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—— i ——— PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR TVelexeaph News Service of the United Dress Assoctation hing Co, Phone Main 600, x all departments me 20 -s | Liberty Bonds not only will win | the war, but will be foundations for | thousands of home savings funds. i. WINNING THE WAR! By James A. Haight {In the Muni ¢ Germany is a shell. Her man-power 15 depleted. ribs le are underfed. Her ammunition, airplanes, motor- ache, railroads, and other material of war are inferior and deteriorating. Her finance is frenzied to the last de- . Her morale both in the army as well as at home is lining. When the shell breaks, resistance will be over, the end will be at hand. Though Germany is a shell, the shell is tough. tered love taps by padded tack hammers will not break it. Sledge-hammer blows, tir lessly repeated, concentrated on one spot, with dynamite behind them Until such blows as these are given, tyranny will, callously and insolently defying the teachings of civilization, continue to multiply their and tortured victims. The strength of that shell is the German army; that, and the shell collapses—the war is won. The army is therefore our objective. ‘i By uniting our various commands under Foch we have welded our armies into a sledge hammer. He is wielding that sledge hammer on the German army, and the stag- gering blows he is striking reveal the value of that new strategy. Our daily harvest of thousands of prisoners shows how that army is crumbling. : But the German army is large and hardened. The high command is resourceful and absolute in its power. Its re- cruiting agents seize children and old men, they whip into the ranks Russian citizens as well as German subjects. Thus they renew at home a part of the strength we batter away at the front. We must put force enough into our blows to break thru and disorganize that army. We need more dynamite be- hind our sledge hammer. Our armies cannot furnish it— they are the sledge hammer. They are doing all that armies can do. They are the finest and most perfect ever Organized. But they need more dynamite, and the dyna- Mite can come only from ourselves. That dynamite consists of men and munitions. We must treble our men at the front and we must increase our artillery and airplanes by thousands. So reinforced, our blows will break thru the enemy defenses and convert the enemy army from an army in manéuver into an army in flight. While a fighting army is doing all he can to hurt us, an enemy in flight is, in spite of himself, doing all he can to help us. pal News) militarism and humane killed break rman Steel is the food of war, and Germany gets two-thirds) of her steel from mines of France and Lorraine in Ger- 's possession that are nearer to Pershing’s army than is to Seattle. If the brilliant drive at St. Mihiel can be repeated three or four times, as our drives on the the Aisne and the Somme have been, those mines be ours, and tyranny and despotism will see their “Waterloo. : The heaviest charge of dynamite we can put behind this campaign is a big subscription to the Fourth Liberty Loan. Let everyone save all he can and work all he can and subscribe all he can to the end that this shall be the greatest war loan subscription in history. Then wherever ‘” soldiers or sailors are fighting under the Stars and Stripes or under the banners of our allies, they will know that all the people of America are behind them with all their means, with al! their strength, with all their hearts, with all they have. One of Rasputin’s slayers has arrived in the United States to tell his story. He will probably be as numer- ous from now on as the captors of Jeff Davis. Don Quixote Up to Date “Lead me to it,” said a young American captain when a doughboy told him a German count—a high officer, of course—was waiting to surrender to a COLONEL. “No colonels in my company today; just come with me,” the captain said—and the count came! The count wore a monocle, he carried a cane, he was some count. The doughboy didn’t say “your highness,” or spill any of that kind of bunk. He shook hands with the count, gave him a cigaret, and hustled him back to the Prison cages, like he was, a regular fellow. And perhaps the count is a regular fellow by this time. “They lack the dashing appearance of the French cavalry ; they haven't the stateliness of the British cavalr but with their tin hats cocked over their ears, riding their horses like Indians, laughing and yelling, brandishing a re- volver in each hand—with which they shoot very st raight, either hand, or with both hands at once, if you please—good lord, how they can fight!” a Scotchman writes of the Ameri- can cavalry. Don Quixote made duels silly by fighting windmills. Riding a lop-eared old mule, he went about Spain slashing away at the big paddles, and always getting his bumps, until he made duelling silly, ridiculous, preposterous. People LAUGHED—and duelling DIED. That is what the doughboys—God bles: to war. As good fighters as the world ever saw ey haven’ the least bit of respect for the glitter —_ They are knocking off the tin They They ‘em—are doing of war. ocki ‘ oil. are stripping it of gold braid. oe pare t the dignity out of it. ey fight like hell, yet they are kind to people, th love little children, they are res ated d en, a spectful t on France loves them! eee The Christmas gift limit for Yanks over there w keep them from garnering all the Hun helmeta get hands on. on't they can In Palestine, in Macedonia, in Italy and in France they are laying the foundation for Freedom, For All, Forever. 3 If he spoke truthfully, the kaiser would call his present loan a German Defeat Loan—not “Victory (?)” Loan. The kaiser ia reported ill. few million people could wish him nothing more devilish than Spanish Flu, Turks, like Bulga 78, are beginning to wake up to the fact that they lined up with losers. 5: i “Buy a Bond” isn’t enough, if you can buy two. alone will crush it in.) TUF Entered as nd-C) Matter May & at the Post eat | Seattle, Wash, unde \ ‘ 8 Mareh 3. INTR \| By mail, out t per r month ’ ‘ t W ' nO te the ' | 1.00 nF arrier ¥% y , y | Private | * *% BUSINESS MEN: Buy Liberty Bonds Buy! Buy! Buy! | * * * & wn ~~ ~ enn n BY GEORGE A. SCHNEIDER, | werter as te the soldier in uniform Champ Liberty Loan Bond Sales. who quite under fire man of the United States We are now being called upon to (First of Four Articles Written Es. | *ubscribe to the Fourth Liberty pecially for The Star and Associate | Loan Hond issue of our govern ment. We are not being arked f Members of the Newspaper Enter prise Association) a donation. contribution or a t If we Americans are to be frank | 4re being urged to buy to the limit with ourselves we muat admit that|Of our ability the highest class of during the first three years of thin | investments, drawing 4% per cent war We capitalized and commercial. | interest, a giltedged security backed ized that terrible conflict. We were bY the matehiens resources of our becoming a nation addicted to ex steat country treme wastefulnens, all waiks and| We need more ships Wnd cannon stations of~life self-centered and more aircraft, more muniffons, more food, es and equipment for selfish in the pursuit of our individ. and pleasures, We smug and complacent in the knowledge that our country waa at the 2,000,000 of our boys already ir France and the millions of others we must send over. We must tend financial credit to the n ual were interests peace, that we were prosperous and happy with m we are allied When, after three years of sub ented in posta ail Loan mission to unheardof violations of @ upeeds Up our war activities, our international rights, the limit of | Dastenha the return bome of our boys a lonee rat achat wad the Unites (over there, and brings nearer the States joined the allies, most of us| Tealization of our vision of the fina even then did not seem to realize | Slerious Meh roast be won we were actual combatants in the Mot in I Melee GF Frans eaevihie vageonee nye but must and will be won on the woll ‘As a people we did not take the|/¢ Germany, stamping out for al! war seriously until the martial|time to come Hun gilitarism tyranny and arrogance straina of fife and drum were heard in every village and city of our land and the flower of our own nation’s manhood, our own sons, brothers, |} Edit 9 Mail { husbands and friends, were march: |} ors { ing away to engage in the same!) awfal warfare we had been #0 ac euatomed to reading about for three | years, it had become commonplace While our boys, who but a few months ago were engaged in peace ful pursuits, are making ail America proud of their deeds of courage and bravery on the western battle line of France, we must guard ageinst being too optimistic, for ‘we have a CONCERNING BABY'S MILK Editor The Star: As an American mother, I appeal to your readers for your support In behalf of the present milk delivery plan oP a certain dairy Some time most of the them deliver you and ago this dairy certified dairie their got the to jet cortif milk long, bard pu ff us before| They said it would be a patriot we can hope rT the nal and de | cause, because those men who we cisive victory which must and will | taking @ bottle of milk or a pound of be won for the great cause of Mberty, | butter to a woman's door justice and humanity we are fight- | position thi would be of help to the tor. war ery American must become Now same prominent manager thoroly imbu the conviction has another idea: that t« eave that we have an army and the -nilk at the near-by grocer's, of navy to get r but an entire at little statio hat he has ected. natle that must be trained. with On the etre f the new labor every man and woman ready to saving ca and, in lent he apt und to the beat their extra profit he could make, the price yond to thelr country’s of our certified milk ad ed from for duty, service and 18 cents per quart to 20 cents on the firet of the month cannot all wear a uniform,| But why pick on the babies? How shoulder a gun or be Red Cross many mothers can conveniently g nurses, but every man and woman and get the babie And do in today enrolled in our country’s you suppose that milk k in going to be 4 pre service just ax much as are our boys in khaki and blue. The war cannot he won without their direct personal co-operation. They must respond to Je upon them, He who fails our country in the great ¢ in justo kept on toe and har What about the mith ndaye? ntay to get our milk for our every call m Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n. THIRTY FIFTH CHAPTER Dr. Certeis finds He left on su and this « Altho ie miles from the railroad, it eas “The to go to York on business 2 trip this mor New once a week ing r ” if noon Daddy Lorimer 1 te IGNORANT OF FEAR, I Toston to talk with the managers of DANCE ALONG TO MERT his campaign. It see that Mea A MAD ADVENTURE han and the two men who * - ® wer ed to resign from the coun try club. mak ¢ some election complications, ex: s Daddy feared they would, Mother Lorimer in wis ton al I don’t know whether I am left here as a chaperon for Mrs, Chapin, Raby Barbara's pre nurse, or whether she is chaperoning me, But it loesn't matter ere’a nothing in the wilderness to fear—but snakes, And as for t wea, 1 been sitting all noon on the upper veranda writing lett and watching the glorious water, Not a sail, not a smoke cloud, not a fishing boat has made a dot on the sea for hours Before it gets dark, I'm going to have a dip in the briny deep, “all by my lone.” a ee Reckoned by the facts, it is only 48 hours since I wrote the above Measured by my emotions, I must have lived half my lifetime I slipped down to the cove, clad in my “annettes" and wrapped in a thick bathrobe. 1 knew the boat house would be locked up for the night and the deserted, but | found it much darker down there than I expected Somehow I lost my ambition to swim and decided to take only a plunge. Preparatory to which I had been sitting all afternoon, L put myself thru some lively exercises and ended them in a wild folk dance which whirled me down the causeway to the island As I stopped to catch my breath, the soft even dip of oars surprised me. There was no other sound—not a whisper—only the faint of water. | I crouched between two rocks—and jJust In time. A small rowboat lightly grated on the sand six feet below me, and two men stepped ashore | “Three kites went up,” said one of them. “Tt but be careful.’ We'll find the papers here, all right | They were evidently familiar with the place. Each man drew a | pistol ax they neared the boathouse, On the platform which ix above high | tide they stopped at a great corner post, and drew from some concealed drawer a long, flat box * | he taller man took out one envelope and rer Then they hurried back to their boat I wax on the rocks directly back of it, and quite safe for my white legs, my white arms and my white, white face. stifling, Not even the muscles of my chest moved, Then the gleam of their electric flash, just by chance, fell upon my toes, It rose higher and higher, engulfing me like a pitiless flood, and then, full in my face, the light blinded me c rince splashing t means ‘Come on. ed it with another. except 1 was (To be continued.) SDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1918 |BPLotere Ty epptin. Grov Dear Mine Grey: 1 am a constant you are a United Staten citizen [reader of your daily letters and 1) ‘otherwine, not ju enjoy t ut it is certain ly ining to road some of the let r Mins Grey: The time of year ters written by soldiers’ wives, When approaches when It Is up to “father any lady, a soldier's wife or other: | to net up the family heater and wres Wine, claims mhe can't walk down the with the stove pipe and all the t thout t ntopped nt profanity, Nine times out en to or followed a “inasher,” | of ton it la necessary to cut a length 1 can't understand what kind of a) of #tove pipe to make It fit properly lady” she ix, Tam a soldier's wife! and perhaps this litte “hourehold and | am working while he is away, | hint may be of aenintance, empecia | 1 go home every night alone and 1) ly where father in not equipped with hot annoyed Ja pair of tinsmith's shears How do these women know they! A very nifty Job of cutting ean be are being flirted with if they are pay: done by using an ordinary can-open ing attention to their own business?) er Tie a string around the 4 | 1 hope if they read this they won't) where you wish to cut, then mark | think Just because no one stops me) with chalk or pencil to insure aceu that lam unattractive 1) racy. Insert a stick of wood thru the can't H attontion, be pipe to support it while you punch a eaune snd ain @8 BO0d | hole for the ean-ope and you will look! girl, t's aim that you can easily cut the pipe ply because I dreax neatly and pisy in Jattention to my own business, and J 1% | think if the married women would all |do the same they would seldom be) pear Mine Grey: I am cnuch ir | bother 1 by these soca Mad | terested in the letters of “Young Bol ere - dier's Wife” and “Mra. 1. W.,” regard ANOTILER SOLDIEI'S WIFE ing their protection against “the old mashers Dear Mian Grey: Bince reading the ye wan fortunate that “Y letter W recently, 1 have’ g we." had jack-knife handy ir been wondering how wt th rewded street car to defend mombers our fats ‘ her life and hoi » doubt, had those with peach-bloom complexions, yaid manculine seat-sharer persinted, [felt honored in having our soul the other “animals” over 46 in the secrets that have outworn the ages | car would have aided and abetted idenly subjected to much @ glare Of nim to accomplish his nefarious de rea which seems aa deep and | ion, an broad as a wading pool 4 Please enlighten me, fair young cle ar os ad : : Wives of soldiers, or otherwise, how ." has sure got the goods or can one distinguish a Y. 8. W. from ns beep imabeth, M “ig Fogpoen a other women? Are they such para Hoots and the girl with the peach | eong they can be known by their bloom cheeks sure were true and ) tuloss? examples of what all of THEI So much for soldiers’ wives KINDS do, but 1 refuse to let Je |. hee the question arives, what @ hovab in on this—HE was @ FIGHT: | Women going to do to protect 7 elderly husbands from the wiles and Where are he wine nations of ne , the wine nations of | machinations of the designing snem antiquity?” Search me, | don't even | ee er ae ee con with thelr SOW NARS CaP NOSIOe Senne amoufiaged — facen bbreviated lucky, crude people who and fighting »o much have gone, Well, | hardly think we wufficient proot that when men | ire wisdom they also acquire | for “W. 8," whom I tke is nome authority, questions our ability | to know what wisdom is happy ss wkirts and all the other arts that go joyed loving pF enaal pins to luré poor, weak man from his own fireside” The other evening, riding up the hill on a street car, a young lady wat down abruptly in my lap. She amil ed and said “Pardon me” 1 said No offense whatever, stay there ax You, that's right, “W. 8." as long! it an you remain so dense that you long as you please You know, I don't know that the only way for|"84 0 pocketknife handy, and I Any one or all of the two billions souis | (euRht I would humor her until the ar # could pred at my atreet, when I make my ungraceful exit. 1 ean imagine what would have hap I been precipitated onto lap—I would have been eaunage moat Seriously speaking, I don't believe to fulfl on this curt 6 destiny you should keep on study sod Forget Laat old worn-out ma “Where ignorance is bliss, it is folly to be wise.” You did very well to get this closeup exposure of ONE angio of a manyaided question, | ll the real snen are drafted, and all However, I think your Ume was {ij-| this hubbub about middie aged men chosen; you should have waited wil preying on young wives of soldiers is all tommy-rot. The masher, young or old, soldier or civilian, like the poor, is always with ux, and ought to be aqueiched. If our ladies would quit going around lke High tw m and wear their waists a little high: generations | and skirts a little lower, it would d as such, You y & Nitle more gray matter and wrer. to the greatent them some of the rude shocks confronted the | which they seem to invite after Uhe all of us sirie tithe | wure th ve and war volutiona war is over w U you're are wt forces abou IL hope you would hat suggest an WHY that has ever people of this burdensome life, and 1/ M. RR. hope you'll come again and anmwer | a few of the many questions you ask, | EX PRACH BLOOM FROM MISSOURI, Dear Mime Grey: 1 came to thin city as a young lad from Australia. | ~ tam now 223 years old. My father in an American citisen, Will you please tell mo if the United States govern ment claims me aa a citizen or a for s signer, and should I register for the army? IN BOUT. If your father received his final” naturalization papers be fore you became 21 years old, PRO What Doctors Use | for Eczema es. |“4{F I HURT YOU, DON’T PAY ME.” ‘9 my message of deliver u from the fear that ac- is Dental operations. CROWN This J ance to EXTRACT, FILL. TREAT Teeth absolutely without pain in all cases but acute absceased conditions Lowest high-cl: |STERLING DENTISTRY Dr.Kenneth and prices in zor eity for . euaranter THE BEST Cup of Coffee in Town | Served with REAL CREAM and Fine Hot HOYT'S DOUGHNUTS or \Is the Most Valuable Tonic, SANDWICHES | Any Physician Probably no remedy with euch phenomenal success as has Nouxated Iron—over 3,6 1,000 people annually are taking it in this coun 322 Pike at 4th try alone has been used and highly inde d by such distinguish We Never Close. ed men as: Hon. Leslie M. Shaw, for- mer secretary of the treasury and ex-governor of Lowa; former Unit nator and Vice President c John L. Clem, U.S. A. (ret the drummer boy of Shiloh, who wa the U. 8 r the sergeant in army at years of age, and WHAT DR. MACALPINE SAYS: as lecturer ar SAVE i] EYES FAILING CYESIGHT RESTORED BY OUR SYSTEM “During 16 ye adjunct pr (proctolo anor sure y), in the New York post medical 1 and hos f special graduate course to so val pital, I never ha D 't P. uable a remedy fe building oe health and strength of debilitated, ont Pay Pe Gitte ot hecte ro Severe tests recently made Exorbitant Prices |) coxic5 fos oo OUR OFFER INCLUDES: Bx. [) convinced me that it is a prepara- amination of the eyes, a palr of . dine t our erystal apherteal ienscs {ne f| ton of most extraordinary meri spectacle or eveginas “If people woukl only realize that or one dollar and 0 t as indispensable to the five cents. Come and ine {| 70" '* Just as indispensa | blood as is air to the lungs, and be just as particular about keeping up | suffictent supply at all times, ther | would, in my opinion, be far dis | ease resulting from anaemic, weak ened conditions. For years it was a | problem with physicians how to ad- minister jron in a form that could be | taken up by the system and increase | the red blood corpuscles without up setting the stomach, blackening the teeth or ing other disorders DESTROY ¥ BY t ’ DOUBLE Vist The Single Lenn y Ask to « YEAS KAPKRIENCR NINE YHAKS IN SEATTLR U. S. OPTICAL CO, Kixclusive Optient Speciaiiata prody r almost as serious as the lack of tron itself, But the introduction of Nux- ated Tron has done away with all ob- jectionable features of the old min- | Re that as it may, the following States Senator FE. Johnaon Jude court of claims of Washington; Judge , ‘amuel S Yoder, statesman, jurist 7 ee PRUSSIAN PROGRESS by Edmund Vance Cooke I—1914—POMPOSITY, Might is right and war is Kultur wins, for kultur should, Kill and mutilate and rape! Let no guiltless child escape! These things done Of the world shall terrorize. Thus shall we impose our will good; before the eye And our Wilhelm! Peace! be still! (Why should other nations be So inclined to disagree ) 1—1916—PRAYER Aimighty Monarch! by whose right We have established Prussian Might, Who bade our troops go forth and smite, Whose other name is Schrecklichkeit, We raise our eyes to Thee Wisdom is wise, but Thou art wiser: Law is but law, Thou its Reviser; God is but God; Thou art the kaiser! Less were lese majesty! I1—1918—PROTEST Gott strafe Alles! Murder! Robbers! Fire! They are affronting our Imperial Sire, y've no respect for devils or for Prusss y're trying to steal our war away from us! This is our We made it. It’s our own! But those darned Yanks won't let our war alone! The disrespectful swine, that they should dare! i Help! help! They've got our war! No fair! no fair! (Copyright, 1918, N. B.A) war. A w ORD ing. No nomination is worth that FROM much—running against Henry Ford. JOSH WISE ooo Th’ big cor porations gen'al | And We Hope It Didn't Also De ly have a high stroy Her Digestion priced man The home and contents of Mrs. look after their Celia lcher on the East side were end uv whut'’s Rr destroyed by a fire on Monday ev'rybody’s bia afternoon, but we hope they were . pesticn fully covered with insurance. — oe Elkador (la.) Democrat. New Heads on Old Faces While You - Se Brooklyn barbers have decided The frown that had been forming that hereafter all men who shave on the fat man's face faded and | themselves must pay $1 for a hair there grew in its ph beam and cut. Pretty soon the barbers will a head that nodded understandingly. be asking the legislature to make it Cleveland (O,.) Leader. | a felony for a man to shave him “ee | self. war to the end, to the ia the mes “We make end of the end,” very sage sent to America by Clemen ceau. thru I ont Sechurman of Corne We it that what the old Uger means i# that no matter how far 4 his team is he is go- | ing to take his turn at bat in the/ last half of the ninth | | see | | Speaking of the very end of the lend, the bottom of the tail of our | overcoat, which we thought of can- ning last year, has fringe on it half an inch long. eee enlisted » Cannon, Irwin, Pa. |, Watkinsville, Ga | de Camp is a phy-| sician in New York One of the defeated republican candidates for nomination for sena- | ator In Michigan says he was told could have the nomination for! He was wise in not buy-| —— | Will Teach You the Shortest Way to a Good Position E. N. FURMAN NORTHWESTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE $150,000 TAILORING CO. Headquarters for and Suits, Coats and Northwestern Shorthand Reporting One-Piece Dresses | srvtzring _Siivanted Grammar 425 Union Street fiendays Seedinuss¢: GARE K.MacAlpime adisnet’Protesor New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital Says That Nuxated Iron trength and Blood Builder Can Prescribe SPECIAL TO PHYSICIANS Doctor, What Recommend ta Renew the Blood of 4 and is borne cAlpine’s ich phy= pinion indorser of DR. KENNETH K. MACAPLINE New York Surgeon 1s Prominent WHo HE Dr, MacAlpine graduated from the w York University Medical col- was assistant surgeon (outdoor this oe wish to department), Bellevue hospital, for a trie t ‘meth and merly house surgeon and for 16 years od builder the vim adjunct p r New York Post y into t f the Graduate Medical School and Hos- re pital, which ts the original and largest: post graduate hospital in the United Sta nber of the New a me Medical society, the ¢ © Medical soctety, 3 ‘ York Physicians’ association’ and ¢ Post. Graduate Alumni association. r Dr. MacAlpine | ded as a lead~ nervou indown — f« two rity on proctol~ weeks’ time, Your drugs UL re operated fund your patient's money if it vectl doesn't Medical S¢ eral salts of iron, and gi facturers’ Note: —Nuxate areful, thinking physi by Dr. MacAipine and and valu can recomm with benefit to hi rundown patients enriching the blood blood cells, stren: rebullds the weake helps to instil renewe endurance into the whole system, whether the patient be young or old my opinion Nuxated Iron is the ) this city by Owl Drug . Swift's Pharmacy Y valuable tonic, strength and blood builder any physician can pre- scribe,” drug: