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S0e per month, 2 months, $2.70; year, $5.00, Im the Butside the eS for @ nrontha, y ity, Me per week. THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1919. The Fruits of Bolshevis Sort of Warms You All Up Inside | } | teste | : THE FRUITS OF BOLSHEVISM—ALLI-| ANCE WITH THE CZAR’S OLD | (T's AS SECRET SERVICE POLICE GooD As ween the French revolution went mad and sought to SEEIN ' establish liberty by cutting off the heads of the old TH’ GAME of the kings it was consistent in this, that it made ions in favor of the corrupt, brutal police who had e kings in the past. Those ad have ead what has been written by Albert Williams, John Reed, and even Raymond Robbins, are ly under the impression that Bolshevism is a govern- by real working men and real working women. Of course, it is known that Lenine and Trotsky were not What is not so well known is that they have asso- with themselves the old corrupt secret police of the |! John Spargo, who is known to every socialist in ica, has made a critical study and analysis of Bol-| in Russia, and from his book, “Bolshevism,” pub- fi BASE Ont by Harper & Bros., is taken the following, verbatim: ‘They (Lenine ahd Trotsky) have associated with themselves, too, some Jef the most corrupt criminals in Russia, Here are a few of them | Professor Kobozev of Riga joined the Bolsheviki and was active as a | followers no DOYLE AT TH’ BAT— Two OUT AN’ TH’ BASES FUuLL= DOYLE LINES OUT A TWO-BAGGER! Galeeate to the Municipal Council of Petrograd. According to the infor Possessed by the Russian revolutionary leaders, this Professor) job being to make reports to concerning the political opinions and actions of students and a members. of the very first men released from prison by the Bolsheviki was || Doubrovine, who had been a leader of the Black a an pogroms, He became an active Bolshev My the Botahevike Jeader, friend of Lenine, is a journalist. He formerly a member of the revolutionary socialist party. Soon after used to be a police apy, bis special ‘War broke out he was arrested and behaved #0 badly that be waa con by his. party. Early in the revolution of 1917 he was accused of Betving the secret police at Kiev Bonno Brouweviteh, military ‘@ well-known anti-Semite, who had been flee on two octasions, once by the czar's gow nother of Lenine’s trusted military officials and | official of the caar’s secret police, known revolutioniats. Accused of high treason fled, but returned and joined the couneilor to the Bolshevik government, Giamissed from his military | ernment and once by the | ie, WHEN A CROWD GATHERY; TO LISTEN TO YOUR DRAMATIC INTERPRETATION OF THE BALL GAME Z the a J ‘Andronikoy, associate of Rasputin (Lenine's “my friend Orlov, police agent and “denouncer* and secretary of the inte. | ‘Mous Protopopov; Postnikov, convicted ahd imprisoned as a German spy “im 2910; Lepinsky, formerly in the czar’s secret police, and Gaulkine,| = ‘of the unspeakable Rasputin, are some of the other men who have Closely identified with the “proletarian regime” of the Bolsheviki { ” fhe man they released from prison and placed in the important posi: | ‘of military commander of Petrograd was Muraviev. who had been ‘Of the czar’s police and was regarded by even the moderate members | the provisional government, both under Lvov and Kerensky, as a dan *% mart Radek, the Bohemian, a notorious leader of the Russian Bolshe who undertook to stir up the German workers and direct the Sparta le revolt, was, ‘to Justice, expelled from the German sociat} Gee party before the war as a thief and a police spy 3 "Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his . 2” said Jeremiah. & . Does any one believe that these police spies and pro- who made Russia a hell under the czar, are now liberty and justice? Of course not, and the dog which runs with wolves may ly be classed as wolfish. } : ine and Trotsky are running with the czar’s wolves. QUESTIONS MR. GREY CANNOT ANS'VER } On what kind of trees do women's bonnets grow? | I heard my wife say yesterday that «he whe going | down town to pick one—R. EB. Ward | Did you ever hear of a politician haviog sore feet | by coming out flat-footed for or againgt anything? | —O. Botes, Beet may be easy to eut, but what makes a bridge | tender?—Otto B. Beaton.” a MR. C. GREYS HOUSEHOLD HINTS | Never throw awny an old silk bat. Any woman [with ordinary skill in handling scissors and needie ean make a pair of bedroom slippers out of it, A good set of dice can be made by cutting six flat sides on old nutmegs. A Connecticut Inventor has patented a self-tighten ing clothesline, The more clothes hung on it, the tighter it becomes. Wallpaper should be taken down in the spring and dry cleaned. Moths will not eat stained glass. eee Lets Get Down to Brass Tacks S THE Gorge Creek development commercially prac- ticable? Will it enable us to deliver electrical energy ttle at a cost that will attract large customers and) us to compete with the private company? If not, the) th: ect is large is of no advantage. an ony quoted from Acting Mayor Lane's mes- Skagit power development. Mr. Sherry, the widely known food and drink pro- states the case well e Skagit is a vast propo-|viter of New York, has decided to run a strictly but its ihee fs meaningless to us if the cost is out of“ Place. He should change his name, the service rendered. If the Skagit develop- Late. Sins it Seattle cheap light and power) the fact it is'a second will be little consolation. Original estimates been kicked overboard. a om an original investment of $5,500,000 for the first) it; we are now told we must now prepare to spend nearly ure Hee as much because the borings at Gorge Creek have not! As tor the Chinaman's troubles, no doubt they'll all d satisfactory. We are to go at on a ge river,|be ironed out ¢ Ruby creek, or some other point. At what cost, no one even willing to hazard a guess. ; -. When the Skagit was first presented to public atten-| n, it was claimed that some 250,000 to 300,000 horse-| r would be roving rg ry ~! oe aga gh) fo er 100,000. Now we are told it will eventually cos! 000,000. ay Really, it is time that we got to the point of more defi-|to meet this demand we Intend to stay ta oun cate ness. It is an essential pofnt to know, not only whether trom 6 a. m. to 6 p) m. daily for the next month oject is feasible from an engineering standpoint, but ®"¢ five 4 penny for each doliar offered to her it is feasible also from a financial standpoint. Gene Sarty ang: aeele $4, OR SEN es = The book publishers of the country held a meeting lin Boston recently and decided that after prohibition goes Into effect men will read more. On the theory, no doubt, that “reading maketh a full man.” eee That Brooklyn man who kidnaped a widow jbeen sent to jail. He'll be comparatively rate eee give Uncle Eara—These city fellows will find it mighty hard to go without their booze Unele Eben—Yep, and it takes years of experience before a fellow gets to know just which patent medi- eines contain the most alcohol —Judge, eee The Chicago Tribune has discovered a hotelkeeper | fa Belle Plains, Ta, who hands around a plate of apples at bedtime. Wait! The AnttAppleat-Bedtime will get him some day eee Officials in Washington say there ts a greater de us The Doom of Bolshevism ‘ The most significant news out of Paris in weeks was the brief dispatch stating that the “Big Four” has decided) An rastern man anounces he has invented a cock to ize the authority of Admiral Kolchak in Russia,|tati that can be carried in the pocket. There's noth Grovide! he agrees to one condition. jing new shout that—if he means the hip pocket. lite If “aig Kit to its bg ooh ayer ig ooo step on} 2 aie chee hae: checen be more tight skits | of the allies means the doom of Bolshevism. Someta ne re whinge shed | Wet the allies ask Kolchak to do is to hold an election 204 oo tecent be Tow et me ee for a constituent assembly, representative of Russia, when eee he reaches Moscow in his march against the terrorists.| A cook's wages are so high these days that ‘If he agrees to do so, he will receive money and supplies |°*"'t ¢ope !t out why a woman gets married, in quantities sufficient to maintain a stable government. Witers.ta Kolchak has thoroughly established himself as an ante-| tips. There's Bolshevist and since he began his operations against the tient “Reds” has conducted a vigorous campaign that is today! continuing slowly but surely against the forces of terror that have created havoc thruout the vast country of the has there. | we | Budapest a movement have decided not that we won't to accept have to . THE COMING BELASCO At the monthly meeting of the Max Plohn |matic society, Ed Skinner was elected manager be- | bi : ‘ jcause of his theatrical experfonce. Kb was a scene | That he will accept the allied offer can almost be taken | shifter at the Quincy theatre two seasons.—Calicoon, for granted. With this vast assistance at hand, he can|!!« Leader complete satisfactorily his great task of solidifying all) 4m, . 28 | % 7 ay 5 ol nassachusetts $25,000 for a ’ Russia against the Bolsheviki, who are now losing caste in|caif. We don't know how he expects to make any _ the land they have devasted and are on the defensive in| profit but by selling the meat and getting a couple battle. lof pairs of shoes out of the wkin he ought to break Once an assembly, legally chosen by Russians, is es¢ab-|"’°" eee dished, the bloody cause of the “Reds” is done for. Claiming} ‘Tamale Villa, the Mexican Hawk, Is trying to pull to be of the majority, they have controlled during their | comeback. Started to shoot his way into the breeder has paid terrible sway, not by majority rule, but by suppression, |M™* columns again. When the s«potlight turned Kolchak is today the strong man of Russia and has ith ota ja ionic aug hata ee He eink with | in his power to become savior of his people—the man who his troupe of soap dodgers to the hills to double. wiped out the curse of Bolshevism. cross each other for vacation and rest. Now ee, that things are finis on the western front, he's cent war again on the southern exposure, He's real desperate this turn, Latest |report is that he made a@ daring raid on a town and captured @ bath tub. His casualties were heavy, | | Water tank broke while his army was retreating down a railroad track and seven soldiers were soaked |to the skin. During the barage, some of the sober |ones even swallowed the stutff. Villa is figuring on using the bath tub as a torture chamber for | captured prisoners, | | started his two p Now that we have learned to think in terms of bil- | Yions, why not tackle the good roads problem and stop _ this talk about the unemployed? It might be possible to establish Utopia if nations spend money in construction with as much enthu- siasm as they spend it in the business of destruction. the signs point towards a “revival of retigton.” | organizations | within. Jesus accused the Jews of His day of always having stoned the prophets which were sent unto | them, Paul summed up his opinion of the people to whom these messengers of the Almighty were| sent when he declared that the world was not worthy LOUDER, Z SONNY a | Tomorrow | { r 1431, on the Sth of May, Jeanne d'Arc, the Maid of Orleans, was burned at Rowen as 4 rorcerens } On the 30th of May, tn 1484, Charles VITI. of France, when 15 years old, wa» crowned at Rhetms.| In 1640, on the 30th Gay of May, Peter Paci) Rubens, the celebrated Piemish painter, died i On the 20th of May, tn 1654, Queen Christina of} Sweden abdicated the throne tn favor of a cousin And set out on a pilgrimage thru Europe to enjoy a Nfe of freedom. i On the 20th of May, in 1744, Alexander Pope, | the celebrated Engiieh didactic poet, died. | On the 30th of May, in 1778, Voltaire died at Paris. Voltaire, whose given name was Marie Francois} Arouet, bas never been exceeded for versatility of) talent. He was @ great philosopher and a great wit.) The mass of his writings were too episodic to the! period to be of wide interest now, but his epigram: are immortal. brilliant On the 20th of May, 1901, the Hall of Pame for/ great Americans was opened in New York. The| Duilding, erected from funds given by Mins Helen Gould, stands In the grounds of New York uni versity. ‘The names of the candidates for the Hail of Fame are selected by a jury of 100 On May 6, 1868, General John Logan, commander: | Inchief of the Grund Army of the Republic, issued | an order to the organization to observe the s0th of| ¥Ork® have bought 100,000 tons of American coal at prices below those | for whieh English coal was offered.| The Original Pood-Drink Fer AN Ages. May as & Memorial Day in honor of their fallen comrades in arms, FREEING eee RELIGION BEING EXPRESSED | IN TERMS OF MODERN LIFE | al »- — Keen observers of the trend of things tell us that Men are interested in religious themes, but it ts clearly manifest that the subjects discussed and the/ books being read regarding religion are very differ ent from the purely devotional subjects which inter | ested them a decade ago, They are just as devoted as were thore of an earlier day, but the expression of their devotion | has changed. Men tn the street, in hotel lobbies,/ in trains, in the shops and stores are talking about | the vital problems of the day In the terms of religion It would be a mistake for the church to tnaist| that they shall use the terminology which served it purpose for another generation, and that they must have the same kind of spiritual experiences The men of today must be permitted to express their religious aspirations ‘In their own way. They will do so anyway. It is simply @ question whether the church will be broad enough to accept these thoroly consecrated Christian men or whether they shail feel compelled to seek a home elsewhere | While it would be unfortunate for the chron were it to fall at this critical period in its history it would equally disastrous for thowe who are impatient for progress were they to leave the church at this stage. There {* no doubt that those who| would Accomplish the biggest things in behalf of the people can best do them thru the church, even tho they may just now be forced to fight an array of| conservation @yhich at times seems appalling The same Weactionaries are to be found in other and institutions, The democratic form of government within the church makes It easier to fight them here than anywhere else. When men of God appeared in every period of the! church's progress, they met their greatest opposition not from t outside the chureh, but from those of them Luther, Wyckliffe, Knox, Savonarola, and a long! list of others of more modern times, were compelled to withstand the opposition of those whose compre hension of the significance of the Kingdom of God| was exceedingly narrow, Often, as someone has! said, these saints were first os ed and then | nized AMERICAN ENGLISH IS SPREAD BY MOVIES oy —_—— ——— | LONDON, May 2.—American English ts becoming | internation™ thru the motion picture film. Ameri can pictures are more widely circulated thap any| other and captions and subtitles in characteristic | Ameriéan slang “catch on” quickly wher is spoken here and in other lands, A British movie producer who tried Angliclaing the American phrases met vigorous protest from film fans, Onglish He was the arch enemy of hypocriny,| _ | and his satires and personal letters are imperishably AMERICAN COAL SOLD (Speoial to The Star by the N. FE. A) state THE HATERS BY DR. FRANK CKANE (Copyright, 1919, The Bolsheviki may be right. Upton Sin- clair and his “Appeal” may be right. The | ved rioters that marched the streets in | Cleveland the other day and waved red || flags and wound up with a free fight, may | be right. | be right. The apostles of the Soap Box may They who cry “Down with Capi- tal!” and “To hell with the United States!” and “Gott strafe England” and “Cu the Rich” may be right. ture of protest, the army of destroyers and on the disciples of overturning, may be right. | Who knows? We may be all wrong to cling to the in- stitution of marriage, the right of private property, our national boundaries, taxes and courts, besides the ten commandments and the household fetiches which we have been brought up to revere. Perhaps. Maybe in the 25th century all our present | customs, covenants and moralities will be rel@rated to the scrap heap. ne es, the I. W. W. and the Bolsheviki and the Spartacans and the Comrades of the Kevolution may be right. But I shall not join Because they are Haters, it is a matter of taste. I don’t like hating. |Nor Haters. They make me feel crawly. They do not offend my brain. fend my nostrils. I love lovers, with all the world. I never knew of anything of permanent They of- good that hate has ever accomplished. \ | Hate is a destroyer. Love is the creator. Every human being in this world came here because of love. On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise And all the litera- | It’s not so much a matter of principle as | by Frank Crane) | Most of those that suffer and die are victims of hate. , however good any man’s drea.ms schemes may be, I will not join amy m ment to make them come true by hs ite, | No man can make me beli ‘ that | road of hate leads to any kind of ‘hea I propose to follow the road of 1 ove, if it leads to hell. But thither it lead, | For in this world of darkness, ‘the we cannot sec, but the way we ca n-see, The final outcome of any action. is h from haman ken, but the quality’ of we can know. In the spiderweb of the uni verse can tell where any strand leads? But any fool may know if his intent joving or hateful. And J am a fool. Underneatlh ‘the before the complexities of destiny, I I am a fool, So I can do only the safe thitug—fall” on my instincts, which tell me that somehow, sometime, shall even tuate in fare, for me and for all men, .and ‘that h surely brings wretchedness. What little wisdom I have I distrust, | am not so sure. ; | But love is God’s wisdom, the co | needle of Ommiscience in this cloudy ‘ | time, pointing, in sunny days, and in | and stress, pointing the right way. It's easier for an old bachelor to eay that he is | fectly happy than it is for ‘him to prowe it. é | ae | No man ts so absent-minded that he ever pays hi | gus bill the day before it is due. £ | Ea i 4 It is difficult for some men to mean what they By the Rev Charles Stelzle (STAFF WRITER ON RELIGIOUS TOPICS) There is no doubt that mixing with men is a great expertence in training for your life work, but it is also important to know nature and books and God If you depend exclusively upon your knowledge of men, you will unconsciously absorb much of thelr narrowness: and prejudice, and thus look owt upon Kfe thru the eyes of pessimism, and there will develop in you a certain worldly wise attitude which will effectively shut out the sweet est and-purest things in human life, But when you open your mind and heart and allow nature to epeak to you, and read the con- clusions amd experiences of the world’s best writers an found in worthwhile books, and if, principally, you are willing to permit God to rule and direct you, it doesn’t matter what your job may be-—you'll be bigger for it and it will be better for you. Not Men Alone, But Nature and Books ; and God oer r oe, Moses spent 40 years in the back woods as & shepherd, so that he might quietly prepare j own heart and mind for the great task of delivery ing the millions of Ivrwelites from the bondage 6f Egypt é David Ikewise spent many years of his life if solitude tending his father’s flocks on the F sides of Bethlehem, where be “communed” ; nature, and with nature's God, and he became the “sweet singer of Israel"—the composer of th wonderful psalms which even to@ay (heal heart of the world. ‘ Paul, altho splendidly edueated in the tles of his .day, went into solitude for years, so that he might think things thru, fore he ventured to become a preacher, but Preparation Iniped Wim become the greatest sionary in tacred history, Safe TO SWEDISH RAILWAYS | ASK FOR Nourishing Digestible Ne Ceohing STOCKHOLM, May railroads and 29.—Swedish various gas Vee in your Flakes. BBL FOC AR TK a amaatae a | The Original Mataita es y. . @. my Ko | For Infants, lnvatide enaGrowing Children. | Rich Mf, Mla?ved Crash fear! That School Appetite Children, when: they are growi need a bite just home from school and at other odd times. Always keep a box of crisp Snow Flakes Don't ask for crackere, say Snow Your grocer can supply you, THULE to HEARTS ont Maited oe ee OTHERS are IMITATIONS. pantry, handy for them.