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THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY | * a How to Make Ten Pounds Sugar Do Work of Fourteen SEPTEMBER 24, 1918 THE SEATTLE STAR 1207 Seveath Ave, Near 0 MEMBER OF SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE 0: Telegraph News Service of the United Press Association Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaj Enterprise Ass'n. lass Matter M under the Act o 1899, at the Postoffice at 878, ‘Wash., Congress Marek 3, 1 By mail, ont of city, bbc per month; 3 months, $1.50; 6 months, $2.75; Fear, $5.00, in the State of Washington, Outside the state, er Fmonth, $4.50 for 6 months, or $9.00 per year. rier, eit Published Daily by The Stne Publishing Co. Phone Main 090, Private exchange connecting all departments. 4 ry an first of a new next Liberty Loan by ‘ vers of the fairest women of fair city in the class. y of gra afternoon in our big ball r rehearsal, Afterward, they Attor Jaturday, September 28 Keep Jt in Mind eee nipeieanee ki ° - thi 2 No Truce With the Hun “NEW LINERTY LOAN INTRO.” sees a America could give but one answer to the peace ‘of- am bind A BOAP box’ ha | fers’ from Germany and Austria. § swer was an unequivocal NO! ney : 10 pounds Hated cane sugar, 444 pints of water, 2 medium teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar. Dissolve cream of tartar in a little water, mix with 414 pints of water, terday when I was pouring for Martha Palmer asked me caravan? The only possible an- % Chrys “Where is that lovely Mary Thomas I met the day we fed the ; 7, F ‘ ay beg 35° minutes. \ We cannot talk peace with the Huns until they beg ; couia teach her to do perfectly stunning work in this Liberty Hond | & Or eseraprebelie erysiallizn. | Clal " peace, instead of offering peace; and that time will not pusiness mand” prediices Weve catnt | come until.they are beaten to their knees. ; For a minute I was tempted to nt tu the Bohr ot Bey which is pure” sugar Consider what a peace based on today’s situation ™* ‘sterin ae Ghie iee hcl gibuictia te Gk aed panaeee ee ; would 4 verful Germany, balked but not beaten; Ba pom ae wht ecg Pe raibes ae Allow the liquid sugar to cool and eens powerful pode hae Man |S nee ace ng Perper etl in pour into clean fruit jars, There thwarted in her aims of world-conquest, but not punished So | stammered some kind of a reply Shoda We dk pone ‘et ie: eet for her crimes against humanity; stopped in her plots for ; os nol Fou See her ee line Wer aie bias sugar, One pound of the liquid immediate victory, but left in the mood to prepare for an.) Sh8 ‘neces she woulan'c do at a sugar Is as sweet as 1 pound of gran i “Marth 1 thi he te sn atihace inky avin bd sd no| Ulated sugar, Three-foutths of a other trial. ; Be he ae artha, lady Iawyer tho she is, looked considerably puazied. And no Saeed ere ais There can be no lasting peace under these terms; there for ie r But 1 will be awfully giad to share my growing contusion about | TAU Gustut ef dry granulated can be no permanent peace until the criminal madmen of M aA Cot he waa” SAkaS DAiRA fe meets— | SURar. Berlin are made powerless to thrust the world into another orgy of war. “i ; Germany is not yet beaten. She has extended her over betrayed Russia, and annexed a score of bor- Use the liquid sugar both for cook ing and on the table, In cooki use 4 less syrup than sugar for by recipe. syrup to sweeten a cup of tea or cof- Mrs All the of duchesses engaged in war work en that arch suffragist and feminist Palmer with elegance she can gather Chrys goes around lately posing from pictures Her are not speech is to be on the theme, “Unless what you do hurts, you our share war work Provinces to the Hohenzollern chain-gang—provinces |" Martha ‘Thomas wrote the speech, and it is fine because it Ix so true, | fee, or for fruits and cereals, that, if left in German hands, will furnish future soldiers put I think it would be more vineing If some poor oman deliv: | © to carry on Hunnish vandalisms at the pistol-pointed order red it. But Martha says some poor old woman couldn't hold @ movie! Discharged Canadian soldiers get of the Prussian masters SrONSUIL, It neema to me that eco that thie war can't hurt | 100 sores of land tree from the On 1 a house on St tarlo government w Germany must be beaten in the field. Her armies that! chrystabel Lorimer very mu might, of course, if she cared for her | hh Byveenuey o Overran France and devastated Belgium must be whipped brothers, but she only cares for herself and eth atettarallNory ORF: back across their border; her people must be punished, if meed be, until they rise in their wrath and dethrone the ‘crowned maniacs who led their sons slaughter. is office when he gets back from the East His retary, a man he has had years and years, comes under the new registra and brothers to the) tion law. He is a bachelor—no depe sand in the best of health And daddy is practical and prudent. With both sons in the army wants her private sec THE BEST and . ; : st fortune to leave behind, he t Chrys’ duty to get posted abo’ Cup of Coffee in "2 Some may talk of an economic war—a boycott against * \“*t fortune to leay She Soe eee Sue ey eee eee 4 Town after the war. But the boycott is a dangerous And Certeis favors the plan—which settles it fpr Chrys. Gavia’: sri Aba y 7 ae - Served with ‘Weapon as long as Germany has the power to resent it. I envy her. I would like to do a man's work, too, But ‘Mother Lorimer REAL CREAM If we make peace with Germany now, and then decide comforts me by saying th poe ar Rein ll eel i cg a and Fine Hot punish her for future crimes by ex ‘luding her from : “8 HOYT’S a intercourse with other nations, we simply invite Ger- DOUGHNUTS ‘Many to make war again—to prepare a new war as an an- or ‘Bwer to our boycott. | |. _ America wants this war to be the last war. We are fhting, in the words of President Wilson, “to make the orid safe for democracy.” And the world will not be safe for democracy as long the blood-mad Hohenzollerns are left free to plot again extension of their despotism over half the earth. SANDWICHES HOYT’S 322 Pike at 4th ; 7 a MR. €. GREV'S HOUSEHOLD A earold man and 30-year-old We Never Close. ‘i Germany knew the American answer, which is the HINTS wotnan ‘were marrisd ih. New. tork answer and the British answer and the Italian an-) 4 ox that holds too much wa. | ¢ r day, We'll give you two wr and the Belgian answer and the Japanese an ver 2 WEF. | tor can be easily fixed to hold leas, Chances iP acidity. ‘Germany knew the answer is NO; and hence her “offer’”) ji; the holes with putty, plaster of| What! Right the v dtrst Mime was insincere. Paris or concrete, R ARAARARRARA AAA __ Germany “‘offered” peace not because she has the re-| Fine imitations of noodles and { ‘: test dream that America and our allies would accept it,| spaghetti can be made of ru faa, Cynthia Grey Is it because she hoped to strengthen the pacifists, the Bol-|, !4undry suds will not sour if a on Her Vacation little soda is added to ther ikis, the defeatists, the cowards and the yellow dogs ada kent th an airtight 0 in the allied nations, and bring about a condition in the) Red ants will not eat a cocoanut jc countries similar to that she wrought. in Russia, Never sharpen a kitchen knife on And that is why every American who even considers * ”!°e f Cut sls : cening now to a German peace is crying “defeat”—and . s AIDING THE ENEMY! A German general, surprise-attacked, fled in his pajamas. The German army may not be outfitted with night shirts, but that it is “retiring” there is no doubt. Spies in Seattle : Four Minute men last week warned Seattle theatre AIRE waudiences against enemy agents. “Mrs, Chapin “There may be one in the seat next to you,” speakers 10 paneer Seer grounds took this! « Cynthia ¢ is on her vaca- Ther no letters for the remainder of the week. | irey will be tion ocrati TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and tage or auto’ | One-Piece Dresses o., | 425 Union Street Colora riage or automo » does free Dr J. BR. BINYOR Free Examination ‘BEST $2.50 GLAssEs | on Earth A If you were in the audience, perhaps you warning very lightly. 3 Yet, enemy agents are at work right in our midst. ‘Two hundred sacks of sphagnum moss, picked and cleaned, | trom schoo! teaching 50 years _ Feady to be used for dressing the wounds of American sol- has ¢ back to it. H _ diers, were destroyed at Red Cross warehouses here in Se- @% £004 48 ever: attle Sunday night. ; One way to counteract the work of active pro-Germans ded thd nent in Colorado Springs, ¢ legraph eee An Altoona, Pa., man, who ret UNCALLED FOR Things ha P one of the few optica: anged much around the scho Wish. Gtide oudiese We ors, ont, ct the. few option houses, except the heating plants. Made Suits nq and $60 "is to get into action yourself. Go down to Red Cross head- ‘What did the boss’ say when bh at Halt Price, on free, by Geidilnss oi rs, Fourth and University, any day or evening, and fe ceases Bal reserved ‘Oh, he was sort more sphagnum moss. Army hospitals are call- ay cont be for this soothing material, which can only be produced sweet words.” in the Northwest, and workers are urgently needed to pick Plenty of sugar for car and sort it. Hun war chief declares “er The CRISIS will be worse! U.S. Takes Hand in Rent Cases The arrival of Walter A. MacClatchy, special represen- tative of the bureau of industrial housing and transporta- _ tion of the United States department of labor, is‘a welcome, event in Seattle. If we read the signs right, rent profiteer-| ing will be to some degree, at least, checked. | 4 As The Star has repeatedly said, rents, like all other _ commodities, are entitled to be raised in accordance with the higher costs of things. In many cases, landlords have contented themselves with that. But in many other cases, they have not. Rents not merely increased 20 per cent, or) cent, but they have gone up as high as 100 per cent. This is obviously unfair—and who have been the sufferer ? | The war workers and the families of soldiers. | 2 The Star some time ago advocated the establishment | __ by the city authorities of a commission before whom land-| ; ls were to make application for perm{ssion to raise rents. It is claimed the city has no legal power to enforce this. | he federal government, however, has. absolutely necessary, BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FinsT AVE Rear Seneca St. it’hone Siaim 1550 RELIABLE DENTISTRY Teeth Extracted and Filled Absolutely Without Pain 4-DENTAL FACTS-4 That Emphasize the Importance of Having Your Teeth Attended to Here | ning.” s might be worse, First— Second— A ' a You get the services of dental Our offices are equipped with Whether this or some other plan is evolved, it is to be experts—men who have made every scientific device that has hoped that Mr. MacClatc will get results, The Star the study of teeth and their proven beneficial to the den tenders him whatever a; ance it is capable of giving. requirements their life work tal profession in improving the The allied command is not “Forward,” but “Foe- 4 ward!” _ They Do Not Quit—Can You? “Tll catch up as soon as I can get my breath.” | So declared Private Robert U.- Neal to the | geant after two shells struck him. And he struggled on until another shell hit him. He's in the hospital now. They do not quit—our brave American boys at the} front. Laid out temporarily, they strive to catch up as| s00n as they can get their breath. What do we know of pain and sacrifi Ours is but to invest in Liberty bonds. Theirs is to suffer and to die. If all of us could keep this thought’in mind, Seattle would get its $28,000,000 Liberty Loan quota in a day—on Satur-| day. . | STAMPS ARE THE SAME AS” MONEY. GOOD AS CA This is true of ever operator work and making more pleas ant the methods, Fourth— Our low prices, like the supe. employed in this office. Third Our Painless Methods have for ever removed rior quality dental chair thing as p: of our work, al We have a large practice—buy in large quantities, thereby enab- ling us to do dental work for less money ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS “Laboring Peoples’ Dentists” 1 dread of the rear ser- no such most defy competition When we re PAIN just that in sense of the word LESS we the fullest ? Located for years at the S. E. corner First and Pike (t pstairs) “Laboring People's Dentists” ness, | | | | 4 | o The labor question Neither will its solution be hastened by misrepresentation and abuse. | THE REV STELZLE the prophet and leader of the people § such n Sometimes unapprec is to IN LIQUID) Who are do they while t “Master Minds are Emerging From Among the Masses” |” BY THE REV. will ne CHAS, STELZ be settled by Nor yet will snobbishness more cordial relationship between dvantage gained at the rerifice ciple can permanently benef Men may 0 sure Some there their actions are hasten prevail and truth shall Whe er all this n when the counsel of the cheap, blatherskites is to be heeded. labor is demanded the man who has been bowe own imagination, must be the ter minds from are emerging of the common people are and who nce to their own ery for help hearts of their idc that which will be of permanent value What a responsibili live to the highest ideals in the labor inovement the interests of his own craft he must dare and as those who are close: toilers, er this puts upon the leader do for men to him: tyranny ure 4 will come the who seek to put off t he time y mean to the employing class, it means to the workingmen that the day short-sighted, ignora Stateemanship of the highest order in the cause of | Yar beyond the like whose eyes have been dulled by the lurid glare of his d by the very ones whose battles the ve the sugar In the liquid, | @d whose destinies they are working out, these men and women must ‘The | £0 On as did the prophets of old, until the hour shall strike im the victory And yet workingmen—like most’ other men sacrificing most which is giving utter Ifow often do they break the make unto themselves golden calves ir true leaders are toiling in the mountain top to secure for them * putting their best into a movement Is. How frequently and bow down before them, How free he must be from the petty jealousies Looking not only upon his own things, nor upon but seeing the need of the gre: it passing resolutions bring about a| No temporary of a righteous prin victor | nd sneer at their | is truth | when justice shall has gone b: t narrow limits of . bulrush, or he man who among the are fighting masses that shall pro- Miss Florence C. been on the pe Gompers, of the ungrateful to those son the working condit department of labo How close he must! be to investigate in war industries and means for standards body of the men whose needs are just as Age nar eae Chaillo Just as we the pronunciation of the mes of towns in Picardy ‘anks had to go and introd us to a lot of new ones in the 8t Mihiel salient. towns that are now appearing in the news from the front, with their ap: | Fl proximate phonetic Allamont Boulllonville Briey Buxie Chaillon Chambley Champs ( ombres Conflans Damloup Dampvitoux . Dieulouard had got ourselves ac So here's a list of | Euvezin Fey-en-Ha tgny Fresnes Hageviile pronunciations . Allah-mon . Bowyon-veel | Haumont Bree-ay Hautecourt Buk-see air | Hattonville Shy n| Hennemont Shahm-blay | Herbeuville . Shahm | Heudicourt . Combr' | Jaulny Con flon | Jeandeliz . Dahm-lou n Is Shy-yon, Briey Is Bree-ay, St. Mihiel Is San Me-el *::: Lahayville rques Les Eparges ..... Marvoisin . Nonsard Noi + Dahm-vee-tou | Pareid .... + Deuh-lowar | pintheville + Duh-nou | Pont-a-Mousson . - Ex] Regnieville Rembercourt Ronvaux St. Baussant St. Benoit 3t. Julien . St. Mihiel St. Remy Spincourt Thiaucourt Vandieres Vigneulles . Vittonville + Oh-mon Oat-coor At-ton-veel Enne-mon . Er-buh-veel Uh-dee-coor sssess Zho-nee . Zhan-d'leez | La-ay-veel | You can foretell the future You say “The man who could foretell illness would make a for- tune!" Of course no man can— in the sense you mean. But you can tell pretty accurately what to expect your own body to do. How? Get this simple physiology : Your body machine has to be repaired. It also must have fuel to supply heat and energy. Your food supplies both repair material and fuel. But a furnace always produces ashes and clinkers. If these accumulate, the furnace becomes clogged and cannot work properly. If your bowels become clogged — you suffer from constipation. Perhaps you hurry to work or play and neglect to obey Nature's call. Waste matter stagnates in the bowels. You go right on eat- ing, drinking, working. What happens? The constipation be- comes established. Waste matter undergoes decay, fermentation and germ action. Poisons are formed, absorbed,carried all over the body. They attack the weakest part of you first. Then you know you're sick. In reality you've been getting sick since you missed that first movement. If you want to keep well—wholly well, all the time, so that you're on your toes every day, remove that waste. Many people take pills, castor oil, purpatye mineral waters to force the bowels to act. These act, but they irritate, tire out the intestinal muscles, make the trouble worse. Others take “salts,” which attract water to the intestines and flush the bowels—about as gently as a fire hose. A re-action follows that makes the intestines dryerthanever and aggravates the constipation. You needn't do this and weaken your system just because all of your ancestors did. The Nujol Treatment moves the waste regularly, and easily. It is a Pacey mechanical process, ab- solutely harmless, based on a simple principle —that you can move a softened mass out of a tube more easily than a hard, dry one. It doesn’t gripe—you won't know you have taken anything until af- ter a few days your bowels move at the regular hour. It makes you “regular as clockwork.” Don't try to foretell illness. Fore- stall it. Don’t wait until you are sick. Keep well now. Your drug: gist has Nujol. Nujol VRADE MARK For Constipation Nujol is sold in sealed bottles bearing the Nujol Insist on Nujol. Warning: Trade Mark. suffer from substitutes. Ss The Nujol Laboratories ANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY). Bayonne, New Jersey , You may tion of Labor for several years, been appointed assistant director of worki enforcing \ "She Investigates 7 | Work Conditions Thorne, who has 1] staff of Samuel American Federa- has eervice of the r duties will conditions adopt rules certain jon r. and t La ar-ak Lay Zay-parzhe . Mar-vwa-san Non-sar Nor-rwa Nov oe Pant-veel Pon-ta-mou-son win yeeay-veel Ram-ber-coor Ron-voh San Boh-s san Ben-wa an Jul-tan an Me-el n Ray-me . Span-coor . Tee-oh-coor . Van-dee-air . Veen-yull Vee-ton-veel