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aiaeiaaie THE SEATTLE STAR 3307 Seventh Ave, Near Union st. MEMBER OF SCHIFrS NORTHWEST LRAGU “Teles ‘ses ited Prees Association « THE SEATTLE-STAR—THIL | CONFESSIONS OF | WAR BRIDE | Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association TRSDAY, NOV. WEE MEN predicted at the beginning of the war that the world would go bankrupt in a year; they were fooled; so now, after war, pay no attention to pessimistic views; world needs more, not less, goods. ad n oe Se See eee — a4 I : i Kae FR eC jnietarett and our gro’ has been so| can, He has considered hi Br onde t the Postoffice at Tn the midst of my enemies, while they lived, I had fot been | i-—— — big and r growth iim an raider > Ne Se iat oF bodttees earch 3, 1878 afraid, Now that they were as impotent as statues, | cowered away | | Pa ee, ee Ae lee 5 dated hd Wain, te Hes org ate gh we ee wii borage a gee is SOC enN. ES. & wan basa ~ _ a he This horror of 5 editor 5 attention to ite foreign marke ul person but bumptious 4 By matl, ont of cit vay boi Ba oag ana ‘a, I told Now York weekly, has been engaged to write two or three articles is only in periods of local depression not to be trusted. He has po Zoae, 96,08, tm, tng i oe py yd IN) jayaelf, but [ could not conquer 1.| | week for The Star and associated members of the Newspaper in noon as thone passed we have! been eager to trade with the t per week. . eamnenmaegginna — -- IND Sar im AND I enatched up my cloak to fly from, | terprise Association, Spillane has never gambled a cent in Wail giected the foreign market and| American, for the American hag Pebttabea Dally by The Star Publishing Co. Phone Main G90 Metvats| 50 - TY tne houne of “death, but when T|| Street, and he writes from the standpoint of the ordinary man—not | | poen watinfied with our domestic! been unwilling to conform to 4 exchange connecting ali departments. opened the door, the storm flung) | the business potentate; yet his words are read epgerly by the mow trade the foreigner’s busines: forme ; iT me back into the room and held the door wide | prominent and powerful financiers, We are sure you will be greatly NOW, WHETHER WE WANT or caprices, He has considered ! ae The wind tore whistling thru the joints of the shack, and between tho|| Interested by what he has to say about AMERICA'S PROBLEMS | |TO OR NOT, WH MUST SUPPLY) the American arrogant and to g5@ «well and ebbing o » . . g sobbed o: o OF PEACK, Watch for his next article, THE Wé D. Nowhere on th large degree money mad ‘ ic Of ite fury, a long, low moaning ed on the alr, If fay SP preg dtd he War hiee con 5 tae know | y y fro ne rocks a! | Pon Peve pees clnag nd nas changed the fey Joker in German Appeal ine "es Car 8 sinen Seung Gite away trom tes resent Nik Nene - ae mti| bautty: obtained aa tare. Onr wealts| cmars views fo German women are NOT appealing to American Women |inat uncanny chamber, the moaning seemed to come from #ome giant in BY RICHARD SPI NE Seon ae ie mewere, Sod | athe He has seen America pour outils to supply them with shiploads of free food. wore diettoas 'Y RICHA! filer ‘Salion Mas, Se, asuch arable | alas ct himen’ tec taee Read their appeal. ’ : nel - oe T glanced over my shoulder, Were the arms of the dead beckon: | Editor of “Commerce and Finance’; Noted Authority On|iana ‘No other nation has uch meen the people be wale is release of railway cars and locomotives m new very well that the wind was raising and lowering the | ‘ Economics manufacturing facilities. No other dollar idolators r i t is for the f y 41, (Sheets which covered the bodies, yet I whimpered pitifully, “The dead Kinance and Economics. ' pp = to be surrendered to the allied powers under the armistice |snouid lie still te sul” J (Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) | Ration auc Brera gr eee everything tor the eal ot wore terms. rl i I recognized my terror as primitive and unworthy of a civilized and Most of the things about which we worry never Happen.| nas of any other three nations |to think of Americans as the pee | The German women argue that unless these cars «on Cn ctucated woman. Soldiere must endure this same hare expetience, I) In 1914, when the war began, many men of high intelligence | combinea eat people of the world ‘ . 2, . p | told m *, ~ v n ’ | 7 ore! ner! b ¥ t engines are left in German hands, food supplies cannot be | fold myself, when = paged Vagge Dye? dors yo ell \predicted world bankruptcy Pe. gigi: AP magia ti Bf geen won something th brought from German farms to German lowes, .~ tang terror, I crept thru the door and forced myself inta the arms of tho|if the conflict last six GAGA uider baaMesbe. ac deeds Wet be measured. Sc. fas wal ber for distribution, in which case starvation is likely for hun-|tempeat. n months; world destruction if have been carried in vessela owned| ood will of the world, ‘The wha dreds of thousands half-famished on that scientific war To the west was the pleasure park. I knew there must be guards to it lasted a year. and operated by other nationalities | World wants to trade with Ameria. diet which were told a while back was such a good thing for wateh \t, Afier © | weary journey over & etorm-wrecked path, I came| It has lasted nearly four |Our ts Hen commerce has been fi it must trade with it tor « dam pon a a gate in the high fence, and within the inclosure a keeper's sithe nanced thru banks of other coun-|for from no other source can it the overfed peoples of the world. e +4 |cottage, from which « sloppy, sleepy, handsome girl stepped at my knock, and a half years and neither tries, Our agents have been men) tain #0 readily the raw and tints The long, four-year war taught us all that you can’t) ono rain had stopped, leaving me shaking in wet garments, of the dread forecasts has of other climes products, the foodstuffs, the finay- trust anything that comes out of go gel P 8 a <AmOU.| aire me seme dry ethos, leme” 1 SERS, been gel age Rg DAYS OF TRIBUTE TO oTTERS |“! accommodations it can g@t ‘i ia o j i othis Ss Lt here do you come from she inquired fri 'y. nose who are ng } ~ — here. flage. Nothing is true, nothing is holy, nothing has goc “From the last shack down the line" I answered, “but 1—" about afterthe war conditions, fear IN FOREIGN TRADE GONE Foreign trade js the lite blos#ile faith. i < : x “All them guys has the ‘flu'—my friend rowed down that way three|ing trouble in weaving back into | yw, for the first time in history rnational health greatneag. What cunning scheme is behind this appeal of the Ger- days ago and talked with some of ‘em,” she commented, “But gee, who'd |industry the millions of men we we are becom macased of 4! The world needs everything Ames. man women, att appeal SENT TO AMERICA, ignoring | cuces they kept a girl like your” |have in the army and navy, loning mercantile marine of m size com can supply. The American farm, Co nder-in-Chief Foch? I drew a long, hard breath, perceiving for the first time what kind of |sleep over fear of on being re jmensurate with world ponition. the American factory, the Amerieah or weil a isitioned from Germany “, girl she was; perceiving also that once # gitl slips out of her protected | duced, imagining afl ports of dis We are beginning, only beginning working to their highest capa. The cars and locomotives requisition ro xe 3 le—once & Woman cannot or will not explain herself to all inquiries—|turbances, are an tin to be con |to get our own banking establinh-|eity for the next few years canna by the-terms of the armistice are the same cars and 1o0c0-| society has but one explanation of her founded in their fears asx were ments in foreign lands, In t all the demands that the motives that moved German troops from front to front and} “Sell me something dry,” I insisted. Sometimes T wish T had a snap |those who saw world disaster In foreign trade a» we develop world will make on them dd the lines in bewildering numbers and with shot of myself in the gay attire she sold me, not because I care to recail|/the world war |r we will not h We may expect unsettlement here up an iown the lines . the awful price I paid her for the things, but merely to prove how certain America is vastly better pre- to others for carrying our goods,jor there in changing over our in. bexcildering speed all thru the war. The same cars and loco- motives that carried to the millions of Germam troops clothes can vulgarize a decent woman. “Now, where can I find @ phone?” I demanded when I was dry and pared for peace than it was for war, The transition from a Richard Stiliane * | for marketing our products or for furnishing financial tions for our business, accommoda. dustrial equipment from war needs to peace needs, but nothing more, |for we have good days, active days, prosperous days ahead for a fair number of years. war basis tos peace basis will bring unsettlement in various lines of industry, but readjust America’s present problem ts not! one of preparing for contraction in Heretofore the foreigner has : i i ipage, | warm. their enormous supplies of food, clothing, camp equipag “At the office, down at the other end of the broad walk,” ahe replied. been doubtful about the Ameri- ammunition and guns. The same cars and locomotives that} whom should 1 call for help? 1 couldn't think very clearly. 1 knew hauled from France and Belgium and Russia huge loads of/, aozen women in New York—college sorority girls, friends of Mother] ment will be much easier, much |DUMNeR, Dut very reat poche, ote cee meso ae muy cece lumber, coal and iron ore to make shells and guns and air-|Lorimer—but I could hardly appear before any of them In my preseat| more rapid than generally ex: | mu h opportunity as this one has to The same that bore billions of dollars’ worth of loot from invaded territories back into Germany. it (To Bo Continecd) EXPANSION, NOT CONTRAC | |"“Tot us take a look at Americ. cars i i ‘ood from ; 3 4M | here in our 48 states we have! These and locomotives did not, carry ‘There will.be plenty of work for! more than 100,000,000 people, all. the farms to the towns for four years, and yet the populace didn’t starve. Where are the cars and engines that per- formed that service for four years? The allied war council that dictated the terms of the Pres ‘, Jal, _ ‘to Unrave armistice also sdopted ‘a resolution to provision Germany |% svel Tangle Mty humana, Miht do more to bring about a [the American people are prudent| easy to mupply thru our transporta against starvation this winter. ; | marened the under Tis tathen ant | BAPBY adjustment of this matter |and resourceful. They have not | tion ystems of railroad, trolley and President Wilson in hi8 speech to congress said that the en nae. He had not been living, ‘ae Anvene eles been prudent always, but they| automobile. Nowhere in the world| ‘ lrea n ‘ced Ger-| with his first wite, - - never lacked resourcefulness, In| is there so big a market for the allies and Americans ny iy ay cpmiing Laie i pont mn ose Pon Reg deny ie Date of the last few years, they have/ manufacturer and supplier to reach thany as they srganized to feed Belgium. But two weeke later he had another | Thankegiving shown a prudence greater than|#o quickly and no easily Herbert Hoover is today en route to Europe to start} jstter which stated she had just dicd.| Dear Mies Grey: Would you|*¥ Were supponed to possean, | Our domestic market has been so) this humanitarian work. If he finds that those cars and are needed in his task you can depend on it _- locomotives that he'll get them. Enough said. attire, I reasoned. Explanations would have to go too deep 2 Requires an Expert successfully married woman of your acquaintance, she, perhaps, | plmse let me know if Thanksgiving {in the year 1911 came on the last Thursday in the month? INTERESTED READER. Is our marriago strictly legal? WORRIED You require an attorney to straighten out your matrimonial | pected. day. everybody to do. There is no rea: | practi son to fear what we term “hard! language, all animated by the same times” as @ result of the war. Sure-|ideals and purposes, all within ly there In no danger of much a con-|reach of the Mterature put out by dition within the next five years if|/our great national publications, all lly considered, speaking one STARSHELLS | tang! coordi n o custo and b Some day we may forget how tickled were the German naa eigtactinn af dee sicadian The Shadow of the Coffee Cup people—women included—when the Lusitania was carried Explanation Polite, Thankagiving alway TT down with its precious burden of our women and babes. German propaganda and cunning. We're not quite cer- Aare the game in the locomotive-and-car appeal but we know it’s a trick. i Where's the old-fashioned man who never had to be thankful for on Thanksgiving day? He's to be as lonely as Mr. Scrooge this year. For a Victory Monument the lant Thursday in November But Not Necessary Dear Mine Grey: 1 have been in should not publish it, because of the fact that so many young boys and girls read my columna. | Send @ self-addressed and stamp ed envelope for personal reply. CYNTHIA GREY. MRS. ELLSWORTH’S RECOVERY WAS A be right to write him and ask for an explanation’? lL. If there was no engagement, the relations between you do not appear to have been close enough to warrant asking an ex | planation. You would be humilh | ated should the young man de cline to explain. ter lightly and cultivate friends. explanation later ‘Treat the mat | other He may volunteer an “*T mastn’t drink coffee—or I can't sleep."’ Does the tyrant coffee demand this obedience from you at the evening meal? THE BOOBYCHAT OF POMER We have just learned where tie) Some day we may forget the pleasurable thrills the people). '"". nn for two| Letter Detrimental FRYYHAM Huns got all the paper from which of Germany felt when hundreds of women and children were | years.” Now ho has stopped writing to Young Readers A Chambers novel underneath the | 2 made shoes and clothes, ‘They Switch to Borden's Malted Milk when tea and coflce-make _ blown to bits in London and Paris by Zeppelins. to me and never calls. I kDOw Of were 1. F: Owing to the na bough, ee er ene you nervous. It's soothing, nourishing and satisfying. But we're not chumps enough to be taken in any more} "° — — — Ringe ey ture of your letter, I fect that 1 [A sar oo buttermitk, a lunch, srs | Things Worth Knowing | Serve ice cold er piping bot—easily prepared. B me, afttt tn Ravenna | ne ene eer ens Ps pert | Altho water always runs down penany dey nemaved frome Bisa F hill, the water in @ river goes up set after heavy rains. | Sparring matches cannot be lignt- od by striking them on the box. A violin bow should never be ted in a hard knot. | Horses tn the Australian cavalry | wear button-shoes, Some for the money of this life, and nome Sigh for the prophet's Paradise to cone: But all take cash, nor let the credit | Fe, Nor leave a man a dollar or a crumb. Rusiness as usual. Portland, Spokane and Tacoma are speedily arranging asia | - dig to erect Victory monuments in honor of men who fought in| Wife Refuses GREAT SURPRISE With your indulgence, we wish to | the world war. to Go Home | add a stanme to our short pome of re F Pig Victor Alonzo Lewis, widely known sculptor, has al-|} Dear Miss Grey: My wife and I) —— binges tthe tai: ready completed a clay model of the proposed structure|Srt {7 ns" Glng™'tu"teams'%s Tamlae Did Her, So Much) "Yan " "08" i in Tacoma. It will be executed in heroic size, in| jijue ner mother’s advice and com-| Good That Husband and Done. and portray Victory. holding laurels over the head? | pany more than mine. I lived with Friends Began Taking Our today's verse fer _ of two fighting men, who stand crouched for action, with | ‘hem all as long as f could stand it, | the Medicine. Thr, eo e | drawn bayonets. A granite pedestal, according to tentative |2n¢, then pulled ove | Sle Teme | vee 66 bb) plans, will bear the honor roll of all Pierce county men Who) to come with me. 1 make good FR PROBLEMS AHEAD u1Cl e I | offered their lives for democracy. wages and am willing to provide| | = belted — tinal A taseg Retiring of social queens to private In Portland a committee heen ge appointed by Mayor) Well for her, but I will not ge wg oo Rg wag gg HOSES TG ONE RS $ Baker, on which representatives of every interest will col-| cther's home. Am I right in this,|Jac that she Wants to try it, too, phaghgerctsty T : laborate in working out monument plans. Down tHere the: Rates oon make iny wite eee |and asked me to get her a bottle,” | nave, been stepped on by heroes at HOUSAN DS of co le commit y J i par want to have the monument erected before the boys come| things from my viewpoint? 8. B. | mid ag A. 1, Ellsworth, while In| Reintroduction of war brides to 2 id b . h ! shome. It is your right to expect that _— gfe Poe den Yager Pe their husbanda. suicide vy inches : home for |cently, Mrs, Ellaworth lives at Su- rs "s Portland is considering an arch, which will be con-| Jou’ Xni'py kind treatment and |quamish, a suburb of Seatuie, and| Jom tor cob If one should take minute daily structed of Oregon granite bricks, and which will support her husband is employed as fintah- eee ee ; a group of figures. Every one in the state will probably| 2 rat oe esate at oe esi my | wl sem stranen, tor 2 doses of some: irritant or poisonous ven an opportunity (con' a by donating hy her needs aid f |the neighborhood where they live| While, to live without war maps, 4 ° from 25 cents to $1 toward the monument fund. iv Memuhter, sont una. AA jand are highly esteemed by thetr Gan ome semtees drug, no particular effect might be — —_ not fail to erect a Victory monument as] sifish in the matter, Tut there | mafy finde atx re 2) Rpiaysie noticed until accumulation of the pol- promptly as her sister cities. pos Lig oeaggensebliprd soa | be esd The tad: t Goer he’ a . and no alienation from tinued, “I suffered terribly with my ly nex mys she's . . . ° th W. ’ your home. It might be a goed | ptomach, and although I took every a oe . So son made its action evident. Saluting e Wounded van to Mave an attorney taik |kind of medicine T could hear of to| =A ny \ ae . ‘ w ife and explain to her get relief I kept getting worse ali|/ ounces them the way they'd be in , (From Stars and Stripes, Paris) that she ie violating her mar |the time. Everything I would eat | our own language, | Yet how many realize that Irritant 2 Tage ; " soured | y stomach and I | coun tien 2 marine on service in, the United States en-| riage aerement ty 3futng 1% ronal ‘alhing uP gaa anon |, OU personal unc Is thatthe re and poisonous substances are formed rine who has n wounded in France| paras si igested food. I got so I could | #0M the kaiser was so slow in abdicat | : h l h d ° f d and poe en ed he Cet him : a. Officers in that! Pledge Cards Are hardly eat anything without suffer.| ns waa that he first had to fill out a constant y, even in hea th, uring foo way ute plain buck privates, for e custom has spread, | Your Word of Honor ing with an awful burning fn my | West jonnaire ‘ol ouse served . . ° . ° the report runs, to all ranks of the marines now in| Dear Miss Bes Sep eyatana | SO. eres Abe Seat A 2 eee ee and the ala of its merica. works in the shipyard. When the). i as 1 i|. The Hun ran true to form. Ie The wounded man does not return the salute; often he| "4 ‘river came up. he has al97| rections that 1 could not sleep at ali |/Bolsted the biack flag when winning waste for elimination —— a) simply analles or nods his recognition of it,| drive came he pledged, also, Since | well and felt miserable all | the pili ra If the bowels act regularly and thor- els to move.’* Because such drugs. as it pleases him 0. paying for the last bond on the in-| 9 and w a eet ik Sign of peace: . . : tr ‘a ough); att insti} _ The other day, in France, two wounded doughboys, stalizomnt page tarde heostne 90 peel glided ye as al atu “$8 puttees, $550 ne ly, such dangerous matter is do not cure col pation. ‘They their saluting arms in slings and their heads swathed in| {17,04 win all other expenses and | the other eogie: safely gotten rid of. make constipation a habit’ They bandages, were out on pass, taking the air in the hospital | nigh cost of things, we cannot buy Pe, F board 2 much about Tan- Wiss otemiones atiass Unk aecon, But if constipation exists, there do not prevent “‘suicide by inches.” 4 a. : mpd the street came a French colonel, an elderly, |*! ** pe take any ac. | Cortainly acted like a charm: ‘ni| father used. results stagnation of intestinal waste, On the other hand, the Nujol 5 eee Fler Se Eeritm: Whese decorations be-| ton against such, when a person is| though I have taken only four bot-|— 5g increased production of poisonous Treatment not only overcomes con- en ard and daring fighting in previous wars and |») i savin all be can? tles so far I am in splendid condi s i al er: : whose left arm bore the chevrons denoting four years’ ser- buying and saving anne Sts, [ton now. My appetite in fine and Crusade Against Bad igeing tied erent wlleeras eae sipatcn, Seeaan ree Sas “ . rn y |T can eat anything I wa sl 3 $ to the blood, which carries them all makes self-poisoning impossible. vice at the front in th The pledge you made to buy a int and en: ec! vil in Faris " — He took one look at the tke battered Yanks. Then he| ceriin number of W. 8. 8. was | BF ee inc teetion, emer utter 8! (wpectal to The Star by N. B. A) over the body. Nujol is not a drug, does not act i. ™ fention, ‘a — . ‘ 4 2 gaised his right hand to the salute. Sateranyste Pisani pa hg burning in my stomach I used ts|, PARIS: Nov. 21—Amerioan bank The result is disease or disorder, like any drug; itis absolutely harmless. § What has H. tint Bote thas 7 rp re se conscience, you are going to forse my as cee noe hurt me any tet cae cvouinm tie sane ee “De which, if neglected or allowed to Nujol helps Nature re-establish easy, 8 Hollan mn: illi keep it if you can. If unfor- ‘ore and sleep like a child at F F : outta aes wey as ey ae POUR WO, ne oe eal mY ing a registered number; a franc is The vice at ach eelt-painon: NUJOL is sold r) ‘i * nevitable and buy a# many as about anywhere Set FY : Spa was an appropriate place for Bill finally to you oan. Do the best yeu can [I WANt to 0 without its tiring mo foam apie tte A - conte pe ing comnitthe suicide by inches, Warning: ile otaled ng taste the waters of defeat | like it did bet ; re edly Jom: Constipat bad habit. I “4 7 efeat. None of us can do more. Psd ese Tanlec, has done elry stores brought a crusade that re , Pi a rid ad habit. 118 les bearing the Nujol Trade Mark. Insist \ = lh | y 4 in th f th asin inst ¢ 5 " _ Anyhow, as somebody has once before remarked, |She Docsn’t Grasp [husband has begun taking it, but) anda man claiming to be @ eorgealt B bir odes , _ sntttinl Ton aay setertrom extecteatts. Wilhelm the Last is certainly in Dutch. Meaning of Wedlock |several of my friends also are using|1n the American army. ue tl ere is an even worse habit, > ‘ i itr Was dial Geert A abort: tikes it b egpebrerrag se worrengie mee trace a crime against Nature, the taking Nujol Laboratories _ Hoover was right. To judge from the starvation ative aay marriage, 2 found that my | Drug Stores under the personal dl: Opens Dental Office of pills, castor oil, laxative mineral ¢TANDARD OIL. CO.(NEW JERSEY) eries out of bocheland, it was food that won the war, aoe ee nce ald fee dine with | rection of a special Tanlaa represent-| Dr, Wm. H. ‘Thompson, formerly waters, and salts to ‘‘force the bow- 50 Broadway, New York ie is sey wiles bat they sul soe: |e ee operating a dental office in Spokane, Extremes not only meet, these days—they collide. Absolute monarchy runs smash into absolute anarchy. __ All in favor of allowing the Hohenzollern crowd to Lee eer reihed in Holland will signify it by saying ‘Hoch! German women tortured our wounded, spat upon our prisoners, gloated over starving British captives. Now, with true Teutonic gall, they shriek for mercy be- cause, forsooth, THEY are being starved! (Or claim they are.) If the German women had had the elemen- tal humanity and courage to raise one single word of protest when Belgian women were being violated and deported, we would feel more merciful today. . tinue their love letters, One friend of mine comes to the house often. I trust him, but my wife seems too friendly to suit me, If I spenk of this to her, it invariably causes a quarrel, Perhaps you can advise me. U.N, It in unfortunate, indeed, that your wife has fafled to grasp the full meaning of marriage—that of devotion between you . two alone, with no thought of others. You must try, in a kind and tactful manner, to make her re. alize thie, ‘Try to fill her leisure time wii interests which you | provide, Bf there is some older RABY TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street Wash,, but more recently of Vancou ver, B. C., has opened an office in Seattle, at the southwest corner of First ave. and Yesler way, over the Dinham-Strehlau shoe store, This newest of Seattle's dental offices has | been equipped with the very latest and most modern appliances known to the dental professio FREE DOCTO Ex-Government Physteian 4111 FIRST AVE. 169 WASHINGTON 9, RIGHT DRUG CO, STORES Leok for the ree Decter Sign,