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E SEATT. 1207 Seventh Ave. STAR BY €, ©. LYON Near Union St, —y Y PRENCH AVIATION STATION OF sckirrs NOoRTHWE RAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS | NCE, April 21-1 had hoped News Service of the United Press Assectation to be able, today, to (ol readers of ——l'The Star how the German trenches Entered at Seattle, Wash, Postoffice a» Second-Class Matter and defensive systems look from @ per month; $ months, $1.15; 6 montha, French airplane, but By_carries, city, 380 a month Our blamed engine went dead on Star Pabti us and we Were forced to descend _o Range conmeeting all dh behind the Prench lines in @ series oa jot awful bump. a Ee P —=—. | “it wad my first ride in a battle-| avs ann (oe JAIN tions, my lant | : lp » R | Ly ys 1 oe wo ¥ A certain high officer in aviation | y | 4}5 , ‘ou o\e A | hac nm promising for a long time | a A ‘aN to take me over the German Ines hy Be. | tents, morning “te be said TAR'S & ( lA MILE IN TIME $$ AND PURSES You've we Leaded pur Women are carrying ‘They don’t look It, and you wouldn't lieve it, and ‘They aren't worth It, but some cout As high as $60 ARQIIEV ll eerie Gradually the world has lost faith in Germany and her people, who held such a dear place in hearts of iy progressives before the war, But the dumb submission of Germans to the outra program of their bloody leaders has cost them the t of thinking men and women, : | _A letter, in the editor's mail today, expresses this , as follows: Before Germany started her world murderfest I did) that the German people, as distinguished from the/ nment of the kaiser, were a great people. A ton And we know all “7 was an active organizer and worker in the socialist That's carried in at that time. for ars had admired the German Them—in a powter democracy, read the works of the leaders of} Puff, rouge, Up socialism. ; : |. Sigedbensbiety wed " “At a conference of delegates of the international shied Oy aes te Nickels and dimer Rolieve mo, Hank If we were a Woman, and had $69 to put in } A purse, we'd Sure put it ia | One, and a Bb-cont At that. . list organization, representing most all the countries iow at war, including delegates from Germany, all of the eg s voted to use the most effective weapon at hand ent war—the general strike—excepting the repre- t s of the world famed German Social Democracy, (the German delegates were silent. _ “Ever since that day I have hoped that these so- socialists of Germany would be exterminated from of the earth. They boasted of their wonderful for years; they preached peace and brother- f_ among the workers; one of them wrote a ‘bible’ for ia to worship, ‘Das Kapital’; and when the time for them to use their power—3,000,000 strong—to > | ent war, they were silent and went home and did e | of the kaiser. | “The representatives of the socialist organizations of 4 said: ‘We will prevent this impending war.’ German representatives went home and helped one Th’ feller th’t's always sayin’, “Believe me,” Is gen'rally one you | | don’t betieve. see Only « Private, but a Big Gun Private George Cannon haa return ed to his home at Beadle after doing | [his bit at the front.—-Kindersicy | (Can) Clarion, . | And Ernest Zepplin lives in Ger man Valley, N. J . rt it. | “The whole history of the war since that day has] we haven't seen it yet, but we ex one of unspeakable savagery and barbarism on the! pect to read any day that some Ber- 'of the German people; the blowing up 07 factories in| im newspaper bas printed an ei pa; the sinking of the Lusitania; the betrayal of the|‘"\ pen ine Tomaians forced annex the list is too long—a list of treachery, torture,! ation upon us i Pe vestion of rere Bore right or mercy. | PD and bora has _—— os ¥ “The rman people have had over three years to! ee ae ho ofe, and they still go to madder extremes, if pos-;™™ * “* “orm mea!” In the hearts and minds of all decent people the Amen’ as a race, should be condemned. ‘The Musical Messenger is going on rr TI 9 Mr. Herbert 1. CED gH bo Ree og ldeychangelty arena hege Mars meet Mars! Became a Cornet Player” will soon Phere’s a war in the world toda, conclude.—Fillmore (TIL) Advertiser. ee He women were introduced to it. e tortured bodies of the living dead litter Europe's Id. No Man’s Land is wiped out in the surging It is now sald that Emperor Char lie's wife's mother wrote the famous peace letter, Now these’s a real} | mother-in-law joke | : y, and it's time that} } “The face should continue to be es of bleeding armies. God alone can know how a wound- oe n bg amyl in can suffer before he enters into the peace of death. | 28% AP" 4 wilt contines here’s a war in the world today. But give any street! to be i ce-over and the glitter of beads and the gleam of thin| will prove that many fine ladies are living in ignorance; We". how do you expect ‘em to} fference to the world’s great agony. ho orig Melia tbr arene Yet for each one of the buyers of baubles, for every See tis aeaa ions Seteat "| rar . ly coquette whose only interest is to deck her fair body| ith fripperies, some soldier has laid down his life. | Think, Madame, that every minute of every day, for a a scores of valiant men have died—that you may ey have made you their heir. They have deeded y to you. 6 | ife was sweet to them all, as it is to you. Yet the only| pe yo of your heritage is to purchase white shoe dainty feet and pink powder for your nose! Measured by your standard of personal beauty, does! martyrdom seem quite worth while? } Plainly, a new and nobler part must be assigned to all ladies. They must make themselves worthy of the of their men. And the first thing for them to do is to their love of finery, as the women of England and e have done. The German hordes have come on in the west because total woman-power of the country backs its man-power. And whether she wants to do so or not, the American must now walk hand in hand with Mars. She has no » She has no es If the American boys are to! their battles quickly, if they are to get thru with the or and finish it soon, the American woman must make god of war her friend. } Therefore, Madame—meet Mars! Eight-Hour Day Opposition to the eight-hour day in the Northwest is crumbling before the urge of humane and economic ure. | ae One of the most powerful barriers crumbled when the Paget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co. yesterday decided sto adopt the eight-hour, or eight-and-a-half-hour, basis for _ trainmen. The traction interests and the lumber interests ‘were,! pethan:. the mightiest opponents of shorter working hour: ; have given w not necessarily because they were in “sympathy with the eight-hour day, but war necessity com-| ‘pelled them to adopt it. | Possibility of ever goin ese citadels is remote. a The eight-hour day i j here to stay. Dr. Edwards’ Giiny Futtate Got : . at the Cause and Remove It _ A New Question — 4 | Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the sub- Keep a backyard hennery, proclai a the agricultural shane pel pee tending gently on the le} ment, or you'll pay hig’ Y ere a “iy - | bowels and positivi lo the work, | agi br you'll pay high for eggs during the entire) ™Prcite aticted with bed breath find . : : alg | quick relief through Dr. Edwards’ Olive Keep a pig, advise the food administrators. | Tablets, The pleasant, sugar-coated Backyard garden, backyard hennery and backyard|tablets are taken for bad breath by stye! “Why are boys leaving the farms for the cit Gosh a’mighty! Why are farms leaving for the city? If the telegraphers go on strike the messenger boya will be able to take more time for orien But the strike will be over before |they return if they're not careful, . Tin be 28 FOF) good ship might save many a der from red hot rivets Bion N \ crust =f, _ forks, & BAD BREATH LET'S | TH! MAU g back to thé old basis in either of ” | jy | all who know them, ‘ Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, | stimulating them to natural action, | clearing the blood and gently purifying | Wisconsin baker advertises: Ser Eorrrer sphed, Wey . the entire system. They do that whic Bieta a LIBERTY BREAD, EVERY LOAF A |dangerous calomel does without any LAST, of the bad after effects. | All the benefits of nasty, sickening, Siz New York men, names unknown, have failed | $ibing cathartics are derived from br. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without Briping, pain or any disagreeable effects. | Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac- tice among patients afilicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath, Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets are pure- ly a vegetable compound mixed with | | olive oi; you will know them by their A fitting fate for the kaiser, were he captured, (ie Caer cate See 2 tao rey to make their incomedaz returns, because they have so much money their clerks haven't been able to finish the work, That's another advantage of being poor. _ Reports from Germany declare the crown prince likes to eat straw bread. ia that he also bra ‘ night for a week and note the eff: d be to turn him over to the war pocts. d 250 per box. All rusgista s €O SX Act S WORTH | They 4 STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1918. PAGE 6) Sy ESSAY ON DRKATH ns Death to te be the emd of life. penplo cay) to the ‘beginning. that the earth sheukd net be. ennet it. Ht comes like @ thief nightmares. moving picture shows, street care or tele. phones in it. Those whese souls are saved by Death | Will pay epper reaches some of Us there is something wrong either covert shout in the woul A any | & soldier's | with | Ar Rewepapers,| theas remarks doing the fellow wh something ix wrong with bi: | t in Takes First and Last Trip Over War Zone in Battle Plane—Makes ‘Tummy’ Sick-4 , HARD ON CIVILIANS that lie mangled fathoma deep Lae a direct line for the German Wditor The Star; Some peopl | the shattered hulk of the Lusitania | trenches | A a8 m think because @ young man of draft |—who haa no reverence for the dead| We had gone hardly half a mile) They're fine! Don't stay bil ago wears civilian clothes that be ix|and their devotions; no prayer for|pefore something startling hap: | ious, sick, headachy either a coward, would-be shirker or | the dying and thetr angulst, no pity | pened or constipated. or he id be in the army or navy. girl remarked to me that young fellow who does not wear or sailor's uniform ix jered with so maay divergent |*ither married or something wrong the fellow, and that she would 11 a ® perpetual process. A rich mes | not be seen with a young man who|but not conquered the night and @ landlord after the rent | WS" not either a soldier or sailor * the who ona kl) ktrin are pt in the army or navy justice no. It is true that with Pith Colden wings aed geasy rebes, ef! put it ix the fault of nature, not us frinale, The remainder turn to dust. oe Now that the chaplains at Camp | There are many thousands of |young men in Seattle who would | «ive Lewis have adopted pugiliam, they | Uncle Sam can knock kaiser, the devil out of the eee ESSAY ON STARS Stars are dust. In this reapect, they resemble man. Man uses one of the little stars to live on. From it, he has a fine view of all the oth or, stars, Stars are in space, Some say space in infinite, some finite, No one has ever personally invest gated Our ancestors used to think they Were bits of glittering tinsel. They burned men who thought otherwise It was a bad day for astronomers then, It tikes millions of years for a star to be formed, and millions more for it to disintegrate. Sometimes, a star gets mad, and starts on a rampage thru «pace have even been known to attacks on other stars. Usu fiasie out ook fine at night RUDITE. make ally They Two outetate mooument @ealers chanced to meet on the rear plat form of a street car, and they were moon talking shop, After they had discumed designs and inscriptions for several blocks, one of the dealers happened to notice that a negro pax wenger wan lintening to the conver- sation with apparent internat, Turning to tho negro, the dealer anked “You seem to be interested in| They are on a par with the Beattle|in the superior court in Oly ‘ ‘ ry fut ; ympia | tombetenes. What do you want on| newspaper that reported that the wine. » The men in the shipyards are cordially imuited to your grave?” | daughter of a banker, who ran down . | attend this service. Bay, bow,” replied the negro, “I| and killed a workman in her car, | ae want markers none of On Sam had woul their all to be accepted by| none but a Hun @an commit, none] ei: as tho a fast elevator had let go but a Hun can forget! pn) ad eam two different occasions the » A RNATHAN. [""howover-—AND THIS, FROM 39¥ { writer was turned down by Unele bd _. |OWN STANDPOINT, IS A VERY on account pt eyesight If 1| “AMERICAN MOTHER” WRITES | IMPORTANT FEATURE OF THIS been accepted the first the I id now be in the trenches, Tears come to my eyes every time I think of “over there, for 1 want over and see what the Noches are solitary kick of the engine rewarded 1 had never died before and 1] Vor awhile we sailed along inying I just made; sorry if 1 joltea iy up them for their efforts J wasn't particularly ik about risk | glorious style. The old engine up some But she’s working # 8 *T assented. “Where's your] The pilot was profuse with orders |ing my neck behind an engine that | peared to be in dead ear net th morning, bos and directions, Three or four times! wasn't city broke and perfectly re | hitting on all cylinder ern th ¥ t dead on us over Out on the field behind that last}one of the mechanics crawled up | Hable Jairplane engine st back there I thought it hangar yonder, ‘Tell the men toon top of the engine and hit it with! 9. rWhelming pride usually| Leaning over the wide, 1 b , | waa oft with us and 1 began strap you in the back seat, I'll be|a big hammer hefore & fall out of an airplane, | @utting real “yment out of wat picking © to fall in along in a few minutes; L've got to “Thin old oat,” the pilot | 4 power td ling the farma and woods and road If 1 “lf to new get my tor turned to me and apologized, - {and rivers rapidly drifting out from I was ail presen he 1 had been hasn't been acting very well After about an hour's hard work | under wu er mind about the bumpe and and tied so] lately, We've been overhauling [on the part of the mechanics and) 4) 01. wme a thin thread ap frien I Phe thing ew securely, that I couldn't have re] her and thin iq her first flight | helpers, the motor started and ran) oy a ne tthalt aloe mont t eb on Se Jeased myself with a set of burglar] since she came out of the shop. lke a.top—for about 15 seconds. | eee ne ee uhend of tools We'll have her going in a jiffy Then it stopped. iat Ath, shignon “46 t At was @ biting cold morning Don't pet impatient Vive minutes of this and she sud-|1 discovered it was a French # The pilot took his place and the] If a number of my friends hadn't) yo Cn running lke velvet train on ite way to the mon started turning the propellor been standing on the sidelines J hovered ¢ t at a height ¢ They twirled and twir and} would have been willing to have) 1 saw the pilot wave the men out) ) 006 twirled and then took off their coats}ealled off my part in the flight over | of ‘The truck drivers waved and and twirled some more, but not a}the German Hines, i Vass houted to us, and in reply I dropped | es sae ng mE P SAREE RM GAP RAR LEA overboard a copy of a month-old IR J voc agave Mtoe gegen dog : nav | Best, safest laxative for liver A \}pened to have ny overcoa 7 ‘ LETTERS TO TIBIE IEID || noe and bowels, and people Here, we turned sharply, and, at} know it. right angles to the road, made off in | for the bereaved and broken—whowe |” y blood in not quickened by our pertis.| tne engine, without the sli | whose heart ix not softened by our) vance notice, went stone pains—who reads unmoved of blasted |. yick nor a pant nor ® che homes, and wasted countrysides, of| Having dnectated and desecrated | my pilot, who has an international | shrines; of heroic Belgium, overrun reputation as a flier, a little matter of eple France | ike a dead engine didn't, at the time, were over a thick woods when | tent Hy not unlimited confidence tn eltios jand the noble dead that ‘Tle buried | impress me as being of any partic there--the great dead that fought] niger consequence and the innoc that merely | 1a often heard of pilots “gliding” and walted—he who nh forget these things or be indifferent to the | we to earth after shutting off their en gines, and I supposed that was what ifices and the sorrows, the be-|iy pilot was proposing to do reavements and the burdens of Free But suddent it the machine dom's Gethsemanes—that man in 4) iy go at snd dive Hun at heart, for the crimes that) i .+ my stomach went weak and I | Editor The Star: I am more than | grateful to you for the courteoun at- | | tention you bestowed on me in print: | ing an article which I wrote you a| STORY—just as the tree tops ap peared to be coming up to meet us, that wonderful old engine decided RABY-+ ne! spyge-t o go to work again; and, with a re ‘ b to 90 oo | few days ago regarding “No Children |‘? 6° {0 “Ors seatening reports, the|{ Makes Uniforms, One- On bel umes I tried to enter, and Allowed . ot st bird, soared > | finally was drafted, 1 wrote my I appreciate the stand you took |S cn ee heat sal over aie eee and Tai- 7 draft board a personal letter, beg |rekarding same, and enjoyed im-| 0°" ad Saat king to be given a chance to do|mensely listening to the commets |00E Wel felt a tie and lored Suits. something, and was again turned expremsed by different individuals in|) OO oo sad de we watanteued m What more can a young man do?) One gentleman expressed, coming | CUrelioe aor kad tll aanin } I have bought a Liberty. Bond and | down on a Madison cable, his desire a S wen & etabey Vener whe | am willing to do my share at all | to meet the lady who wrote the} <8! ** ee é times. jarticle. Little did he know he waa! There are many others doing the sitting about three feet from her. | mcne. So, why should we be ac cused, and should not reonive full credit for our part as well an the boys ot civilian clothes who have not done| Work going, and that it may help so thetr hurt you onist in uniform? course, there are many in duty But people should in the future | posttion. investigute before they speak, for it! cept s and cute very, deep to think are banded with the rest of the slackers, and you tried #o hard to it. W. A. Meooy, 308 22nd Ave. 8. eee THE BABCOCK CASE Editor The Star: Thank God there STAR! ‘The Star had the moral courage |!!m# Judge John 8. Jurey to set an | to express prominently on the Babcock arrest. No other Seattle newspaper did. iteclf editorially and stone | naively admitted that she was going When I die I want ‘em to| 30 miles an hour WITHIN the city LINCOLN, Ne! 2 e plant a watermelon vine on my|ilmite. Has the diligent chief of tg LN, Neb. sige hale : frave and then let that juice soak| police taken official notice and) ed corn situation ins Nebraska is F Presbyterian Church S | (hru."—Indianapolis News | foekee the car? Not so you would|well in hand, and Nebraska's corn irst aaa sik tel | notice. acreage thin year will be normal, or } Seventh and Spring. The “Kaponca,” which was| Anyway, In regard tqjthe Babcock | probably a little above normal. launched In a Portland shipyard, has | matter, I would Ifke to"kay this often been played on @ banjo. | He who can forget the little ones | COMEDIES OF CAMP LEWIS LIFE | * be Now's your char been springin’ on us Tn en a 1 me AO ony SC GeERONES Herb, to use them new French words you have pws all morning. EAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest and strongest plate known covers very ttle of the roof of the mouth; you ean bite corn off the cob; guaran. Gold Crown 5 Set Sliver Fillings ... Platina Fillings All wort guaranteed for fifteen morning t and Sce s place. Bring this ad Open Sundays From 9 to 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 207 UNIVERSITY ST, years tronage teed 15 years. $4.00 Up of Teeth (whalebone)... $8.00 of Teeth vo. 85.00 ork, per tooth, gold. .$4.00 Up Hings 0 Up B10 coe SOG 81.00 Have impression taken in the Hridge Work. We Stand the 8 recom nded by our early satisfaction, Ask our custom: to our office, be sure you are Opposite Fraser-Paterson Co, It wan indeed a very interesting con. versation, and believe me when I state “that it has started more than Jone to thinking | | Trusting you will keep the good Rev. M. A. Matthews will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled, THE RUT vs. THE TRENCH In this sermon he will show the position and the work of the Church, her duty and responsibility in relationship to the nation and to the war. The sermon Sunday evening will discuss the subject, WAR-TIME EVANGELISM In the Sunday evening sermon he will show what is being done by the churches and how our common enemies are working through so-called religidus methy ods to defeat the Church and our Nation. § [many others that are in my Awall my since! courtesy same I beg of you to an thanks for your in, AN WIDOW. CITY ARGUES FOR WRIT | Walter F. Meiers, assistant cor poration counsel, argued the city's | case for a writ of mandate compel. | immediate date for hearing of tho; city’s cane agninst the Puget Seund | Traction, Light & Power company FINE MUSIC NEBRASKA C Everybody cordially invited. ORN IS O. K.' THE BEVERAGE An All-year-’round Soft Drink for the Bluejackets Our boys in the navy enjoy their Bevo. The esteem in which it is held by the entire Navy Department is clearly indigated by the fact that it is sold and served on all U.S. ves- sels and in training camps. Afloat or ashore, you will find Bevo unusu- ally refreshing, good and healthful. Soft in the strictest sense, but a thoroughgoing man’s drink. Try it by itself, or with a bite to eat. Served everywhere-+-families sup- plied by grocer. Manufactured and bottled exclulively by Anheuser-Busch St. Louis { Schwabacher Bros. & Co., Inc. Distributors SEATTLE, WASH,