The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 2, 1918, Page 6

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PAGE 6 THE SEATTLE STAR 1307 Seventh Are. MEMNER OF SCKIFTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE STARSHELLS he A worRD dosnt W car Ue st. Near Union St rrom or Nrwsrarn Telearaph News Service of the United Breas Assoct 4 » many uv Entered as Second-Class Matter May & 1899, at the A Ms us try € live ac Beattie, Wash. under the Act of Congress Mareh 3 cin’ ¢ some a cord 6 By mail, out of city, BSc per month; § months, $1.50; 6 montha $2 75 fellee’s 4 Year, $5.00, in the State of Washin Outside the state, Tho per other feller's in month, $4.50 for € months, or $2.00 per year, Ly © per week. — ; Publiabed Dally by Tee ster rubtiching Co. rene = Private! nur APPRE IN ANOTHE A rain would be appreciated very ~ — _ much at present in Paradine dise correspondent, Monticello, N The Cost (frame It is one of the ironies of the Great War that it began] j,....) word intends to give up the management of hin auto and run @ Newspaper Henry that the easiest way for him to keep his paper running is to e its cruelest blows long after y into striking Seattle and this s the crash and roar of the battlefield had echoed awa silence. Read the casualty lists! They are heavy these days fg WR Rare ene ey with the names of 91st division men who fought like tigers ees. Ps ° an eer and died like Americans Time was counting out the) yao story Simms, “to say that vanquished Hun. i pat Germany on the Three weeks after fighting stops, Seattle hears the Ee : news that Capt. Howard D. Hughes amd seores of nr who Elba dahon ©. 8. Damen is either lived here or trained at Camp Lewis have fallen. ee And there is every indication that sueeeeding casualty & _ ie he lists are only going to lengthen greatly this voll Of | pein gat sretding btn honor and sadness. onsen s in the fighting zone during the 19 ul, as compared, fer in- Washington's los months of the conflict were triv stance, with gland’s er France's. e They still are, for that matter, but neverthele®& when the whole story of the 91st's sacrifice is told and all th names of hetoes are enshrined, we are going to have a far deeper sense of the cost of liberty and democracy than we ever had before. Some Happy Women There are some “royal personages” in the smashed central empires who wil! shed few tears over the debacle of | she ws Of af ef thy bewatifw pictures White Memye Gn MPomery's wall, 7 of way deur mother-indaw HER thy tart of all! . “9 of & talker, Our adyjee to | The Other Woman royalty and absolutism in Teutondom. Phgetien — —o na — They are the royal women of all the deposed kingly | "Aw stayed ste menths each time and princely familie Superslaves they have always been see in spite of the golden chains and cages about them and the) There are « few tings that won't : be made in Gerteany. Frinstance, | fawning of menials. f Marriage will hereafter mean to them following the dictates of their own hearts, not a bartering of honor and the peace terms, . . Vienna went wit over the peace self-respect and personal happiness “for dynastic reasons.” a it reminite us of an ancient There are no more dynasties to intrigue for power] ioe te « me Vena through matrimonial alliances. It was a theory that died | “Far, tar away, in the Great War that by interrelationship reigning families Where they have ham ond eggs Three times a day could strengthen and perpetuate their power and “divine rights.” The folly of it was exposed when William Hohen- 4 . : “eal . the bewrdyre yell zollern attacked his cousins, George of Britain and Nicholas Gp tnee te inner hell of Russia. that ken dwee amet! High-born women are hereafter to be just as free in times Teutondom as their untitled sisters. They will be able to! vote if the new republics are real and carry out their prom ises of unrestricted suffrage. * The world will be treated to no more spectacles like that brazened before civilization so long by Franz Josef and Katti Schratt and Empress Elizabeth; no more triangle |) tragedies like that of Prince Rudolph and Marie Vetsera in|} FINDING JOBS RIGHT AWAY FOR SOLDIERS BACK FROM WAR ] | | Meyerling; no more romances like that of Archduke John of |} WON'T BE EASY 1 Austria who went away to sea with his “commoner” wife) and sailed to the Port of Missing Men; no more such pitiful (BY THE REV, CHARLES STF exhibitions as that of Frederick and Louise of Saxony and) |. » the tutor | When the setdiers and sailors re ’ }t Amer olny o Nor will there be any more such tragedies as that t cracnentien cae > an po Te Hole Augusta of Prussia and Zita of Austria pleading in vain Jobs for ail of them right away with monarch-husbands to stay the hand of slaughter. wae a Alsat a | ee These royal women have had no freedom of choice as 4... PW pasandice Meng Myo soon the tndustrial machine: to the fathers of their children. At the nod of tyrants they | country wit te shes say aiasiay: have been given to madmen and debauchers. jbut it will require stuteamanship of r Pi tg the hinhest o: © to do it without too Their miseries are over. many unnecennary jelte Let's hold ro fusions about great | maseew of Our men geing to work on farma ‘The beige veto «ame from the farm will go back for the most part, unless | they remain in the city because they have become so mreustomed to excite- ment that fart life will seem feartul- ly dull But the boys who were rained in | the city will surely keep away from jthe farm, Tht was true before the They can} war, and norte has happened since |to chanzh their attitude. Tt way different at clone of the civil war, when the government of. fered free tats! to soldiers. Most of the men Who then went to the front TLE The Shattered Ones The junkpile is not contemptible. Twisted and broken things have value nevertheless. They can be remade into vital, useful things. Nature wastes nothing. The leaf that falls becomes mold to feed another green leaf. Twisted and broken lives are not valueless. be mended. They are mended, every day. There is no such thing as a really “hopeless existence.” Take the twist out of it and it can become beautiful and hopeful. You know of instances, of “come-backs,” lots of them. camp from the country, for two Twisted and broken men, men twisted a ® thins of eur population lived | » twisted and broken and jini” gixtetew, whereas today only marred and crippled and handicapped in the Great War, are coming across seas to us. They are not to be considered objects of charity. are heroes. They are not useless, not hopeless. There is a place of usefulness for every one of them, where each may serve himself and his fellows. : Their scars are not really disfigurements. the outward symbols of an inner beauty. We can think of them so, one-third lives in the country. The gevernment will give serious attertiwn te the industrial situation preiiuced by the return of our fight ors: But it will require the hearty | qo-opwration ef both civilians and sol “ete t make an adjustment that wi give fui and satisfactory em wingerrent to all tt tew't going lery They They are 7 ane to be possible in ev ease to find just the jobs that are worted, but if our boys will take the We will see in the wooden leg the sign of high character, Ds where they are most needed (in en £ Their achievements will be incentives to endeavor to “* "Pit of true soldiers), they will those of us who are sound and whole, Too tame oe The atmosphere about these heroes will know no north winds. The twisted and broken ones will find they have a place in society to fill, and they will be glad. And we sound ones—why, of course we'll help them find their work, and do it cheerfully, won't we? “Berlin fears disorder as soldiers return.” The Berliners appear to be informed concerning the pleas- But those who are responsible for entire task should frankly recog: the fact that they must make djustments on the basis that nize their this is an industrial country Editor's Mail PRIZE RENT HOG ant little performances of Hun soldiery as exemplified Editor The Star: In your war or in Belgium. rent t you ha erlooked the champion of that despicable bust f Welli ne He Uns 4 lace nea ne - - ” hog's place has 65 little cub Yet ’most any leading politician anywhere would be | holes in the basement, s ze 8x10 and willing, after a little persuasion, to become Chief Magis- |6,feet high, with wire netting fo ae cellir vartitions separating these trate of the World. cubby holes are five inches from the fi Dark and my tho they are, a lot of us shipyard work ers were compelled to take them be Lives there a man with lungs so poor that he pro- ' gr gre Aton a : Pasigrsd 1 th i 1 three weeks he has raised the claims no plan at all for reconstructing everything in rent on us three times, the last raixe sight? being to $2.50 per week for a cot WSS!IWSSIWSS!IWS and very little covering. He has in MY.9.9.) VV.9.9.1 VV. 9.9.) VV S. creased his rates upstairs in the b n same proportion, and boasts of a net Perhaps Bill Hohenzollern went to Holland to | income of approximately $1,500 per ‘ month SHIPYARD WORKER escape “standing any nonsense from the United States | after the war.’ GIVE THEM BONUS f nae Editor The Star: The government re Ot Mase iS, member of tNe army of war work ers, about to be without Jobs in We'll have peace until congress reassembles, any- | W#8hinston, D.C. a $100 bonus and ‘aot, ! | transportation home. ‘The army in ea France gets transportation, should ae not this Amerltan army of the | fourth line have transportation, too? BADER. Herb nan’ bag Hey, Elmer; c'mon down Dear Mins not If my letter tn too long, please publish it, as “Over There” With the Yanks BY J. R. GROVE DAY, DE | ~ © ae 7 ptaZear here. We gotta shovel France in a Discloses Her System work, ended in a fallure, Love ts! the elixir of life, and it is thru love/ I hope it will be of some benefit| that great things are accomplished }to wives. In your columns, not long) When a wife hangs on, kr Jago, you were asked if the wife, that her husband no longer |knew her husband loved another| for her, there will be no peace, ne | woman, should she leave him and | happiness, no success, nothing abead | divorce him, or “hang hin 1| of them. I say to such a wife: Have | have been a wifé with a devoted! some pride; get up and show your husband, and I have been the muc ff & woman, and not & parasite abused “other woman in the case.”| Get a little bone in your jellyfish I couldn't resist writing an‘answer,| body. Leave him, if he no longer as that phrase “hang onto him"| loves you, even tho it costa yeu made me feel ashamed for my nex.| something. Let him have a little It in so typical of that large and | happine He ja the one te be humerous class called “wives.” pitied, not you. Yes, I would aay let her hank) wry rob another woman of a onto him if she wants to mp and| chance to make him happy? You destroy his ambition, kill his happl | have had the chance and lost. Be neas and make him despise her. If| a cheerful loser! Get out! «Give the she has any sense of decency and! other woman a chance. And, for one fairness she would leave him when| jist word, if the married wornan| he told her he bad loved another | would spend one-tenth of the enonry | woman for two years, even If it! in holding her husband she did in | would be @ struggle and hardsbip| ising him, there might not be the| | tee Ber. Jother woman in the case, amd the| | That ts the shame and degrada-| sernal triangle would not be se com: | | tion of women, that they have no| ion | | pride, and instead of leaving when . : | they are no longer wanted, they| Wake up, wives! Nagging wives | stick and stay and bemoan their| With harsh words, wives with cold} | fate. Some men have a mistaken | on thelr faces, wives with} | sense of honor about marriage, and| Shiny noses, wives with the oder} | they will keep their word, even if it| Of Onlons and steak on their hair, |in only a marriage ceremony wives in bungalow aprons, wives | | Rather than leave their wife and| With curlers, get up 16 minutes| cause a terrible acene, they will atay | Pariier and “doll” yourself up for | | | on and drag thru the miserable, de grading years. I have known cases where they «# ‘od by their bad bar gain, even tho it ruined thetr own happiness and that of the other woman they loved, killed thelr am. breakfast Forget you are married. Drop that wifely air! Be young! Be | attractive! Be adorable at all times!) bitions and hopes, and at last, with | out any incentive to do and live and) HOW MIS, BOYD NOIDED AN (PERATION Canton, Ohio.—“I suffered from a female trouble which caused mo much suffering, and two doctors decided that I would have to go through an operation before I could get well “My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, advised me to try it be- fore submitting to an operation, It relieved me from my troubles so I can do my heusework without any difficulty. I advise any woman who Is aMicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it will do as much for irs. Maa Royp, 1421 6th , Canton, Ohlo. Sometimes there are serious con- ditions where a hospital operation 1s the only alternative, but on the other hand so many women have been cured by this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia FE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, after doctors have said that an operation was necessary—every Woman who wants to avoid an operation should give it a fair trial before submit ting to such a trying ordeal Tf complications exist, write Lydia B. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of many years experience is at your service, to TAILORING CO. Headquarters for Suits, Coats and One-Piece Dresses 425 Union Street | your husband, ou may be sure that the woman whom you think steals your hus band from you is all the things you are not. Her whole thought will be in pleasing his eyes and his senses, | | the things you have failed to please. Wake up! floes of 1 of love of Mix the arts and arti w with the tenderness | wife, and you will hold if he is a man A WIFE. | Here is something unusual | something that seldom appears in the Cynthia Grey columns. It | is the “other woman's” point of view In It there is a warning, an admonition, an advice to wives which may be worth con- | sidering; in it there in a teach ing which is fundamentally wrong It is published here, not be. cause it is the right argument use it is the other side of the question—the other view point one can battle suc cessful Kainst a foe if he cannot see him or know his tactics, or realize his strength. his letter discovers the chief foe of the married woman—"the other woman.” It discloses her system, ex plains bh d why she steals the affections of a husband, and is a valuable “tip” to wives, if they will read it aright This “other woman's" argu ment is wrong, because it is an argument in favor of removing the foundations upon which the solidarity of the home and the perpetuity of the family are laid r plan were followed and | |, kenerally, man, a natur ally polygamous creature, would | | make no attempt to be master of himself, would give up his right to maintain a moral stand. urd and would shift the respon sibility of supporting the family of which he was progenitor The consequence of such a xystem, or lack of system, would have its iN effects on the WOM AN, not the man What “the other woman” has to say, in her closing remarks, about the way to hold a band, n be worthy some sideration, however hus con No doubt man must be held by his senses, but often I fear woman with a second thought will admit that she takes 4 life's Job when she mar ries, if she intends to stay mar. ried to the same man, now adays. She must hold her hus band's affecon as well as win not his the other woman" says noses, boudoir caps, curl and a kitehen apron are not in mere m I hope “the other woman" who reads this answer will also read | any sense alluring to | BELGIAN NEED NFESSIONS OF CONFESS A AIR JBIRIIDIE i IS ESTIMA LAIN 1 14 } <Saiikaaheg se rc nh (Rpeclal to The tar by N.¥. Ay Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association ARIS, Dec, 2.--Katimates 9p Rob would not ike to have me work downtown, as I knew very the needa of I Jude ex well before 1 started. Mut I had promised myself eat ad r pendit os for agricup *) piscoven wy 1 ean” ayer I was determined t PM : ta a ‘ ‘ a he Lorimer Chermic c ne in facto NEVER BE A REAL ll a secrets leak ou ' F ee WORKING GIKL Pay resident's room. 1 was ale0|, a the business w ¢ walled do ai her ius trials and temptation iat ta, are mythical or not—how worllin ia treated in it--and how she treats it rs 60,009 toee And finally, I wanted to be able to support mmynelf in case 1 I 0 ton should decide that we would be happier apart than together 4 a does not harmonize with my ideals of independence and jJustice-—when ““— , nou there are no children ce erned of mous But Martha Palmer discouraged me from the start of my business gen at ee 1 t 00.000 Go to work, if you want to, my dear,” she said, “but you can never : * learn what working means — A TENDENCY "Why not?’ I asked, feeling sure she was not referring to my ability a filing Job vu'll never have to live on your salary,” she answe red rs can't porsibly appreciate what It is to be a genuine working girl you live like a working girl 24 hours a day-—-unlems you are comp . make your wages cover all of your expenses.” That seems & plain statergent of a very important fact,” I admitted "but to me a new idea Old oF new, it explains most of the misunderstanding about wor ing women Martha went 1 in her lawyer¢manner it yunta for the ard transient work temporarily em and welfare work resentment the genuine b daughters of rich wo for the an girl is apt to feel tor men or wives who 4 friction between them ern} it BE MERIT ney experts, and a long list of unclassified women of independ Bet Seeha 2 who are fore ver uplifting or entertaining or protecting or A tendency to thin Dood, oF ane It seems, then, that I can't understand the life of the girl who works, | MM May “if setter , In fact, it nor her temptatioti», nor her limitations, nor her successes, nor the diffi. | Oblen runs ei oy Ml in such culties she overcor unless I live on the wages I earn?” ee re od, a8 soon That's t t, and it will do’ you good to remember it, Jane, my | 3% & monn! . the use of a dear,” Martha replied. “And here's another point: People are fursing al-| Teynble | renin Pes ready about the status of the woman worker under new peace conditions| *'F™ nates Porter Weill, if she wants a status worth having, would better begin to fix it| street. H Mase her sev- herself. And I wish to goodness that somebody could make pe enteen-ye daughter, both used this,” said Martha, who is a suffragist and a feminist as well as a lawyer. | Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for the treat- “Hut the trouble with all wornen who work is that they never look to see ant of anemia, and their experience where they're headed for. They do today’s task, well or poorly, according | follows to their characters, but they seldom consider where they will be at the end I had suffered with anemia, or of the year. They flock into professions which haven't any top for them |!ack of blood, from my girthoad* to rise to—as & man never would.” nays Mra. Monatenne. 1 was losing ‘Junt like me, Martha! I exclaimed. “A filing job doesn’t lead any. | ™y #tre was run down, and had wher I certainly am an average working girl one way. Why, do you| terrible hb ches. 1 took bitter know, all I thought about was finding a job I could manage! Honest and | tonics and « icines, but they truly, it never once occurred to me that I ought to hunt a position in| did not seem to me. I was dip whieh I could rise, a# a man would! couraged, ite was poor, and It doen't matter a bit yut you, Jame Lorimer, but it’s the biggest | Whot I did eat would not stay on my mistake—and the commonest—that a business girl cams make!’ “ h. ‘ “I had heard of people who were (To Be Continse® benefited by using Dr. Williams Pink Pity, amd I deckted to try them owt of it my wish te comuey thro | im thm wile, fer whteh he wed [I xetived improvement after I had it, the best working plan fer the her and promiod te ckerioh her | taken thece bowes. My appetite be majority of womawkeod, ‘Te be alwayn came better and I felt stronger in wure, it in the safe gerd same pian, | — T every wey heort in they Dery ream that ty thee a My dawghter, Axteimette, itrame nanny one. One Paris School ren down shout thece years spo, and My answer is not a premix ‘ seemed to have ne newbitien. She wag ment against her, ous on argue Lost 373 in War oir ics ina ner time ached contin mext in faver of fair play for | (yewtat to The Star by N. E. A) She had no appetite and her all PARIS, Dec. 2.—Look at this| {ace broke out with pimples, Dr. Wik If waren would be fant toca | at Sale lene Hams’ Pink Pills helped her at once, other, the quention @ man's ner vecord of 1,500 graduates of | 144 she besan to eat better. Her eok mersiity wewld seon bh sotthedt, Cesteat school, a Paris institution or came back, and the pains in her There would be no sack beteg an the ether woman limbs disappeare Your own druggist sells Dr. Wik eerpenponding to a high school in pe ee tuor woman | Ameren. Three hundred and sev.| Your own, pres AF ne know umy othe x incns’ Pink Pills, or they will be sen wenld scorn te neeept his at. [Cmty-theee have been killed, 468) 1. mati, on receipt of price, 50 cents tentions, if ho were alveady mar weunded, 462 decorated with the per box. Write to the Dr. Williams ried, Mr ¢ gute | Legion of Honor and § earned | Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y,, tor hante to rediscover the qualities at least one citation for bravery free book on the blood —— ee WRIGLEYS The Government wants tin So hereafter all three brands of WRIGLEYS will be wrapped in pink paper and hermetically sealed in wax. Look for WRIGLEYS in the pink-end packages and take your choice of the same three popular flavors. Be sure to get WRIGLEYS for quality and because The

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