways of ease. They cannot fully com- ‘1 nd that mercilessness and terror and brutality are nt, and at their door. They are of a kindly and com- temperament, and find it hard to believe that the world is not so. They lag, while a brutal, hard, , highly efficient foe strikes. few Americans only are yet awake to danger, These working. The remainder cheer the flag in the movie uses, and wait for the war to end. Those Hoquiam men who masqueraded as dry squad officers to raid the steamer Willamette of 40 cases of whisky, must have thought they were giving a good presentation of “Within the Law.” Clean Up! Paint Up! Remember now your back yards in the days of your prosperity, before the tin cans pile high, and you shall say of the mass of rubbish: “I have no pleasure in it.” In the beginning, Man created the rubbish and con- fasion, and the dirt was without form and void, and junk was over the face of his lot. And the committee from the Seattle Chamber of to Investigate Co lotbed of Anti: Miner John Rival's wife list. Three more raps—no imagina- Hike a tripha: 6 mine stood there excited * the nfine—" he gasped. “Number six—somebody threw a stick of dynamite in the shaft— ome German spy, they sald—" The woman had quit listening andy the ttle The city may well congratulate itself on having aj ™ door in office less than a month, has already brought about) the nd was penned in trapped with 600 Locked in a dead-end no They'd live a whit le In agony—gaaping | for shipyard workers, which it had been trying to get for | Fithos / Months. This came about directly because of Mayor Han-| other miners son's activity. He refused to let the Washington authorities | ene thru a lot of red tape. He kept the wires hot, and |” rumors flashed all the stories of suspects, She took a shaw! from the back! chair and ran Other women were coming out.| t or would do to bring to the city’s and then to the na-| ’s attention the condition of inadequate transportation, | ot h was slowing up and hurting war work here. The | out or had even threatened a public proclamation, laying | cane-bottomed each other and started for the min and walt-—fo . UAL the rescue) ear the shaft and men—-Diack faced | most of them above-dencribed mine disaater | every | miner's wife in the rich southern Il | nols coal district has lived thru it.| Not once—every day! The whole district “Nerves” you might call fe in a state! I came down here to find out WHY this section is the hotbed of | anti-German agitation tn the United the mobs have tarred pro-Ger-| ville union. The ‘That's why mobs go about| miner, who's ready to “go a little w almost nightly making suspects kiss) This is a the flag and sign loyalty cards. Thats why beaten—why a woman was carried up and down Benton astride a rail here is a kind of patriotism current in the United} Means Death to Them the first lyneh war-—bringing & Governor Lowden special discussion by President Wii son and his cabinet of the urgent) STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1918, PAGE 6 IPRO-GERMAN SUSPECTS, GET OUT! ‘THIS IS THE WARTIME SPIRIT OF THE ILLINOIS COAL MINERS thru| | George Robertson, Maryville miner, leaving for work, i Mrs. Fornero is the wif descent. Many of the miners are foreign born, but a large percentage of have been, them are naturalised Americans and many own their homes. of need for the new Iegisiation for deal ing with pro-Germans ProGermaniam, to these miners, means death——slow, terrible death. 1t means the only thing on earth they fear: being TRAPPED in one of the tunnels leading out from the bottom of the black shafts, The miners hate that word TRAPPED. | THEY FEAR PRO-GERMANS uit What Loyalist | hal i | 4 fear it. So do the miners’ wives) terrible thing we all are afraid of.”) m)) Mobs Have Done In the last two months mobs in |) the southern Iinola cout fields have qt | we ED 124 persons to kine }{ the American flag and pledge }{ their loyalty } D und feather pa 7 }} Persons, including 4 mir Rosey of |) and beaten weveral Editor of { CHASED three proGerman sue ( pects away and aumed many )| ‘ |} others to leave by warnings } BHOT three persons, one man |) dying from hin wounds» | |) CARRIED woman thru |} mtreets of yon a ra ‘ | \{ Ly? suspected Ger: }| ( |} man agent ) RAR AR ARAN nannnnercnnd The women don't knock when they 1 acroms to other's homes Nilsers | | Nothing said ats they just don't | it was the came verywhere—st OMISTVELION FAwardaville, Benton, Staunton,| I Ps Maryville, all thru the district > very time the warning whistle FRECH OCS blows, it strikes terror into our! MW hearts,” said Mra, Lily Fornero, Il Maryville miner's wite | Don't Trost ‘Hm A booklet of 100 Conservation Recipes showing Ee boon gs I eggt bsheeah agers how to use Wheat substitutes and cereals success- buckets on their arma, start for the yawning mouth of the mine to go ff fully in baking and cooking. Seventy of the recipes down the black shaft in a litte cable A] have been prepared and tested by Mrs. Swezy; the car, the wor wateh them out of HH balance of them have been sélected by her and may miqhe—wentering end hoping be depended upon to give excellent results. “We're willing to take our chances : b on top.” Will Dorvae, miner, put it.| fj This booklet will prove to be a great aid to every woman who does any baking or cooking during war | times. The booklet is neatly printed, cover in four colors, recipes carefully arranged and indexed. As there has been prepared a limited number of f t these booklets, requests will be filled in the order they are received. The booklet can be obtained absolutely free and will be sent postpaid upon a , written request addressed to “put down there underground you haven't got a chance, Some German plotter could kil! as high as 600 men at a time by just blowing in one shaft, and it would be simple to do Buch canes are dealt with by the [if in | Dynamite has been found in the homes of some suxpects. Brexia An tonece!, Staunton miner, was turned | f over to federal authorities on Lib-| i ° erty Day, after his wife, loyal Amer-| [fl AtbersBros. Co. fean, had told of threats he made '°. and of dynamite stored in their Publicity Department home But there ts « feeling widespread) [if 2 ‘ and his| among the miners that the authori Arctic Building rf baby at the gate to see him off. ties CAN'T BE LOOKED TO FOR, f Seattle amen Fornero, president of the Mary-| ’ROTECTION. Most proGerman is Floyd Koch, 4, son of another) suspects are NOT arrested. So is bucket.” | crowds go out to teach suspects that in « native of Lilinols, of Scotch | “no fanny buriness goes,” | they'd be better off somewhere cise | Some suapects—the miners will | tell you this—are probably loyal and the miners’ children. | But if a man MIGHT be « German Mrs, Rival told me that when) agent, that's enough. I knocked at her door she expected) Maybe you're right, and maybe to see the muddy mine boy with the! you're not, but we don't trust you, news of a disaster See ta” ty tap aeeeieen ihee 1 ocked ie vd why Md an n 7 ater ler eee @ OMISTAR WANT ADS BRI In the few moments between those raps I lived thru the whole ‘Telephone calls for this booklet will not be considered. Your lady friends may obtain copies as de- scribed above, and that goddess of liberty shown, and troops move silently | "". The city and state are plumb fall of poets some more limericks on Bill the Hun and his pals. Winner of the contest, which closes today, will be announced this week, after “Starshell” gets a chance to read ali the mall. . in the Hindenburg line, And to squelch it our Sammies do “Over there’ that they will, And they'll drive Kaiser Bilt To the end of the na n'a bread Une. 104 James at. The kaiser and his son Thought they had the battle won And were on their way Along comes Uncle » you perish.” 4114 Ashworth ave. “Me und Gott a bright spot And in the « . take it from me, Some time hoe The one thing that Commerce said: “Let it be clean,” and it shall be clean, | it is good. shack be rebuilt, and the ways of the streets shine, and | Gust and dried branches go up in smoke.” And it shall be! even so. | And the end of the week shall be the first new day. Trouble with the restaurant men is that they don’t Hooverize their price lists. POCOCCOO SOOO OO OOOO OOEOLOOODOCCOOOOLS Analysis of the War Moves}! », Written for °.° The United Pres: test the morale of the American | tant raiding expeditions, but are pre froops in France has had results| served for offensive purposes in ma. that must prove highly disconcerting | jor operations or for important ex to the German general staff | perimental work he employment There can be no doubt but that|of these “shock troops” against the the enemy thrusts against the Amer.| Americans can have been for no jean trenches in the St. Mihiel sec-| Other purpowe than to provide infor tor have been for the purpose of per-| mation for Hindenburg as to the con. mitting Hindenburg to determine the| duct of the American troops when fighting qualities of Gen. Pershing’s |4ttacked by the best offensive units forces. It is now essential for Hin-|in the kaiser'’s army | denburg to know with fair exactitude| A® a result of these encounters how the Americans are capable of |instructions must certainly — be fighting because American units are | ssued to German commanders to ex. beginning to arrive in support of the|ercise great caution and take no Uritish lines protecting the roads to | chance with American troops. There ihe channel ports, jis no room to doubt but that the Hindenburg therefore unquestion-| German shock troops were over. whelmed in the hand-to-hand engag nbly ordered test attacks to be devel- oped against the trenches held ex-|™ents with the Americans and that siusively by Americans in eastern| the assaults of these picked soldiers France #0 that German commanders | °f the kaiser against the American Gould be instructed what to do when|tTenches were broken down without encountering Americans in Picardy | “fficulty. and Flanders. Had the Germans not retreated to their trenches they would have been Americans Showed Them annihilated by the individual rifle This is why “shock troops” were| work of the Americans. timed by the Germans, hock | ‘There is every reason for America troops” are the mort highly trained | to feel satisfied with the outcome of and dependable soldiers in the Ger-|the first real test between Hinden-| jaan army. burg’s and Pershing’s men, Von Hindenburg’s first atternpt 4 They are not wasted on unimpor 13 33rd Ave. 8. : | And Seattle shall behold the cleanliness, and see that! re kaiser once thought that both And Seattle shall say: “Let the yard be clean, and the | Ana England were in « dead trance Imits he mistook kick him each day in the A nmall boy one time aaw a pie, And said he would eat It or die. Just like Bill, Uniforms, Piece Dresses lored Suits. 425 Union St. Characterizes every transactic jed every cour teey conaistent with sound busls Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited. Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND All either could do was to try. MRS. RILEY W. McCoy, Terry Ave. A Hun who lived {n Calcutta Thought “Kultur” 4 look well on his ahutta. He had printed Ku ’ Von Hinderburg and Mill, the Kaleer,| Knocked him heels over bead tn the Sajd Belgium was « good “We'll rule the whol But the Yankees said, “Can it! By heck, wo will soon put you wiser.” gutta. Cc. X. NICOULIN, 2526 32nd Ave. § cee ‘The kaiser's alr castles no fine. When he planned that in Paris he'd dine, All turned Into air When our Sammies got there, And dug into Von Hindenburg's line. WILMA BAILEY, 1506 W. 64th St. eee There's a people in Hurope called Hone | Fighting Paria with wonderful guns. Rut I'll aay for the kaiser He had better get wiser For the Sammies are not there for fun | | | | | Age 14 CORYELL, 1423% Third Ave. . | | | | | | . | There once was a dachshund so bold | Who thought the bulldog he could hold But the French poodie, too Gave him all he could do. And the hound dawg his finish soon told SARA G. BOWMAN | 1006 Taft St, Port Townsend. see This note is to make the kaiser y tis cub, and Von Hindenburg wiser When they're 4 in the xlime, They'll have a hell of a time The Sammies are coming, good-bye, sir C.D, CRICHTON, 4907 Rainier Ave. cee | Don Quixote, a dear, muddled knight, Fought windmills w all bis poor might; But William the Is @ far bigger nut, For he thinks he alone is just right MRS. J. J. CHISHOLM, | Fall City. . utt | ee | There's a nation of beasts called the Hun, Who'll be sorry this fight they be gun A total eclipse Would not be amiss. | As their glorified place in the sun H. L. HULL, 3316 Fuhrman Ave. eee AYE, AYE, SIR! |The charming young niece of a banker, Went to sleep on his yacht while at anchor; She awoke with dismay To hear the mate say “Let's hoist up the top sheet and spanker.” SHANGHAIED. see THE SPOKA’ THAT LAID 4 ED BIDDY HEN SHOULD s8U TUTED FOR THE KAGL A NATIO BIRD, eee Editor B.D. K: If a woman geta $4,000 when her husband gets shot, does she get $2,000 when he wets half#hot? “WORRTED.” 4 rolling-pin, | tuberculosis in from five to six) reet sunlight and even diffused day Ld fight will do much to disinfect clotn-| Delivery Systenp | ing or other articles that may need ? such disinfection. j= The home and its contents should e | be exposed to direct sunlight for at ‘Ss | least a number of hours every day | | ting out the nlight in a dangerous! . | practice. tor germ iife thrives bear(Enereased His Power and | safety and afterwards again exposed Jentire satinfacti | are too heavy and too thick to allow! New York Physician and Medical | of the penetration of the ome rays, Author; Dr. James Francis Sulli- jee ial had? bkcue Gxhomroenl: 3 hysician of Belle- thereof that nay harbor dangerous} Van, formerly Phy germs. | vue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.) |son suffering from fever. In tti#|mon without fron. Pallor means anemia bo lthe strenu \ Congres: ‘ pars in any branch of the service;|jiusiness competition of the day.” Iron is absolutely necessary to ogress 18 168). Setenans Dea Second—Because working in a} wm. R. Kerr, of the City of Chi ni ng tissue. ithou 120: - ui ter how much or what shipyard, helping the shipping board and I could live in safety in a free| p Vit cause of their fathers, mothers, sis.| ordinary weight. She usually gets two flatiroms andj band stand has been erected in its midst. who wi bs Direct sunlight kille the germs of | houre when they are in a thin layer! of sputum. Dif-| fused daylight will kill them in sev eral days, Many other germs are in Y Y, ewe jenn resistant than %, ° J : those of tuberculo tion, Father sis, Therefore di , € and to good daylight for as many! hours every day as possible, Shut | In semi darkness. ] Articles of clothing that may need | Endurance so Much, Gisinfection can first be placed in That He Feels It Ought the strong sunlight for a day, then cleaned by any regular means with to Be Made Known to to sunlight tor an additional period! Every Nervous, Run- of from five to ten houre. Buch Geintection shoud. tendce the ac down, Anaemic Man, ticles entirely safe for future use Woman and Child. Mattresses, pillows and rugs, how Site "auintsinn” “fuese’“Stdeee Opinions. of Dr. Ferdinand King, Where infection has been much | New York and the Westchester that these articles may have become) County Hospital; Former Health dangerous, the only safe courwe in destruction by fire. Lighter mater Commissioner | Wm. R. Kerr, of jais, including Linens, can, of course,| the City of Chicago and others. be boiled and can thus be even more tat tin regard t offoctivel disinfected h | Senator Mason's statemen © ° ffoctively distr 4 than if sun He tor un was shown to several phys!- ght alone were relied upon who were requested to give their opinions thereon. fe Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York phy and medical author, said: “I heartily Gentlemen: T have often said I would never rec- ommend medicine of any kind. I believe that the ‘s place. However, after the hardest political ign of my life, without a chance for a vaca- d been starting to court every morning with that horrible tired feeling one cannot describe. advised to try Nuxated As a ploneer in the pure food and drug leg . 1 was loath to try an advertised r with my medical friends, I gave it @ tes uits have been so beneficial in my own case, I MEAT AND FEVER | Mre. G. P. writes: I have been a te made up my mind to let my friends know about it, ee tur Mason's statement in regard t 1 oy told that much meat is bad for a per.| Senet’ Mason's Mannie nO. vigoroU and you are at liberty to publish this statement if ate ? you so desire. Iam now 65 years of age, and I feel that a remedy which will build up the strength and increase the power of endurance of one at my age should be known to the world. Yours very truly, ? emia meana iron deficiency. The skin of oe paemie, and women is pale; the flesh musclem lack tone; the brain ne memory fails, and often they , nervous, despondent and mel- |anemic m | fab faen Meat is bad for a person suffer ing from fever, not because it is hard to digest, but because it has a tend ency to increase the fever. Francis Sullivan, formerly phy- tellevue hospital (outdoor Dept.), «. and the Westchester county hos- “Senator Mason is to be com- }| pital, q 5 ©f) {| tended on handing out this statement on ‘Or S$ (| Nuxated Iron for public print. There are (| thousands of men and women who need a trength and blood builder, but do not know Nhatttc take. In my own opinion there is BONDS nothing better than organic Tron Nuxated Tron—-for enriching the diand help’ increase the hood and Helping tance ‘of men thelr atreneth, power and en- 4d wome no burn wl too durance will find tt a most rr and women “Warvoul energy in Mmarkable and wonderfully eftec- : Kyain of the great tive remedy. WHy WE Bt Faitor The Star Following reasons why I purchased Li From the Congressional Directory published by the United States Gov- ernment: “Wm. E. Ma from IHlinols, was ¢ to the both Congress in 1887, to the Sist First-Because To am unable to it, no mi fo, xaye: “I have taken fd Iron myself and exper Senator Mason is now Congress- man from the state of Tlinois, your food merely passes construct ships to carry food and} MUS piving and strength- through you without doing you Sonato! on’ pulldiniie public welfare I feel it Strength out of it, and as a con- fA Pure, S008 ant ge logisiation, hird—HKecause my ancestors and te ane hake Known the re- feduence you becc , pale pe Be 3 ge aR relatives fought in the civil war for | ™¥ oU'y 9 “ yell ¢ and sickly looking, just like a y . acy oO} freedom | alte OF Ite Use. drovand want to) plant {rying to grow in a soil de ye OR ge i BA e my three y i want to ficient intron. If you are. not ff Tishts of the masses as againat Fourth—Reoause this countr a|iny that T believe my own great SNe and well, you owe it to [gf tusts and combines, make the men of this country, in 1776,| Physical activity, le, tree we elf to make the following fm National figure at Washington a fought and died for freedom wo you! Mea? tron ‘Krom. See how Jong you can work [9 endeared him to the hearts of | Tron. rom tar you can walk without [Working man and the great masn hg tired, Sext take ‘tw f people throughout country | wch ain tabieta States. Senator M has . wckass cf fans jit nt to be : 1 Tron t ‘ eine one of the real Fifth—Recause of home and all! {{(a} and. prescribed by every nm, three t : n of the nation. His strong that it Is to me and every Amer-| physician in this country endorsement of Nuxated Iron muse i I have a brother and two| While, former H convince any intelligent, thinking: Urothersin-law in the wervice of |roner Kerr is not himself a phy ender that it must be & prepar nel m1 a wie n, hia experience in Man oe r Note: Nu Mi Trot <a ip - . and o: thelr country, who are fighting, not! {idling public health. problema ,, Manufacturer's Note: Nurated Tron, which the senator feels is bound teal because they enjoy fighting, but be-|inust give his opinion more than en By be of great value to the masses people. everywhere, otherwise h nuld not afford to tend hia mane ters and homes, puyler C. Jaques, visiting f r n of St. Elizabeth's hos- remedy, is well known ¥ specially after his strong What better reasons have we to| mi New York City, said: “I to druggists everywhere, Unlike the ocacy of pure food and drugs fight for? F. H. D., Rave never before given out any older inorganic iron products, it. i sialation. Soldier, medical information or advice for easily assimilated, — : publication, as f ordinarily do not the teeth + upaet ut in the cage of the tomar oturers guar In lieu of a lake of water, one of) x\i\'n feel I would ve theteas oil has been utilized at Mannford,| remiss.in my duty not to mention tory haser or they Okla, a8 & recreation center, and a| tt elt it te a given it to my patients with m city by Owl Drug © surprising results. And tho: , acy and Rartell Drug quickly to increase Stores and all other druggist,

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