Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR 1907 Seventh Ave, Near Union St. “SCRIPYS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSrArbES) nd-Clane Matter May 3, 1899, at . under the Act of Congress Mare Telegraph News Service of the Un! Aasoctation ress Entered as Seattle, V the Poastoffice at a, STD. @ montha, $ the state p § months. By mail, ont « year, $5.00, month, $4 e k Main 600, rivate ~ : St. Quentin has fallen! Our men || “over there” are fighting every | moment. And we must make : possible for them to continue to Roe victoriously. Liberty Bonds | are the means. i ——— i 4 se | Nat Goodwin and | Emma Goldman i > : ! fould you ever t foodwin and Emma Goldman! Would ) link ee est Nat has had his linked several times, | and, from all we hear, expects to try it again. : “But Emma Goldman? No, we do not even hint an engagement. Yet it is upon matrimony that they appear| a ee splendidly-acted “Why Marry ts which presumably was written for the much-married Nathaniel we could hear the preachments of Miss Goldman presented, if anything, more lucidly, more graphically, more bluntly “and much more entertainingly than ever she did. Nothing on stage or lecture platform discussed more frankly and with greater force of logic the marriage cere- monial which legalizes loveless unions, while unions born ‘of love, unaccompanied by the few spoken words of chureh| or civil “authorit receive the world's condemnation. Nothing Emma Goldman ever said attacked the mar- oy institution as completely as the sympathetic acting of e charming leading lady in Nat Goodwin's company, aided and abetted by Nat himself. It is a thoroly enjoyable show. The acting is excellent. is And— 4 They used to arrest Emma Goldman. The lines are clever. Search us! | Maybe Nat and that beautiful actress should be ar-) Bi ngs maybe we have advanced in social thought | 7 and are permitting brutally frank trampling upon marriage "| eceremonials, in the hope of devising something better. 4 And, still again, maybe we are so deteriorating in moral| fiber that we are indifferent to what any one says. Have it your own way. There are many kinds of memory systems, but no one has yet invented a system that will help a man forget. ing when memory becomes more merciless than ever Q ene’ has been robbed of its rightful toll. a No man can of himself drive away the pangs of mem-| ‘truly sorry for the sin which will not be put out of one’s a First, it’s only right and fair that the sin committed } should be confessed to the one who was injured—whoever at ; confess to. ie | | a Second. it’s only right and fair that such restitution as ‘one can make should be offered to the one who was injured. | i But memory is made hideous not only by our own sin, ‘but because of others’ sin or failure. ae ; In such cases the cultivation of the spirit of forgive- ness will bring peace of mind, and the consciousness that each of us has his own shortcomings which cause others to _ grieve and sorrow. | - Memory, too, is made unhappy because of the loss of + one who was loved but who has gone away—for a brief } time, perhaps, or forever. : My Fghsacea peace of mind for those who suffer on this| ‘suffered as we have, or for those who need our help for ‘whatever reason. F } s Memory is merciless only to those who are defiant of ‘its power, but it is ever charitable to those who seek its, favor in the attempt to crowd the heart and mind with} oftier thoughts and ambitions. Von Hindenburg’s Fears Von Hindenburg has told the German people not to) fear the Yanks. y } The admonition, no doubt, is based upon his own belated conviction that the Yanks ARE foes to be feared. | They are now substantiating Hindy’s realization 1 belief. But Von Hindenburg really doesn’t fear the Yanks—| he fears the PERSONAL consequences of allied victory, | which the Americans have made a certainty. | He fears retribution. He fears the AWAKENED Ger-| man people. He fears the might of America and the RIGHT) of her cause. } He is a typical Hun bully, of which the gorilla is the totype. A glowering, towering monster is Von Hinden- Seg hen his gang is with him and his victim at dis- advantage. ‘account, there is work, work, work—for those who have | parade | dollar, TT BACK o— } ——_—___ a. BY J. BR. GROVE (N. E. A. Staff Artist Attached to General Pershing’s Army.) 1k SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1918. ( errr | pre nernnrrnnnnrnnnnny par || STARSHELLS || The Sugar Card (By Edmund Vanee Cooke.) Style I YOUNG GIRL LONELY HOME 1, POSSIBILITY The government in ‘ warning (Common colloquial IN MIDST OF WOMEN’S - le to be nomiecal with paper. ‘ 2 otters ia ie I've loaned you soaps and soups and | 3 . a : eaken, | Dear Mins Grey: Have you ever! they spend their time mopin, ON THE GREAT LAKES And silverware and tacks. been jonesome? In desperation 1) in their roorn They do ae > this ie Lake Michigan?” I've been your neighbor and your|come to you for help. You will find them down at the “You,” friend; I have been in this city for some led Crom and other branches | “And in Lake Michigan the finest] I've loaned you lamps and lard; | time, and have tried again and| of war nervice work. You may br | % ai f the Inken?” But this the end! | again to meet the right sort of p become a part of this great es “I wouldn't may that, mum,” re] 1 will not lend | ple, but it seems to be utterly army of womanhood, if you will sponded the captain. “The next we] The Family Sugur-Card.” ponsible but make the effort y enter is Superior,” It is lonesome and monotonous And remember, little — girt, “ee @ Style IT going around alor In the day that these worth while people Otto B. Shott (and he ought to be (Homely pathett-,) Ume it is not #o bad, but oh, the| you wish to meet and make for sending this) has forwarded the “Well, well, he's a evenings! To go home to a room| friends with, are just as partl following Gone! poor old und wit alone is almost beyond| cular about making new ac OLD RELIABLE ENGLISH CURE What's to be waid human endurance, and yet it is| quaintances as you are, and FOR RHEUMATISM She tineitae equally bad to walk the streets, One make allowances | can’t enjoy shows alone, forever. Kever let out | y time a girl Of jail was Ka It is true that every time a gir | Cateh a common house fly; put a Dear Mian Grey: I am sorry round it neck and tle it to the band " | goes down the street mhe has any | education in so limited that h_ « clothes pin Until it cries Wight off hia hide fellow. I have ween girls do that,| rectly, but I do want to say 1 feel Catch the tears in a teaspoon and He'd give his shirt and it looks #0 cheap and common.|& deep regret that “Just Thirty” |rub on the affected part. It never And say! it hurt J J can't go to dances alo! nd I/and “Anonymous” had not met and | fain to give instant relief. Him if you tried lknow of no society or club that is | married before they helped to spoil fully submitted for the ben irl Star readers who may be af 1 want to keep but I two homes with and hypocrisy ORDINARY To pay him back He'd make some crack jout “Vriends was friends | open to a strange their nelf-conceit What can I do? | my nelf respect and decency. HUMAN, whe ade, Wor other |can't stand this much longer, It| We've heard of the man who lost Than euch makes me just desperate to see Dear Miss Grey: Just a few 1 bass drum, and the bass violin lother girls pass me laughing, in| Words to our woman correspondent, player who forgot his instrument, 1t's bard | groups or couples. I’m not jealous| Who writes that she does not want but they're no worse than the gink To lone a pard |—I just want to be with them. I/ to wear the ring of her husband's who leaves his registration card at Like him. But etill feel so alone and left out, first wife. It's heaven's will And tho’ I'm jarred Heavy and hard, I—well, you see He's willed to me Mis Bugar-Card.” | 1, too, married a man who had | been married before,sand before he ever made love to me he told me | of his first love, of their courtship, marriage, and the death of his wife }and baby Please help me, Miss Grey. JIUBT 20. My heart goes out to you; but 1 Know there is much happiness in store for you if you will do ee The men in the German navy may not be getting much to eat, but they ought to be getting their life and ac cident insurance at a low rate. as I way and not become dis | #nd ba . p Asante g P SBtylo 11. ouraged. The evening high | When I married him I knew she “I lke that Uncle Sam poster, ‘I schools have just opened and | Would always be his first love, but Want You writes A. “But II ee. |do you think I would let this ruin 7 “Fair maiden, at thy feet I lay m: they are practically free. They hink I wout saw it on the Butterworth Undertak wealth, 4 7 ™Y) otter varied and attractive |OUF lives? Certainly not. Instead, ing Co.'s building the other day. | 1 am proud that he loves her mem | | | (Reservedly rhapsodical.) | | My home, my hearth, my heart. courses, among them millinery, - > = Tt " . Ce | ory, for if he was so true to her I WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE plo To cherish thee in sickness and in| dressmaking, art work, gymna- | Rack home—but such a home A Michigan man has beta arrest health | sium, French, Spanish and num- opener ro be or Selig ‘The most noticeable thing in France is the old women. As soon as 0d for trying to blackmail J.P. Mor] 1 wet my life apart. | erous other things, Take op ee ne heen mar ied four vem the American soldiers enter a captured village its former residents are on |#8" He's probably crazy, Most | one of these courses and after y their heels, pathetically seeking the ruins of*their former homes ‘They sit around am same roads with the guns. | " Hy men are who try to get money out of |I set this circlet on thy finger, thus, and 1 am quite sure it would be a few weeks write me the hard to find a better husband, He the ruins and live under the mame conditions |) ss Se ial an tes nice econ i result Sat daem tes Mio faek ees ee [a0 the soldiers. ‘The refugees go driving along toward their homes on the) 4 you say you hawe e friend| With ous cole sone but us, ‘Then, too, there are the young tect iat, veetan Cae | who objects to the hobble skirt. Is People’s societies in the churches. | after our marriage, and I want to Liberty Bonds Buy! Buy! Buy! | Buy BY GEORGE A. SCHNEIDER | Champion Liberty Loan Bond Saleaman of the United States (Second of Four Articles Written | Especially for The Star and Associate | oyinute proportion of fam Members of the Newspaper Enter. prise Association) | The kaiser and his imperialistic crowd have proven a poor lot of propheta, | The Hohenzollern insane concett for world conquest Kas been backed | Booze deaden the senses for a while, and dope may up not only by the German mili-| portunities for advancement, edu } lift one oa the wings of dreams, but there's the fearful tary regime, but by an entire na-| cation, tion of people who from chiid-| bood up have been taught to) revel in the supreme egotism that | every Hun was a superman, that ory—but there is a road to peace of mind for those who are| Germany was the master nation of| good enough to fight and make the world and God's chosen Inatru- ment to reincarnate the universe, being civilization’s only hope and salvation And when, after 40 years of thoro Preparation at home, and leaving the slimy trail of ite crafty, inad- fous intrigue and propaganda spread across the world’s map, the Hun set the much vaunted Ger- man military machine in motion| to crush out ruthlessly all civiliza-| ton, the kalser and his barbarian | henchmen predicted an early and| decisive conquest. | But brave, sturdy, little Belgtum | threw a wrench in the works of the German juggernaut, and then France, Great Britain and Italy and other European nations got into the game and headed off the Huns’ long rehearsed on-to-Paris And finally, after enduring three) years of insults of a nature that would make a jackrabbit turn and spit a bulldog in the face, we ericans knocked off from our daylight chase after the almighty and rose to punish the > Hun. And then the kaiser promptly volunteered another prediction, to the effect that the day we entered the war hundreds of thousands of | Practically every church in the city has clubs for ita young members and they give little rocial affairs from time to time. Since you'are a girl worth while, of course you will be wel- comed into one of there circles, * Last, but mot least by any means, ia the vast field of war work. Go down to the Red Crons headquarters and offer your assistance. When you are busily engaged at something Lo! now my bridal kims is on thy | brow, | To have! to hold! to guard! With all my worldly goods i thee en j dow, Except m | Bulgars Drink rem Victorious Allies (Bpectal to The Star by N. BE. A) ROME, Oct. 2 When the news she modent? Marjorie | tell you that I Jove that ring more than any of my own. What if your husband does love memories? You you think you can | gain this same love he held for her by refusing her rings? My husband often teNs me I re- | mind him so much of his other wife, jand he could not tell me anything |that would please me more. We often talk of her. I always see that on Decoration day her grave has plenty of flowers. Hoe has taken me No; fat oe the Germans in the poor actors. That depends on how you claasify them ‘They're firntciaas burlesque actors Balfour na peace drive ar “Sugar-Card.” o- What has become of the old-fash joned man who said he couldn't af ford to wear an old sult of clothes? And the o-f. woman who wouldn't have a coat dyed? oe. reached Sofia ot Marshal Foch’s re | that will bring comfort to our | miles to meet her people and I know Let's call ‘em the Hohen-hollerina |OC®t Western front victories, Bul wounded soldiers, yes, even save [he is proud of me or he would not American citizens of German birth eee garians in the Hotel du Bulgaria] their lives, you will have litte | @o this. and parentage would take up arms RM. ways drank to the wuccems of the ailies.| or no time to complain of being And now our cup of happiness is for the Vaterland. bode “a ‘ Asked by Germany recently to at lonely, There are hundreds of | running over, as I am soon to be a The other day I was on a car and tack in the Balkans, the Bulgarian minister of war replied the defensive do it yourself. is ove young women in this city today who are lonely, who have a «reat aching void for their hus- bands, brothers or sweethearts, who have gone to war. Do mother. I would say to this poor, misguided, jealous wife to forget it, |or she will lose the love of the man | she claims is dearer to her than life. M.A. 0, And again he made a bum guess “We are on for, with the exception of a if you want to attack, Yor our part the war! saw a conductoret leave her post and co forward and talk to the motor n. Her steps never faltered, and she accomplished the feat an neatly an I had ever witnessed it done by any male conductor. eee very ic, un | m grateful individuals, our Americans of foreign birth or heritage realixed that they picked the United States, above all other countries in world, as the future home for! themselves and their families, be cause it afforded them greater op- STUFF Prosperity and happiness than any other country. They cannot help but realize that if our flag has been good enough to live under, it must certainly be sacrifices for, and the most val- uable and benefictal influence on these people in the fact that hun- dreds of thoumands of their sons are today enrolled under our coun try’s colors, their deed«a of bravery And courag® on the Western battle front of France being the best tri bute that can be paid to their patriotiam and loyalty. | An overwhelming majority of Americans of foreign birth or par- entage realize the fact that they above all others, owe it to the land of their adoption to support it in this present great crisis in every | Posnible manner, and the splendid response they made in the way of subseriptions to the past Liberty Loan terues in the best evidence and promise that they can be counted upon to go to the limit of| their ability in boosting the Fourth | Liberty Loan tame. + | discovered a man who batted with a They appreciate that regardieas long knife and fouled off a shell that of what nation we or our ancestors| was headed for Foch, Pershing and came from we are today ono cause,| Haig, has now found a man who one people, one flag, one country, | jumped from his own airplane to an and as the world’s greatest demoo-| other while they were several thou racy we, above all other nations | und feet in the air. The Piain Deal of the world, must stand ready to|er failed, however, to explain that make every macrifice of resource | the airplane into which he jumped and blood to defend and uphold the | Wa" above his own, and not under it very ideals and principles which | oT along side it attracted them to our shores, ¥ The Cleveland Pisin Dealer, which I CONFESIC THIRTY-SIXTH CHAPTER “Gott in Himmel! muttered the little man. | “A skirt!" added the tall man, altho, very plainly, a skirt was exactly 5 Von Hindenburg has brain-power, but his main power. \the confidence of his countrymen—is waning. He's slipping ind knows it, and dreads that day when all Hunland will w it.» It is time for the Prussian war-lords to start planning) jand preparing alibis and-explanations. | Some of them should select their asbestos shronds now Wand abandon any notions of maneuvering for clemency. | {An Old-Fashioned Misery mugly than ordinarily. The information is comforting, because mighty few of grippe” and become posted on how to handle it, | The program for prevention is simple—avoid crowds, | | beware of taking a cold, and don’t get “scared.” | | plenty of good food and good air. The “grippe” becomes epidemic solely because part of |the people don’t live sensibly. P | | SECRET DIPLOMACY MUST END by First of America’s 14 peace terms, as enunciated by the president of the United States last January 8, || 5 and which still holds good. | until the last minutet sical |" 1 COME TO THE END OF MY || WORLD BUT HOLD ONTO | MY SENSI E — 38 thing,” growled the big man, clapping a hand over my mouth “But a woman, in this place, at The little man spoke English, and watched the effect of his words on me. Tha “Orders be d—d, There's always a woman somewhere spoiling orders, We've got to keep her. “No women are in this game. “This one will not let her go.” “You mean we'll take her with us? It’s you who'll open hell, if you do.” Heip bring her along. “Hustle up and beat it. her in the boat.” “And the ocean's deeper, too, a little way out,” said the short man. I motioned them that I wanted something. The medics announce that the Spanish influenza jg| wished to speak—but I couldn't have uttered a jmerely the old-fashioned, well-known “grippe,” a little more|°"*": '@ Point out my bathrobe on the sands, and the little man brought it and placed it around my shoulders. ‘Then the big one spoke in the voice of an educated man “Sorry, Madame, but with your permission—” us haven’t, at one time or another, had “a touch of the| ¢*sily as I could lift Barbara and laid me down carefully in the bottom of “| the boat. With another “Pardon, madame,” Over his shoulder I caught a glimpse of the cliff. a form moving along the edge of the ‘Then a bandage was slipped over The treatment is just as simple—rest, keep warm, get) S¥T¢1¥: 1 had come to the end of the world! ‘Then I might just as well ne , Justify Daddy Lorimer’s boast about when caught by villians! Tho gagged and blindfolded, I still had senses I could use for my in My fingertips, touching the side of the boat, told mo it was | made of oiled canvas, like the collapsible canoes the Lorimer boys used to formation take to the north woods, From the rise and drop of the boa | at right angles. Then we must be headed south, | noticed that the line of the swells ran east and west. headed straight for nowhere, No sense at all in fainting, as movie heroines do On & southerly course the nearest land we could touch would be near the south pole, (To be continued.) | Jean Willard and Jack Dempney have agreed not to fight during the | | war. Then we hope they go to work. AR BRIDE | . Copyright, 1918, | by the Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n, \ = - P They’re in to Win |Fair targets, every one of these men, for the German riflemen and machine gunners hidden behind the parapet. But they are not thinking of the bullets whizzing past them; of the shells bursting over their heads. They are intent on one thing —to scale that bank, take the bridge head and win the day. And these men are made of the same stuff as all true Americans who read these words. If we are the same stuff, let us prove it. Let us get what I lacked. “Come down ont of there, little one More gutturals | from the short man were perhaps a warning that for the time, at least, 1 | ought to be treated with respect, for they took off their caps politely. “Remember, she's seen every-| this hour—she might be one of us.”| into the fight as they do—to the limit— for Victory ! ‘8 orders.” She'll open up hell if we} | We can decide about | Of course they thought I sound. I managed, how and picked me up as | he bound my mouth, I fancied I could nee cellars—a form that stooped—Luke's! my eyes and the land was shut out | Back Them Up by Subscribing Your Full Share of Bonds of the Fourth Liberty Loan me. I would keep things stirred up TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street t, I knew we were crossing the swells In the afternoon I had We must, then, be This space contributed by Swift & Company