The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 23, 1918, Page 6

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1307 Sev Telegraph y by The Star THE SEATTLE Near MEMHKR OF SCTIPTs NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPER News Service of the United Press Assectation Batered as Second-Class Matter May &. Beattie, Weak. under the Act of Congress Marek 3, 1 Ty math, out of city, 400 per month; 3 montha, $1.15; € months, $2 Year, $4.00, in the State of Washington $4.80 for 6 months, or $9.00 per year inking Co. departments. 1899, at the Postoffice at TO, ‘Outside the ny Thea farrier, jaim 600. Private _ Won't see it. spirit of America. world stakes. On with the war. everlastingly licked. characters here. The Doctors ‘should be the mo fession. the No ‘stead, the army the life of \ =, to be congratula ab! of No Compromise for Kaiserism Nothing can be gained now by discussing peace terms. y is still arrogant and not grasped the spirit of the war on autocracy. They will have to feel it. shot into them by allied guns. The allies have accepted Americs as announced by President address to the world at Washington's tomb expresses the Wilson. Newcomb Carlton did not stay long in Seattle. We do not care for undesir- Seattle has no room for anyone ‘who wilfully, to promote his own profits, will defy the U. S. government in war time. all solent. professions the wholeheartedly unselfish. In the military medical corps, this altruism must be 2 beyond the point of selfishness. ‘Sweeps aside ethics, precedents, cugtoms and practices of| Her rulers have) They It will have to be s unselfish war aims His Fourth of July There can be no compromise between that spirit and) Why not add to the story of the hon Prussianism. They are as far apart as the poles, Diplomats can’t sit around a table and shake diplomatic dice for War must go on until we have won ALL that we are fight- ipg for—which, in essence, is the right of all the people ‘ everywhere on earth to the right of life, liberty and the for a pittance pursuit of happiness, unmolestec who claim to rule their fellows b¥ divine right. Until the German kaiser into him and all his family and all his associates and all other autocrats everywhere, nothing can be gained by discussing terms of peace. Kaiserism must be eternally and by any two-legged men} understands that—until it is/ commer | ~ The Every physician today is a potential army doctor. Every physician today should give thought to what) that changed life would demand of him. existence, medical Sacrifice, there, lone of the luxuries and conveniences of private of- : attend upon the physician who attends upon the soldier, the dressing station just behind the lines. ' Gone is the grandeur of limousine gas-palace. the danger and horror of enemy gas attack. dering to the fancied ills of moneyed folks. loctor dresses wounds of such terrible began to + as to call for his utmost stamina, self control and) “What ts this highest powers of surgical skill in medicine. . It is a glorious thing to save a life. for one life to be more precious than another, then! a soldier stands sacredly supreme. one American doctor has thus far been found di-| In its In- But if it is pos-| ‘ responsible for a soldier’s death thru duty _ raff become infected? ically | Victory Carnival. the spectacle. the gorgeous pageant. course. ing Telegraph. be made to understand. Mohammed V. may hav Not mean that he did not dle It will be noticed that field Republican. Evening § domitable Jugo-Slave You Should See It Picture in your mind a great open air theatre, with a setting ablaze with color, and backed by giant trees lake. Then imagine hundreds of graceful girls, artist- costumed, cavorting with such celebrities as Harry Whitney Treat and Chief of Police Warren, arrayed in an- cient splendor. Music by a great orchestra of trained mu- ! worked out the setting. There must be a feline stratr Iron crosses sell for 40 cents in Germa fmarks accounts for a price still 10 cents too high. whi In the Austro-Hungarian ret his armies in person.—Arkanans ( Both Gen. Foch and Mr. Hoover are showing us how the Huns may be whipped by nibbling tactics. Germany has built three new bridge @vents cast their shadows behind? According to T. Rt., the moat this country is the last “n” in intern $100 next fall. And no possibilit who can unite cordially in singing wants that little long.”—Springfield We heartily favor recognizing as indep Lumberman ¢ explaining that the defeat was duc the rain, Austria none the less fires the generals who let it rain. zorte unnecessary death acrosa the Louis Philadelphia North American, bg, = i man is now serving a 12-month jail sentence. Were! it a hundred years, his incarceration could never blot out crime or restore the life it cost. Humanity summons every doctor to resolve now, be- Uncle Sam calls, to place the soldier’s recovery, the mad for some tomato ainda. ‘restoration of health and strength to the fighting man, in the gallery of his soul as the picture of his highest and Most sacred service to mankind and posterity. | | , Are there any rich men’s sons in confinement at | e | the stockade as vice disease victims, or do only the riff- har abate ag bw Such is the pageant entitled “The Road to Victory,” which will be presented every night this week, except Sat- urday, beginning at 9 o'clock, in the natural amphitheatre "on the university campus in connection with the Girls’ Hundreds who witnessed the dress re- hearsal Monday night were amazed at the magnitude of It will rank as one of the most ambitious community artistic endeavors the Northwest has ever seen. The stadium will seat 10,000 people. Miss Lila A. cotrduaie aris JUSS rom New York to direct) j. lrene Ewing, Both deserve Seattle’s gratitude. It would be a splendid thing if Seattle could show its appre- ciation by capacity attendance. children, should view “The Road to Victory.” local artist, Everyone, including the Join the fun! At the Girls’ Victory carnival, of in Nicholas Romanoff.—New York Morn They call it a bumper wheat crop becduse of the bump it will give the kaiser.—Nashville Southerr A peace by understanding would be all right if Germany could onty | baby, its mother will have much im: | St. Louis Globe- Democrat n assassinated, but for a sultan that does a natural Springfield Republican The depreMtion of paper New York World to Spring Emperor Charles protdbly is leading Star. Rhine Globe-Democrat Do coming luxury accorded to spies in Garment men are predicting that ready-made suits for men will reach of relief with sultless days—New York the heroic ndent nations and whoulder with them to make the world safe for democ: understand clearly in advance that there is to be no kissing, either before or after victories.—Columbus (O.) State gournal. | Gen. Otto Von Below is assigned to look after the Austrian generals, Man wants but little Herr Below, nor Republican Czech-Slovaks and the in-| ng shoulder to , provided they | t to make endure hortes of her boys splendid moveme the hallowed me who die It ie fare for democracy to rename a thoro row,” and for each roll of honor to plant City officials and the families of Id star men will participate in emble stout hearted a tax hess and valor. Rach living tribute’ will have @ ‘They're talking now about putting laughter, A wWoRD FROM JOSH WISE |; a A uy fellers | yr WN think th’ school uv wh experience Is a) sex night school, wr i A Ani on hotel and restaurant checks. | Ha! Ha! Oho! Our sides hurt from | All Jin At last there's one tax we Sweet drips of pleasures, 1 motion that measures the ec The cow's Jaws move Ike waves of DAY, JULY 23, 1918. iC! Dear Miss Grey: I would Iike tc ure not engaged, but I THE MELANCHOLY MUSE answer a “Philosopher's” letter to be soon, Yet it occurred to me Wat {x #0 wad as cow that in pas | sald “If a girl haw not already made it in welfinh t promine Prt eb sure, of some man she will hold on png ; poe ruminates regularly? to several Ding them gucaning| of my atte 4 of even to breaking of | UAtll one proposes, then she coolly |y. cher men nd | be dawn and dows turns down the rest called upon to make ure in atall, the bovine te wont to| Hut Hat to the girl's aide of it ficea while waiting for me muse B Sriend will be much brighte th tongue that treasures d her for a platonic! promise, but is it fi cor-| atacy to the young woman to leave her the long day, without confessing your love and potential hay, never hinted of making her his wife) 1. nope that she will become some time. other man met,| Your Wife some time in the fu- plate fittingly inscribed, every one a! can beat, We'll let the waiter pay it the wafting sea, In the meantim: | ture. You can do this without verse in the Rook of Victory, written Champing and chawing regariiess| Wooe! and w h and they! exacting a definite pl in the hand of Right, printed on the! Which reminds ua that Chicago| ‘of things to be. i chanced to move to the city where) 10) on laying down ru! press of Sacrifice, bound with the waiters are accused of putting poison | reyitable the movement of a cow's | Net, “Platonic friend” resided. Alth conduct in your ab boards of Liberty and dedicated to! ous powders in the food of guests j he has often naid he wished always) POnGne™ OO tees Posterity who did not tip them, We don't! pike fat nves in mildnese of| to >° & friend and visitor of hers, a8) pn pouite Only one alteration to the plan | know just how it waa done, but our mast 4 they were so congenial would not) edge her suggests iteelf, Why not fruit trees? | hunch t# that the waiter concealed | rmpetied of primal-and elementary |¢¥°n “ll en her or meet her hus | Qos napp: the powder under his thumbnail and law, a see ored dead and the “fruits of victory,” nature's own? Why « wid not each city care for put it in the butter. New York ole. stores are employing| Set on us by creation | ‘The cow brings thoughts too mad for » you nee, girls are not alwayn to! 4 blame when they marry the other| Change of Work fellow. Let the men always make) Might Help Him tongue oF tenes, their purpose known to the girls and Mins Grey: Please advine A change in his work might be y | rit onth. My She Anawe the marines within « mont y fn | ork eangtt Sea |e losopher | eagernens for military life in uncues| helpful. Then ne anon song i tage %4, but-—I am leaving the girl I] about the houne Y things up and be as cheerful as | you can Het | spond. oe2e « of Distinction Between “Mary” and “Marie” y Are “Mary” a Dear Mias Grey gradually re “Marie the same name, or diff ent? ue They are different forma of | the ame name. r Miss Grey ne the D | man noldiers | rad” frequent The word As the-G for “Comrade.” ‘The Germans for companion” the zmotive of treachery behind 4t. 4 it as an appeal ship, but with New York: Has One \s English and the other French. |\“Kamerad” Means “Comrade” in German I notice the G Kindly tell me meaning as they use the word, word “K. YY erman wi these trees, even more symbolic than | Women floor walkers, and the prefer-| When we consider how cowllke wel they will then have to face no dis-| Doe be of what they are set out to|¢nce is given to those whg are mar. are. nat cm 4 on no Gl ine how to treat my husband. ° Cab service to mankind? Why fied—on the ground, perhaps, that) Chomping and chawing thru. the ¥ oe MARTHA. | never wmiler. He goes out mad and Three in Cabinet : fruits be ted, pre | they have had experience weary yearn, i comes in mad, No matter how I try Dear Miss Grey: Which state . served and distributed to the poor see With death as a guiding star, No Law That Will to please him he finds fault with me|the largest representation in A GOOD THING Do we not eat to live? But come, Protect Tenant and everything I do. Every time| president's cabinet STUDENT. Each brar » would blos-| “Society 1s 60 shallow,” remarked enough |" Dear Miss Grey: Will you inform| we have fuss he says he will go New York. with Lansing. nn, bud austiful here | es thee poung weaian. The restaurant calix, and one must! me if a landlord can put me out of away. We have been ae ame oh ea cena Du 4 perpetuation | “It od thing it ts,” replied the away—to wtuff; my home? My husband is a ship | years and I hay gveriooked ie} pee regory” of those _ _|eynic, “or half the people who are| T° Primal curse, the chawing of| yard worker. The house is up for| treatment about as long aw I ole Rat _ wading around in it would be drown: food, vegetables and meat, sale, I would Uke to get my winter | #m nearly broken down, zi ed." It 1s heavy on us, and we can but| coal and wood in, but am afraid I} It i* hardly pomstble that you | Canteen Service aie eS obey, we can Dut eat, eat. might have to move. MIS. G. W. could be wholly at faatt; that Serves Soldiers © advertisements of the * Pomer. | It 1s quite probable you will everything in your home shoul sind _ cee . o. cae’ be wrong all the time, It ie | Dear Miss Grey: Will you } re posteards J, M., “remind me of ae ha AB Mt ae innt would | therefore something wrong with | tefl me what kind of work the ¢ { My agi Bi pd proving or = wae WAS OF onl S tenant | 8 n | your husband which makes him | teen service consists of A. Re FE the volume of business was eo great|, 2.0008 knew & man who was mak-| Under such circumstances see faults everywhere, Perhaps ‘The canteen oe ae he made a good profit.” Kreal) ing money so fast that he had to go sé his work is monotonous or irri- refreshment sta m3 “4 rae tating and he needs a <e. ters, ete, where edibles are Vannrnnnnnn nner ” 7 PROTECTION OF SCIENCE 1S r ‘ BABYS RIGHT x os Just as I* arrived at the point where Dick was moralizing on the duties of husbands and wives, I had an illustration of what it means to be a mother My baby's nurse came to me ab most in a state of lapse, sayin Come quickly, Mrs. Waverly, 1 think that Dickie is dying.” When I get to b crib he looked as tho he were dying. Luckily he was un dreased, and I called to the nurse to start the hot water running in the/ bath tub, and by the time I had got-| ten off his little nightie I had reach- | ed the tub and immersed his litte stiffening form in the hot water. The convulsions ceased almost in-| stantly, altho the water was very hot, for I, in my exeitement, did not . thermometer nute or two w up. baby we most in a m my Mabel?" What has this child been He was throwing up great ch of something red in the curdied milk. | Mabel turned pale and «aid: “When I was eating my dinner to day the baby seemed to want a taste of tomato walad, and you know the | other day your husband's mother said she thought Dickie acted as tho} he were hungry for something, and she asked you if you wanted any- thing very badly just before he waa born, and you anid you were simply | I asked *‘So—well, Mra. Waverly, I gave! him @ little tUny piece; he wanted | more and I gave him more.” “And you are a trained nurse™ 1 exclaimed. “Do you realize that for | an old foolish tale you might have All such ideas of prenatal influence have been di carded long ago.” Mabel burst into tears. “Oh, Mra Waverty! don't send me away,” she exclaimed, “I @id it because I loved Dickie, really I did; he reemed to Ik it we Il me that you loved some thing that you would hurt him, simply because he wanted it?, If that is the case you have no busi neas to be a supposedly scientifically trained nurwe. I think I shall have to let you go.” “Oh, Mra. Waverly! I know 1 will die if you do not let me stay with Dickle. Honestly I won't ever do that in not actentifically one thing t as long as I am with you, if y let me y. I have d my lesson, but you see I Mra. Trent knew. She had brought up three children.” “That's just it, Mabel," I inter 1; “you must realize that we © moved ng way along the path of correct living since your mother and mine brought up their are getting to a point where we realize that a baby ja only a lit tle animal; that he grows a soul from & very rudimentary ghing, just as he grows a body. If we keep a baby comfortable we must feed it aa carefully, and devote ourrelves to it, not in a sentimental, but in a prac teal way, just as @ stock man de: votes himself to the welfare of his pr’ nek the last generation a baby wa little meat de the young bride's arm y tt This generation bh to clusion that a baby has rights, least, and I ex; |when Richard Waverly ILL. grows jup and takes a wife and owns al proved upon this baby’s grandmoth- | er’s raising. Until then, however, | we will apply a the modern acien- | tifle » know to the proper | bring! Richard Waverly in Again the nur such pleading e think looked at me with that I said, “1 you have learned your lesson, and I will keep you on if you wish, but you must make a solemn prom. | ise that thie nor anything like it/ will never happen again.” The nurse threw herself down by | my knee on which Dickie waa ly-| ing y in his usual health, | and none worse for his ex perience. (To Be Continued) TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street army had bad luck. qo, Dad _a run of it. Vienna paper mays the Austrian One might say for into seclusion for quite a while.” . Should Tell Girl That He Loves Her he went to the penitentiary, Dear Mian Grey: I expect todeave| counterfeiting.” | the city and cross the ocean with! Persunde him to take a trip with you where he will become inter- ested in something new and dif- ferent from the routine at home. id he have a nervous break =—QUIT!== Spokane and Tacoma Piano Dealers We Sell Their Stock These Dealers Not Being Able to Carry the Heavy to Doing Business These Trying Times, It Became Necessary This Fine Stock of High-Grade Pianos and Player Pianos Has Been Shipped to Us to Dis- for the Bush & Lane Piano Company to CLOSE THEM OUT pose of in the Very Shortest Time and With the Least Possible Expense. Bash & Lane Grand Reduced Price Bush & Lane Reduced Price Victor Cecilian Reduced Price Manufacturers _ Most of these instruments have raised in-price $25 to $100 since they were first ordered, but we are going to sell them at the old price. If any are shop-worn or case-damaged, they will be further reduced. Every Piano is warranted to be in fine condition, and each carries the full guarantee of the BUSH & LANE PIANO COMPANY. _ Used and exchanged Pianos are included in this sale. The figures at which these instruments are to be sold will nev- er be duplicated. The policy of this house is to sell nothing but the best and to put on few sales. In other words, when we say SALE, it isa Real Sale These Pianos are going to go, and they are marked so low, value considered, that you cannot fail to accept this op- portunity, if once you see the instruments. The name of BUSH & LANE is an absolute guarantee of reliability. You may rest assured that any statement we make is founded on facts and your own best interests. On account of the excep- tional value of these Pianos they will not be here long and we would advise you to come without delay. The cost of manufacturing is rising rapidly. No one can safely say what the prices of Pianos and Player Pianos will be in the near future. Some of these beautiful instruments can be secured with a moderate cash payment, and a monthly payment as low as $10 per month. Several First-Class Organs, $10.00 to $40.00 fotolia Fie Homie of the Famous Cecilian Wholesale Seattle Store, 1519 Third Avenue, Between Pike and Pine Bush & Lane Reduced Price Victor Reduced Price Farrand Reduced Price served to soldiers. This work is — carried on mostly by the Y. W. Cc. A, Y. M. C. A. and the Salva tian Army in France. Retail

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