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She Seattle Star By mail, out of city, per month; 3 mont! 1. Months, $2.78; year, $5.00, in the | of Washing Py the ste | per month, $4.50 for & m ha. or M } per year. By carrier, city, i3e per week d or of its institutions, Consequently bx immediate remedial action. @ as fantastic as the disease. i should subside. discussion of this proposal. othe: 4 It. hold back Bolshe’ tines. ism. 5 eft to itself this power may world. tte! using these forces. Barrin: g Bolshevism — A third plan is the reverse of the second. ) proposed to “feed the beasts” until growling stop- But ever the vast wealth of America is inadequate feed to social satisfaction the hundreds of millions now It must be fought here, not in Russia. be backfired against, not beaten out. When old nations crumble and new m, when millions are dying and social caste ag, when property values fluctuate and flicker out by all institutions are fluid, and must be molded into forms or they will dissolve in chaos. _ Within these dissolving institutions there is a tremen- and as yet by no means blind, dynamic force seeking “freedom and a better world. The forces of unrest, hope and desire for better things form the est power for good ever released upon this globe. become a destructive explosiy e. ed to the machinery of reconstruction it will build With nearly all Europe east of the Rhine passing under shadow of Bolshevism, and the certainty that war half sympathy and economic unrest in the re- the continent make military suppression impos- the world sees at last that the old civilization, with is threatened with destruction. ‘a mad clamor rises to the peace council The suggested remedies One proposes a ring of buffer states about the infected But the peoples of the proposed states arg already ing in allegiance to the old order. ; Military circles once urged the formation of an “iron of bayonets and boycotts to be maintained until Bol- Revolts in the ring itself ended Hoover and Bread, bayonets and barrier nations are equally futile It demands prophylactics, not It ones are being te is disappear- fhe problem of fighting Bolshevism is the problem of Directed by ; and rage, they will wreak destruction wreaked it in the past. passion, despair, as they labor’s demand for greater power and rewards in uutee i programs i slums, n fostered, and all of society, we Bolshevism. rai uni ly rooms for retu’ not be overlooked. day. and furnishings. at them for work well done. d of service. happy. if unemployment is fough lition of child labor and construc 0 if profiteering is checked, co-operation encouraged, done as part of a democratic shall build the foundation of a wall fice and solidarity that won the war agai utilize the splendid revolt against injustice: thruout the world, and harness all the | ergy of war to a fundamental program of social progress. | ‘Seattle’s proposed war memoria! auditorium ought to’ club room accommodations for returned soldiers Democratic Luck The army that defeats Bolshevism will enlist the whole in a crusade against evil, command the sacri- nst Prussianism, | e that is preva- magnificent sailors. 5 ; Tentative plans provide for art galleries, music rooms, and convention committee halls in addition main auditorium, designed to seat 20,000 people. ‘All of these auxiliary proposals are splendid, but ample} med men to congregate whenever they see fit! More men return from oversas Numerous brotherhoods have already been | ned. They occupy rooms in different parts of the city, which they pay rent, and are handicapped by inadequate | A $2,000,000 structure, built on the magnificent scale! nted at the Metropolitan theatre Saturday night, can ‘ tainly be designed to meet the needs of the veterans in|} ~-~* ition to all the other proposals. ON ramag ees *|the latter. Get From Behind Mask of Coldness A little girl was trying on a lot of new dresses face fairly shone with happiness and satisfaction. iidlike, she wanted every garment she saw. | “How happy your little girl looks and how easily |cor praying too loudly d,” said an observer to the mother. “No,” answered the mother, “it is only that she has| yet learned to hide fer feelings behind a mask of in-| ” It’s true. How often we are tickled most to death by a) “God isn't deaf,” Judge Miller explained, or or a new suit or something that comes into our lives, |#°"* *¥*"" eae we hide 99 per cent of that pleasure behind a mask of dness. We do not wish*to appear demonstrative. But, how are those who try to please us to know they) succeeding if we:do not pat them on the shoulder or|sit on him for § Let us be children in our appreciation of kindness} It will make us much better satisfied with | ‘ourselves and it wil] make those about us infinitely more| to the minds of the faithful. the democratic party. things it has done. pelled to declare unconstitutional!” Hunland. The man who patroni and we are trying to make erced that isn’t political greed. Nothing the ancient Spartacus did justified the in- sult of using him as a name for the minority crowd in Germany said that she wouldn't have a it hard for her. Things haven’t been breaking well for the democratic party lately. The voters stepped upon it last November of battle and gave the G. O. P. control of the next congress. there have been other things that have brought the blues} But there is sunshine coming thru the encircling gloom | ould."—Everybody’s. now. At last there is a hunk of democratic luck. Bailey of Texas, he of the big mouth, big body and big |¢y voice, who left the senate some years ago, has renounced, Joe “views with alarm” some of the #!! the way And what do you imagine is one of |!" the things to which he takes exception: That a democratic |;,, congress invaded the sacred rights of the states “by enact- ing a child labor law which the supreme court was com- in who patr 8 a savings bank and has a garden to dig in, isn’t interested in political ’isms. soft peace, Some day in the future there may be a political thru co-operation with the unions, substitute cities of better homes | t with shorter hours, | tion of great public And; Joe | |The Thrill That Comes Once in a ' | } A- AY. HERE ANA | | NAILS! an DRiver | Care Am ~ —-—_- were's A Boon | . | CALLER How Te MAKE Lovet | j RANSACKING A DESERTED HOUSE Starshells SPRING, SPRING, BEAUTIFUL NOW THE HOUSEWIV In the spring the housewife’s fickle fancy turns to thoughts of housecleaning. Housecleaning in a Nigeaw puzzle tearing the tepee to pieces, shaking it all up, and matching it together again Even tho the wigwam is given a stiff massage weekly thruout the almanac it gets a 66 bh. p double barrelled shampoo during the period the grass and Christ mas jewelry glows green. At this stanza, the housewife de clares on the tent trim mings, while her spouse remains very much new tral, being either wise or lazy. She casts her vote on When the armistice is signed, and the |works arc once again restored to a peace basis, he pays the indemnity of a complete new edition of spring togs for her. ‘The poem mechanics, inétead of rhyming about the stuttering brook, and the warbler’s debut, should jazz up thelr poem pads over war and|th® wallop of the carpet beater, and sonnets to the |wall paper cleaner, for modern spring ditties see a Wichita (Kas.) peddier Neighbors said they |hear him two blocks away | was arrested could Sam Miller me,” replied the defendant “nor MAYBE YOU CAN TRANSLATE THIS Daughter—Everett kissed me last night. Mother (indignantly)—That is outrageous Did you Daughter-—I di A WORD FROM JOSH WISE | Th’ man who's just | fell off a ladded finds | it hard # climb t th’ , top again. | eee ALSO, THIS MAY BE VERFE y CLEAR TO YOU Box CHuce® FULLA A OW di } BROOMS SWING | o¢ medical public that Dr..Read, the city commissioner glum funds for reconstruction and | of health, as quoted in your paper tonight, says that | place the country on a sound finan trary, an fa is one to which 16,000,000 |ctal basis ¢ soldier ted. Let him ask the #0’ ——— . fad and he will learn how ie ate sme. ute tor the Japanese Demand liberty loving soldier . Votes for Women twhen free this high the land, Whe they “Why yell at the Lord?” inquired Judge Carl H vis. “He's far off and I wanted him to be eure to hear | Said an Irish léader; “Min, ye on the verze Will yds fight or will run?” We will!” came a chorus of eager replies “Which will yex do?” says he “We will not,” says they, “Thank ye, me min,” says he; “I thought ye | “ee If somebody has owed you money for a long time it the following news item out and send it to him: SPRINGFIELD, Il—William Dohrs, aged 75, came from Whitlash, Mont., to Virden ar to pay a $1,000 debt he owed William man ” more than 40 year ‘reeman was dead, but phrs paid thee money to Freeman's he WOMEN ARE SELDOM 80 FRANK Quincy young women who expect to be home: |makers and the women who already are homemakers jean attend this sehool free, and they will be presented the subject of homemaking in a most interesting |way. The course will be arranged in a story like form, beginning with a cha on “I » to Marry Him."—Quincy, Tl, Journal However, J, W. Baker ts a baker in Lorain and Comfort & Comfort a law firm in Stillwater, Minn While we think of it, Fred Van Horn is a cornet [player in Augusta, Ill, and Henry Drum is the war | de nat Walla Walla | What has become of the old-fashioned man who used to wear 4 mustache turned up at cach end in limitation of the kaiser? THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1919. Lifetime. SA ss crew A Gory! Here's A HULL PILE OF BorTuEs AM A LAN TERR Ary’ OME DIME NOVELS An’ A CORSET An i A RAT TRAP Art SOME CURTAIN Q RINGS An’ A Box oF Lime! Finpees » KEEPERs!! J He ~~ t Y, SS AGAINST VACCINATION Editor The Star | Let Dr, Read also consider that, altho our losses f ey in battle were very heavy, considering the short! KYOTO, aun SeCied in bine! . time our troops were in the front lines, yet there |Special to The Star by N. Bs A) ie thrift. were 6,000 MORE deaths battle casualties, by the United States, a there were 32. many times, disease figures. from official In th 7 deaths from disease the death rate of similar population: from medical serums and injections rate is among the picked in the prime of health and remembers the German n resemble if not a jer that there wer vigor asiew, and wh did eanles & host of other diseases after th y military compulsion. from animals Recently Dr. Eugene Kelley, commissioner of this state in Massachusetts, appeared before the latter body in opposition to a bill compelling the production of vaccines uffder as clean conditions aa the manufac ture of foods, Hoe stated that the terms of the bill would abolish vaccination because it was impossible to produce clean vaccine. Yet it is with materials tidy than’ canned soup that the doctors—only the small grqup of “political doctors,” thank good: ness—would fill the veins of our red-cheeked school children, by propagating in them the grandchildren of germs and crawling vermin taken from cows and horses and guinea pigs THORWALD SIEGFRIED. THE OTHERS? Editor The Star; There is #0 much agitation re. garding the welfare of our returned soldiers that I want to speak for the other side. How about the men with large families that the government would not take? It was not our fault, and wherever I go I meet the same trouble—if I am not a soldier I cannot get work It looks to me as tho our boys took militarism away from the German and left him our democracy in exchange “A REGULAR STAR READER. HOW ABOU Time, the Policeman Text: The average man is as lazy as he dures to be,| We love to loaf in the corner's sun, Yarning the long past deeds we've done. Hands in our pockets and chew in cheek, Gathering germs of the Bolshevik, zy to laugh and too tired to yawn;— But Time, the Policeman, says “Move on!” We love to linger along the way Telling the trifles of yesterday, Straggling and draggling with putter and poke, Blocking the traffic of busier folk, Chanting the chatter of glories gone; But Time, the Policeman, says “Move on? We sag on the old Park's rusty beneh ‘To arise from which seems a deadly wrench, We shrink from the rrying, harrying throng, ‘Till Time, the Policeman, comes along. He curses us for a slacker's spawn, As he eries, “Move on! Move on! Move ont!" O, Time, the Policeman, let us stay! Mor tomorrow will soon be yesterday, Will you hale us out of the old church yard When we cover our heads with the cool, green sward? Will you beat on our head-stones when we're gone, | With the same old taunt? “Move on! Move on!” ‘Tag: Unless haman nature changes, Gabriel's horn will sound like the alarm-clock, (Copyright, 1919, N.B, A) FEATUR By Webster; On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Heroes Are Human When we realize that heroes are human, with the same desires and aversions, the same weaxwness and weaknesses, the same anxieties, troubles, temptations and necessi- ties as the rest of us, there may be less high talking, but there should be more real doing. That the man who crept across No Man’s Land, a target for all the many de- | |vised deaths, to rescue a pal, may become a homeless tramp is a simple fact. He may have been one before he went on the Great Adventure. Or he may not. 1 wonder if it was with @ sense|onesixth of her prewar scorn for the ignorance of the non-military, non-| t from Overalls of foreign make instead of e ong troops that did not go over,| This exceeds, | {rst Yet) 7 ung men of|* bor demonstration in the West at/ine in the public hall, then a parade second-hand edition mumps, subjected every| to inoculation with the diseased virus taken} formerly state health and now similarly officed! The hero is just the pre-war humfn plus the war experience. That experience made many great changes. It is not well to for- get either element in their make-up. The hero has been fed, sheltered, clothed, medically cared for, trained to act with lothers, to disregard danger’ and to die for ideals with little talk about them. He was sent away with profuse promises and plaudits, told that he was going to e the world, to make it better and to be welcomed back to the bounty of a grateful nation. He has returged to be reminded of these promises Tiru a momentary outburst of ful- some flattery, then told to look for a job and scolded if he does not take the first jone offered. He finds that tsouvenirs and experience some of those at home were accumulating more substantial emoluments. He hears it said that all this talk about “dying for democracy” was “bunk,” and sometimes feels a little as if he had been buncoed. While he m not while he was collecting | | have taken all the pre-war promises serious- ly, he does not feel that there should be unseemly haste in repudiating them. Subjecting millions of ordinary human beings to such extraordinary experiences produces great results. The soldier learned the possibilities of united action. He saw what could be done when men and money are spent without stint. He knows that the impossible has been moved far beyond its pre-war boundaries. He has learned to practice discipline and fear nothing. He has learned to choose and follow leaders or to act, when necessary, without them. He can do and dare things in his daily work that were once beyond his dreams. Instead of wondering what we will do with and for the heroes we had better won- der what they will do to and for us. Po- litically and economically they are the largest compact, commonly experienced, and, therefore, on many points commonly minded mass this, or any nation, ever knew. pect organization, They will run our industries, carry our elections, control our society for genera- tion. They will do this the easier because the things they want are what we all want. They want better jobs, with as good food, clothing, care, education, amusement and other privileges as they enjoyed in uniform. They want security against war, poverty and injustice. 3eing human as well as heroes, they will willingly work with all of us to secure these things peacefully. But will not be easy to bully, deceive or BRITISH WOULD Belgians May Sell Province for $3,500,000,000 Special to The t by a A LONDON Apr Ly Britain may buy the Beigian Conge A price of $3,500,000,000 has been suggested.| IF Belgian ministers have been in 2 clone conference with the British| ff ministry of foreign affairs | Belgium owes Great Britain not lens than $500,000,000. She has a |total war debt of not lees than/ $1,500,090,000. | Interest payments on Amount to $2,600,000,000, day’s ber loans which is revenue, Baie of the Congo would give Bel native dress, hundreds of Japanese |workingmen paraded here in the organized demonstration for universal suffrage s The event very much resembled ern world. There was a mass méet ¢ito the station to meet a speaker from Tokio, He was given wild neers and escorted thru the streets, the marchers carrying a biz banner 4 which read, “Give us votes,” and! singing labor songs. YOUR FUTURE What about your future? impose their will on you or shall you be the master of your own fate? That all depends on your vision of today —on your conception of what constitutes a to merely make money, without careful cal- culation of the amount you should save, then the chances are very much in favor of others controlling your future. On the con- handed, you may be reasonably certain of determining your-own place in the scheme of things—you will be your own master. The first principle of self-determination, as far as the individual is concerned, is Seattle National Bank Shall others work well done. If you’re contented if you are provident, thrifty, fore- Begin to save today! Savings Department open from 6 to & every Saturday night for your convenience, The Resources $30,000,000 | waste tion by cau: Are You a Bolshevik? Bolshevism is based upon violence, relies upon force, is deaf to right or reason. contents and facilitate easy, To force the bowels to move thorough evacuation at reg- by taking castor oil, pills, salts, mineral waters, etc., is to out “bolshevik” the body. Be- cause drugs act by produ- cing irritation. ic Nature Castor oil, for instance, is so bad habi s ebnozious that the bowels °° its, can be used make frantic effort toget rid at any age, under any con- efit. Other medicines, from senna to salts, provoke ac- 4 the bowels to try desperately to expel them first. With such remedies there- fore the removal of bowel second: wholly incidental. the result is not to curc con- ipation, but on the cor- trary, to make it w more obstinate, harder to overcome. On the other hand, Nujol is not a drug, does not act like any drug, pew not medicinally; Lape forcing Nature instead o her. mechan- Nujol Laboratories, Steadard Oil Co. (New Jersey), 50 Bread- wey, New York. d Ma ' svolsvare ts'estien asestina ular intervals. Nujol makes easier and more ive the action of intestinal muscles. Nujol absorbs Poisonous mat: 7 Nujol is free from any dele- terious after form and ditions, and overcomes con- stipation because it works hand in hand with Neture— be her laws, not against them. Self-poisoning due to con- stipation causes over 90% of human illness. Get a bottle of Nujol from your druggist today, and send coupon for free booklet— “*7Ricty Feat of Danser.” and lence, rse, Warning: Winns ca bearing the Nujel Trade Mark. Insist on Nujol. Yeu may safer from eubstitutes, Nujol Laboratories STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSBY) 9 Broedwey, New York Pl @ free booklet ‘‘Thirty Feet ef xication in adults,