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SEATTLE ST 1307 Sevewth Ave. Near Union St. or Nw SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEace Telegraph News Service of the United Prees Association Entered at Seattian Wash. (fice as Second-Class Matter year, $4.00 By carrier, elty, S0c a month Datty by The Star Publishing Co. Phene Mate G90. Prt; change connecting sl! depertmenta, ' “God Help the Rich, the Ey Can Work” Foo on Mall eut of city, «de per month, § montha, $1.15) & montha $2.10; The Austrian prisoners captured by the Italians had iron money Maybe they were going to sp it at a foundry eee The secretary of the Silk associa n has sent word to the manuf irers that the ordnance dep has asked that no more silk in elvitian clothing. We don’t know whether a stocking t# clothing or not : FY rd Du hat'll the girla do? It will be interesting to observe the operation of Ken-| ®t £ it's. Sune wera & Stucky’s drastic anti-loafing law, which has just gone into) ents, And a Scent package of rf This law requires that every man in the state, from) tobacco may cont 6 cents, And a 18 to 60 years of age, must work at le ; ing remunerative enough to provide a living fc rr on the rich than on the poor. must be trying to loaf for years and years, and the Maybe we s ily, besides one’s own expensive self. J Kentucky ee the banks of the Ohio river lined with $6 hours to catch him. We charge Kentucky's id ry if Col. Lillian Russell, actress, has adopted 40 grown- : sons and made ’em enlist. Secretary Baker's asleep if he doesn't make Lil a brigadier-general right off. Ihat a Joke! a duplication of the famous impractical joke of or of the shipyards. . ‘ the pressure of an air hose, carrying In purest of playful moods, ion. He probably does it to see if the victim experiences issues decorations. that is nearly irresistible. and physicians say he may recover. sought by the police. ing night letter telegrams by train. Gee! We ht they'd been doing it by foot. Large, Virile Dollar p value of the American dollar abroad. ‘ His dollar hasn’t any value abroad and stabilizing s up. _ Uncle Sam's debt is about eight billions. ‘An East Union street car attacked a policeman at ave. and Pike st. Wednesday afternoon, knocking down. Traction interests after city officers? hy; Years of Violation and the blind, deaf an ffice department must have stupid, if it did not know about it. 4 When the secretary of the navy commenced to re- its customs, for awhile 'twas a political case of tn the Lion's Den.” But now—convoy our ts to him! Must Be Clean at a eral labor conference voted against the plan of ; socialists to meet with German workmen in neutral country to talk over peace plans. “Never will American workers meet ”’ declared James Wilson of the U. “Till then Americans will fight to the last doll the last drop of blood.” In other words, the German people must come to nity and gross injustice. American labor will never clasp such a hand! The rime for Huns is guns.—Boston Globe. General Von Mackintosh seems to have been left | out in the rain on his first drive. While those German U-boats are on this side, why mot mark some internment camps as if they were hos- pitals?—New York Evening Sun. M Man made the city, God made the country, and ‘the German army transforms both into a place some of 8 no longer believed in. w York Evening Post. Save, and have, when siz billions of bonds must be eribed for, next fall. Corns Stop Hurting, Then They Lift Out With Fingers No pain or soreness! Corns and calluses just shrivel up and lift off—Try it! ‘ subs A noted Cincinnati chem- | ist discovered a new ether} compound and called it freez-| No pain, not a bit of sore- one and it now can be had| ne, either when applying in tiny bottles for a few| fteezone or afterwards and cents from any drug store. it dpean't even irritate the You simply apply = few) Hard corna, soft corns or Grops of freezone upon a! corns between the toes, also tender corn or painful callus) toughened calluses just and instantly the soreness! shrivel up and lift off 80 disappears, then shortly you easy. It is wonderful! will find the corn or callus) Works like a charm. Keep so loose that you can just it on the dresser. lift it off with the fingers, Really! No humbug! st 36 hours weekly if and his dependents, no matter how rich he may be. It is one of the few laws whose strict enforcement will be) pace THAT W We've never tried it, oN in features: to hunt up a job by which to support an expensive ?!° sco and whisky millionaires fishing for catfish. One | cat” will support a family for some time and it often) wren us ich nothing Yor this beautiful economic-poetic suggestion. Now has another Seattle riveter come to the front, 250 pounds ; ‘compressed ozone to the square inch, on the back of Or perhaps, for the fun of watching him writhe and jo. wry fl on the ground. The prehistoric species used to excel Maybe he wanted to eat It )this subtle humor, and it is of a brand for which Kaiser It is a sort of bearish play- | The latest victim of the air hose is in an emergency The jester _ Secretary McAdoo bluntly refuses to give the senate nation as to what measures are being taken to stabilize "Here's one point where Bill Hohenzollern has the bulge ,. > Long taqts He has about ‘ever by billions of resources behind his dollar.* His dollar is all at home or abroad, and after it has licked the Hun, burn. thirst, nausea. belehing of gas going to be the almightiest dollar that anybody ever »« United States postoffice department calmly an- ces that, for considerable time past, it has had informa- that the Western Union has been violating postal laws night letter telegrams on trains instead of on This practice of the Western Union has been going on The Western Union should be properly punished upon on, but what about a department of government that inked at violation of law for a considerable period of | Members of the American Labor Commission in Paris 4 the Germans note until the latter abandon the cause of imperialism and mil- S. commission, m Meeting with clean hands, and as long as kaiserism ® their god their hands are stained with savagery, inhu- ... Scent glass of beer may cost 10 or conts. But a 2hcent Thrift Stamp sells at a quarter, eee NT WEAR OFF Home wanted for bride with built WII pay $2,500 cash. Liberty building —From Post || Intettigencer of June 25 see S| THE MELANCHOLY MUSE the maddened month of Jue, sunshine seems too soon, le} And the moon ts pale at night Apprehensive moon Then mud-puppies wobble and weep, And ery in diay: “Alaa! And moan as they crawl thru the mud “That it should come to pasn™ And stare in the waters deep And think of eternal sleep When the time is fused, earth, | Removed by space from the aun, and the ago, is helping to immortalize the obvious | And the mud-pupples, one by one. ity eRe Mg age y he| Made dreamy and dazed by dearth, When the magical month of June Comes out of the seasons to earth. Pomer. eee A painting by Murillo sold for $21 000 In Rerlin the other day. We don't the purchaser wanted it a INDIGESTION Some Types of This Common Ailment and Some of Symptoms If you would avold indigestion eat regularly sie down to your meals ata certain hour ev ery day. Arrange that meals are not more than five hours or so spart 1 weak fonter the tendency or they 6 stomach it) to overeat may destroy a it is at is merely a matter of making the printing good appetite One type of indigestion attracts at ; the pain it causes. This in often severe and Is felt hours after eating. Other symptoms are heart adache and constitpation The appetite is fickle. It may be very harp or entirely absent. Those who suffer from this form ofeindigre- | tion should avoid spiced fooda. | A rather more common form of tn @igestion manifesta iteelf by such symptoms as lom of appetite, un- pleasant taste tn the mouth, coated | tongue, belching of gaa, nausea and | vomiting, vertigo or dizziness, head ache, sense of fullness or weight tn the stomach with perhape slight pain and constipation. Rarely are all the symptoms listed present at one time, but one or more of them is sure to be. Avoid hot cakes, pastry and ce Mj reals if the latter are found to dis agree. Plain boiled rice, baked po- tato, soft boiled or poached eges. lean roast beef, brofled chop or steak will often agree when other foods cause dintrons. A tumblerfal of hot water can be taken half an hour before meals with ee Mra. F. LL. anke a corn a more Yea, corn ia mach richer in fat than wheat tor’s Mail | a rms a A LETTER FROM MOORE mer: gram ar) thi int is to be labor's 5 reconstruction that a. is be char om @ peace to a war gradual pro ge from @ war | be sudden, ghtning from parau an been a # but the char peace basin w an a bolt a clear sky, com Labor may nov good wage improved after the demand shorter hours and se war long w tion continue unless some y step in now taken that w tail into its war ba This preparatory must be a political one 1, brothers and sisters, wore vited on May 9, last, in a peaceful effort to working people of thin » ieal safeguard essential to ite af the-war interests when you were 1 INITIATIVE ASURES 33 and 33 1518 16th ave les Case says that wi from a ought and peaceful step to participate ure for the 500 names ertain have been point when there 5,000 Are to we a lot of moles? | Have we no wisdom | May we not anticipate the idlenens from an over labor supply, and the quent want, sufficiently to now | cons | plan for a political prestige that will be helpful in the re-establishment of + } rf + rf + ? } economic affairs? H. ALVIN MOORE, Organizer, Railwaymen's Nonpartisan of Washington League | MeMURRAY GOOD EXAMPLE Editor » Star: Seattle should pattern after McMurray. We were 100 per cent on Ked Crows memt ship, we went “over the top” on the Third Liberty Loan, we raised nearly ix times our quota on the Red Cross war fund, and we War vin expect to sell twice during th We are but our size » “over the top” now on “um re just we are A little sawmill town to th ¥, there xtent of IBS, Asst. P. M. Ww. SHO IN STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1918, PAGE 6 ny ©. ©. LYON Star Keporter Attached to General Pershing’s Army, Who ts In This try ona an Ameri imagination increases in the cont of tiv ing price Think of poor quality coal at from would be staggered by war sas they are in Europe today $60 to $70 @ ton; wood, $35 to $40 a cord; sugar, 20 cents a pound; coal oll, 20 cents a quart: oxen, 19 to 12 cents aplece; and footwear (hely help) from $12 to $50 @ pair, accord to whether you are buying ing \er shoes or boots: The cheap thing in France today in bread. IUa five cents a pound, and it tur nishes the biggest riddle of the war Fix Bread Price imports enormous quan. wheat from America, makes bread and then sells the bread for lens than it is being sold in the bakeries near the Kanaas or Dakota wheat flelda, where it grows’ In France the government fixes the price of bread. Since the start of the war the Prices of practically all foodstuffs in France, except bread, have advanced it Into x” - * DICK’S MANUSCRIPT SHOWS A NEW DICK ” “It Is on a queer kind of plane. Margie,” wrote Dick in his manu script, “that a man places his wife. You often told me how I seemed to make you over Into some you were not and never could be, something that I would never have fallen in love with under any ircumatances At the time, dear, I did not realize that | was doing and I # I was often very grouchy when you said those things to me “But | know now that cosmic force is purely material Nature is moved by law, not spirit. A man na After he weds, na rent in him. It upon bin soul ness if he would find it here, Margie, is where the take en woos with desire according to ture’s great law ture has no more tn in then he must oa. for hap An does not call upon his own soul for happiness, but he tries in a vague uncertain way to make his wife over into a sort of emasculated being Usat is his idea of a feminine rgel “Since I have been thinking much on this subject I have come to the Margie, that man has two reasons for this. He may not be conscious of it, but Iam sure he bas them. However much he has de sired his wife, however much he wanted the substance of the sacra down in his heart he wanted his wife to be satisfied with the «ym bol, Most men, altho they will not acknowledgs it even to themselves, are sure that only in this way vieartously—can they tranamit souls to their children. | “A man desires a mweethenrt, he | weds a wife, he lives with the moth er of hia children. “All of which is eplendid, my dear, and would make heaven upon earth if he would live up to this high standard, but unfortunately he does net. While she, in turn, becomes sweetheart, wife and mother, he re mains only and always man. The men who wrote the marriage service had an inkling of this, (Do you remember ours, dear? It was a jong time ago) ‘I pronounce you man and wife.’ “You see they knew that after marriage 4 man was still a man, but & woman must always be a wife un til she exchanged the entate for that of mother. “Margie, conclusion. mente I shall never eee my wife but I hope you will get mfort from the baby that is « to you.” bh, Dick! if you only knew what comfort the baby that has come to me in I do not think I could have stood elinean if I did not have a a part ou to take in my arma, I smother his little face w dear, whenever I see crooked mile begin to creep to tt of his me a6 dear, I laugh as 2 him up to me, for I say to Dick and I, have out ou, for I #till have a part of that will In future years trans mit © part of himself to the carrying of human } which t# only hu man progre: th NOW RAISES. Al) CHICKENS After Being Relieved of | —— Trouble by Lydia . Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. Oregon, Ili—"“I took Lydia FR. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for an organic tronble which pulled me down until I could not put my foot to the floor and could searcely do my work, and live on a farm and six hun- chickens year, it it very Po hard for me. T saw the Compound advertisnd in our paper, and tried it. It has restored my health so I can do all my Work and I am so grateful that T am recommending it to my friends.""—Mrs. D. M. Avreas, R. R. 4, Oregon, 11 Only women who have suffered the tortures of euch troubles and have dragged along from day today can realize the relief which this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia EB. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- bound, brought to Mrs, Alters Women everywhere in Mrs. Al ters’ condition should profit by her recommendation, and if there are any complications write Lydia EF. Pinkham Medicine Co,, Lynn, Mass,, for advice. The resuit of their 40 IST FROM $18 TO $20 A PAIR AD PRICES ARE LOW ES CO FRANCE; BRE | years experience is at your service.” AAA hon or boo doom't eat the eKKH for $1, nerve a noup, finh, @ piece . . jlor the honey; they hoard them and of roast beef with som egetabl WHEE FRMOOR EE} seit trae tothe rice naricon wcll stuee tian’ potaiven ‘cheeks Onde {| dier apple, but they charge extra for France Today | In the eyes of the French every | coffee, which in nerved without milk American soldier must be rich, be breakfast, practically all war } Here are nome prenentday war our private soldiers draw al-| zone restau and hotels ser | Prices In France, with most as much pay as a French ileu-| two exe c coffee, an } nor with prices aa they Were }| tenant, and our sergeants, on rauions| piece of bread and butter for 66 ) before the war (| allow ce about «a much a8 & a. 5 1918. 1914. {) irrench eaptalr Wages Slightly Higher i Hatter, th... .. We 30c Sell ‘im to Soldiers The war has enhanced tb York, th Be The average French housewife,|ings of those French in Potatoes, Ib acces : after welling her eggs to the Amert-| workers who have been kept Koast Heef, Ib........ 300}! cana, will go out and | some) to man munitions factor Heans, Ib ws re nd vegetables, and a little! the 41 « hasn't kept pac Coffee, Ib ee 49¢ {| hotue of table wine and, with that, the jump in price Chocolate, tb... . O5e 25¢ \/ uncanny art of cooking that all! ‘The average French factory work Clothing ts at least twice 98)! French women have, she will pre-| er carn $2.50 a day, 88! way expensive in 1914; shoes are)! pare a meal that is palatable and a the war from twice to four tin as high. {| nourishing. » muffering in the nore than 100 per cent. and, In some In the entire American war zone " who are at the Instances, nearly 200 per cent Question—How can the French people pay thene sky-high prices when all the men are and the income of the average family is only a fraction of what it waa formerly? Answer—They don’t pay ‘om —that is, wv The French family Confessions of a Wife | I love all that here, Dick aré nearching bad. world # the aw strong. ing, but tim them al Heven in that olden time when the book of Ke t. nor ery often. that you for a reason we ponder on them today However much we think, however much we much we fight, much we on” Perhaps of your child vanquish time and chance then we will groping for t that filter do earthly, miwundervta (To COCCCOOOOOCOEEE SCO EE OOOO OE OOO HOSE OO SOSOLOOOSOOOOOO OOOO COO OSE OSES OOOO SSE SOO SOOO OOS SOSOSESOSOOSOOSOOSOOOOOS act, struggle, however time and chance happeneth to them nome however time. # child will be able to | When Joffre m at the Marne, as resol an Fate, but unti “La rilled ume, skin to #) probably be alway Could h? It couldn't? Well, but wait he light of our ideal TH “Dixie” in Berlin. wn into the pit of our ht, 1918, N. E. A) © Be Continued) Scoeteaeabbecesetbecoes ‘Seattle’s Largest Upetaire Clothes Shop Comfortable Clothes For the Fourth and the Hot Days to Follow This store is ready, as never before, with light apparel of every kind. See our Windows Along Fourth Ave. and on Pike St Hours fam to 6pm ; f to war keeps a have written . because I know th & reason for all that life did to us, good and It in the question of the © Time began Why tn it that “the race is not to the battle to the neither yet bread to the wine. nor yet richem to men of understand nor yet favor to men of kill and chance happeneth wan written, men pondered on there things, and somehow, somewhere in the future, some child there's only one restaurant that can French erm be termed “first class,” In this| ment gives the wives and daughters place here is what one can get to| first chance at jobs vacated by men eat for $2 entering the army j Soup, fish, steak with French Mothers who can't go out to work fried potatoes, a cup of coffes, draw from the government a “sep two cookies, and a hunk of ice | aration” allowance of 26 cents a day cream not quite as big as a hen for her with 15 cents a day for re each child who is too oung to work y The cheap restaurants and hotels,| Dad, at the front, gets 5 cents a SS | THRILLS BY EDMUND VANCE COOKE When the crowd sweeps to its feet the strings "O, way!” before have sung el When the loans and funds go over with a bound, There's something tickles in you and you feel about the way As when your When Pershing sald * den greens above the ground. ous Voila at the tomb of La Fayette; © greets you with a grin; The thrill runs pretty deep, but there'll be one thrill deeper yet— When the Yankee bands play “Dixie™ in Berlin. When @ legless sold When Sims made quick tor response, “We're ready now," and proved When the Briton set hin back against the wall, I felt lke bude ab in the So full of thrills I couldn't hold When the milk-breath of a baby blows its perfume in your face, When the wheat’s a billion bushels in the b Perhaps you think you're all thrilled out, but wal Till the Yankeo bands play “Dixie” in Bertin. tin springtime, didn’t you? & little space, Ma you ever hear a French crowd cing “Ia Marselaine"? Well, You bones within your body dance and whirl. You feel as full of lightning a» you did the daring day, The first thoe that you ever kissed a girl Teach You the Shortest Way NORTHWESTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE North weate: Bookkeeping Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street FREE DOCTOR KN. Formas « Good Position And NIGHT y, Wednesday, Friday Filltett 1881, HERE a look costs nothing W and a buy saves you money. Saturday unusual value Summer Suits and thousands of medium and heavy-weight Suits Ss Sport and Outing Wear Sport Shirts, Outing Trousers, Khaki Outfits, Linen Dusters, Knitted Coats, Bathing Suits, Athletic Underwear. Straw Hats and Panamas Sailors in split and Sennitt at $2.00 and $3.00. Panamas in fine weaves at $5.00 to $10.00, TAILORED READY CO. Don’t fail to sign up for your share of War Savings Stamps. 401-403 Pike Street |est garments made “Ready to Wear,” at =» $30 $35 8 Apparel for Motoring ode