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Telearaph News Service of the United reas Anqoot Ae Second-Class Matter May 3, 1899, ° ttle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3, 1878, nthe, $1.50; 6 months, $2. Outside Une state, Th 00 per year.” By ° dae sf ee | ° ° Be All Over, if They Win : Admiral Penrose Fitzgerald is another of those super- thinkers who believe that Germany can be licked some other method than blood-letting. He writes the mporary Review that the allied navies have it in their ; to say: : “No German flag shall ever again be seen upon the of the world. N man shall ever again show Pnose outside of Central Europe, and no ton of tropical | gemi-tropical produce shall enter rmany, until the in government agrees to any terms of peace—the rigid and exacting—which it may be our pleasure to And when we do dictate them, we shall take care there are guarantees for their fulfillment, other than of paper. Will this pressure of e and win the war for the allies? nt that it will.” The sole virtue of such a declaration would be that d cost nothing. It’s like fishing in a stream wherein are no fish. You catch nothing. Still you are Vhat economic threat or actual boycott could make impression upon Germany than the blockade she ‘endured for four years past? Is she upon her knees? ‘on both feet and, apparently, as strong as ever, com- aes sea power bring Germany to her ly. There is but one way to “bring Germany to jo ” and that is to pound her on the head, and all Sol are hopeless and wasteful. the unavoidable necessity for guarantees other “scraps of paper,” and such guarantees are impossible many as long as she can fight. anti-Teutonic world is mighty stupid if it does not, time, fully realize that’Germany’s main aim is Victor, Germany will say where Germans shall yw their noses, what produce shall enter Germany and it nations shal! purchase German products “willy, nilly.” } world has seen and stood aghast at the brutalities Prussian militarism. It will experience Prussian eco- mic brutality far more disregardful of human rights e in general, if her militarism is not wiped off Will a nation that applauds the murder of Edith crosses of honor for the successful bombing churches and passenger ships and justifies the fiendishness, hesitate to say where her markets what her imports shall be, after winning world ition in such a war? Impossible! It is as easy to that starving wolves will not devour the deer they ham-strung. Somebody worries about what War Fathers may do hile the War Mothers are holding their meetings. es let ’’em take up the knitting where the knit- off. ung Our War Problem BY A WOMAN ‘women—many of us—are farmerettes these war And yet what woman whose small girlhood was d away 20 or more years ago got by unscolded—for to copy her brothers? Twenty years ago mothers been taught that the young of the species are first animals, who if they are to grow into gentle- ‘womanhood must become physically strong thru ttle girls as well as little boys. “Whistling girls and crowing hens Always come to dreadful ends—” So you were admonished—this after you had spent secret hours, tip-toe before a looking-glass, screwing D your face into tuneless attempts that finally resulted ‘a fair imitation of some boy's whistle. But that was 20 years ago—and today we are at war. | the little girl hearts that then beat under prim ruf- are now woman hearts that throb under the smock j And many a farmer, all over the “Whistling girls and good fat sheep Are the very best stock a farmer can keep We women are whistling, all right, not before looking- that reflect only ourselves, but by the side of out- trains that whirl away our dearest and best, and before casualty lists. Oh! It takes just about all we've got, after one of white nights we spend kneeling beside our pillows, ‘to face the next day’s work with lips steady enough to tle. But we can do it. When the tears and the fears must have their way, it be in private. For the sake of the war-winning cing day, for the sake of the harvest of field, factory,| kitchen, for the sake of each soldier we've sent and strength of the army we're backing, it’s heads up, ‘women of America, eyes front! Whistle! German: wants to foist Constantine, ex-regent of Greece, on Finland as a good, second-hand monarch. We fear Constantine's “Finish” will be bad. The Soldiers and Sailors’ club, Fourth ave. and Cherry is the scene of constantly shifting faces. The boys in and olive drab come and go, but the club is always and there are always some sailors and soldiers stand- ing in the lobby waiting for something to turn up to break the monotony of things. e Many of them are strangers to Seattle, and are only ; temporarily. They would like to see the city exten- ve sively, if they could, but it costs money, and the facilities - at their cet sagfiionba eee fae autoists, people with cars and some time at their disposal, c ye f “oe peeing if they will. ae ee * le the general popularity of the “Give ’Em a Lift” $dea has resulted in a large number of autoists proffering - their services to the “boys” they meet on the street, a a smaller @umber have adopted the habit of dropping in at the club occasionally to take a party of soldiers or - Bailors out for a spin over Seattle’s boulevards, oe Drop by the club and show the service men about | the city. “The president's veto of $2.40 wheat seem: y gone ep ibn the grain.—St, Lous Star. ue iheys The crowned heads of Belgium went to England in an airplane. We suppose an “ace” took the king and quan —St. Louis Star. The kaiser may still claim the distinction of having been cussed in more languages than any ruler of the past or present.—Arkansas Gazette. It won't be long before General Depression starts giving commands to the Huns. $ Not too early today to commence the next Liberty Bond saving campaign in your own home. Pretty warm to do your war work, ch? Well, it’s hotter “over there.” 1 do not doubt for [ All other plans |g England they re gard it as A settled thing that after war Belgium shall once again be placed under their eco [nomic suterainty, As opposed to this, Germany will take the stand point that she and Belgium are unit ed by a ayxtem of nerves and mus cles that cannot be broken except to the severest injury of both The railways from the southweat jo the Scheidt, as also the line from [Cologne via Alxla-Chapelle, Liege |and Brussels to the coast, which con stitute what one may term “the tron Rhine,” mean for Germany commu nication with the with the world market which we can never abandon. Germany would be committing suicide were he to allow the door to the open ocean to be closed and to hand the key to an enemy, The et gian railways and ports must remain in German hands, or, at least, they t be placed permanently under German luenc® Otherwise we should have to look toward Holland for ae In France and | | | CONFESSIONS | | OF AWIFE ” MEN DREAD WOMEN'S TEARS w — - x | I tel you, little book, I was glad free ocean and| THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1918. OLDEST OFFICE BOY NEVER LATE; NEVER LOAFS ON JOB When an office boy can't get off to go to the elreus with the old stall about “randmother sick la kid out of luek ‘That's the fix Grant I He's 89 year the boy in the we And office boys can't refer {o grandmothers, t away with it art, after an active fe as nt driver and miner and poll cian in Northern California, tried | to enlist at th k of the war, | but, for or other, was | refused, altho he told the reerulting officer that, if they'd put him on a horse, he'd “stick there Ull we get to Berlin.” | Shunning Taggart is in vat ven erable office his age, inactivity, he went to W. R. Alberger, vice president and} general manager of the “Key Route,” & big traction #ystem on the east shore of San Francisco bay “Haven't anything for you unless you want to be my office boy,” aaid| the traction official All right,” replied Taggart. “Per | hapa it will releas younger man for active ‘over there,’” He got the Job, and Alberger mays he's the best office boy he ever had. He's always on the job. A quarter of a century ago he was a member of the legisiature and served three terms as Shasta county clerk and © an clerk of the #u-| for the legistature from Oakland, bis preme court. Me is now a candidate present California home. nervice Grant 1. Taggart that Donna and Mollie and Mary | came over this afternoon. If they |had not come, I think there would have been an open quarrel between | Barclay Si!) and Jim. Jim could not have been as busy as he thought he would be, for he came in very early and I will say this for old Jim, he jhas tact—when he wants to have it He did not say anything about the party and my abrupt departure. In stead, he began immediately to talk to me about the business. | Finally Richard Waverly 111 | brought in. It is perfectly beautiful, little book to see the way Jim loves that baby Ho seems pertectly happy when he | has him. in his arms, and he will sit |for minutes looking inte the uncon wctous face. Today I could ree a miat in his eyes when the tiny mouth turned up | at the corner in perfect semblance to one of Dick's fascinating crooked smiles, “Look, Margie,” he said auddenty, “could there be a better miniature of Dick?’ I wuddenty put out my arms for the baby, but, aw I felt ite tiny bedy against my breast, I felt all the more bereft and lonely, and I burst into sobs, Jim stood looking at me for a mo- ment, and then, as I could ‘not wipe |awnay the tears that were running |down my cheeks, he gravely took [hia handkerchief out of his pocket and wiped my face carefully as a mother would dry the tears of a eaild. The action was as absurd aa It was kindly, and 1 laughed a little hye terically at the thought of how the picture would impreas any of our friends. Jim, however, han a bigger soul than T; he had no self-consclounness | His heart seemed onty full of love |for Dick's baby and pity for Dick's wife “Lam sorry, Margie,” he aid, “to see you cry, for it tells me that you are unhappy, but I think that tears | wil! do your overburdened heart g00d.”" | I looked at him in surprise, Was it | possible that Jim—dear old Jim who had never struck me as think ing much about anything he was not compelled to, bad that finer under standing of human happiness and human grief for which I had been groping all my life? Most people say “Don't ery,” sim ply because to see you cry makes them unhappy. They are perfectly willing you should be unhappy if you keep it to yournelf. “Don't cry, dear; please don't ery.” lwe say to someone to whom the blessed balm of tears comes like a benediction. One of the things that is impreased upon all women is the foolishness of crying in the presence of a man. A woman is told that one reason she | must not do this is that it spoils, for the moment, her beauty But in time, little book, a woman comes to know she must not ery be- |fore a man because she will make him uncomfortable—and when a man |is uncomfortable, he promptly pro | ceeds to eliminate the cause of hia discomfort if he can First he tries to dry the teara was If he finds that impossible, he simply | goes away and leaves the woman to her solitary solace. (To Be Continued) ST - oe | | The Latest Mother Goose Series | Solomon Grundy, 12654 Prow pect ave., was buried on Sun day, funeral *s being con ducted by the Inde lent Royal Order of Woodchucka, of which | he was a charter member Mr. Grundy’s life was a ro. mantic one. He was born in Painesville on Monday and came to Cleveland shortly after his christening, which took pl Tuesday, He marri Wednesday to a Cleveland young | | woman, who survives him, He | | was taken sick on Thursday and | | was removed from his home to a hospital, where his condition was so serious on Fri that surgeons decided 6n an opera- tion, His attendants were hope- ful of his recovery, but he died on Saturday Mr belonged to sev eral prominent clubs and noted for his charitable work, | which he performed, however, so | quietly that few knew of his | g00d deeds, He left no children, | | was ton Grundy was | | Py reaninamdsniite | Olympic Hot Springs week, WINE@D MoT WATER AWlst MING POOL. Supplies for sate at Mprines Angele raay. } OLYMPIC. NOT sFRINGS Co, i Kiwhe, Wash, MOTHER’S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH You know this place we live in sometimes geta my pet Angora And I cum ite whole existence, both ite fauna and its flora, Hut several years ago, before the kaiser got the notion He could post his sign “Verboten” anywhere along the ooran My wife and I, we took a trip, and my! we traveled SOME And saw more things than I could tell this side of Kingdom Come We mw “the glory that waa Greece, the grandeur that was Tome | And ever since we've had & new respect for things at home And mother’s quite in earnest when she says she made a soarch And didn’t find one thing to match the Presbyterian church They showed us big cathedrals, Paul's and Peter's and Cologne's, With a few Westminster Abbeys, chock up full of human boner ‘They'd fill us full of history that every place waa rich in, But mother’d poke around a bit and ask ‘em, “Where's the kitehin?” A modern church.” she'd may, “you know, ain't Just for Sunday meeting It's for every sort of rervice, with conveniences for eating Your triforiums and buttresses and architraves are pretty But 1 was on ‘equipments’ of our woman's subcommittee,” And then the dean would moat fall off bie dignatorial perch And mother’d add, “YOU ought to see our Pret an church!" | | They showed us miles of palaces with acreage of floors | And castles, towered and turreted, and big a» al! outdoors | ‘They'd show us where some doughty duke had laid the cornerstone, And how, ‘most like a living thing, the grand old place had grown. They showed ua banquet halls so big they must have fed a city, | And mother looked ‘em over and responded, “Very pretty! And then she added (and her voles would have a hostile quirk tn), | “But saints alive! AINT it the Godforsaken place to work in? Now WE took every catalogue and made the closest search, | And we've got all modern fixin’s in the Presbyterian church.” | Then they took us to museums, to the Vatican and “Louvre,” And the British big Museum! I thought maybe that might move her. | It's got the manuscripts and books from every age and nation, "way back to “Adam's Comments” on ‘The Sixth Day of Creation.” | Why, the place just seemed to sbrink me, with a sort of lofty pity |For such a puny thing as me. But mother says, “It's pretty But in reading an in eating, it don't pay to be too greedy, And in OUR reading room we got just ONE encyclopesdy, And tho our literary club 1s given to research It has answered! every purpose of the Presbyterian church.” Of course 1 joked her, and, once home. started a report ‘That while abroad she'd had the chance to be received at court And how abe told the gracious queen her crown was “Very pretty,” But it should have been selected by the girls of her committee But mother anwwered, “Yes, a crown 18 nice for lookin’ at, But it can’t compare in comfort to the commonest old hat And for castles and cathedrals, Europe leaves us in the lurch, But for common use,” says she, “give ME the Presbyterian church! (Copyright, 1918, N. B. A) The Star Will Gladly Publish Interesting Communications From Sammies clency in eats during our drive. Milk is very scarce, but I think I can get some this evening. We have several rose bushes in the yard near our iilet, hich perfurne the air. They ave some of the tartest cherries ever grown—they are much like a green lemon, The French are stack ed with Spanish jams, which are fair ly eatable, but there are some brands of real French jam that are excel LETTERS FROM 4 MARINE ‘The following letters, from Private Carroll K. Peterson, Seattle boy, with the marines fighting on the Weat front, tell how the boys rest up after | > sharp fighting h "My nerves are he says. won left the shipyards to join the marin July, 1917, and arrived in France learly this year. He waa formerly a/|!ent. especially apricot and cherry student in Philomath college, Ore-| What kind of a writeup do the gon, and lived at 1206 Terry ave. | newspapers give us? If posnible 5 send me one, as Tam curious as to the view they take of our drive in no| the states, The French commend us highly and will confer high honor on us It in very quiet thi evening, Just cool enough #0 one can sleep won derfully. They have some excellent bathhouses down by the river, and I have visited my hot tub daily, and it has made a new man of me, I bought some canned corn from the army canteen, and, believe che, it tasted | good, with fresh bread butter, fried potatoes and coff: The French women are delighted to cook for us if we buy the eats, and they do their best for us, too. Nearly billet has a French I got % good night's sleep last | Mother, and they sell us things night. the first good one sines, May,| Cheaper and do many little kind acts 18, when we started which help considerab! We had about three warm meals, and coffee three |! must close, with times until all, from yesterday morning. 1 re repeat, I azn not wounded, #o do not Pe aiee wae Le worry. I have gone thru pl ; a where it seemed impossible to get out alive, but I © always gotten |) nafely thru. I have a alight scar POINTED PARAGRAPHS either wrist, where the skin waa ” —— — partly broken, and some holes in my jeclothing and equipment, but none | | in pretty good Skinner Dear Folks at Home: I am still on the top side, feeling pretty good. wounds, just a few scratches, Heinle love taps. I saw many of my friends fall on all sides, most of them wounded, and will recover, A few of them never knew what hit them. We took| Heinie by complete surprise, got him | going, and kept him going. ‘They do not like our method of fighting. We are careful to let them know when we are coming. The boys who relieve wu are continuing the good work, and Heinle in going back right We have won honors from but perhaps you know! more about that than I do. | not and every ans of love to se *” hurt me. New York Tribune. st close and write to the rest,| The harder the | with oceans of love to from | worse he hurts his fist j CARROLL K, PF RSON, | ord-Herald. | United States Marines. | June 19, 1918 Hun hits, the Helena Rec I mus i, We must now make one teaspoon ful of coal do the work of two.-—Chi | | cago Daily News. NERVES IN GOOD SHAPE | Dear Folks at Home: I am feeling | Pretty good this evening, have dined | heartily, have slept well the last two jevenings, so consequently my nerves jare in pretty good shape, Our town in rapidly becoming repopulated, for |the people fairly come streamning in. | They left in haste—in fact, we pass ed many of them coming out, as we | und | were on our way for our drive Ww i can get good bread, real butter,| he probably would say: “Th jam, figs and some chanolates, so | Russian born every minute,” have nearly made up for the defi-| sas City Star. Nobody would object to the luxury tax, if he could make up the list of luxuries. w York World. r admits the war is not That seems to make it Philadelphia Inquirer. Finland, begging America for food, muat first get ri lachshund r the table. rk World re P. T. Barnum living today, | yet won, | unanimous. You'll find sugar in the dictionary, | AAR | DING HIM UP Hokus—The doctor told Guzzler |he whould take a drink of whisky | only before each meal, | Pokus What is the remult? Hokue—Ho in now eating elght meals & day.—Town Topics, | aus | HIS KEASON Rastus—8o'n yo’ gwine to fine de army. Who don’t yo’ jine de navy | instend? Sambo—Niggah dan Ah can ewim . Ah can run fastah Judge. : FOOT WORK | Mra. A—Jonephine ja progresming |by leaps and bounds in her piano | practice. Mr. A-—-I thought she couldn't |make all that racket with her hands alone, | | CREDIT WHERR DUE | A student, coming to a hard ques | tion on his examination paper, wrote for his answer, “God only knows; I | don't lowing correction in the professor's | handwriting, | you don’t.” “God gets the credit; HIS GUESS Mrs. Jawback—1 wonder what 1 |maw in you to admire when I mar-| ried you? Jawback—My nerve, I guess. oe THE MELANCHOLY MUSE Man, for 4 moment, mad by the sea shore stands, With pomp and power and passion and pride in his hands, | While the waves lap on and the } tides advance on the sands, But man shall pass in his pride, | And other Unings reside, Yea, many things the path of man shall move benide The Great Gingwallapus ts gone, Nor shines the sun the Green-Eyed Goofus on, But the Eager Eel shall from the deep ascend, And the Blear-Kyed Roffitt be on the earth at the end. Many things were before man, and hall be, When the bones of man are covered by the nea. Tho the reign of man was long, And his arm strong, Yet his arm shall be withered soon, And all that made up man to the four winds strewn. Yet shall the Poorfish swim in calm- or waters, And the Mudpuppy frisk upon a sun. Ut shore, When the pomp and pride of the race of mankind totters, And Is no more. —Pomer. Editor's Mail Unsigned letters will be given | ho attention by The Star. Bign your name and address, and if you do not desire them to | be published, please atate so. Make your letters 250 words or 8. * eiiliine a al } | | | » THE LANDLORD'S CASE Falter The Star: Much has been maid lately about profiteering land lords in Seattle. I believe there are some profiteering landlords, but not all of them are profiteering. Prior to the United States entering | the war, many tenants in Seattle were living in houses for a rent next to nothing, except perhaps steam- heated apartment houses. Many of these tenants had leases on their houses expiring this year. Now, with better working conditions in Se Mattie, I think the small, earnest land- lord is entitled to a little increase in rent, so that he doesn't lose cnoney on his house all the time. They talk of a crease in rent above rent paid when the United States entered the war, but what would that amount to for the landiord when his tenants were living in his houses prior to the war for a rent next to nothing? I think a better way would be to appoint a committee of three or five fair-minded and earnest persons, to investigate the conditions of the ten ants and landlords, and when they found there was too big a tax, then tax the landlord 100 per cent on the excess rent he is charging ld be to prohibit arcing higher rents Seattle during the fair in 1909, At any rate, there is hing in it for the small landlord 1 Seattle, on account of high taxa jon, The small landlord many times pays higher rent than his tenants, even if he lives in the humblest flat himaelf. Many lose their little homes in Seattle on account of high taxation I would gladly sell my little hold ings in Seattle real estate if I could get what they cost me. A SHIPYARD WORKER, ds from ¢ than were paid { Editor The Star: ident go to Europe? If the presi- dent is needed to cement the relation of America with the allies, then there must be something wrong with the Amerteans in France. When Kerensky comes, he ma tell you many thin ither he nor any one else can accomplish amy thing in Russia hirt, new coat, or new pair of boots, and pin licenses on his coat, ¢ considers himself a le will fight, quarrel, that disputes his Give or Star Mditor ‘The TI think the Most president should Franée, It will help in more ways than I have space here to tell you He should go. R. H. LANGDON WOULD RA » to URORS’ PAY Editor ‘Th In these strenu times ar igh ¢ of living, ople in all walks of life are clam joring for a wage increase, I want to send this thought out: that there are people serving their country 4 very important way | rely overlooked I refer to the body of men and women good and true who settle oth er people's troubles, vi: jurors in jboth federal and superior courts, These jurors receive the munificent sum of three dollars a day This |onerous duty whether they will or no, In many ipnstances they are obliged to leave other that command » the amount of $3 ake & motion that jurors, both in the federal and superior court, be paid at least $5, EXJUROR, | ov who are en occupations | The paper came back with the fol | ‘ervice Stara for | Relatives Only Dear Minn Grey: Please tell me if I can have a service flag in my for my brother, and then are two more young men, friends of mine, that 1 would also like to have a star for. do this? D, M You are entitled to only star in your service flag. Answers Cynthia | With a Rhyme | Dear Minn Grey Ing I am concerned tn whether it be life or property, and old time the &. O. 8. signal is tit must be recognized » with the beet intentions and your approval I offer the following to “Your Admirer” t young widow jof “three long and giad years” and} more to be, yet only 27 | | To One in Distress Oh, that dashing young widow, | whether blue eyes or brown, | Who wishes for wrinkles, and @ homely old frown, Who thinks to be married is purely | nin wishes the her more chin. Perhaps 1 am wrong, but I'l bet| that I ain't, This corking young widow uses) powder and paint To cover the wrinkles that surely | are there, But in war, #0 in thing's fair, Virtually speak rescue work houne there Rr one Some Forget We Are Deep in War Dear Miss Grey: I have read your answers for some time and not once have I seen anything of the nature I wish to write you about. 1 am a married woman and have Lord would send)a daughter 14. My husband is a ship builder and makes good wagen; also we own our home. We have more than met our for Liberty bonds, Thrift stamps, smileage book and also the Ked Cross. Peérha husband and 1 feel the need 6 as 1 have lost one brother over love, mont any-| there and he has one in action now but be that as it may. This is what I would like to have While some nearsighted gink shines | explained to me: Why do our lead up to this girl, ing stores make much .« display of With his heart in his hand and brain costly gowns, hata, opera all awhirl, |ete.? They only make our selfish, causes this widow to become) narrow-minded sisters leas patriotic. really vexed, | Today I was in one of the stores to While she's thinking herself, “Now,| visit a clerk, an old schoolmate of who'll be next? | mine, and we watched our soldiers While nome kid from the cradle, her) out the window on their way to love seems to crave, camp, and a woman said: “Just Or some loving old guy with one) like leading them to slaughter. It | foot in the grave. | makes me shiver.” Then she delib- Why not take to the timber, far, far/erately and coolly turned around away land purchased an evening gown, clear of the lovers chance | paying $87 for it. I slipped down throws her each day? stairs and begged a Red Cross git | Or better yet, if she would roam, | who is in the store to come with me, | And sign up in some old maids’| and I pointed out maid lady, so the home. | girl politely asked if she could help |out @ little, and the woman said: |“I'm afraid not today as I have Ana | Ana And YOUR ADMIRER, TOO. very | Can i cloaks, rperience” Answers Query of “Perplexed” spent quite a few dollars and am | not thru yet. Things are so high; still we have to make a little | | been happier today should he have | | tor this world, and now in the crisis, | & per cent in Should the pres. | ix forced upon them, | Dear Miss Grey: To the gentle | ing anyway.” man who signed himself “Perplex-| When asked if she had sub | ed,” who maid his wife was taken | for a Liberty bond or was a n " | with a religion that had broken a/ of the Red Cross she said, “Not yet; | bona of long standing, may I say: |I am a working woman and need | Thoughts are things, born of the some clothes first.” | brain, and the law of retaliation| Think of that—how our dear boys works in all things. I would hate to| need those dollars she so idly spent! think all the readers of your paper| And how her conscience must hurt were sending him the same thought| ber, and that grown stifle her, if she as I jhas a conscience I wish you to Suppore he and his wife were on, print this so that she and others |the same plane mentally, Then| will wake up to the fact that we are thru endurance, trials, perhaps| deep, deep in this war. something that only the wife knows MRS. L. H. | came into her life, Her own strength | gone, she sought a something to help! If those Austrians have any re- her and the religion filled out the| gard for that last dreadnaught they square corners and gave her peace | have left, they'd better sink it some of mind: lifted her where gross con-| place where they know they'll be ditions of the past were no longer) able to find it after the war is over.— bearable. The man had the same) Philadelphia Inquirer. privilege to grasp the higher things = in fe, but failed and came to you with his plans well in mind—merely wanted you to confirm his opinion for peace of mind's make. I really fancy that he would have | anid instead, “Well, she did her bit! | of lives I t big enough to Effective ¥ | of our lives I am no’ | . |nee her viewpoint of Iife on the) August Fourth. . J equal basis of friendship. ‘Trains 270 and 273, between Se attle and Bellingham—Discontin- ued. | For the children’s sake, in my opinion, the greatest gift is mother- Train 278. Bellingham local— { Leaves Seattle 210 p. m. hood in harmony. The emnddest ts! childhood robbed of all its beauty by linhArmontous conditions. So, Mr.|] of 4 p.m. Man who seems so transparent to|| Train 286, me, take an invoice of yourself and || reaves Seattle 4:15 p. consider well Christ's teachings. || o¢ 430 p.m. x | Heaven ts not here nor there, but|] “nrain 357, Portland express within your own sow a Se a aar EXPERIENCE. ope eg 12:30 p. m., instead GREAT NORTHERN Maintained by U. S. RAILWAY COMPANY Dear Miss Grey Should an author copyright his articles before 7. submitting for publication? If #0,/ how should he go about it? AN AMATEUR. He may either ahve them copyrighted before attempting to sell them, or dispose of them to a publisher who will have them copyrighted. One may secure information relative to having an article copyrighted thru the United States Copyright Bureau, Washington, D. C. Copyright Bureau | | Don’t!! throw away old shoes. We'll renew them. Phone us B TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street PAINLESS Hear this great lecture at the TENT TABERNACLE Third and Lenora Sunday Evening at 8 o’Clock. Important lecture each evening next week—Free, Questions answered. Song Service, 7:45. | ABSOLUTELY Matthews will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled The Big Program for This Church | In the sermon Sunday | evening he will dis- cuss the subject: Jam Look into your mouth and see if your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding. If so, you have | PYORRHEA trie dlsennerand restos SoCal [to a healthy condition ver) "ha | will be devoted to pa- [peave, “A. Tenmomettne wieetaiaall triotic music. It will lilies ne ae. eo begin at 7:45 o'clock jonaras. pace sharp, and will be i i | led by Dr. Ralph United Painless Dentists Atkinson, |] The Terms of Peace The great song serv- |Z ice Sunday evening HOUGEN }) é