The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 26, 1919, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1919. ° On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise per yoar, by carrier, o ” SEASONABLE When a Man Tries to Be Sensible. —By McKee. OCCUPATIONS hie * Clearing Up a Thousand Points }..:-. |Comrades, there where the cross 1G im SuCM A | { streams flow Costume! jIn the symbol of Life, with ite Hold this printed page close to your eyes—so close that your eyelashes touch the paper. | Caer ane “er You are unable to distinguish the letters clearly. The sense of the printed page is lost in confu- * Bays the crossing cop And the long line halts, The en-| Your eyes are too close. en The eyes of the whole world have been too close to the world war to really see clearly what And all of us divers, ewéar and went on. a nweat ‘. | ‘or jes are meny and moments We are just beginning to adjust ourselves to the proper perspective. ae Be ie As the months and years go on, the mysterious confusion of the whole gigantic struggle will ap- — )"°r *!! of ‘he things we have to ao pear clearer. PS Today the allied world does not know what went on in Germany during the war. loo des ca the gle te The men who directed the colossal effort to dominate the world have not yet spoken. RE FR a That is why the publishers of every civilized country eagerly wait for Lundendorff, the master- J} passed | [ee iad tees Teh wakbeeae teeon sha | mind behind Germany's war program, to complete his history of the German side of the war. And we ene 8 Oey fellew whe] pap eg dena Sere FOR You voy Ludendorff went to Sweden, with his mass of records and large staff of assistants, to give nes Dri world the German side of the story—a contribution to history. Comareten, Deets Kel gare. re Ludendorff has completed his book. It isnot a defense or a justification for Germany's crimes. and "Stop." is a revelation of what went on in Germany—an estimate of where credit and blame belong, by em outstanding German figure in the conflict. : ? a When the sign sare "Go" | Ludendorff’s book will permit the world to see beyond the German curtain, and into the minds with speed ‘of the men who plotted the conflict of might against right. We drive to the devil and take 1 heed It will clear up a thousand points that have never been established. Of a friend's distrése or @ neighbo It will tell when and why Germany made ruthless decisions—it will bare the true weakness of oo enemy during the days when the allies were fearful lest Hun hordes break thru the Western line | Tin “Stop” Thee id strike with blood and iron in England—even in America. ; PET ote Bois W) Ly Ludendorff’s book will give the world valuable information. ea V4 JU No man or woman who would be well informed can afford to neglect reading the Ludendorff Se che Gemeente ae Fortunately, it will be given to the public by the daily newspapers in every civilized country lAnd the line streams by or them {(w AAHAN, wy \| | yi Sn Sy SX ~—— © A. Aare NI, sul WH endless flow Boe see vin) / apve As the cop on the corner flashes i Go.” i} ne ’ : Ralph Waldo Emerson What's Necessary to a Happy Marriage? Riepietcicssipstaciecnppenioiosea BY DR. FRANK CRANE American had more influence upon the thought of (Copyright, 1919, by Frank Crane) than Ralph Waldo Emerson. | - - writings have been like a vast quarry into which} “What are your ideas regarding marriage grow with the years, and will automatically Writers have gone, channeled out blocks of thought| between persons of different religions?” | solve all problems. j ped them by words best suited to their particular|writes a lady. “I am a Jewess; a young | , Third, Decency. Which means, you must| 5 e 3 i |man of Catholic faith is in love with me, Le Papa ein ccontine oH om wat | ~y od oma arpaningd —— way into/and I with him. We have both very broad| And you are not living on a desert istand,| em literature ithe day. |views on religion, and would be willing to| but in a highly complex civilization. But} J tist : ; ‘ js |Sacrifice our religious ideas to a very great complex as it may be, it has a few simple, __ gh rol bas og Ment aenthel toteceat {057% if we thought we could be happy | plain requirements. If you do not intend} fitabl knowledge a reading of his complete book after marriage, but we are perplexed.” | to observe them, let marriage alone, and of Life,” is su ted *| Go ahead and marry the boy. If you are | join the parlor Bolsheviks. j arc ap h i fiaite ob ‘ happy, you will commend your own judg-| As for agreement in Opinion, instead of “4 gogo regen e, Poise bt eae: ment and waren, o not, you will blame | being a necessary requirement for a suc-) E A mass *\it on me. ut ave so much on my | cessful marriage, it is more apt to be the! is erg © conscience now that a little more will make | contrary. nius works in sport. no matter. | A couple is usually happier when they ture is upheld by antagonism. A happy marriage does not depend on | hold differing views, provided they have) he sist on yourself; never imitate. unity of opinion, either as to religion, poli- | sense enough not to try to regulate and eats In i torage wht makes everything fit for use. | ties, art, society or anything else. change each other. It is much more inter-| ll healthy things are sweet-tempered. It depends on three things, which lie | esting to live with one who sees things lo object really interests us but men. deeper than the above noted: on Love,|from a different point of view than with! 6 d 7 best fruit of travel is conversation. | Loyalty and Decency. | one who merely echoes your own opinions. | Oo oar e your work and you shall reinforce yourself. | First, Love. Because Love-means Illusion,| If you are hospitable-minded, fair and : adhd from the forces we overcome. |the Rainbow, Colored Glasses, the Ideal.and | keep the Golden Rule, you will have no) : Th properly no history ; it is all biography. jthe Dream, Human beings are so consti- | trouble with divergent views on Church or| Live stock is a seasonal crop=like cereals and grains. r ; ‘ne! In every \oork Tale ve ease | Girces eueeticae tn ye Taste 2 gronglh oboe f ae ones if you are vain, proud, tyran- Gos * * : Y He 2 ‘ You must love, or you cannot endure the | nical, constitutionally selfish, ‘pig-headed and It is‘’ ripe” and is marketed in larger quantities in Strom the house na tothe iabitan "or yas wil lonthes"'So be very ure abut | hsb docs no ogres without Se one tine and'a neteral Suuitage oh coaiben 7” mkind divides itself into two classes—benefactors | plete proof he will make you a good husband, | The freer the minds, the surer the con-| During the time of oversupply Swift & Company Fasters: the seccod a oe fret a handful, a out ¢ he cannot it is proof enough he will | viction that you will be understood and! places some of the meat in cold storage, against the rost that kills the harvest of a year saves the |not do. j | loved, no matter what you think or say, and sea: i ofa pert by eee ers, or ae pace nga Loyalty.’ There is no difficulty j the mdfe complete the sense of trestlon, eason of short production. pnere is a lency in things to rig! emselves, and |in this. Love is naturally loyal, if you are | why, the happier the marriage. is i Sten 3 ion’ 4 ir and revolution or bankruptcy that shatters a rotten | hones . If you give it a chance, love will | (Maybe,) Aes Phe eee This is a necessity in order that the nation 8 ration n allows things to take a new and natural order, § 9 | ——————__—____>_E of meat-—58,000,000 pounds every day in the year— ‘ars, fires, plagues, break up immovable routine, clear) | y SEER Cae ae may be forthcoming as the consumer requires it. ¥ ound of rotten races and dens of distemper,‘and open i F field for new men. Stale mabaeceblsandll HES Dollar a Day | Beare? cneeaietbd This is not hoarding, not price manipulation, not . ; ee Old Hindenburg has one int 1 ; et a : ark i Morrison says there will be a sort of revolution if | ion fealle, weve igh We ere 4 bap yi age Mong nf hed ante i} sete Pag Me ghlen Pes i sic et control. It is mere common sense. leaders are unable to control the workers. Salaried | atraia he might go into the movies.|1°% “4 ‘ey dare to offer such : he Colon) having no organization, are remarkably successful sae | AO aa Wee eee United States Bureau of Markets’ figures of stocks To men who had sacrificed home, |‘ led in Virgini nd returned controlling themselves. |The, man who makes a chair] yo Rahat to England for supplies to tide the of frozen and cured meats July 1 are being used as a ia ere:. 7 To honor and antwer their countey'e|cmaniste, over, the eoming winter basis for Department of Justice it perp many }| Julius Barnes. hea |no trace was found of the settlers An Uocisi f the Nobili 1 pon pce Page oaew gM | Sponyenen Keenan ye cities. w hen properly analyzed, bas: on Swift & prising o: e Nobility gd the feeds. 1. Onden Armeun nips tee famine or Nad been extecminates by Company's stocks, these figures show: meat is the cheapest. Willlam Tell-|Meady to do, yes, die, for the right,|{h Indians wis ‘ Hin, « milk is the ch Next!/ 1 ow bine s dae o On the 27th of A t, in 1630,! i i And now the 12 ladies in waiting to Queen Mary of 6 ’" ™* & 'T* fhenpest: Nex) Then a cote te suk chute War Wkddea” 1h 62 per cent (approximate) is pork and beef cuts, etc., nd have won a strike for a-100 per cent increase in| mut, a» the waiter remarked, “My|Who turned American Charlestown and Boston; the pastor cured and in process of curing. It takes 30 to 90 eeeise allowance! customers are in time but they slave sp mie | wae to receive w salary of $200 4 days in pickle or salt to complete the curing process. | They didn’t call it a strike. Dear me, no! They re-|*e*P me waiting.” ‘ 7 1""in. 1086, onthe a7th ¢ ust, | i i that’s what they did. The queen had to coax them| 614 man Ludendortt vosatvba PELE slack Cecheatvee: terteen ie jartision Gi casliisditen! wen tenes _ 12 per cent is frozen pork, of eager ag vo a ck by pening their appropriation for court clothing from | $175,000 for his book from an Amer-| brand |by “which the Dutch colonists of quarters is to be cured in the next few months. 500 to 000 a year. jean publisher. The pen is mightier| Those traitors deep who, for love ot | N°™,, Amsterdam became subjects é et _ What a lady of waiting does, besides wear impressive |**® ‘* *word | gold, ne ‘Due rien hwattarhs otal ‘ al See we = 2 — pe pa vi ments and wait, we cannot say. But she is importan te ree Tepeve Mone ELS. NGverY: BONG. |e aawiid: thet.” to poseedal fate ‘our-fifths of a pound per capita, and much of it A ’ y 3 portant, | ithe pike of: t i taf Cw. {and all i them to p e their itl h 1 ‘it would be hard to go out and hire strikebreakers| 5; 55 4'hunarea in four dune Soenk| pecaniaib lait Jontates qs free eltizens and enjoy| will have to go to supply European needs, en ladies in waiting walk out, Onl essed and\wriie or telephone to your meat|® : \their own modes of worship and : ‘titled persons can fill the job, Bere ae Guiles ali totes ber cccison ne The Old Gardener Says jo" government eee 19 per cent is frozen beef and lamb, and miscellaneous additional burden of $18,000 a year has been added oR ie ns aaear sir tuto @YS {| On the 27th of August, in 3776, meats, part of which is owned by the Government : : , A 3 | > "ithe Battle of Long Isiang a :. ‘ the king’s private purse, which, of course, the king|, 4!!,a*rsements have been made| pon't forget the necemity of pice The atta eam font Pa rand was intended chiefly for overseas shipment. If f ‘ apg for Char haplin to play Ha | > : : ri t earn by any toil. The purse is his reward for|we nopo somebody in the cont hicg| KeePing the potatoes sprayed. it i4|the land, that is now Brooklyn. ‘The this were all diverted to domestic trade channels it a king, and, sizing the whole thing up, he Mas it/nim with a pie at this season that late bdight often| Briti#h, with @ force of 20,000 un 1, H U . No sensible man would aspire to be king of Eng-| And an iron ple, at that, gets inits deadly work, cutting! 2°", General Howe, had come with — would be only 21% Ibs. per capita—a 5 days’ supply. or king of any place, for the fun of it. | tae | asa its Viele tah WuneetaloltVl aoneel Waghnceie ne rel 100% pyalty in England is safe from the perils which have 47, THIS RATE YOU'D SOON be Drag in command | le monarchies nervous of late. A king and a queen and| MV! YOUR YARD FILLED jlarwe ‘extent, “The Jonger you canjof a force o crude militia From this it will be seen. that “meats in storage” a is T WITH GOAT keep the tops green and growing, n, was \hopelessly outnumbered ‘ A - in waiting are merely historical luxuries of 1 democ-| ror sac™one Young cow, sives|the etter will be your crop. of| DY, the tained army of Rritian and | represent unfinished goods in process of curing Bene will no. dente pon Pes ost rer pg eee (vs gh tage tate malate a ‘Of course the Drover apray| Amertoans Hot BN tae ane and the working. supply necessary to assure the s Bordeaux mixture, altho Ore AF the costume strike. : sland (N, ¥.) Star lie there ‘are stil Duge on tne pinag| wounded and 100 prisoners, The consumer a steady flow of finished product. 4 owe amounted to 63 4 4 jyou will need arsenate of lead, too.| 271 wounded, and 22 prison “ gee A Havana (Iil.) farmer had to|The combination of Bordeaux and| Ghd | Huh! If Article X doesn’t grant Congrese the _|P8¥ $525 for a pair of shoes for|jead is to be found in days after the battle, under coyer i i fd 4 one of his children because, he was Boog Saget at several COm|of a fog in the early mornin p V to ie her trig (s igteih it’s a safe bet that | yoia, teather wan high ene |iuetoial efrererations on the marl washington effected a master ne W: om an 9 ° le 0 gress would take the right anyway. day ho took a calf skin to market] for’ both the peste und the biient. | {reat with his entire army, He and received only $3.25 for it be crossed the Bast river and led his Seattle Local Branch, 201-11 Jackson Street * cause, he was told, leathe: : ee * 4 now >, At any rate, posterity can tell us how the league 5 Sheree we — —— He ahalen pwaeaeienh eee J. L. Yocum, Manager. will work. And a lot of senators show a disposition to \«wnene’er a thing you try to buy BRING THIS ‘AD B)ington Heights, above the Harlen for that testimony. You find the price is very high; Wil repel any “Amerl- Il river,’ ‘The British occupied New| ice heattidlemrn But when a thing you try to sell ter Now add $2 York and kept it until the end of! - fou find the market's gone to— jamaged, for th 1 Panhisieton's veteekih We are not all agreed about what to do with the pieces,” Good until Aug. 96. eur Toueised Ge ta Asaiiecdl 0 h | American ty, wat we are all agreed that there is no sense in eects i Siobhe: oro ? We pay saan forg|army from extinction | fs ‘ Jermapy age another taeda f amonds and Bl ig nothing. . |ways General Von Bernhard! Meb- zd Liberty Honds, | ahi eee ie But she'll bea. bit. more\tards Ww Alas Why ts it that the supply . There ia 0 Bolsheviam in Mexico, but they have aw \rui in. picking the. co LUCIO'S JEWELRY © |of cheap food always runs out in} es makes a [ai substitute. 5 tabin. Plcking the countries shi Bats wBCOND AVENUE Rinlute Bap ®DOUt 10 minutes, while the profit | “eo om er always has plenty oa hand? } <

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