The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 14, 1919, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

[THE S"ATTLE STAR Telearaph News Service o Entered as Second-Class Matter Mi Seventh Ave, Near Union St. 3 * NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSrArEens the United a, 18 ft Congre Seattic, Wash. under the Act o| ont tha, $1.50; 6 months, $2.75; nthiington Outside the state, te Dy carrier, etty, out of city, 68e per $5.00, in the State of Washington. Ih, $4.50 for 6 months, or $9.00 per your. week. mal pst 2° linking Co. Phom departments. Daity by The Star Pub exchange connecting © y a the Censorship Tt is a certain and sure thing that there is an active organized propaganda under way to stir up American t in Russian affairs. Russian politicians 7 thru country almost weekly, giving out lengthy and for the part blood-curdling accounts of conditions in that un- py country. The press reports from European capitals pndon, Paris, Christiania—are loaded to the guards Russian “news The unmistakable tendency of the whole is in one tion. Allied intervention—particularly American inter- is urged. We are told that “the Bolsheviki must p smashed.” But we are told mighty little else. Americans are suspicious, and have a right to picious, of any story only one side of which they are mitted to hear. They know that there is a censorship, War over or not, that controls information about Russia. they have mighty little faith in\ the disinterestedness Ecensorships—especially of censorships controlled by nh government: It requires no very great imagina- to conclude that there are still left in the world “s be axes Here is just one case in point; it is remembered Russian bonds, now repudiated, were sold in large tities to the big business interests of France. ' Here is a question that the average American as when confronted with this “Russian intervention’ > Gt When the Bolsheviki are smashed, what en? To what political party shall Russia be turned over? © To the ordinary man, it appears that there must be a number of these Bolsheviki; that they must rep- almost a majority. Otherwise, how do they rule? the absence of fact to prove it, talk about “a handful ”’ bulldozing in some mysterious way all the Rus Millions sounds fishy, to say the least. To the ordinary man it would seem also that there be a lot of the old, corrupt, ex-czarist, peasant and crushing crowd left hanging on the outskirts of gov- nt who would be only too glad to have the Bol- iki knocked out for them, so they could step in and rpetrate a regime which, if differently so, would still i ust as wicked as anything that has been said of Trotsky Lenine. This is only supposition. But remember, it’s our fault that we are in the dark. _ The Star has been urged on more than one occasion, tly by Russian and other European politicians of a t of view and anything but an unbiased spirit, e out for American intervention on a big scale in We have refused. ‘There is one thing, tho, that we do come out for. That lifting of the pernicious veil of censorship that is drawn d Russian affairs, so that, so far as they are con- d, our people and the peoples of the rest of the allied 0 must walk in the dark—are even urged to fight in con ” seer ee we ee What Happened to the Power-) __ Greedy Tribe of Hohenzollern od | For a minute let’s study the lesson of the Hohenzollern 's tumble: Hohenzollerns were above the law in the Germany they created and misruled. Nobody could arrest one of them, no matter what they did or didn’t do. They could break speed laws, moral codes, religious rules, and evade taxes with impunity and immunity. Only William the Devil could punish a member of the tribe. And William thought nobody could punish him. Well, there’s a new deal . New Germany has decreed that hereafter all Hohen- uns shall be amenable to and under the civil law, sub- tt to erent for lawbreaking, just like burglars and other minals. From petty thieving the Hohenzollerns rose in older iy to gang-leaders. Then they became robber bar- They evoluted into “divine right” despots. They held the lines of all Germans, the property of all ( my at the mercy of their word. ' So much power made them greedy to rule the world. In the attempt they grew dizzy and fell into—Holland! Power should be shared, not hogged. Now, the Next Step The state senate has passed over the governor's veto so-called syndicalist bill to prevent discussions and tices of sabotage. The governor had thought we had) ough laws to cover lawlessness of this kind, but no mat- » The state can accommodate itself to another law or o along this line. But why not go farther? Why not legislate against things which make syndicalists? Against industrial and ocia! injustices? Give men a square deal, and will they then talk of | lage and anarchy? Hardly. Treat them right. Too many lad been denied even a blanket to comfort them at night the lumber camps not so long ago—in our own state. it conditions will make them good citizens, and now that the syndicalist bill will help to reach, perhaps more ‘Effectively than before, those who have turned lawle: jal legislation step in to prevent, in an intelligent) “Manner, the breeding of new syndicalists. a | : SEATTLE IS A LEADER Y With weekly bank clearings running at time: above $36,000,000, Seattle is among the very top- notch cities in business activity. There is plenty of | evidence moreover, that peace-time conditions will not abate our progress, attle will continue to be a leader, But each of us must do our best to stimulate our own bu nes The Pirst National Bar its services to help you push yours, FIRST NATIONAL BANK Tal techn THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1919. ” | _| STARSHELLS | A WO SAYS NOISK DOPSN'L the Yanks! t Coming Home With rom Kditor the Btar: I un 1 4 JOSH WISE Mayor Ole Hanson and a Oe men) 1 nf . ( one of th . hea rap oi eS me ut, of course, it might be the Bien on a Cleve Nloor ne oc tee tn dhe Thrift Home Mott Will Be in an Ad Clob Next This la a 1 Farrell is against large fasr lies and says he won't rent bh have one house, yes, a couple of them, that I will rent for $15 month, and if a man has 15 children I will throw off one bone; 1 dren, 2 bones; 17 children, 3 b an Se eo and e900 in ronrapt yee country could afford that much, Aft pony & man has 30 children, No! or t paid rent for a room, had ve one but Mormons neod apply, and) Meu and apent a few daye they must have good Improvements | ee eee eee oy aia th on to ‘em. If m man has 100 chil: |) 0, ore Fee are a oe bicadl Ling 4 poo io ved ta) What we need ix substantial help month as long as he Iives, and to . parr hin children, even unto the third and A RETURNED SOLDIER fourth generations, For further | Byer > tt particulars inquire Mott Arm WANTS PAVEM ntrong, at 211 bullding,| Editor The Star: 1 b t right over Peck * thirat par-|the action of the atreets committee lor. Open day and night until July |!" granting the request of a few 1, next, after that “bone dr 4 in| taxpayers and blocking the im such case made and provided, ‘Tili|™ment of Wilson ave, and adjacent the cows come home.—Advertine. | street ment in Ottawa (11) Republican) The pretext of “ex Times. unavailing. Some of eee who protested ure h ao. e and a few live in im Lenine is in Jail, Trotsky ts dic-|0f the city, and ¢ tator, The king is dead, long live | ™#Jority of the hor the king 1 of the propo eee 4 improvernent EXTRA! ATTENTION! to wait for a decrease in Expert rectifier, who sent Dry| the cost of material, it is reasonable Squad Sergeant Jennings a small aasume that wages will be lower bottle of “Hottled in Barn” whisk wentiy, our at to pay in evidently a wit and a cultured £° pyement will be prop gentleman. Hin letter shows breed ened, | easeree. we ing and education. Yet, why should to ks oe penne Boece he confine hig attentions to Jen-|!" Summer once more. and prepare shag » wallow in t ack ntreots Still Piekin’ Up Curtosities cee that form a barrier to a very (senireniiinaenliiennemicnnene seen cs mmc ones —) we ervice every winter, merely to suit Mad as at « few realty manipulators, who beaide Where the wa OF SEAS, SAY HUNS ©” HEAT IN APARTMENTS The (Special to The Star by N. EB. Aj! oa men and. offen as star PARIS, dan, 14.—Capt. James! of the officers who could donned civ be pas Norman Hall; author of “Kitchener's! ian clothes, § * refused t se Mob,” was help@i to escape from! salute them but did not inault them ee German prison camp and into) The soldiers refused to keep to third tha die a natura: Switzerland by German officers.| class carriages after November 7 Bt | death? after the revolution broke out tn! No one objected . : t inbe are Germany President Wilson is a popular THE RIGHT MAN 1 call it inbumar way we ar ie ——— _ “They nay Mix : - o | treated, working all day in the wet Capt. Hall served two years with man in Germany. There is still bit They Miss Highstrung fs 0 | Oe ss with an ico box fe the British army and was in the terness in Germany against Eng-|!"E to marry an army officer veil Baye or Pager Lafayette encadrilie before being jand, but the German people solace Well, I should think that a man oa’ clara I~ eg pea hag eb who makes a business of war might made a captain in the American alr | themselves for the loss of their mer i Areas genag hop forces. chant marine by the common com-|be able to get along with her scar ins Mia Gta waa With him in his escape were ment that ‘América now will be min 3 re 5 ae Lieut. Henry Carvill, Germantown, | treas of the seas WHEN THE LID 18 OFF been hit by a bolt, which I hed ! trees ¢ ne am “I tell you, Bull * r hen I got to my room, it Philadeiphia, Pa; Lieut. Charles F.| “A prison camp inapector sent to| “I tell you, Bill, when you take a/ totwmm’ Wile | Rat ip toy radin O Codman of the 96th Aero Squadron, Landshut came from Munich and inti-| Wife. roy fee ae te We Ob aa oe eneis cae bat ncch Boston, and Lieut. Aviator Robert| mated that we might be able to go yin’ ts a aoe * stpnbapthie , P ing doing, #0 I lit a candle to warm George Browning, of Minneapolia, (to Switzerland. Previously 21 Amer Bure thing. As the wise guy re) i nds, and phd went (to bed to At Berne they were “receipted! jcans had been nent to Villingen to| Marked, you never know whether eal: ade oes ehtvercd Sn: hae for” by the American Red Cross, and! he shipped thru the allied lines into | YoU Married a peach or a lemon un | "°)P Deri Oi NT aut sent on to Paris, furnished with new France. We four stayed behind to) ‘i! the first family jar is opened t mest sty e is mit. If « uniforms, insignia, war medal rib dispose of the Red Cross food stores - bs law can be passed, pelling a per. All four declared that the Swine! py a German officer, we slept in a pi ress : e proposal) —THAve |e passed compelling apartment commission of the American Red) first-class hotel and went about un Sie Pcater Aseria h ften | HOUse OWners to furnish heat? Cross had been a “lifesaver” to| molested. Some soldiers saluted us. wath % 7 ave often) “Hoping immediate steps will be ‘ed men for their strength, cour ‘The railroad station was thronged | *4mir beauty, intelligence or some American officers and men in Ger. taken to provide the working man man prison camps. with returning soldiers and. there | with a little comfort, I am Privates in Prussian prison! were joyful reunions penny Ranma? sielpgnernk Berg Matra! | HENRY LOCKE, camps depended for thelr lives on, “From Munich we went to I you, Perey, it ia love--nething eles! | Red Cross boxes,” Hall. dau on Lake Constance, where a@ | PROFITERR 18 Yv “At Landshut, how 25| German captain politely told us that | The Star: I a to thank American aviator officers were well| we were technically ‘esca pris ° f the organization for fed and treated oners’ and that we would have to ew Imes 1 under date of January ‘On May 7 I was shot down near go into Switzerland as such.” BS >» legiaiation to prevent Pren The cloth on my wings rip. » brokers from increasing the ped off. As I fell a German shell BY CHARLES B. DnIscoLL tx to an unheard-of extent struck my motor squarely, I es LIEUTENANT HOAXES (Written for the United Press) — | he t Profiteering league caped with a broken ankle and the PRUSSIANS ON FOOD rounc Year of Promiae, born so well, appreciates the work of The Star in other sprained. nt ¢, Jan. 13—Prussia had as| “What are the ekies portending?. ee ts Bee ee In Bombed Hospital a food dictator for two days a non-|Why are our councillors filled with emy we have, viz “1 was taken to the German army | commi who with as/ a Why do the people so madly shout cRCAMP. hospital at Saarbrucken sumed authority ruled with a high| What may the Fates be sending? NA. HAVERCAME ‘The Germans had neglected to hand over the chief burg put a Red Cross on the roof, al-| Merlin and the mayors Clouds and darkness are round the tho the two lower floors of the how | cities. His name waa Mueller, Helgay will the day be dawning soon? Where will the sun be r For East is West wh | Kast pital were used for their own wound: had a following of 20 soldiers and Allied aviators came over 4! he ordered the bread ration increased times and bombed all around! and’ distributed quantities of other food for two days before the impos-| “ing Weat ts And 1 Prophet and sage and pries Math muddled us with advising. ria, generally, the rev-\ture wna discovered and Muellet | | olution was orderly. The councils | evicted by the real food minister Have we seen the end of a world at/Say Anaemia—Lack of Iron of workmen and soldiers delegat — a | - were in full control. Cafes were| Government experimenters In Ar-| Of the b y business of taking life, | and excesses stopped. na have had much succers tn] qi) °" a by Othe won| DINAND KING, New York Coming of Revolution making paper pulp from the wood “ ‘ Physician and Medical Author, Its first indication was the ap-\of several varieties of native pine | Or will tho kings and the kainors go,| Deystelans tencribe more And the lo have thelr inning), OFeantc iron—Nuxated pearance of red flags and red in- trees : pg eg James Brane! 278 : im : ~| Shall t that flowed like the driv € Dr ng rain » formerly Phyntes er red tides, in vain, Hoxpliat (Outdoor an end of slaying? | and the waiting today to hear expital: Dr. hymie: tested the things wa Waiting ting and prayin ws value of Nuxated Iron, (COLD GONE! HEAD so: sonny oe ke pale, | haggard and nould at once ir ath and endurance of weak, ner pes a areworn women in two weeks’ \First dose of “Pape’s Cold \™: Compound” relieves all boautif grippe misery. . healthy, women. can t My Servants First, Messire le Milkman, while still I'm a-dream, , 1 Presents me with milk and a portion of cream. Don't stay stuffed-up! r hen a Courier 1a me the news of the world, 3 Quit Pha oben and one A;* h he leaves at my doorstep all folded and curled, dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound" |; While the government lends taken every two hours until three |v Me {ta servants, and sends |doses are taken will end gripp a san, anagm A untformed knight bearing letters from friends misery and break up a severe cold |}y, "he brain Which have come thru the world from its uttermost end either in the head, chest, body or ties fails, and Aye, tho you may th it t to tell m | Mog Pry Was Caesar or Croesus serve: er Bo well nptly opens clogged-up nos- |!) from d air passages; stops nasty line t i of women the roses ¢ Coa: Gale Wihasitint se Sreis-of tin Seana discharge or nose running; relieves| from their che on foods of My baker has spent the night out of his bed. dache, dullness, feverish.|, “In, then icars, tadl And many more serve me—and not only they SS Att Sphre eateet aa del 5" ndies, polished n 3ut also they serve me who take things awé anc ness. bread, a erack biscuit ey Mig Wickens ie uaecade 5 Cold Compound” is thelaront: spaghertl tapioca, sas ‘The paper and trash-man Ley ogo sown a st i the husky he dus the thrice elcome man bas . ¥ by gay Ms aicbera And h shu ky, th uaky, the t W h me mar store’ It acts without assistance, « Who calls for the garbage and empties the car desi gue i : , Yea, truly I think he has made me by un bat coe ee "Tis often more blessed to give than receive. ee n't accept a substi the servants wh come to my door pa = 3 oO am served by a wides ered corps One sends me a light n th wings a wire And some fill ny pipes bringing water and fire And one, when I call Thru a hole in the w Will pick up my voice and will by it away Wi lek up mr wc and wi ear LORING CO. Not the glory of Greece, nor the grandeur of Rome Was served half so well as my little hom: . Headquarters for ae anal Or, should I go out, bent a ork or on pla H withstand all pr should I 0 out, bent on work or on 1 Suits, Coats and and taveuon of J y Chariot bears we away . Recantiyey war Tiere'a’ Hd: 40d tosny henvanial and J. duetay tiine, One-Piece Dresses Nuxated” Iron a I serve ail these servants, and serve them in rhyme W ha gdb. Not only I toast them 25 ni bw And brag the and boast them. 4 U ion Street Kut for their delectation I daily reveal The thoughts that I think, the emotions I feel | | se the I pipe for them, sing for them, laugh for them, ery for them vu a8 Blizabeth' pitak " 01 ery for them; ae 2 ‘ x inabeth's Hospital Some day in a swan-song, well! well! I may die for them The Largest Audionce in the 1: T have never redical infor publication as ra mation © sop: ota. ot. te | | Northwest Reads Star Want Ads | |; n (Copyright, 1919, N. B. Ag | ¢———_——_———_—— r advice for Physicians Explain Why Women Need More Iron in Their Blood Today Than 20 Years Ago Beauty of the Modern American Woman. eee ~ Male Vanity Is Cigar Clerk’s Key to Success Therefor ove 1 a man's jay bluff if 4 ant to cep bim as af patror } bt On this tripod 1 have built my d as a clear wtore malengirl 1 what that success is worth to me and my employer may be judged from the fact that ¢ h 1 nell #45 worth of smoke: Maybe ot working girls ean ateh a tip from my experience and atching the male in the glow his own clea l ver quickly rned that man’s vanity is of the mind A lino ery smoker r ards himself as a connoisseur of tobacco. To question that assumption, by word or hint, is to°lose him as @ customer To cater to it is to re tain him and win his friends, ‘This in often true of other “experts,” too. | An a matter of fact, I've found t a r i's taste in tobacco about as indefensible as his nature. Not one in 500 knows the difference be z uae tween a phe ana at 4 c re " ut 1188 BETTY KASHEVINIKOVF 1 wouldn't tell him the world. Cigar Store Saleszirl, Butler Hotel, on ne sagged pirow mmaggatd that one with “perfectos” and a third hoimeurs,” 1 handed him a cam-| With “cheroots.” And the same as Daflaged nickel cigar in place of the, sociations would prove as valuable Ne oe ied been smoking (if selling men gloves, kerchiefs, a ora the difference, Hie) Shaving soap and goloshes, 1 am taste” was bluff. ssa oe Male vanity—tt the keynote. 2 2 Find what it is and servo tt, if Nine Are Killed be a successful salengirl : : ‘And in that connection a cull in Train Wreck vated memory ts invaluable PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14.—The an T have, to associate death of nine persons and injuries men’s faces and names with their! to several others was caused last pref Kemember what was night when the Scranton Flyer on dered last time. Show them you! the Pennsylvania & Reading railway haven't forgotten. ‘They'll take it crashed into the rear of a local train an efficiency plus a personal tribute. nm Fort Washington station, five They'll come back nd bring their miles north of here frienda . n# increase of One coach on the local train was business and very likely increase of press engine tore thru the length ralary press engine tore thrue the length I link this man with “ of it. ~ Come, Let Mother See! When the child droops, won't play or is restiess, pale and grunty, look to see if the tongue is white, the breath feverish, the stomach sour. Then hurry, mother, but don’t worry! Give Cascarets, the harmless candy cathartic. Children take Cascarets without coaxing ~ only 10 cents a box! TO MOTHERS! Nothing else “‘works’’ the nasty bile, the sour fermentations and constipation poison so gently but so thoroughly from the little stomach, liver and bowels like harm- less Cascarets. While children usually fight against laxatives and cathartics, they gladly eat a candy Cascaret. Cascarets never gripe the bowels, never sicken, never disappoint the worried mother, Each 10 cent box of Cascarets contains directions for dose for children aged one year old and upwards. is eatest Curse to the Health, Strength, Vitality and The Child's Appeal—What Is Your Answer? roxy cheeks stend of being irritable You can tell the women with fron in thi blood—benutiful, checked women full of Life, y—while those who Inck iron of rosy A Vital Smith's mother and was worse off are and now she looks are often © nervous, ble, weak, years younger di feels tired, complatning creatures whom nobedy just fin wants to have around, 1 ordinarily do not believe in it. Iron and other similar Hut. in the case of Nuxated Iron [ ucts and failed to get cel L would be remise in my duty member that such products ar not to mention fit, L have taken it entirely different thing from myself and given it to my patients ated Iron.” g ona satisfac — If ple would only take Nux- hose who wish ated nm when they feel weak or Rely etrength, -down, instead of dosing them- Will find ita Selves with habit-forming — drugs, wonderfully stimulants and alcoholic beverages, ther probably thousands who Sullivan, for- Might readily build up. their red GPa oan. bie corpuscles, — increase their New York and physical energy and get themselves foepital saya: into @ condition. to ward off the Otel aut. Millions of disease germs that are ore ucctoring almost continually around ws, It is Tie Minds ot ig. furprising how. many. people suffer rent ant trig akuse unt from iron. deficiency and do not areal and true qausompiy Know of it, If you are not strong dition Is simply or well you owe it to yourself to néficlont | tron in Ane make the following teat how transform the “food they 1op® you can work’ or how far you transform the food they can walk without becoming. tired, p Drawn, muscle tlasue G5) Next take two f rain tablets of are ord’ craguentig. Nuxated Iron. three. times per day Ho iron Wan, Y after meal Weeks. ‘Then Notwithstanding all that has {est your st and see becvotwithatanding all that has how much you have gained. jot by well) known physicians, Manufacturers’ Note: Nuxated Iron, thousands of pe Insist in which Is prescribed and recommended dosing _ themsely metallic above by physician, is a secret. reim= iron simply, I suppose, Bev edy, but one which’ ts well known. to costs a few cente less. 1 druggists. Unlike. the older inorganis advise readers in all cases to & fron products, it is easily assimilated, physician's prescription for organic doa not injure the teeth, make. them iron—Nuxated Iron—or if you don’t binck nor upset. the aiomach, ‘The want to go to this trouble then manufacturers guarantee successful and hase only Nuxated Iron in its entirely. satisfactory. results. to every nal es and see that this purchaser or they will, refund your Uicular name (Nuxated Iron) ap- money... It is dispensed in this city. be pears on the pa If you have Owl Drug Co,, Bartell Drug Co. Swift's kag taken preparations such as Nux and Pharmacy and all other druggists

Other pages from this issue: