Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE 6 THE SPAR ie. pee ci | Buy Liberty Bonds i Buy! Buy! Buy! SEATTLE Near Union § MEMBER or scr ‘Telexraph News Service of the United Pres Assoc romtottice at Second-Clase Matter May 3, 189% at the Post ‘Wash. under the Act of Congress Marek & 1870. ‘TY LEAGUE OF Nwsrar } ne 2 h a By mail, ont of city, S5e per month: J months, $1.50 "hbo per rn Year, $5.00, in the State of Washington Outalds th tats th Rs] Seen, £0.50 for 8 months, oF GR.00 per year Sy of e | . SCHNEIDER going to foel when we face these — 4 ggg er Loan Bond Sates jade whose patriot ed Dally by The Star Pw Co, Phone Main 00, Private of the United States | ering and sacrifices were exchange conne: vi Volume 20 | (Last of four articles written om we remained pecially for The Star and associate mombers of the Newspaper Enterprise | asnoolation,) Three years ago the past summer while in Toronto, writer saw thou tion and support that was asked sands of Canadian soldiers marching| of us? thru the streets to the inspiring 1 had a young Ca strains of military bands and Seoteh | with me for 10 days | pipers, th men being on their way | ing tour—-a fine appearing. to training campa and embarkation | some, lovable young ehap of 23, | points for overseas duty | whose left leg had veen blown off ‘© as fine an appearing | by the explosion of German shell ae T had ever seen, rep | he battle of the Somme. the flower of Canada’ 1 hockey and Ja manhood. articlpating in For the first time since my tri he must suf do for us, wh here at home in perfect safety and comfort, when at the bottgmn of our hearts we know we hive falled to give them the coopera departments. Aim for your own Liberty Loan goal, and having reached it as indi- viduals, we shall reach it as a city— and as a nation. Simultaneously with news of Ger- man defeats, let Berlin also know that we are prepared to back our men by dian sergeant while on a speak three years ago I went to Toronto ted, at being ones j} during the past month, and again 1! crippled for life billions more. Jnaw the atreets of that city filled| 1 was moet with the following | with Canadians in khaki, but they +| Were not keeping step to the beat of drums or the inspiring strains of mt! | itary bands. Thousands of them | were hobbling along with the ald of crutches and canes; | were | prompt and decisive response “L, lke any other red-blooded man who g0en across and sees the fright ful results of the barbarous warfare carried on by the Hun, feel that no sacrifice in too great I have the mora! satisfaction of feeling that 1 have not lost my leg, but have simply exchanged it for a clear consetence It in that kind of #pirit of sacrifice for humanity's sake, that» ApUr On Us #tay.atLhomes to respond to the limit to every call that is made upon us. Every true Ameriean must rally to his country’s call in connec tion with this Fourth Liberty Loan we and pledge himeeif not only to limit of hin ability, but to the point of self-denial and sacrifice GIRL WATERS COFFEE; SENT TO GERMAN JAIL (Special to The Btar by N. BE A.) AMSTERDAM, Oct 4 A wait ress in a Stuttgart cafe was sent to prison for six weeks for adding The morale of the Hun is said to be low. This will make it lower. It may be the breaking point. Let us not hesi- tate. A dollar contributed now—a dollar INVESTED now—will save us the need of raising more later. empty sleeves | apparent everywhere, I vis | ted several military hospitals, seeing | hundreds of men with legs and ‘agms gone, men whose facea Pere soared burned and scarred, blinded for life men whose limbs were paralyzed and — - helpless. | As I looked upon these wrecks and e——____-—- . remnants of what had, a few month e a Quasi-Patriots | See been suon sptenatd wpectmnens ot je i hem—who are} young manhood, my thoughts wan There are men in Seattle—hundreds of them ye manhood, my thoughts ly advertising the fact that they have deserted the na-|dermd to the fine, upstanding. phys n and the men sent overseas to fight for us. representing our country in ctvilia streets, in trolley cars, cafes and) tion's death grapple with the Hun pec Ss You see them on the y ; theatres—fellows who have resurrected Third Liberty Loan ge EE buttons from some half-forgotten collar button box or) oe Quick inigine and wou bureau drawer, and are wearing them during the Fourth] anout 40,000, and we have bu: Loan campaign. | tted the cup of sacrifice to ou! Ft These quasi-patriots had discarded their Third Loan) ss compared Redline. canada. buttons shortly after the Third campaign closed. Time) cig otner allied nations have taly elapsed. Then came the Fourth Loan. America cried to} rorea her people for money with which to equip her armies Col. Brey weet covers hundred Amer beat the Hun. Then these Third Loan men brought out pipe tpherbdrbes rd me wound. their Third Loan Swe! from some dusty retreat and) ina poisonous gas, and as the weekn pinned them to their lapels. customers and converting a single portion into two, pocketing the df ference in money paid. GERMANS NOW FEAR THEIR OWN GUNS xo by, America must be prepared to Here’s what these Third Loan buttons on belated dis-| "ee the present trickling stream of Sam and the money has already been spent on aa Fr ek pliner redihes A iy of ser and clothing for American soldiers. 7 wale ate dee ane aie “Now America cries to her people for a fourth time tiated maimed and Liunded for ite a ey to free the world from slavery. low are we civilians, é “a My master has not replied. Instead he has refound| ROCKING CHAIR PATRIOTS, — ME and I am on display to show everybody that my mas) | man soldiers have changed ft to “We fear nothing but God and_our own artillery.” This sign wan pont- ed on a dugout captured im the recent offensive. ter was loyal in the past but that he is now a bond deserter to his country. “I wish I had been left at home. Then my shame would not be complete. I cannot look a Fourth Loan button ] in the eye. I would that I had been left in my dark re- treat when my usefulness was ended.” | Don’t humiliate your Third Loan button. Wear an up-| to-date insignia of citizenship. } Ci y lost whose low descending sun.secs no new Foch ageinst the Hun. Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n. | ‘The thin shell of our craft bumped gently against an obstacle; we | stopped and tipped a little to one side as tho strong hands had caught and } 207 # held our boat. Then a voice demand | i Od: “What's that you've got, Mr. “NOW LETS SEE THIS « : se Bremer?’ “I think it's @ Lorelei, Drafting Houses | MADE-IN-AMERICA | air," replied my chief captor, Feet { i} MERMAID" | scurried toward us; there was a vo! We are getting so accustomed to all sorts of war drafts *- that it excites us but to momentary comment when we . ; : Dearne h ick? Nege G rs Beer of the government’s draft of houses in Washington. | °°”. Ho’ ny Papen iswa come the commend. so happened that some rich folk had winter houses in! pers.” the national capital and summer homes nearby. Usually} “Here, str” 7 7 : fe | the chie' Phey, lived in New York or Newport, spending but few days) toiching ine side of what might be a well or a chimary. Soon 1 found r Washington mansions. mynelf stretched on a narrow shelf, for a moment forgotten by my captors Those houses were needed for government clerks and as if I were an unimportant parcel sagt detained in Washington. They were commandeered.| 1” spite of my covered exon, I could foel a wave of gs alberweaagycnre e Glover house, the Stilson Hutchins’ residence, and [Y : ° reel eA gun ly irra ya hae ! * aggerate the power of sex,” I thought. “M interests which those of the Keans, Beales, McMilians and the Robert T.| exceed their interest in women,” and I was truly thankful Lincoins, all were taken by the government and turned into Men were close to me but not heeding me. The ca dormitories for war workers in a town where real estate| ®7Pouncement which was received with cheers : sharply and repeated monotonously hogs are holding up government employes for abnormally) pecijnea that 1 high rentals. About 8,000 war workers have been provided i i at my side 4 é 2 s ‘ | I sat up and pulled my bathrobe close fingers } od the k oft ig and Newport residences and hurrying back to Washington | tne handkerchief which blindfolded me aon sa ae aaath wadiane 1 7h); +o live in their homes. Others are patriotically sending electric glare, I found myself facing a crowd of men, and I perceived that | hres oes to the government and telling it to go, as far as it likes in using the houses. | Those who close their New York and Newport homes} But my prison interested me a rather than permit war workers to live in their Washington) _ Tools were fastened against homes remind us of that dog in the manger. enn Son te tac ae eb nathan erence ley of German exclamations with laughter, I was surprised to find “But first, the pa in made some Commands were given was aboard a boat and was epeeding away thru the night When at last we were well under way, the commander’s voice said, clos differ at all from that which I used to create at parties, ages and ages ago -when the world and I were happy. as much as my captors. ling: ks were folded against the jals, wheels, electric awitches and regie ters, skeleton ladders were jumbled in my mind. Men went thru a hatch At my feet and disappeared into what was doubtless the engine room. Other men went up 4 ladder and vanished in a shoulder-wide tube. That must be More coal saved now, means less cold in zero |@ conning tower. It was easy to decide that I was a prisoner— weather. | alone—in a German U-boat! : ar ee It was not difficult to pick out the commander. Hoe was a spotless . | creature who resembled the crown prince of Germany—and worne cannot | Claxton Asked to t | be said of any man But he must be clever, I admitted, for only a smart i The Cleveland Federation of Women’s clubs has asked |™*,°0U!4 learn to run all that complicated machinery. | a 7 - “Fraulein,” he addressed me—my left hand with my wedding ring wi | the president to remove Philander P. Claxton, United States) cutching the folds of my robe—"Fraulein, at midnight 1 will have the commissioner of education, if Claxton refuses voluntarily to| honor of lunching with you under the ses resign. With a wonderfully formal bow, he disappeared thru a narrow door at The federation protested against Claxton’s stand for|‘"* “*™” °% te cabin. Germanism in American public schools, and sent the follow- oad telegram to President Wilson and Commissioner Clax- “The civic committee of the Cleveland Federa- | tion of Women’s clubs protests against German in the public schools of the land and against the reten- tion of a national commissioner of education who advocates it.” The women of Cleveland do not want their. children! studying German “kultur” unvarnished or disguised in the! 0 of German literature, which Claxton professes to ad-| mire so much. They do not believe their children can study German without imbibing at least a trace of Hunishness, a| ° thing they hope never to have happen to their babies. | Nearly every disease can be traced to “Whatever the German language once meant, it can only stand i i A in i now for ruthless barbarism,” sald the chairman of' the committee, constipation. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is org Lg orale peace toend pricy aaa og is 80 vital a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that quickly relieves constipation and restores normal activity. It is gentle in its action and does not gripe. (To be continued.) ‘ “I had been troubled for a long time with chronic constipation and never found any- thing that gave me the natural relicf that Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has.” (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by Mr. I. Rosenthal, 6 W. 28th St., New York, N. Y.) Buying a bond aids in extracting the Germany. war from ee Everybody Sing Are you planning to go to the Arena tonight? Better take the whole family and go. You'll enjoy the an Soa Loan song festival, is fellow “Everybody Sing’ Lyon, from Cam Lewis—you'll like him. Mk | eg be is able to go into a theatre, or before! a street crowd, and make people forget everything except the fact that it’s good to sing, and it’s fun. “He can pe grouches, and sour old fellows, and even young fops, cast __ DR. CALDWELL’S Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggiss Everywhere ald | water to the tea or coffee served)" Apparently the mysterious envelope wan transferred to} Then I was handed down a vertical ladder, my feet sometimes | From the throb of the engines 1| When my eyen could endure the |§ already I had made an tmpreasion on them—an impreasion which did not |2 THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1918. STARSHELLS | WAAR APRA ALRL PAPAL LAL A WoRD FROM JOSH WISE When it comes t cueesin’, « fool en often beat a wise man W. #, Brown, now In the service reports that when a trdep train in |Texas stopped at a small town, the boys saw & restaurant near the jumped from the “put,” he ard on the station and they cars and rushed for it reports, “there was @ 16 Hore front door that #aif, \to Dinner | Maybe the: |navy for #01 | the war. | see ving the German ind of work after 'The Day Mra. Bohn Had Such Good Time Henry Lents and wife, Hand; Oncar Egnes, wife and baby Will Bobn and family, of Howard |City; Charles Knox, w and Dan Whipple and w mn Mr port, 1 spent Bunday at toh Howard City (Mich) Record. a | ow at has become of the old famh' man who used to ask for Vienna bread? see It Sounds Like » Wedding With the morning sunshine and its effulgence to brighten the heavens, his splendor as threads in the wkirts of the robe of deity, after the night wrapped in the sable mantle, woven with gems and #tare which shined ax ornaments worked hy the needle of God, in the brilliant plece of tapestry which jover our heads an a dw the beautiful and a Golda, daughter John Ward. Peters, with the friends, wa al altar in t bride's home | Herald. had spread ling tent | | ‘GIRL MEASURES LOVE BY GLITTER OF SOLITAIRE of Way-| Dear Cynthia: I ama soldier lad as you see. Before I enlisted 1 had been keeping steady company with a girl for several months. We had known each other all the way thru grammar school and high school. Learning that she cared as much for me as I did for her, which was con- siderable, 1 proposed a week ago and was accepted, I felt free to discuss finances with her then, 1 was learning a_ trade which pays well when I en-| tered the service. I have several hundred dollare in the bank, and I put this plan up to my sweetheart: That I put that money in bonds . for her instead of giving her an engagement ring, and then after the war, | would buy her the ring. She assented luctantly, and much rather to re- my surprise has treated me very) cool since. Now, frankly, Miss Grey, what do you think? Did 1 do wrong? I certainly meant no offense, and only en- deavored to do the best I knew for the girl I love. Other young men in the ser- vice who have more than 1 have, are giving their fian- cees Liberty Bonds, instead of rings, so I do not consider my proposition an insult by yiany means. .1 would like your opinion, anyway. LANT. The girl who treats a man coldly because she docs not receive an en- gagement ring does not deserve to have one, The importance which some young women attach to a solitaire, as an evidence of a man’s devotion, is positively startling to all persons who consider love an important item in any promise to marry. Does this girl love you because “you are you,” or only for the showing she can make among her friends? It might be well to find thie out be- fore going farther. Your letter is just one more proof of the ez- alted place which the diamond occupies in modern romance, and, unfortunately, it takes all the real romance out of much modern love making. ar Mins ent how to prepare and smoke kippered salmon? Mrs LF Prepare salmon as for other use, Soak 12 hours in salt water, remov pat dry with wott cloth the smoke * house ready y the salmon on a el any kind of wire w it falls to pleces if hung » and smoke until thoroly dry see Dear Miss Grey receives a wedding announcement two days after the marriage ceremony, how should one give @ present, send it or take it When a person invitation, or | when calling? I suppose ft is quite! | her wounded heroes grow in volume | (Special to The Star by N. EA.) play say to the world: ray x : jas the great fight for a final and de| PARIS, Oct. 4—Filemarck haa! “I am a button of America’s Third Liberty ge , | cixive Victory Increases in intensity |the author of the famous German | 9 mas! bou: months a from nele | and ferocity. saying, “We fear God above, but “My ter ight bc bond go In a few months every city of our ne ¢ise in the world.” The | 50 cts. (i) $1.00 ATRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY . 1. BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS aside their reserve and sing like churchfolk at prayer meeting. He chooses good-natured, rollicking songs. The soldiers over at Camp Lewis like to get together with Lyon and sing. You'll like it, too. Let's fill the Arena, Process. Ye i iN y: Kindly state as} i proper to give ® present, altho onty a alight aoqual VICTORIA, ts should be it is quite give a present in re to an announcement, but imperative when the ‘oom or both are Soldier's Wife Asks Advice Dear Mine Grey: Would you king ly tell me if a man in Clase 1 who claimed ¢ fn at the time of regiatratic 0 reclassified and be put in ha now for exe vireg no reasons A i No, not if the ¢ the correct ing the case DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING? IN TRENCHES! PARIS, Oct. 4--A group of (Special to The Star by N. E. A) new arrivals was sitting in a Parig officers’ club speculating of trench \iife, One was telling: 4 A stress. jing incident he had Heard of when |Captain Frank P. Adams, one-time |newspaper paragrapher back home, came in: “That's right,” Be put tn, “once you get in the trenches youl find everything done to make death |no longer attractiv: YF WIFE. raft board hag formation regard TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses ne Little AMERICANS Do your bit ERE is a food never out of season. Keep the familiar Kellogg Package handyall the time. Serve Kellogg’s with milk or evap- orated milk, with fresh or stewed fruit, at any time of day—break- fast, lunch, supper, or when the children are hungry between meals, It is convenient to buy, ready to serve, saves labor and fuel, needs no sugar—owing to the flavor and sweetness developed in the Kellogg Kellogg’s and Milk is a com- n Ke <7 Bre SORE Save sugar, wheat, meat, labor and fuel bination perfect in It builds flesh, bone Compare the high and low cost with other foods and you will find Kellopg’s and Milk the most economical food you can serve. Most people when they say “Corn Flakes” mean ‘‘Kellogg’s"’—the Original— the Flakes that are delicate and thin, with a flavor and crispness all their own. Don’t merely ask for “Corn Flakes” — specify Kellogg’s Toasted Corn Flakes and Ht Hallagg It identifies the Original Corn Flakes Look for the signature— KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO., Battle Creek, Michigan ARR food value. and muscle. nourishment