The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 30, 1918, Page 6

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DAY, OCT. 30, 1918. “ou aison «sows Spouse Objects to Rouge Now; CONFESSIONS OF A WAR IBIRIDE THE SEATTLE STAR 1207 Seventh Ave, Near OLY OL NOWS ™ OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS] wry iy q pancake like the sun?’ | SSroge aEa E ecoemmanae a Dot a any,” aciew nd th Swede Thought It Clever Before | vaoréittat Chrystabel haa fini She Watered as Second-Class Matter May 8, 1 t © |) hint der vest."—Orange Pe } Dear Miss Grey: Tam a bride of two months, and, am sorry to may, | | ¢ 3 Monae Seattio, Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3. 187% = ae ce mem | int Oo! you for advice #0 noon, 1 kept company with my husband | » i EVOLVE A CREED Fon © morning re 6 his oriouls At of city, BSc per month; 3 months, $1.50¢ 6 montha, $2.75: JUSTIFYING HIMSELF steady for two yearn be we were married, Lam naturally very p ’ | WOMEN IN TIME OF aanieiar is now in the navy, oar, in the State of Washington. Outside the state, The per 2 4 Y and use just @ Uny bit of rouge, My husband knew this before we * | Chrys s far more for vieto Month, $4.50 for € months, or $9.00 per year, Ty carrier, otty, lie ‘ Anot her agent? I really can't #66 | narried and used to laugh at me and think it clever, Now he ob; . WAR ht. an eae rong per week. hepinenaiions - mm || FOU. raisew an awful howl when I put it on, Do you think this right, w | * mY 2 etiae weet is Published Daily by The Star Pebliishing Co. Phone Maia 000, Private Then it's lucky I called. I repre-| never guid anything before? JUBTICH. | | I never can get to the back of her ee t know whether exchange connecting alt departments. sent Dr, Wombat, the eminent opt No, of course not. If he had any scruples about nouge he In undertaking the hard grind in the c from motives of patr ota a eee clan peal ib | should have aired his opinions before,the wedding, That would | because Cortais put her up to it, or because aie thinks she ought to pad ee LS ae dain 2 HEE wha 18 Nhe rl have given you an opportunity to decide whether you considered | about Dadéy Lorimer’s business, now that bis sone ar ose im | UNWORTHY GEORGE | the point important or not. Since your marriage you fall Into the | 1 am almout jealous of her becatise all 1 am able to do tow 1s to ta Learn to Live Outdoors | But 1 am so unworthy, éasting.”| nrcnunate alternative ot buire eoised to coumder thie whim ef SE A ena fine cage oon pa arplnped Don tll f he murmured, as he held the dear your husband's or have trouble with bim, | Hack in that old U-boat, in the hour when I thought I was Most of us are already planning what we shall do Pe eee se The man is following the course of his kind by insisting on his | Gili ahel tic Gk “Guan E Gad te cheek & tuasoniee “ae von “wh " “Ob, ®," she sighed; “if you nt to dominate ver not habits of hin new ry . 7” . ‘ ~ et” right to dominate the amall personal tastes and hal everywhere en the boys come hom and papa eed on every point as wife just as noon as has her safely bound, ‘This does not place { wanted to make women think and feel, every hour of every da They have been away so long, on such a dangerous, | you do on that, now happy we would) him in @ herole attitude, 1t would geem more decent to let a wor lentil thie Wab.Ab over, ttle peteonal Gabt ‘they ows to the san ad ps heroic mission, that when they come back we will love heen | PF Sean Pe | he was still free to choose between com- ’ m ¢ them to help thet c ne e ’ more, and treat them better than ever before. We will ap- SOOTHING HIS PEARS Pern rong, I consider the peace of one's ass a Seer ee ee eee £ j i hurry-| He understand your father sald | household far more tant than the rouge on ‘n cheeks, n enta, lot her observe, ns if I ings for love and comradeship. We will spend more time kick me out the door find a safe way around hubby's sudden prejudice and keep the Wyle a isces Udepe. tet er iratae 0t ke aeltnn ae enjoying the human companionship of the boys and each) she—On, don't worry; father's} — much-coveted rouge, And—don't ever, ever boast that you had heads are pillowed on the ad. other. | punting is wretched, your own way.” It matters not how you get your way, or wheth: GEN.JANIN ‘When she lights a fire, let her imagine how cold a wet trench M4 2 s, + . “ee er friend husband even realiges that you have outwitted him, so is on a frosty night But if we spend more time with them we'll have to!” ove Great ADVANTAGE Jong as you win | When she puta on clean raiment, let her picture the mud” spend it out-of-doors—for THEY won't stay in the house) «staxine,” queried.the teacher of!) , Pin comeamar ener General Janin, of the Prench| stained clothes of the men who fight. to play! the head scholar, “what is the differ | From “Over There’ vig re ~ the at kong wh Bas army, has been chosen commander And in the midst of galety, let her pause to pray for the * arm: e cooped- ence between electricity and ight | Phrases in French ng its best to remedy this nitua- |of the Czscho-Slovak army, and t* wounded. Tire men in the “Aap ey ea me atonly ning Dear Miss Grey: Please tell me| 0". It is constantly calling for [now in America on his way to Unless women live this war dally, in ways that hurt, they cannot fp places of modern social and industrial life, have suddenly) «4 gon't nave to pay nothing for|the meaning of these French words: | Sfficlent stenographers, clerks, | Siberia to take active command appreciate what their armies are doing, and they will not try to do the been taught the uses and delights of plain, everyday fresh) jgntning,” answered Maxine SS a fen ea etc, In an effort to wend the al | pe air. They like it so well that they won't be content with rae AN came all the way from Franc i. See eee gag Ae | The taster America works, and the better we women work, and the i i " it i sleep hanksgiving gloom “Turkey | posteard. Also, "Je vous aime.” | - ere — ard more workers there are a the sooner victory will come The any other kind. They have learned what it is to sleep jhortage serious.” Still, we may be] * HELE Cross can ald: you in most enthusiastic women b und their jobs. Now it ts time is under the stars—a joy once reserved to tramps and Poets. | trankful that there's a serious short Free translation is “Th this respect. | for the shy ones, and for those who have never worked for money before, | They have watched the exuberant glory and triumph of age in Turkey taquiate howt fe the. 4 | President’ 4 ei | to undertake their special bit i ros’ rise, and learned the solemn beauty of creepin: fs | which one is lovél.” The latter | re sident’s Ancestors American energy, increasing ounce by ounce, is driving the Flun over twilights. id y P 7) FIT MAN FOR THE Job | beac | means, “I love you.’ | Scotch-Irish Descent | TAILORING co the Rhine, and searing him into overtures of peace. Every woman who m : A professional atro: re ie Dear Mixa Grey: Will you please ° ,ddu her mite of energy to this great push, hastens the homecoming of EF “In Flanders field, where poppies grow,” they have] paar jn VARaea, Wash pamees A Good Bit | sell enh te Sour setwlecatit toe pe her man | learned a new and mighty language of the common gTrass ger on a trajn from Chicago to? Of A dotas Mra. Woodrow Wilson is the Headquarters for A call from Martha Palmer Interrupted my meditation. Martha has a ‘ yes| York, and had occasion te to | é dent nd or third wife? s found me @ useful job, I think. She's ng a "Cheer Club.” She says % and flowers, and thrill to the ae ot bad lark that brave: | the pom coal “There. ve adie Dear Misa Gre 1am an old read: | the pi an Ei Suits, Coats and that the younger women get along without their men be than the 4 the battlefields as they never thri to solemn organ tones. | costed by an eccentric looking per.|¢f of your column and would like to | America, or of English de One-Piece Dresse. der woman, and that {t should be the special duty of war brides to find A day in June or October is more to them thmm a square jon who said: “Pardon me, air, but) @AK® & #uRgeRtION to some of your 'S | and cheer up the lonely mothers of soldiers. She is trying to work out on the calendar. It is a God-given time of sun and air, and are you not the strong man?” howd nnnngaetar ipl ont letters The present Mrs. Wileon in the 425 Union Street rome plan tor comforting the mothers of the soldiers who *'go west.” i i SI lor of| “Some say I am,” was the good. | criticising and challeng ev president's second wife. Wood nope I can help her : eee eoldi ‘e ae Lo arta tide or in orig A “You can lift three tons in har-|try to use it as a debating pa tch-lrish ancestry on both |= — —————————— e ers have learn at outdoors is not just aN ness? J others as a matrimonial bureau, = interlude between work and home and amusement. Out-) “That's my record.” atill othera to weverely criticise . Py ‘. $. “ These re are never interest \War Riek . doors is freedom, and health, and happiness—and if we) “You can hold two hundred: | War Risk Insurance . 7 Z| ° Saal te nd always leave an acid * . > want to work and play with them hereafter we too shall | eyes bP cae Met taste, Why not. read. the letter | Gove rnment Organization 1 ore) . Dear Mim ire o hand?’ ways. We're none of us perfect. 8 . “Yes.” |why do all of us blame the rest of or more lsrge ins Your Business 5 po ROP A lus when we are all just plain hu-| COmpanies controlled by the : . . P . “y podee mans?” If we could get this broad | ent? Pay attention to your business and it will return the) «), "that . © we could for The war rink fneurance is compliment. PBI Melitar % Sen Mr. Bach of 46| Purely & government organiza them. Let's all Gon. 4 fal _plishes the end originally designed. How hard he shall work is a question every man un-/*° good 4s to undertake to raise lear window for cisco Argonaut. . mer"-—-San Fran consciously answers and dismisses from mind. His decision is determined by the depth of his am-| bition and the height of his aspirations. | A sense of duty to dependents or a feeling of obligation || to family may also be factors in the formatéon of his policy! But before these elements enter into a man’s life he should || have clearly shaped in mind a goal, a well defined objective, toward which his energies will be directed. | ‘atter It may mean the accumulation of a certain sum, the { attainment of a coveted position, the accomplishment of noteworthy vocational or professional prowess—but it should be based upon individual effort, no matter what its nature. Every one of us should cheerfully and eagerly dedicate {47 {7 RE. the major part of two decades to intensive work, DS. ¥ ords “Spanish Flu” ition. Drifted up to my degree of success resultant depends upon the fore-| Pt" from the sight and vision which chose and planned the career. leaasia of tuslaee Talents, inclination, education and pecuniary needs|And the last 1 each and all should be considered in the selection of one’s; emembered was life work. My mind working But once the field of endeavor is decided upon, when|{;anch ria the die is cast let nothing deflect you from the charted) This morning 1 course, hew straight to the line, make departures only after| Woke up an hour THE FLU Last night as I mature deliberation. Late, and my first Pay attention to your business and it will return the|-1 senior 1c that's t! A symptom of | Spanish Flu!” |My beard seemed to | Have grown pretty ie ily dissuaded, readily persuaded to change\jetnun your mind, to alter your views, to amend your decisions, to| seanues Fiat in policy, opinions or plans? Breakfast didn't seem In this world of kaleidoscopic change, cross-current in-| 7° D饮 '* rewular fluences incessantly assail; they decoy, detract or deflect! spanisn Fru! us from the path of predetermined purpose. On the way to work There is one possession which insures undisturbed poise |! heard coughs ana and undeterred pursuit, of any prescribed objective. It aa establishes le firmness, a resoluteness that accom- Spanish Flu! I felt like coughing And sneezing— Confidence is the key. Build it; develop it; seek less) “vanish Flu! self-sufficient. emanae ce from within. Be)t thougnt— Spanish Fri! Confidence brings adherence to convictions despite| And here 1 éintsh A ’ As a their conflict with views of others caleslated to revoke type hiring oo Confidence is the offspring of faith in self and in one’s) s+ work. Confidence is born of belief in personal power as GOING, GOING in that which is sought of attainment. Again the squeal is heard from To be well-to-do, found the will-to-do on a basis of con-| rent); “Our enemies will try to Pes A a crush us.” You id chinful fidence. Ambition commences, confidences carries thru,|ty Bill We mean to lay You & Co “Less confidants, more confidence” is a rule the successful tT than a pancake’s vest. We're | gonna set you and outfit down so close you won't be able to throw a shadow, and that's some close. Crush you? Why Bill, dear old Vote FOR Referendum No. 10 wart, we're gonna hammer you thin Again the people of this state are required to vote ner than vacuum, and that's o a “wet” and “dry” question. Initiative Bill No. 10, drafted | ne ike a fmake's hipe, and. you by the dry forces, providing for a “bone dry” state, was (o77 ou, Siuash. @ anake in neck qeeeed by the legislature with a referendum clause at.| Youre wrth ee man rigidly observes. You've started, and we didn't like On the ballot the question is presented as Referendum) 22° the finish Measure No. 10. If you want to retain the “boi ”” con- dition of edad — of Washington, tlh re No. 10. Whatever it used to mean, that “I. R.” which Bill al- — after his signature will soon stand for “ me. ed your way, Bill. You can't duck vote FOR Referendum|it- !t’s gonna emear you from your g008e step corns to your crown bun. jonas. That bolt you threw in 1914 turned out to be a boomerang, and it's booming ita way back to slam you #0 far you'll be 9999 decades late in answering when Gabriel strums his ukulele. Mussy days ahead, Bithelm. Clemenceau’s daily little journeys to the front will have to be abandoned if they keep moving as Woes much further east. Acid Stomach! Meals Don't Fit! Gases, Heartburn, Indigestion Instantly ! fine. _ ht || SHOP EARLY | Stomach feels The moment Diapepsin teaches the sick, upset, sour stomach all distress ends. There was an old woman who lived in a shoe, 7 She had a big lot of shopping to do, With gifts to buy for her twenty- four kids, usually got clothes and lids) This year she'll be done long before December, You wonder what became of the indigestion, acidity, gases, flatuence, heartburn, sour risings, dyspepsia. Magic relief! No waiting! (She them shoes, Eat without fear! Costs little—Any drug store. Then will buy them some real ifts they long will remem- PSET? P, D £ upset? ane’s an Wilbur ters || Appeal Not Nec your sample of start, so we're gonna | There's a nice, | big package of snappy finish, head. | b more forgiving, and strive to be | better to each oth keeping in mind what our boys are fichting and dying for over there—not #elf ishness, but to make the world a decent place to live in. Bo why not kick this selfishness out of ourselves atchome first, last, and always? 6. C. sary, Says “Old Tar” Dear Miss Grey the ‘old navy.” and who are still serving with the colors, maw in your columns of The Star, October |S. ©. &" article from our boys in blue asking for your assistance in securing a phonograph for lerew, as they thought they were | soon to be leaving for a cruise. | The “8 ©. &” article stated that | the boys in biue had invested all of their savings and money in Liberty which, of course, is the prop- for it. But why should any Uncle Sammy's dlucjackets “bum” (an we of the old navy call 110 from the public when they can } appeal to thelr paymasters or to some organizations, such as the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A. or War Camp Communi ty service? | "rhe government pays all of its | “fighters” enough money to be hap- | py, and If the members of the “S, O. |S." crew Would only pass the hat among them they very easily could raise the money to secure the phono graph or make @ payment on it | The U | ter mon | the world, and old | proud of it | Heve it is not such an appeal. AN OLD NAVY MAN. Allotment Delayed, | Wife Suffers | Dear Mins Grey: Can you advise | me regarding my government pay? | Sometimes it is delayed for five or navy The “old navy men” be: | necessary to make | six months and I should hear every | | month. I cannot make all ends meet jon the salary I am getting at work and I depend upon my pay consider |ably. My husband ix in France #0 |1 cannot ask his advice, Would it |be proper to write to the war risk | insurance? MRS. B. C. | It in a shame that the wives of our men in France cannot get | their checks when the money in absolutely essential to their live: does sugar. | A few of un of | thetr | \Oh, It’s There! Ouch, How It Pains!) | RIGHT ACROSS THE SMALL OF THE BACK | OR OVER THE KIDNEYS! | ulates in the system in form of urate salts. Obtain at your nearest drug store that splendid discovery of Dr. Pierce’s called “Anuric’—(anti-uric). more potent than lithia and dissolves uric acid as hot coffee Police Should Nab This Mr. Raffles Dear Mixa Grey: What would you | |think should be done with a man that nokt chances on an automobile about nix months ago and then hae ywed the machine to be raf A returned the money to per na who bought tcketa? A POOR MAN. ‘The name of the man and his whereabouts should be reported to the © department at once. Editor's Mail THE WAY TO PRACE Eé@itor The Star I read an edl- torial with surprise at the une of the term, “All men are born equal.” All men are born equal. But the = equality is not either physical, men tal, moral or spiritual The equal ity consinta only of the right to get their sustenance from the bounties of nature, Go anywhere in nature that you wish and you will find vegetation, animals and Insects get ting their sustenance from the bounteous supply of Mother arth. | Go among primitive peoples and you will find things Ukewise It has remained for so called civil ization and Christian people to aay to their fellow beings, “Pay mo,” be fore one can have the privilege of eating that which sustains life, or have access to nature's stores that go to give food, raiment, shelter and everything that is needed to sustain life. There justify man in in nothing in nature to this self-appointed ownership of all the forces and bounties of nature, This ownership has been the cause of all strife be tween man and man, It has been the cause of all ware that have ever been waged, It has cauned al! forces of slavery that have ever existed on earth. It has caused all want and | worry and almost all the ills that | the human family has ever suf- fered. | | The refusal of civilized man to/ l recognize this law of equality will | continue to cause wars and fam- |ines, with their attending flls, But | the full recognition of the law will | | bring “Peace on earth, good will to |men.” Yours truly, WM. WcELHINEY. All signals of dis- tress. The kidneys have too much work to per- form. Uric acid accum- Anuric is In the Special Price Basement on Thursday A Most Remarkable Sale of 75 Women's New Fall and Winter Coats a eee » $22.50 NEW STYLES—NEW ARRIVALS | yd ashton made and specially priced for this sale. Much - might be written about the hard work we went to to secure these Coats—much might be said about the splendid qualities, the smart styles, the careful making—but we are going to let you be the judge. —The lot contains all sorts of Coats—medium and heavy weights, wool velours, cheviots, Thibets and burellas, some lined through- out with rich satins, others semi-lined — some have broad fur or plush collars, others smart collars of self material. —The wanted shades are here, too — navy blue, brown, gray, green, black—plenty of each. —The size range is unusually complete. Sizes 18 to 44 as well as extra large sizes up to 53. —These are among the greatest Coat values we have offered this season in the Special Price Basement, where extraordinary values are the rule ..... sal aia hekaw ae

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