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THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1918. | Latta Te Crsthin, Grow Womanhood Lost | Can’t Be Regained | by Love--Says a Man| A young woman sinned against the world's code of mor- als, against the laws which man set down for woman to peas Some man sinned with her; for ne’er did woman sin alone. Court Judges | But that is not written in the book of man-made laws. The V. A. Chapman. jman, unnamed, went his way, irresponsible of wrong. For John R. Mitchell. | what is woman's sin is man’s privilege, so says the book, W. H. Pemberton. In the course of time the woman met a different sort of ‘ Three judges are to be elected to the supreme bench for’ man. He loved her and made her his wife. They were happy Six-year ternr. Of all the candidates, the above three men until—another man stepped in. This husband, knowing of & in the opinion of The Star, best qualified to serve the | his wife's past, at the same time admitting his own was no at this time. s _ | better, immediately brought down judgment upon her head, » Judge Chapman's career as superior court judge injin this manner: iree county for more than a decade marks him as a man “The future can be no different than the past. He will be a distinet addition way to judge a woman is by her past. igher court. |not be regained by love. , Judge Mitchell, recently appointed to the supreme court “A woman who has no rey BA oy » governor, has made a long and a satisfactory record underworld and it is a crime that sue: superior court judge of Thurston county. He has passed | decent and aspire to motherhood.” great many questions of state-wide interest and his de-| = Readers of my column will recognize the above quota-| have been generally in keeping with progress and | tions as a part of a letter sent to me recently by a man who “ signed himself “Anonymous,” and who invited theorists to » Judge Pemberton, formerly a law partner of United give their adv Judge Neterer, is 1 man of ability as well as forwaid- > ‘Telenraph News Service of the United Mrese Association an Second-Claas Matter May 8, 1899, at_the Postoffice a ‘Waesm. under the Act of Comgrese March 3, 1878, i The only & present-day viewpoint. Womanhood lost can- ct is only fit for the should want to appear! n; but re t ; ‘ ie » ideals of social and| ters received: aot agg ympathetic with the ide Dear Miss Grey: I cannot let : cation a . jette ‘itter ny non well as mental ~ the four-year term on the supreme bench, Judge {)* | !*tter rtm be “Anony «| ve | meth C. Mackintosh of Seattle has no opposition, He) “i 4 woman's future can only A “Wall-Flower” That Blossomed Dear Misa Grey I have elected unanimously, and he merits it. 4 the two-year term the two candidates are Judge | W. Tolman, of Spokane county, and Judge Walter M. of Kitsap county. P they are both good be judged by her past, how about a man's? How many women would ever have the courage to marry if they had to judge the man by the life he had fore? Providing, of cour For « long time i your columns and meant different paragraphs, but he I never seemed to have the right ved be to answ men The Star will not at- to ean arbitrary choice. Either Tolman or French ned oped to make a clean " nod for answering th wonderful : " . 2c nc preast of it otters which are sent to you each make good on the supreme court bench. Thciiicai’ Seid “aks: 1th @-eaul | Mer Otte ae | Judge Tolman is now on the supreme bench by the ,S/versi years ago 1 met a mor’s appointment and in his favor the pot can be wondertul «to others) in any way that he is entitled, having given up his other work, trom the time I first looked into his tinue for another two years. eyes and felt the pressure of his A mins who has wished she could meet a man who would care for a woman and not a “kid” te thinking the same as I did before | was mar not yet hand on mine [ knew that my | fed - knight had come. It meemed to me that girls who The climax of liberty-saving Anglo-American | When the time came that our love respectful and dignified were ip has been achieved. We fought our trans- — ust naturally volord itwelf, we both eseapiver as ddan, Fr gn ad = ad cor mato! o ie. ore was eo Ceeare too poe am ic cousin in 1812 for compelling our citizens to | )*4 confusions to make. There was lacking “pep.” an the boys for her. Now, by the ratification of the new re~ oi) or not. ‘That kind of love leaves a ocating draft treaties, we insist that she do 80.— | no room for o gnemin. Wo wore] copmumere 7enr Me sebOel but ad & . lot: both surprised and shocked, that . Por H phia Evening Ledger. such tataiy touls happen vo anycea| 42 1 had ved in er graeme 09 who seemed so perfect. The result | “M4!! town. and was well acquaint Must Go was a sympathy that strengthened od wit poatly everyone. My only | idee our love a hundred times. real friend was a young bey, one month my senior who w Since our marriage we have had usual hardships. There have ‘How long is the government going to stand for the iting, unrest-breeding tactics of the old wend of ais Umea when, thru accidents. n Union officials? : jaickness gr lack of employment, we soon will these union-hating demagogues be made aian’t know where our next meal was that Uncle Sam does not and will not counte- coming from their discrimination against labor organizations. Other umes, I have watched a years the Western Union Telegraph Co. has bein brag eser By eter rupuious, relentless fight against the Commercial 4, f death while he od ton, rs’ union. They Pom at an army of spies, who Sours Sun on oar ii ter the nad hed with lavish funds to carry on their Work | necessary 0 btew the. spark | ite ptting” on fellow operators, Employes were dis-| iq tereaved parents alone know | ind blacklisted for having the temerity to oppose | our anguish ial slavery. Hundreds of innocent workers were dis- a long amo guveral doctors raid 1 ; at I could not live—the chance was simply because the spies had to make a showing. only a shadow of a chance, oavesty was no recourse from a spy’s indictment. worth taking. If the operation falled government. called the bluff of Newcomb Carlton, | it would rob me of the few weeks 1 of the Western Union, who defied President Wil-| =n had. it seized the lines to prevent a nation-| ee ke oa <e of operators which threatened ‘as a result of| no be soared. aid what surgeon's neighbor from the As L never was ame every day when my tutor was giving me sat with boys, he ¢ with me, reby not af os one I then started my life career. At the end of college days he came to this city to visit, and to see me but I was unaware of this as I hadn't given him much thought with #0 much atudying on hand. Instead of finishing my career, my school mate, chum, friend and gen eral benefactor and I were married pwhen he had been working five months, Now being away from my parents we invited all my husband's But the operation did not fail ng out by the wire octopus of hundreds of its em-| skill aione could never have done, | friends from our home town, who for union inti 200 Sea’ | We expect to have more trials; but | were by now ing in the city affiliation. More than ttle opere the true, undying love, the love that One day my husband made the re "were victims of this lock-out. They are still denied)... jever for an instant lost. itm t ent by I. N. Miller, general superintendent of prightness, will continue to grow as Seattle district, despite the eg of sir t{: eunirinne leet = Coa eral Burleson that they woul returned to}, °U" otha Prt former positions. Sissi,” Me cassie weet cace ies old Western Union regime is dying a hard death ;| has been, there te nothing to forgive r Sf _ ere is on Sam will get them! i One douaptent to fetes, the eeecning this gang of trouble-makers, Mr. Burleson! A WIFE n! Discharge Miller! Relegate the whole clique to mark that I must change if I was to have any friends as I held myself too far aloof. 1 did it! It took two years, but I finally managed to. “When in Rome, do as the Romans Now he's {nan Eastern cantonment And I plod my way to the chasms of n thorofare each day, and he of his flirtations with pretty girls, of shows he attends with Kitty, Oust | | sins of us mortals, | ! They do not, or will not, understand an) Dear Miss Grey: 1 want to an Z — mg nse Ang ny! benefit of ICAN standard of dealing with those who work. ewer “Anonymous” by stating a few | Ute, “S°lstter Sach week, whether tt | Between the ages of 19 and 25, 1; neers or not, and I call it m | duty, and act cheerful Until he comes home I feet it my duty to let him have as much fun as possible, and just He senda me a m each month, so TI mu CON RAILWAY MEN JOIN STRIKE IN UKRAINIA INDON, Aug. 30.—The railway men of Ukrainia have joined the 75,000 revolting peasants in defiance s of bitter|of the Germans, and are now on should not strike, 200,000 strong. The sinking of the light-ship does not surprise us; | !!ved_in “Bohemia.” among a set of Rave always felt that if its targets could be anchored | vas’ ‘aan vtriend’” Then tmnt e way, the German navy's percentage of hits | man who filled a particular place “wou sensibly increase.—Philadelphia North American, | in my heart and we were married Shacdelaieincettinenicnpsins | We have been pals for 20 years j W B e | have two children and they are beau | uful Did I tel! him? After a while T dic Seattle is situated in an enviable position among other|1 have been good and mation os less fortunately located and established; her shipping|"!™ ®n4 everything that a mother embraces Alaska, Russia and the Orient, with)? 0 toc aavocating immorality. 1 s and railway facilities that have placed her in a nave paid for my belief inn mingle nt position over her nearest rival, San Francisco;|standard with many ri f shipyards have set and maintained the maximum con-| *"*f Girls « uction standard for America, and wealth that comes only ith efficient and hard work has rewarded her efforts. | | , » Business concerns have made immense profits, wages | a fe soared, and employer and employe have both bet-| \ @ fed their conditions, despite the increased cost of com-| D s essential to living. | ‘Therefore, the fact that Seattle has showed a $3,000,-| deficit in her War Savings Stamp pledges is something} @ concern us seriously. Whatever the reason, Seattle must fe that this deficit is corrected in the brief drive that) Saturday night. |to mina the high cost of Dad's folly,” The individual whose circumstances have improved, afford to risk having these conditions withdrawn! * failure to support the government that has instituted The more generously Seattle comes to the assistance! the government, the greater will be Seattle’s financial d. :This does not include the moral satisfaction that patriotic citizen is bound to experience who knows he is supporting the cause of democracy to the extent his ability. Seattle is receiving more than $1,000,000 a day out of expenditures. Every individual in Seattle will be asked to pledge his wings of the next four months to the purchase of mps. This will mean that many who have largely! nandered their money, will save and acquire the thrift bit, and thrifty individuals will merely deposit their y in a safer bank at higher interest, Quick Quota week must see Seattle go over the top| a wide margin, and all inferences of slackerism and checkmated. WAR BRIDE pagename i] Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n EIGHTH CHAPTER “T guess, Jane, it's up to you and me to figure out how mother is going my brother-in continued : “I suppose Daddy Lorimer refused to let my husband talk to her in stead of to you, as he wanted to?” I asked | You bet he did. He told Bob he was mighty short on duty and he or : dered him to hold his tongue.” “Well, Bob certainly obeyed like a perfectly dutiful son. He rushed | back to camp and never breathed a single word to me. Sometimes J, I think Bob doesn't have much confidence in me.’* oes “I guess he didn't want you to know that such rotten could | happen in the family, Jane dear. But I had to tell you. Who cae sould I go to? Sure not to Chrys.” ‘ se “Jimmie, ax you've always told me everything, eve used to push our baby carriages to market together, 1 in stopping now.” “Going right on, then—Dad didn't get well enough to make the trip to camp with the crowd, you remember. But the night before the tree moved east, he got Bob by long distance. Neither would budge an ton from his first trenches, And I guess Dad made it a pretty bad hour to: his eldest son.” 4 % x I DISCOVER THE USE OF MY HUSBAND’ ARTING BAD HUMOR ———_— r since our mothers don't see any sense le it a pretty bad hour for his daughter-in nd that it wasn't a selfish masculine mood y husband in a horrid humor and hurried ting. It was one of the most drea | family mix-ups I ever heard a for poor dear Bob, a iad of pete and soul. Never had his family needed him so much, and yet, for nis! country's sake, he had to go out of their lives. Perhaps he would never be| able to help them | Then said myse ait | , were tried o too, and you fell down madre iene 1 out, law, or a fit of Jea xne: on our silly little quarrel at Heap __ District Attorney Reames will continue at his post and will continue to prosecute sedition. to myself, “And you Why couldn't you hat ‘ 4 only a great big trouble would upset your f ta time like ” | The resolution passed by the Labor council, asking for “Jimmie,” I exclaimed, “we've got to shape file thing gow es na} is removal, will go the same route as did a similar resolution | ®ve both you and mother. ‘Shape it," 1 Jimmie. We mustn't leave | 4 thing to chance. I'm beginning to find out, Jim, moments, no unimportant hours, in anybody's life.’ I felt that I had to dwell on this, for Jim, Jr., altho he is a man of action, often needs direction. Why, it would be just like him to rush off | and marry that girl at the last minute before he reports at flying sehool!| “ " L insisted, “plays awful tricks in human lives,"* Then the postman brought a pile of mail—but not a line from Rob, | Was it a good or bad chance, I couldn't help wondering, that made Lr. | Certels stop his car just then at our gate? ‘ 4To Be Continued) ed by the same Labor council more than a year ago, condemned the entry of the United States into the , The rank and file of Seattle’s union men at that time pudiated the resolution, It was in fact repudiated by labor ere in the United slag _H ry will repeat itself. The Labor council's resolu- ? condemning Reames will go where its disloyal mate of ast year went—to the scrap heap, A that there are no little | | “ “hee and t & penny plece for her goods, but! gay "on, well, it only costs & dimer | orally unmindtul of ge haat Bo. and materials for Suits, Dart “ed mpi: Bee as prittand Se | fare will be appreciated at any cont Coats and One-piece mA the kph tn official. | HOW MANY DO YOU SUPPOSE | Aqarens Box 742, this office —Wash Dresses. sate a a bree Aly sffictal-controtied | ANSWERED THIS AD? ington (D, C.) Star ridden aly officlal- = WANTED—To rent house with eee RABY AGATE JEWELRY BUY W. S. S. NOW And tater on buy rich [#rant. Maybe it was Itussian money » |A WORD FROM JOSH WISE I may have faults as well as you, 1 may be cowardly to boot |_ Th’ self - made But this one thing I never do From Breslau Volkswacht Page har Mag Phage og Let my wife pick out my suit. Heavtiful Bat Different | 0 in ie a . ergpnwrer AAS ‘ md way. | pay up for this next winter.” They're 1909 ‘hied Ave the central market, had barely ar re | wrong. We paid up for it last winter tee poke ee rived at the gates when her cart lowd of vegetables, to the value of | about $200, was surrounded by a| compact mob of men, women and even children, and the entire load! was stolen, piece by piece, under the very eyes of the police, | The thieves then made off with Hirthetene SARDONYX Phone Hiliets 371 OUR JEWELRY “It is not our fault,” says King| A udwig of Bavaria, “that we are now | A MI tering the fifth year of the war.” | Indeed, it dn not. ‘That's one thing | for which they can truthfully blame | @nd fancy cook |eook; one for all; always running Great Britain } . kitchen unlimitedly perfect condition | conducts himself to your entire mat ee What has become of the old-fash to do, Wages $80 up thelr booty, which they held up isfaction, ponseasing every ensential t ned t | tauntingly as trophies, and Frau | [oned man who used to kick aguinst| 111 necessary to do what others fail — Reasonable of Zeiledorff not only did not receive And the o. f. man who used to Berlin! In approaching? he end of the world) 1,26 yard, with option of buying | later; rent not more than $0; muat One good way to make a 1918 match burn is to let the sun #hine stesielianseatonioy | There in talk of Mackensen auc-|be central. Box 312, i it for an hour or so AILORING CO, ceeding Ludendorff, But we find in| Hamilton (Ont) Spectator. pal : m T. IG ..Inc. one of thone 2%-cent dictionaries that | 9 ® | _,2nteresting news from France 425 UNION ST. A man with $18,000 in his clothes | Ham is reported to have fallen was arrested in New York as a va: trust that eggs will soon follow We ues means follow. So our guess | Is that Foch succeeds Ludendorft Home, You Bet! Neat, attractive, comfortable—this place of Mr. J. Corey at Cottage Grove. Mr. Corey, who works at the Ames shipyards, bought the vacant lot the first of May and in just 4 short weeks was living in the completed home. No landlord here, no rent receipts—and no car fare. Cottage Grove is within easy walking distance of all the big plants on the West side. Of Homebuilders At Cottage Grove | Here's a living example of thrift, enterprise and determination! Mr. Corey saw the landlord looming up on the horizon, bigger and bigger every month and made up his mind quickly. A low-priced lot at Cottage Grove and in less than a month father, mother and the five children said good-bye to the rent collector. Today scores of men and women are following Mr. Corey’s splendid example. Spare time mornings, evenings and Sundays is consumed in home-building. There’s hustle and bustle in Cottage Grove—the fastest growing section of Seattle. You can do the same thing. A little lumber, a few nails! A hammer, a saw—and a heart! And the little house grows like a mushroom! We'll sell you the lot at a low price and you can take years to pay for it—as long a time as you want if you will build some sort of a house. Surprising what a little bit of money is required to place you and the children under a roof all your own, the lots are all cleared, ready for you to start building right away. and city water is right at hand. ’ Best of all, there is a fine big brick school house, one of the best in Seattle; and a big 20-acre public playfield adjoining Cottage Grove, within a few steps of your door. The soil is rich and you can have a nice family garden with small fruits and berries. Keep a few chickens, too. You can walk to work in a few minutes. No long waits, no long rides in crowded cars. And no worry about increased car fares. Alki and Fauntleroy cars are but a few level blocks away when you want to come to town. No hills to climb. Call at the little office pictured below. Ask all the questions you wish, and do not be afraid to tell those in charge about your income and the amount you can afford to put into a little home. These men are there to help you; to get you away from paying rent, and the only way they can assist is with your hearty co-operation and confidence. You will not be asked to buy unless you have a desire to do so. Sunday. The office is always open for your convenience, Streets are being graded Come in the evening or Phone West 499 Open Evenings and Sundays THE NEW WEST SEATTLE OFFICE OF THE PUG MILL COMPANY, corner of West Spokane and Twenty-sixth Avenue S. W., right where the Fauntleroy cars turn into Youngstown. Alki cars and the Special cars to the Ames ship- yards also stop here. Open even- ings and Sundays for your PUGET MILL CO. WEST SEATTLE BRANCH OFFICE Corner West Spokane and 26th Avenues (Fauntleroy and Alki Cars Stop Right at the Door)