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STAR-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1918 ‘KEEP AN EYE ON VLADIVOSTOK WIS LIFE | BENDER OF scrirrs NonTHWHST LEAGUE oF NEWsrarnns wae Service of the United Press Association Entered at Seattio, Wash, Postoffice as Second-Class Matter iby mall, out of city, adc per month; # months, 61.18; @ montha 62.10 Year, $4.00, Hy carrier, city, 30c a month at Pebliekea Dauty by Tee star Punter " Main 000. Private exchange connecting ‘0 dcpartmente, Your $50 Liberty Bond will tin the way of “first aid packets care for 160 injuries | : ae Right Spirit “After the war is over, we are going to have a big) parade in New York and there is going to be a regiment of workers from the Skinner & Eddy yards at the head} of it.” This was just one of the ringing, that Dr. Charles A. Eaton told the men who are building “ships in record time here yesterday. ‘ And immediately thousands of big fellows in overalls | Cheered with enthusiastic pleasure. They went back to their work full of “pep.” | These men are making good, and they «were glad to ww that their efforts were meeting with appreciation. There's a lesson for all of us in the psychology of the Piieident. When a man is doing his war work well, extend Bim a hand of encouragement. Thousands of young men canvassing for the Third Liberty Loan. Make them BE: that the rest of the community wants and needs} services. | encouraging things | How would you fee! if ‘that Great Falls, Mont., subscribed $1,000,000 worth of Liberty Bonds in 42 minutes? Maybe sound kind of good, Eh, Av > Spectators’ Galler y “Let's sit on the fence and watch the show go by! | ag not put in highbrow vocabulary, that has been con-| a very high-brow philosophy to live by. Persons who think that they think, pessimists who have cove! that life is a joke, poets disappointed in love} a publisher, geniuses who dwell on ie relation of the! to themselves, students who read more than their! can my childless rich women past middle life, half- ited reformers—of this ilk anybody can spot at least ae Usually they nig cee superior to the war. 2 it “man’s supreme folly.” rie’ aun * Formerly, nobody cared if superior persons looked on ee ee ee ee i pas a circus performance invented for their private enter-| But the boys who will Nght ‘neath | fror ment. In fact, from their elevated positions, “watching | ney tae Fed, white and blue ry show,” they were at least out of the way of useful | “™" a ae ins. But today the world is far from being amusing) OLGA MOORE. Mt there is no place on it any more for a spectators’ eee ‘The most terrible deeds ever done he unburied dead on the field of tattle cry aloud for| Were framed up by @ devilish Hun.) Vietory of Right over Wrong. The blood of every un-| {5 one of mae eli hero dying there rebukes all who “watch the WAY Hindenburg t# the son-of-a convinced that they cannot help it, anyway. j Riedane ey eT NOLDM. ae tehmond ighlands, anh peace would what, Herb (who has been three hours trying to get his saddle presentable for Inspection) I wonder if it's much of m stunt to ride bareback you were a Hun and learned é ee Here's to the kaiser, the son-of-a «un like ana! aU Vernon “Our time of trial will not end with the war,’ says oc Michaelis, former German chancellor. We think will, The time of trial will stop and they'll begin to serve the sentence. America’s Way The English and French newspapers seem to be rather their glorification over the decision to put Ameri- units in brigades with British and French battalions immediate: fighting. Possibly there isn’t full appre- on by Europe of America’s spirit in this war. America is not in this war for glory or profit’s sake. 's spirit was demonstrated, clearly and pointedly, by Jack” Pershing, when he did the biggest thing in a ee career in offering himself and his men for any pur-| A fanny thing Gbout erusielens,| anywhere, whenever needed. America is not in it} they work while they play, and play America’s success but for civilization’s triumph and Ware ee, werk hen. Along op “gesg oni there - no point at yermany can hope that jealousy and false pride ° te a weakness. Milk If conceited German autocracy never appreciated our 1 4 it ought to now. What we've offered may be Economy in the diet does not al-/ lly a drop in the bucket, but it’s there and it was all eee Serene SOee Heiney the wee | st was available. And we're going to fill the bucket! wal eg weet times a question of ‘neal in We know that Boche is pronounced Bosh and Foch _ is Fosh and Y. pres is Wiper, but nobody yet has told us the use| _ how to get over Wytschaete. of | foods | which | furnish nutritive Sultan’s Friend Bill cay tow. out tively low cost. | Milk belongs to the latter class and] German autocracy threatens to give Prince Lichnowsky, the housewife would do well to x German ambassador at London, a warm spanking. ae Ag ag Ey nao ety nd dish newspapers are publishing extracts from Lichnow- hegrrgge ond) ioe red venta a ty’s memoranda, written just before the outbreak of the rele awies Ce ae War. It appears that England and Germany were about to| Many people think of milk only| ‘Close a deal dividing Asia Minor into “spheres of interest’! a beverage, but if they under to be controlled by the English and Germans. = ag holly GP sr esngoe stood that it in reality 6 ® nour ‘The kaiser had better stop chinning. |tehing food uld increase ; German autocrats think it will not please their beloved! ‘The son-of-a-eun “ “ ‘ally, the sultan of Turkey, to learn that his territory was) Of a bloodthirsty Hun to be carved up in the interest of his “Christian| W'! 2007 **e bis lines a-thinning. ’ brother, the kaiser. Lichnowsky seems to be the When our boys*in khaki get bi Von Hin will be classed as a sany He'll know how it feels To take to bis heels And travel so fast he'll get dieey MR&. AUGUST NELSNESS, Enumclaw, Wank oe ance und you ail ean mek home to der ation rom | Join vot a fine time tee waiting for! ow run along und me und der! He vill come later. Bre-| tne tee all geefined and} and the het reception hotter reception « lot od « wome- | creasing as they we down ive | their daily allow and cut on other rel y more ext Cc. M. &, 1223 Alaska Bidg. te goat. Oe | foods We eat foods for two main rea- wastes Deutachland’s the home of the kaiser forming ‘The nations of Earth do despine. |sons: First, to renew body land promote growth by Ring the Liberty Bell We'll wend him to h-—II A spirit of rivalry‘ might be dev eloped if the aweet- heart's service flag, suggested in a letter to The Star new tinsuen and fluids, and second, to supply energy for carrying on| by a soldier, provided for more than one star. He'll be old and bolder Budweiser — - TN. G. | body functions, Milk contains the materials (1 | New York Tribune, with which, we take it, the ghost| K*ite™ 1!!! i* some conceited and such as lime and of,the late Editor Ho [But when the Yanks get o ry for body « comparing ore foods it in ne ‘onsider both the nd the energy furniahe jone alone can properly be w {a basis of comparison, nor any way to reckon, corr value of @ food by considering the! total amount of nutrith 4 pulls his It ix also very difficult tein of beer, pare foods on the beneath the! mineral matter they contain | pn peace, | tremely to protein and also = materials e Greeley has little to do, declares! put when the Yanks get over there} for Colone! Roosevelt for president in 1920, on the ground| He'll beat his breast that “he’s the only man who can restore the republican| hair party's prestige and make it again an instrument of militant|*"* “P*" Americanism.” It’s like grabbing Teddy and throwing it into the ring, whether and it certainly is premature. If this war runs into 1920, it is going to be mighty nod hard to-concoct any partisan issues in America and the job| And then } of restoring any party’s prestige is going to be a right | farcical enterprise. 2 On the other hand, if we have peace in 1920, the| . ie le will have become pretty tired of war and will probably We're after the kaiser jtate about becoming all het up over a platform of “militant Americanism.” The German fleet may come out, says a London dispatch. Yee, and we know how it ‘u come out. Second. | wilt surely go ‘OH! THAT AWFUL BACKACHE. *!."""."": IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS._- SAY ON MOVI It wite in darknens. It ntares with | When the hero kisses the| and tear his “las » there| Pershing grabs him by the throat s hat off his head| And strips the buttons off his coat he likes it or not,| Kicks his pants | And takes away We will plant his of but all in ox. stand- bast orp everlasting valuable |point. In fact, 4 | pared by growth |¥« we'll make| ROY F. LAUER Eighth Ave 4 and expect development him plop When our Liberty we'll drop are the boys Then away For Yankee FLAXSE W. R. writes: “I have heard that flaxseed is a good remedy for con- stipation. How should it be taken and when” ‘Take one or two tablespoonfulx of the whol a breakfast food | Jeach morning | Bonds on him| We that never will] with the and gun seed with Wash. | es | AUDIEN' An unhealthy body, and the un-| bloody, cloudy and atrin, urine, happiness and misery which follow, | too frequent or suppresse vg Ht} may be prevented by ordinary Jude-| All thes@ are nature's sixnals. to cow Bed cep your stomach|warn you of diseased kidneys or 4 eidneys in shape and you will| bladder, which may lead ta” fatal e good health. The kidneys’ rights disen h is to throw off the poisonous, Don't wait * which enter the body. If|upon you reguinrly her organs elven, nditione of the biadder indicated by ner ¢ eplenunens, that tired, yur feeling, dizaine jumbago, he thrilled. Art in at and villain fight, « It chews gum between whiles When parks on a Kymphon: often. talke It liken plays of vampl monsters, if they in the end When pinude w tia tne fa until the danger is oto your druggist at GOLD Makes Piece Dresses lored Suits. 425 Union St. Uniforms, and . the kin ¥! eat-grand About two ules eA keep you and feeling fine. Konay if they do. not you member to ask for eo line | a ported GOLD MEDAL brat in realed packages, large body or the nereen it fenemblag cheers and ap ble. Tt can mwallow £ producers can turn t vt ia saying @ great. deal —Brudite, bien, fort wi urinating, jally bristle with gun | fortified |break of the present war | bay levery hard corn "| genius PAGE 6 ‘ JAPANESE AUTHOR DESCRIBES RUSSIAN Ant ms FORTRESS landing of Japanese and and the reported growing resentment by what ¢ term imperten 1 help you better to interpret the news relative te this city of fate.) BY K. &, KAWAKAMI (Author of “Japan in the World Poll | ties,” “Ania at the Door,".and) “Americandapanese Relations.) | On March 90 a body of mariner landed at Viadivostok from a Jap! anese cruiser at anchor tn ite har bor. The occasion for this action was the raid by @ band of Nussians |upon « Japanese firm in that city renulting in the murder of one Jap anese and the wounding of five others Apart from this untoward Incident. the port of Viadivostok will continue to invite the attention of the world Events in the past #everal months pave already thrust it into the lime Hight Hundreds of thousands of tons of| American war supplies are piled up! there, an American cruiner has been rushed to the port, and many Amer fleeing from the chaos of Rus | sia, aro stranded there. | If the long expected Japanese in| tervention (which, by th originally proposed not by Japa by ain other powers) becomes an eventuality, Vladivostok is bound to | become the eynosure of all eyes nignitying | *prang into Up to the preced. Herbian littoral Viadivestok, a name Dominion of the Eant, existence in 1861 ing the vast on the Japan sea, as well as ite H and, belonged to China, Yet China's hold upon these territories ;o ad been so weak that Russia found no difficulty fn adding {t, in 1860, to her own map It's a Military Outpost Fiver since its foundation, Viadi | vostok has onsentially been a mili leary and naval outpost. Ite prosper ity due not to ordinary trade or industry, but to the enor tous #ums expended by the military autherities for fortification. well as renence of many thou * sands of army and navy Viadivostok ts one of strongly fortified cities in the world. The Shkot and Godolbin peniney las, which embrace the harbor, virtu Kursian is lying athwart the entrance of isn lkewlse formidably was before the out garriwoned year has been nd. harbor and by a couple of divisions To the weat, along t the line of fortremsen extends for | many miles: to the east, even Unsurt | almont ten miles away, ia in cluded In the scheme of defense. It| ts estimated that the entire lines of Cofense consist of 76 fortrenses, mounting at least 580 guns. At the sthreak of the war there were some | 28,000 soldiers guarding these forts. GAlong the naval, basin, military LIFT OFF CORNS FREEZONE IS MAGIC} Costs few cents! Sore, touchy corns lift right off with fingers. No pain! Drop a little Freezone on an ach ing corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out It doesn’t burt one bit. Yea, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to rid your feet of | soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, | without soreness or — irritation Freezone in the much talked of ether discovery of a Cincinnati | COLUMBIA ST. Cor. First Ave. DR. KPWIN J. BROWN D. D. Now at 10¢ Columbia 1 have left the imita- ave. and Columbia the street 1d location. My new en- 06 tice #o that the ine * will offant the inere | cost of doing business because of | the war. 1 want to be known as only man-in Seattle who did not raine hiv prices because of the war. EDWIN BROWN, D. Dd. Seattle's ‘aang. Dentist 106 Colum! ‘* and structed on much a grand seale that they are capable of storing rupplies wufficient for # long siege COME ON, AMERICA! ing, the town is a German one. N {| only the wholesale, but also the re ta yeas, in in handq, {jana ¢ indeed, only one Rum firm of real importance hin description in true with rem | gard to other cities in Siberia. The | Russian are no match for the Gers | |enans in trade and commerce. | City In “Wide Open” | Ake cities in Stheriagg open.” America!” ” fs | Viadivostok tn “w Your friends are standing guard th falreen, st admit thadll ViaAivostok ame The gailant French die in the trench, | F the slow progrens ¢ The British tine holds hard. & commnecvial port Je Jatpely sane the severe winters with which it hay intend. For four months in thal year, the harbor is ice-locked, when4 |lanen must be opened for tncomt |and outgoing steamers by the stant employment of powerful br During the coldest mor it in often 60 to 70 degrees below Yet, in spite of these handi the city, in the hands of an efficie and progressive nation, can be infinitely more useful and prosper | ous. busin mar re is wi “Come on! America! Allied, the voloes ea! Yor by your aid no longer stayed The world may stand or fail! nowt other “Come ont we “Come on! America! Your northern pals are here The bold Canuck has proved his pluck Forever and @ year! ome on! America! From far Antipodes ‘The Anzac hosts have left their coasts And leaped the world-wide seas, hers “Come on! America! The Italian ery is strong The land of art, the land of heart, Shall welcome you with song. pes It has, ax ite background, the vast territories of Manchuria and the Us 4 Amour river basins, exceed: and capable of receiving lions of settlers, It is more rs since the Russians took “ posneusion of the rich along the two great rivers, yet today flour and meat no ncarce in Viad- |ivomtok that, even in time of peace, |they have to be imported from Aus |trailia and the Pacific coast of | America, more than 6,900 miles 7 away And the y Pacific 198, N. EB a are Some | tralia, which are sending provini | to the Siberian littoral, have been ! leupied by the Anglo-Saxons will become a grave menace to (much longer than the Siberian Japan, lying within 40 hours’ | toral has been occupied by the ride acrows the Japan sea. sians. Ans early as 1968, Rh. M. Hodgson, | “Come on! Americ Bebold the Portuguese - Whole Uttle land has made tts stand To whed its blood with there. suri ding! many nan 60 ‘Come on! America! Your guns shall cast thetr vote Against the horde which lays the sword Upon the Belgian throat ar ‘Come on! America! No longer halt nor wait The black beast’s breath of blight and death ty panting at the gate! (Copyright naval warehouses were con Indireetly, by an efficent mill- (the foreign European population tary power such as Germany, | here is German. Commercially speak Letters to the Editor « | called ehip workers animals is unjust. an all men connected with the the acts of a few the most | them, but have always been offered “ amoke, Feet of the men could be called re |sponaible for that fools, who brag about doing ax little. bill | As pomuible for the wage they receive. cannot be blamed on the thousands! ernment departments. of earnest workers, who are working ready fortunate as to ait in front of aman LARGE SUM IS PASSED Such » port, If controlied, even | scribing this port, said: “The bulk of by Hamtin’s | Quickly Relieved | Wizard Oi Hamilin's Wizard Of! te a simple and effecti throat and chest colds. Used as gargle for sore throat it brings quick MAJORITY Editor The Star REAL MEN at dangerous and disagreeable work The person who to help build ships, one of the most essential things to win the war for relief. Rubbed on the chest it will democracy often loosen up a hard, deep seated I have no one working in the ship-| cold in one night. 1, too, De beer yards, but believe in treating all] How often sprains, bruises, cute yittey Rave Seem On the One WHR Teeks, ‘A WOMAN. |and burns occur in every family, as well as little troubles like earache, | toothache, cold sores, canker sores, stiff neck, and tired, aching feet. Soothing. healing Wizard Of] will ab ways bring quick relief. are not responsible for seat, On one occasion I was #0 un. ho enveloped me in dense tobacco FOR OFFICIAL SALARIES WASHINGTON, April 17.—The| Get it from druggists for 30 cents, senate hax parsed the legislative, ex-| If not satisfied return the bottle and That there are a few boasters, or ecutive and judiciary appropriation] get your money back. appropriating $70,000,000 for sal-/ Ever constipated or have sick aries of officials and expenses of gov-| headache? Just try Wizard Liver The bill al | Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 has passed the house. cents. uaranteed —Ad ti mi} but I could not see that the MeDougall/6uthwick . SECOND AV ENUS AND PIKE STREET Lovely Materials and Styles Practical Prices and Qualities in the Sale of Silk Lingerie| Remarkable special val- ues assembled especially for this Annual April event. Crepe de Chine Envelope Chemises 1.95 remarkable Pink Crepe de Snvelopes, with the loveliest of shadow and Val. lace yokes, were ever procured to sell at 1.95 has been the | wonder of many a woman. Crepe de Chine Camisoles 95¢ Though the price is but 95c, the pink crepe de chine is good, the filet and | ci pe shadow lace insets and bands are delight- | ff ful. Pink and blue satin ribbon com- pletes the effect. Jash Satin and Crepe de | Chine Camisoles 1.25 and 1.95 French knot embroidery in pastel shades, touches of smocking and Val. and filet laces really “make” these—and what could be lovelier? *In pink and white. Envelope Chemises 2.95 Smocking ripples the entire front, at each end of the smocked panel is a dainty satin rose, Of rich, well-bodied crepe de chine. Wonderfully Yoked Step-in 1 Crepe de Chine Envelope Chemises 2.50 The yokes are of fine mesh filet lace, Chemises 3. 95 and that heavy, impressive filet. All are | sh-colored Georgette tops, pan- | cut on full lines and well finished—of ] ‘flesh-colored crepe de Chine. | With fl els of lace and pretty lace edging. Crepe de Chine Gowns 3.95 They show unusual value from the tips of their silken hems to their bewitch- ing filet yokes. Made of crepe de Chine with “body”—a quality that will wear. Everything from Boudoir Caps to the most elaborate Bridal Sets | will be found in this sale at special prices. — —sacdougal-Southwick, Third Floor. hinterland © treatment for sore i ignificant fact is that the 2 g 4 Ww. M. 84 bulla velo follo tor: D1 man Sch ley's trans