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nt A SOC CAPRI A i RS aE IEA A LAR ) THE SEATTLE STAR | 1307 Sevemth Ave, a R OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEV es . ed Preee Asnoctation Near Union the | ~~~ ~ CONFESSIONS OF A | WAR BRIDE Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association Tetexral os . ee : “a “Clas t the Pontoffice at 1 mulled over all the problems af my life before I lett that hos —7 r ~~ ‘ : m wrong woman, maybe “ont of city, B50 onth: 3 tha $1.50; @ months, $2.75:} 90 I'm the wrong woman, inaybe, Br walt rho ct, te Reema teat clas tae Take Nee Ete| “ST LRARN OF A DinAPOINA.™ | toll mysell "tlh (n dianppuinted month, $4.50 for € months, or $9.00 per year. ME AND HARDEN 1m ung hu ‘ ; Per week, MY HEAIn nen awfully disappointed in Published Daily by The ” . € Hoty cg eriou “1 ee exehan, 1. Perhaps he's found n Awful mistake, elxe why does he not write me a single happy word about SR LE ene [OUP Hittle life. | Night i# a poor ti for mistrust and rets, and my experience 2 . next morning Conscious or subconscious, selfishness is the underlying} : oa. Gane rm afraid you're not gol ed the money . that motive for each act of life—good or bad. , a Gah yen ee cpomane, eis 1 cola tel you today. Naw thas rae UAE, Selfishness fosters ambition, lures to effort; it is the) rene orphans beacon that beckons humanity on—to do, attain, evolve. _ le You mean that there ian't going to be any heir to welcome Bob home Self-benefit, . self-betterment, self-comfort, self-satis- | T°" Moe ll exclaimed scecisgih ‘auast abas cate Week od faction, self-happin self-elevation, self-gratification BED | cave We os, vere ate Cee rate be he cone Nase Wife the character compass-points by which we steer our course | ‘Oh! I said pointiesaly of deeds. 4 t tort Daddy and Chrys it was a crime to send A child like you on = i i ouc e n pun hon » n Wi © the «hte dea of Even sacrifice, at its grandest, noblest, is selfish. It |S" Dianaen he her WEEGS ton ane 25 you up th a Mines yields an inward pleasure proportionate to the abnegation |—way down on the south shore--and wapepouas Bays aging = involved. Such selfishness commands the world’s respect. tind: you mustn't tell me now ' t the doct aya that, as the The nearest approach to unselfishness is an act prompt- result of oa hardship And exhaution--well: 6 Barbara will ed by pity. But pity is a state of mind which proclaims a Mma 4 Sy» tigen ni og esvtlegle eae cee belief that we are more fortunate than the object of that to cry to suit mother’s idea of the right and proper procedure, | pity. It is born of fancied freedom from the condition that may own Secount 1 didn't em to have any f clings it Bab cared a A . Shy vhatever for my sacred secret, then the whole dream and all the Joy o arouses it, a sense of false security. : lie want talenied So long as it does not jeopardize our own BOS footing, |” “Anas thebeht (hit the toy o¢ maternity, which tn « mother's Hawt we feel disposed to extend a helping hand across the gulf} i» very often destroyed by the indifference of her husband, The coming to the less fortunate one. jo ‘ bore = into the wort ia too easily and too cote aly, + ns x; i veys sites ities; s routes. ment only ta mothers and grandmothers n ny Selfishness surveys sites, erects cities; maps. t {Tethers caught cnewrealprergi agg real rep an 4e usmle gape constructs railroads; charts courses, builds ships and devel- nave thetr vision of the joys and responsibilities of paternity? But fathers the industry, trade and commerce that necessitate the are #0 uninterested, And it's so unfair, both to the wife and to the child r Perhaps the depress whieh followe my ness made me bitter My t three. Selfishness furthers education. Extent of knowledge | hence that is the end which primarily impels study, re-| search, investigation, the quest of information. | Concessions are made to gain; compromises come of the} need to curb selfishness by imposing limitations and en- forcing restrictions upon it. : Love is selfish. The lover labors, sacrifices and gives to receive a return of his love. He counts his SPIRITUAL compensation adequate reward for the MATERIAL stress! endured. Such selfishness UPLIFTS, not one, but two; it) establishes ideals, cleanses, advances civilization and leaves to posterity a heritage of progress. Selfishness is LESS evil than good, else the world would », not be purifying its processes by struggling UPWARD, its and entitied it “The Pieidy of Fon 1, the continuous, permanent, universal improvement of intellect, conditions, MANKIND. We burn no flattering incense before the deservedly censured censorship. But we'll be highly incensed if ™ poche propaganda continues to reach us uncensored. Get Busy This country is going on in prosperity. They may upset thrones and regimes all they please e We don’t do things that way in this country. When we aren’t suited with things as they are we dust off the ballot box and put it into commission. That’s the American way. The peaceful revolution. And business and jobs as usual. Lots of things need change and mending. Don't forget For one thing, the average fellow is going to have than before the war. But free peoples like this know how to go about such ours without flying at one another's throats. coursé occasionally some big or little man looses a tornado of fiery words. We do it ourselves sometimes and our chest feels better afterwards. Now we're going to be altogether too blisy to bother with the brethren of the firebrand. And we won't have any time to waste listening to croakers. 7 They told us it would take five or ten years to whip Thanks be, our boys didn’t believe it. The croakers are discredited. This is the hour for prosperity—for all of us Ameri- tans to make good times for ourselves. Get busy! One of the attractive features of the job of feeding Germany is that it will drain American food stocks and keep up our Lg prices. Our enemies will eat and we will pay the bill. one “The Handwriting on the Wall” “The victory that has been won is but a partial victory if the men and women of America do not see the handwrit-) ing on the wall,” declared Mayor Hanson at a recent meet-) ing of Seattle business men. What is this mysterious handwriting on the wall? As in the scriptural incident to which the mayor re- ferred, the handwriting on the wall is a warning against) the wrong kind of leadership. But America has the best antidote in the world for} Bolshevism, and that is democracy. | And in this day, when the world hungers for perma- nent peace, Rooseveltian leadership is equally as dangerous! as that of Lenine. The Bourbon ideas of a Penrose and of| a Lodge, stifling progress and refusing to recognize evolu-| tion, are as potentially dangerous as that of a Trotsky, who) refuses to recognize anything but revolution. The thing which has given such growth to Bolshevism! lbut born in the United States in Russia was the utter autocracy of the former regime. So, too, in America, there must be no autocracy of any, It must be al over 20 years kind, no domination by a handful of people. bite me nored my ness drove my imagination rteis had vowed that b But Bok, my own husband great experience: Very well. would close that be cient history in his life and mine. (B» Be Continued) =_ He Sends | War Poem joned pleane have written Dear Miss Grey md a poem which it It You are at liberty to use if You winh has not before appeared@in print L. LEVINS The treasures of art have been shattered While antiques a» rare aa the jade O'er the fields of olf Europe lie weattered., Where war a new history has made |The sun that has witnessed the struggles Of battles which few could have neon [Sinks down in the self*ame old } splendor Of days that were peaceful, 1 ween, The belfry of Bruges ts frowning ‘That it nesta there its pigeons no more, Who coved for the calm of old evenings Aur-themeannons beiched death in thelr roar. The fields of old Flanders have covered The craves where our heroes murt Ne, With the wealth of its purple wild poppies That bend where the winds come to sigh. L. Le Keen Rivalry Between Cities tle an argument In Order to set hetween another Dear Miss Grey: Dok gob and me, would you kindly state | the present day population of San Francisco and Loa Angeles? BOY IN BLY Authentic figures are not able at this time because of the keen rivairy between the two cities. The U. §. official census, taken every 10 years, will dis close this information in 1920. The government census of 1910 gives Low Angeles a population of 319,198 and San Francisco 416,912. Daring Soldiers Assigned to Intelligence Department Dear Mins Grey: I read that some Fecruits are placed in the “intelli gence department.” Would you kindly tell me in The means? E.R ‘The men t« this branch of ser vice do scouting, and are de tailed to gain important informa tion regarding the enemy, ete Engagement Displeases Prejudiced Parents Dear Mise Grey: I have been en gaged to ® young man for two years, who is of German parentage Relgians, altho they parents. are have real democracy, where the voice of the many is heard and }marriage with this young man, and given attention. Otherwise, Bolshevism and Bourbonism, two extremes, will be fighting it out—the one is as likely to triumph as the other. The best antidote to Bolshevism is to deal justly. The Burlesons in our government should go. No Mooney epi- sodes should shock our sense of justice. Our legislature must be liberal on public views and must legislate in the interests of the public instead of “playing politics” for pri-| vate and special interests. Decent, honest government—that is the check to an- archy, and the most powerful check of all. No wonder Prince Henry of Prussia sides with the / epublicans. He knows what it means to be suppressed Taian autocratic brother with jealousy in his eye. Socialists in Germany no doubt feel dazed by the discovery that so many persons of title sympathize with their republican tendencies. The German people will find tt a lot harder to rid themselves of the name “Hun” than it was to ditch Bill Hohenzollern. Sept. 12 registrants can keep their cards as sou- venirs, anyhow. The Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin is doubtless doing it now. As an uninvited guest in Holland, Bill is living up to his reputation as an oppressor of small natione. land, Cal. I do not want to brenk My fiance has al kind to me parent y engagement. ya been very treats me well nerviees for the past year. thank you in = ‘vance, LILLIAN. You should endenyer to make your parents view thie situation in a broader light. The young man was born and bred in free America, and naturally has im bibed our democratic principles. What better proof might be of. fered than the fact that he has gone to fight for this freedom? If your parents refuse to change their ideas, the only other thing you can do is to obey the im- pulse of your heart. Population of Seattle and Oakland Dear Miss Grey: I am an inmate of Quentin. associates and myself have had an argument as to which has I am from Seattle. He says Onk land ts the largest elty, and T claim that it cannot hold a candle to Sea tle, Which fs right? 8.Q ‘The population of Senttle. ny 17, 1917, was 366,445; of kland, in 1917, It was 246,519. ‘The figures for hoth cities were taken from the 1917 Polk's The next war? Why not on disease epidemics? Directory. | determines amount paid in the world’s market for service; without a country, had longed for a new calendar, « new life-and for suspicion that several of the witnesses against Mooney had had cared fo tte abour me that he I& | committed perjury in order to obtain the $17,000 reward forbidden ways Hremer, that strange being Hereafter it should be like an. Birth Dates of Famous « ind Infamous Porsons Dear Mine Gre Can you please e me the date and place a& birth . wing perrons 1, Pershing, Gen. Crow jam Hohenzollern? INTERESTED. Woodrow. Wilson was born at Dee Staunton, Va 28, 1856; Gen John Joseph Pershing in Lynn county, Miasot 13 Gen. Eno in sourt, April Wm. Hohenzoliern was born in Berlin, Januar 2 $59. The Mother Who by my wife more than a y Was Not a Mother Dear Mins Grey: I wan deserted ar aKo She ran away with a married man. t t r rested, The and wife he hey ed in another cit until 1 got cuntody returned and Then and lived here in the most disgraceful way, She waa ar fined, and sentenced and a divor of the children. nent out of town by the judge, not t When this time expired, beet and absence nulmance for my house all the time (whiet 1 ¢ eing allowed to return for 90. days. she ‘came now married they are | v | ; | Now she calle at my home in my { é trying to hildren and ‘tause Haw discontent more tr rid my home my uble this 1 put her but D the atreet on aya I © by can't watch ant) and she expects to call any time she wishes, She wan granted no priv Nege at all in the decres Report the to the court, and ask that it prohibit her from entering your premixes or molesting the chil dren. In view of her former conduct, the court will not heal tate to grant this Inexrplicable Mystery jof Mixed Races | for girl who says her grandma ie on fourth negro 0 lived in the United States for They object to my | while T do not wish to displease my and He has been in the I ask for an expression of your opinion, and One of my fellow n the | largest population, Seattle or Oak: | from Oakland and | aq Star, what “intelligence department” | Dear Misa Grey advice. I am I come to you in love with a Now to Mins Grey, this what I know. If we and b children, would the er show inthem? M. W bably not it there 1 in want marry ney ina ways a possibility that tt might If I were you, I would consult « real good physician, if pons ble who has practiced for a of years, and keeps posted... From varied as well from records and statistics, he will be able to you on this subject much better than I one number well who hin experiences, as nd vine Rev. M.A. Matthews will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled, DIVINE WORSHIP ESSENTIAL TO SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT In the evening he will discuss the subject, Foundationless Superstructures organ recital Sunday and afternoon invited FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH SEVENTH AND SPRING TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street JUSTICE OR LAW? We are moving into a new epoch in the world’s history —an epoclt to be fhade glorious by the triumph of liberty over slavery, democracy ove autocracy—and, more import- | ant than all portant justice over injustice. ‘Tom Mooney Why, even the judge who tried the Mooney case, who heard all the eviden upon him, is NOW convinced that there is a grave doubt as to whether justice has been served. The judge’s doubt is aroused by evidence which came a This evidence up after the trial. offered for a conviction. Yet this very judge is helpless to right the wrong. ~|He is helpless to grant a new trial. The LAW says it is too late because the case has already been disposed of. -The LAW says the supreme upon tarite wars; and, indeed, court of California cannot order a new trial. |supreme court of the United States. There remains now but one course to save Mooney’s life—a pardon by Governor Stephens. Woodrow |of the serious doubts of Mooney’s guilt, deny it? Judge Griffin, who tried Mooney, has petitioned for a trom class hostility and distrust, governments must say plainly what This would permit Mooney to be re- It is exactly what Mooney asks—a new trial. is watching California—watching to see whether, in the dawn of the new civilization, which we hope | peace has brought, mere law can triumph over fundamental ) now, conditional pardon. tried. The world justice. STAR ~~~ , eo A WORD FROM o* IT WASN'T BAD That was a good, candidate made on waan't it? n't bad: but x good rain wud @ 6 .g008, Flection Agent ong speech ou the farming au Farmer a 0 done nigh uple 0 ight n Hohenzollern, says a London mensage, left the train at Bysden to stretch hin lee John Bull wilt at tend later to atretehing his neck Mr | wre knew it would come, but we thought it would take longer for it| 1 begged you'd put me back. Anyway y afternoon with whom we used to tra Je buxinens (before the we met a shor act considerab’ war), and he advined us to buy sev oral paire of shoer. We always bite, so we asked “Why? : Prices are going up.” be an swered “Why should prices go up?" we | asked. “On account of peace,” he re plied, eee HEROIC IMPULSE Algernon (excitedly}—Oh, = Mian Deering. half an hour ago I was just a minute too late to assiat In rescu ng a man from drowning! The crowd formed a human chain and Alice (interrupting>—You were the minsing link? Conversation on a street car tween two gentlemen from Al “You all think dat de kals guine t’ commit suletd Man! Man! Dat fellah committed suicide in de summah ob nineteen fo'teen!” Sie semper with the losers “An old man in uniform, supposed to be Von Hindenburg."—From an Amaterdam cable «ee Four or five particylar men inform © spelling Admiral Wemyes’ name incorrectly. But what of that? The spelling of a name has nothing to do with the way an Englishman us we pronounces it THE CHAMP RETREATER Fisher—I understand the German crown prince leads a pretty fast set Fowler—W he ia going some if he keeps ahead of them in the run ning now, IPPER CLASS “So you wish to marry my daugh v ter?” asked the proud parent “Yeu, sir, replied the young man. “How much money are you mak Ing?” asked the governer. “Forty dollars & week,” waa the re | ply Forty dollars a week! Why, my daughter can make that in a muni ue s plant and not work overtime,” Preas. A SUDD! SUSPICION “Fred, do you remember where you ere in 1910?” asked the bride of a few months “Why, no, dear; I don't remember exactly,” replied the young husband, Why do you ask?” “Why, I was reading today in the aper that it sald that in 1910 one rson in every 800 in the United ates was in prison,” Detroit Free ! . thority, or would be better t In this new world there is League of Nations | Wiiiou: the opinion ai toon ami » sue rank { 6 - by Wel the noted no place for such rank in- Writer, in an article In the Baturaa” i, ecdiams Peet thie Wee tal Fede, justice as apparently domi- ther points out that a league of nationn, if it in to prevent war must Ss be strong « 1 to pre t f ’ nates the case of Thomas jentousicn nk CnouKh to 4 nt the causes of war, namely, commerelal 5 __, | Jetlounien; that If a federation of wtaten tx to be formed to limit armas Mooney—the injustice, which fe tm, there must also be a pool or federation of states for the Contre Py of trade would permit a man to go to A few excerpts from Wells’ article follow the scaffold tho his guilt be Few of un desire to see, as a principal outcome of thin world eaita a trophe, a collection of eminent j fn t The anil ' Juriats at The Hague, makin a seriously in doubt. tures at the forces that will prepare the next og Who does not doubt What most sensible people desire in either a strong league of nm Mooney’s guilt? fair-minded man in the en- 4rift of recent discussion of the league of nat ‘ elgh pain in absolutely necens and tire world can say today | must do to get thet snine on” brolutely necessary, and what we that Mooney is absolutely “For mont of those who have recently come into the movement; [€ fe : not a question of whethe: ¢ will have a wor ¢ or not r guilty of the crime he is al-! price in change. effort nad Sadesesonce erika to pay tor i leged to have committed, les voor 1 of the crazy politien! world order of 1 fa patchwork - ; paolutely independent sovereign empires, coms disingenuous sti . * , r ous a namely, the bombing of inno- suspiciour—and so compelled to be armed to tha tect uncontrolled P| € t i must have wufficlent authority to inquire into, restrain a who passed the sentence of death *4PPress armaments on land and » and whenever any country in the world gets bitten with the passion for armament A world eontrol of armaments implies—and there is no good what SHELLS JOSH WISE anaienl di ana give each of us about a fifth of a ton. 1 wonder if I eat that much " o m in a year. 4 What's inside quin and Columbine, eerivee by the Well, it’s a good thing. Wasting of food while anybody is hungry. has oe — liw. yum” 00) . ain. I have read that despised aborigines never waste, having « out SOME | Columb community spirit than we who live in civilized countries. Hf er We must conserve if Europe is to be fed. And, besides, it would be Roller Month. | PIRI A COLUMN OR TWO Comments, Views, Thoughts, Smiles and Throbs Gleaned Here and There Yr) pay ~ BY HEBA III nee) vastly more im- cendency of # _ % H. G. Wells on the the That tions mu the proponed th league with ot ft cloth real ay. tions or no league of nations at al! If the beast of ode wa chained it must have ‘ki ad.” thea 4 chain to hold it and not a packthread, The whole # lien in the direction of Who? What estimating what cent men and women during ®”Y feneral understanding~4s, in view of the stead means of destruction, the one prospect we development of the cannot endure he Preparedne ss Day parade To talk of love is to make love, the wise have said; still truer fel n San Francisco? that to organize armies is to make war If the league of nations is to be a ty in the days to come ever in shirking the fact--some sort of world council, some sort of of the naval, military and air forces of the world under that counell, and presentation of the wtates of the world thereon in a manner commen e with their strength and will. This is going beyond a | ; approach to world federation . . . a || Moreover, a world control of war implies a world control of the causes of war. Modern ware, it has been said, are invariably economic; the © struggles for markets and raw material. And it is evident, therefore, that @ world control of militarism which does not provide some substitute for war rettiements upon theae questions will be no better than i ve, | restraining a suffocating man fro s a ja The LAW stops hiin fresh air Se Lt ghee ies Cakes “A world control of militarism will lead, it will be found, to a world control of shipping and of the world distribution of staples; to to @ general control of international trade Nor can the | Th!* !* 4 large order, both for the free trader and the tariff reformer; but it is a necessary part of any scheme for an effective control of war, : “The league of nations points straight to @ pooling of empires, and it is no good blinking the fact. And, since it cannot operate tn°an atmos S < phere tainted by suspicion, the league of nations demands for its Can he, in the face operation a change in our diplomatic methods. “The world has become too multitudinous for secret und In this swarming world of half-taught crowds, with its imminent the *re tended to arouse : mM ar mean and stand by their declarations unambiguously. “It may at times be difficult and tedious to inform a whole population upon the values of some international situation, but the danger of mis | conception and spasmodic crowd action outweighs the desire of the expert for an uncriticised freedom. There must be an end to secret diplomacy, Nations must understand their responsibilities. “The welfare of the world requires that the very children in the schools should be taught the broad outlines of the treaties that bind thelr ‘nations into the mosaic of the world’s peace. They have to grow up unde nding and consenting, if only on account of the grim, alternative ie ® precedent of Russia suggests.” We must send to our allies the conquerer countries in 23,000,000 tons of food the — year. I cannot visualize that much food. I can visualize a square meal, not a ton of food, to say nothing of 23,000,000 tons. : * ry Yet my reason tells me that this means that America's After Marriage | « en ea aeons 4 food must continue, I know there are 110,000,000 people in the United States and that 22,000,000 tons of food divided equally among us When you and I were man and maid, Once, when the day was hot, me @ lemonade—- * now forgot Ford City Free Press. Harlequin When first my heart found love with. a pity to forget the habits of conservation and thrift which we have a¢ | quired under the stress of war. : Our food administrauion is working out new plans for conservation ‘The rationing of us may be eased up, but conservation really depends upon the plans carried out by the people themselves. s——_ Get all your money and bet it on You Can Bet This: | ts. sy» Wm. c. “CONGRESS IS GOING TO GIVE . : Women Will Vote | women tHe vote” * I loved to drink your beauty In— The revolution in Europe is And still I love to drink. : | stampeding the democratic leaders towards woman's suffrage, ~Chicago Tribulation. | Women in Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and even Turkey will Harlequii have the vote in the new governments. tT the Russian one, aaa | Once from your heart I was forbid, A study of that first European revolution, In the forming of new governments the right of women to vote will in, All bubbling to the brink, And all the world turned black! this statement ren not even be questioned. It will go without saying. | The party that prevents American women from having the while women in the governments that have been turned toward by the United States have full voting rights, is not going to be beloved by American women. I treasured all the words you wrote A race between the republicans and the democrats in congress to And ewift my answers sent pass the federal amendment to the constitution, giving women full citizes You used to squeeze a scented note— | ship, is already under way. ; And still you squeeze a cent. If this democratic congress refuses to pass the amendment, the repud New York Ex-Stamina, | lican congress will do so. Party leaders on both sides have started out for the honor of granting Harlequin S the full vote to women, Where once we sat, too full to speak, It'e a flareback of the German and Russian revolutions. All talk a surplus task, In revolutionary Russia, even Turkish women have the vote. There I marveled at your damask cheek— jg q special election day for Turkish women, so that they may go to the aid And still you “put me back.” ~—Cincinnat! Ink-Wiper, Columbine 1 now omit the “ask.” lis without exposing themselves to the view of male voters. . Pi ”- St. Paul Hardcider-Presa 2 ‘The watch on the Rhine has its hands up.—Rrooklyn Eagle. Columbine Holland couldn't escape the horrors of war, Wilhelm is now there= You're but a Harlequin, whose line Brooklyn Engle. As usual, it turned out that God was on the side that had the heaviest artillery.—Des Moines Register. Gen. John J. Pershing, who has been touring France with @ large Of jesta are sour and solemn, And os you scant your Columbine, You also scant your column. EDMUND VANCE COOK. (Copyright, 1918, N. FB, A) party, expects to visit the home of his ancestors in Alsace soon.—New v4 8 York Sun OVER THE PRUN Germany's greatest work of art is that final “bust” of the kalser== Brooklyn Eagle Now for the slacker chorus; ewark News. a fool when I married you.” nverybody remarked how well po cnatched we were.” Muns!"—> STRONG, VIGOROUS MANHOOD Catarrh in some form, either neglected or bone Ch ey pe nar is un- vigor of ninety-seven dermining the health and sapping the strength per cent. of the people. An inflammation and congestion of the mucous membranes, whether in the nose and throat, the stomach, bowels, blad- der or any other of the body is Catarrh. Unless checked by the right treatment, the condition grows worse and chronic, perbaps in- curable, disorders result. 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