The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 26, 1918, Page 6

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Pr AG ‘THE SEATTLE STAR tom St Seventh Ave, Near t MEMNER OF sChIres NonTHWweer LmA oO” NEWSPAPERS Felenraph News Service of the United Preae Association i : . wpe : x B, A.) om kett t ¢ W |ity mail, out of city, 650 per month nthe, $1.50 if mont ha thre: ao enya pera ya Washing per oan “iy ear rier, eity, 13e , i per week r eed hn Bt, Phone Mt 00, rity owner Volume 20 : as 7 Seniesa —_———~ x o exka I ' te ' 4 1 “ ” A ‘ Hold Fast rag rm Good att " is ae For the United es, reconstruction is a problem Of ine uns " A, » rather than reb were not bombed. | w ; me » factories were . fields are not torn by t ' Buteher - t . nor oyr r ‘ fr We did add r rs for war that wi » useful nore apaciou 1 in peace. Every ty should have a salvage com- ¢ ' the m 1 te fine? ittee ymposi of A ork bodies, to we y ' oye Thar a0 7 i is aveatia need for HITHER PLACE CALLED ' ut - nothing of value is , ee she lant four veara,| TOO GOOD FOR HIM : ’ : a committee now in the last four yea fr Know » as well as gun Poe FO FUE, Gy The ships cannot approach the dock bee the water Ix so shal , Fe = aaeree ants have been ac- } B Acvertisor, wt lo mall boats, This is the manner in whi alser probably will be 7 ships @ thene will lose| ee . landed If he is sent to the island prison where Napoteon died ie these 1 lose Q cumu Qo so 9 ert ' much hs at we i i Withetm's | STOPS ANY COLD : he ver og renc wa ! ate ance en from Shela instr or action of inc 7 c IN A FEW HOURS value. , That rival churche ostile es, compet Pagoda: ‘ f wine 4 tries and antagonist stitutions and individuals ¢ bef Predicts 5-Hour “Pape’s Cold Compound” room ¢ 7 sort worked together and grew appreciative of each other's , opens clogged nose and " a virtues marks a gain we must not k : : oo head and ends A r he i That billions of waste was squeezed from industr : a indand peak ter grippe Mg % much marketing friction removed, labor truly mobilized . a wR way or omen : : , | and a promising begin de in adjusting the relations | t ‘ rambling Tee , ae i af vers nploy is as important a victory AS #t on the (Spec # their place af of employers and employed is a r t ' ' oa : \ ; o price if any gained in France. It will be lost if our bourbons, who eh C3 the! PARIS, Fran ~we "men i a see no need of positive reconstruction, have their way ; cigay 4 Bvlgari: Kaa hl 1¢ head ' 1 rabbed my pay, We created d Cross nur trained nan © the : I oo millions in “first aid, xtion-wide system of base | ss on . , 4 hospitals and accumula 4 vast fund of knowledge con men fr mis ' f cerning our national t We ned wonderful lessons Ir re 5 1 ; in sanitation. We bou r valuable knowledge teve i, nor oar concerning the health of the people. We have the machinery, ree int tiie made for war, with which to save in each peaceful year! | - 1 tt : more lives than we spent Unless we consciously a wn N } d plan to keep thes will pass away and the 0. | 10 0 = rent ers, pia ‘ fuch prompt mPa fruits of our sacr t , . - al fia cage rodlied . oar ook ‘ V made co- ation honorable, placed service above (4 to Pranee 1. 1840 thout assistance, ta Oil Ol Oil Ol Ok OE a, Wie il wie i rofits an indu n and gave industry a nunen fi nventer fi a PE CELE LEE P F CIVILIZED THE ZUL0S— get the genuine common social aim that lifted it above conflicting individual "Ee FOR THE KAISER interests. This is a more valuable conquest than colonies, exclusive markets or widened boundaries. It is worthy : ee e@ e erans of all effort to preserve. « that between 26 and THE MELANCHOLY MUSE War taught that men fight best when they play hard. { the French women In solemn #plend AT THE It gave the methods and machinery with which to or- b works will Fe ae og 4 i tee pea ganize social play. It showed us a vision of directed, so- a TAILORING CO, 4 cialized, educative amusement. The -lessons, machinery © lently died. 2 ¥ and vision may be saved if we bestir ourselves in time. workers | 1 will eat fish-cakes at a restaurant That the schools were roused from sleepy isolation od Ps pr gap encthcoccr wee gen in fat abo ag ie ¥ and their plant, staff and pupils made to play a great part » a cml a pone uits, oats an 2 in national life in time of desperate emergency is the ! One-Piece Dresses | HEAR the war stories greatest educational advance of this generation Only For the fish that ewam in the sea : “A 2 “1 devoted, conscious care will preserve and add to that hee nd slept on the sterile bet of | 425 Union Street x told by the returned World War veterans who The reconstruction armies that will salvage these gains ro se Say tigartin “ He wary raw materials and th , and finning with haughty TE A ma gassed, shell-shocked, crippled and proud. and defend in time of peace the victories gained by the {yy isiand of Accenen Tie atnee ce ae ee ee ‘4 ° | war will have as great need for able leadership, trained Arrica is 1.200 miles, South Ax neko tare thare oie pet aa Seach bit guamtelieh hte prone 15e 15c 1Se 15e 15 y SEE the remarkable collection | strategists and unselfish, patriotic devotion as was réquired or mailen away. ; shortage of women labor and white, 15c A High Class 15c it of war relics and trophies brought from the bat- by any army that crossed the Atlantic. : mm, Siqvovered by the Por Work for All! Pleasing the palate and gastric Juloes * : 2 tuxvem in 1602, wae settled by the) A : before the initial bite [5c Treat. 15c y tlefields of France. omens Dutch in 1645, and taken by o 70 per cent o one who re n| ‘1 4 The Swiss are even less eager ite receive those small n The Duteh } will find w in heer. . . y 1] th f d ! * ne leeftea and gruel for infants and Hoyt’s Coffe swe! e run German states as part of their confederation than Hol- tanding by nak teak tar ten Gace I5e y' e ' : land was to welcome Bill. Sacataalite. Of Gthar wade cr) * Meupeman tik ex ths eats [5c Wits ¥ that these boys are raising to establish a home ee pe at a , ‘ with plenty of fat to fry it Real Cream 15c ¥ for all Allied returned veterans wha need imme- Fruits of Their Valor FIRST WAR MEMORIAL ro nctunlly empl ee “tah, the tase’ soemne ana | LOC And 15c tf diate assistance. enw re actua a ho muse acclaims an: 7 PR " P napiren HOYT'S 1 ‘ Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels says: “Return- IS FRENCH TO SCOTCH (ooo th wolna nek amas ca burning [5c Dot GHNUTS 15 iy COME to Fourth and Pine ing soldiers are coming back to win the greatest peace in the) ‘ ake Hoppa words im of gastric de Or C | > daw of wh r 28 * 7 | (Special to The Star by N. EB. a)|! ‘ wr any day or night from December 23 to January Espirit of fellowship, and high resolve THAT NO_PRIV-| “Pata.” De Firat’ of war| Dr es [5c FINE 15c $M 1 (except Sunday) and spend your entertainment S > emorials to be nay the enon | £t¥ To laud and eat ntil day grown SANL : ay) & s ) ; ne oy HALL MONOPOLIZE THE FRUIT parsonage ~ Rey eonetarannd ‘See - t, and sleep and darkness L5e se: a9 15 by) money for a good purpose, ei. In these days, ‘when every plute organization in the reg: tabioeng aa Sa And fish and tat and poet are loxt in 15 HOYT c ¥ SHOW th b ovs » country is meeting to consider “reconstruction” and busily | the tast scoteh soldier fell, the pen 7 moods the ebb of the final tide C 322 Pike, at Fourth 15c ¥ 1e , 'y: p arranging for them the destinies of their fellow countrymen era! ordered built a memorial, and Or tee Pomer I5c WE NEVER Clean your heart is with them. They are trying to who went away to fight, here is something to ponder. What thin four days, with stones trom | 04 nang “oO @ poor go hunary,” cables ASE 15¢ ¥ help themselves, 7 selves ; ‘ +9 a ruined chateau, & monument has C oe ; p are these fellows themselves going to think about it? of agus yore Rat ig a slowed to do ag |&M American correspon Ger 15c Ise Ie I5e 15c A fair guess is that they are going to think in terms of things that most concern them. And for the immediate future, in the vast majority of cases, these will be: 1. Good wages. 2. Continuous employment “ 3. Decent living and working conditions. be 4. A chance to get ahead, strictly according to merit, | and NOT according to birth or position or inherited wealth. The big outstanding fact as regards these four points will be that in no case will a return to merely ditions” be satisfactory. , There has got to be progress. The fighting man—along with his working pal—will want some- thing concrete, something that he can recognize right off, to set on the credit side of the ledger, over against the service and hardship and danger he has undergone. High-flown talk on world trade, industrial domination, the progress of democratic principles and kindred subjects, isn’t going to be enough—unless he personally can receive some of the benefits. If Germans had a sense of humor they would call their loans to raise indemnity fines, “Liberty Loans.” Wilson’s Trump Cards Recent Paris dispatches say: like to get two million tons of ships and France one million. Both nations are r to effect an arrangement for distribution of raw materials and assurances against overcharges. All nations would appreciate internationalization of America’s merchant marine and a share in our raw mate s, thus ending America’s virtual domination of world markets.” That’s right! Of course hove would. And Uncle is perfectly willing to trade with them—on a No le tho. Before there i merchant marine of the American pec got to be an equal as the British navy. country demand Before the would chant “Great Britain American-built r Sam 50-50 basis. ‘international ization” of America’ y and operated on behalf t government—there has ition of such institutions what public sentiment in this ingement” concerning our raw materials or b “assurances” on any subject whatever, American common sense will require counter-as- surances from the other side—in this case such assurance as will, thru a League of Nations or otherwise, provide ade- quate guarantee gainst future war President Wil realizes this, and has shown that he realizes it as well as anybody in the United State But will national prohibit ‘ ion keep the thrifty farm- ers’ cider from getting hard? And will the Anti-S cider ia a soft drink? ‘aloon hold that, hard to the peace conference Some of them de Delegates ‘will number 100 odd.” ided, Is th ywhere eon ws stealing his Kuropean applause? Wil- “pre-war con-* THE SEATTLE § DEC 1918 ST. HELENA PREPARES FOR EX-KAISER; ISLANDERS BELIEVE HE’S COMING THERE: THURSDAY, A condition not confined te increase our in the ne berronnel ar future,” he medallion bearing a thistle entwined “We sha with roses and these words en. | considerably graved: “Here the Scottish thistle will flourish forever amid the of France.” said hati . |WSSIW Omnibus and subway companies | announce that the women will be al S|WSS SIWSS '$ A Stubborn Cough Loosens Right Up ARERR TS FE A RE ce ai? Ending the War With the Yanks sn ® _ag| $ THIS Nome-mnde remedy | ler for 4¢ v a Mounted — in solid gold, y gold- filled or ee shell, Surely an appropriate and last- mM, ing Christmas gift. We fit KRYPTOK invisible \f bifocal lenses for near \f and far view. WEGNER OPTICAL CO. DQ. R. B. WEGNER, Tick, “Why—yu poor squirrel, that thing'll blow vp in a minute, ada Ave. “Gowan—th’ war's over 5 x. M VISIT THEIR CARNIVAL ELE PEPE LE PRR LE SE ESE LE LEED That School Appetite Children, when they are growing, need a bite just home from school, and at other odd times. Always keep a box of crisp Snow Flakes in your pantry, handy for them. Don't ask for crackers, say Snow Flakes. Your grocer can supply you. . eat

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