The warm ionized component of the interstellar medium, revealed primarily by its faint line emission al optical wavelengths, must be a source of continuum and line emission in other spectral bands, potentially impacting the interpretation of background observations at radio, infrared, ultraviolet, and even gamma-ray wavelengths. From the intensities of the optical lines it is possible to predict the intensities at high Galactic latitudes of the associated [N II] 122 and 205-mu-m, [C II] 158-mu-m, and [Ar II] 7.0-mu-m infrared lines, and the hydrogen two-photon and free-free continuum at far-ultraviolet and millimeter wavelengths, respectively. The optical observations predict, for example, the following average intensities at latitude b: I(N II 205-mu-m) almost-equal-to 6.5 csc \b\ ergs cm-2 s-1 sr-1; I(2-gamma at 1600 angstrom) almost-equal-to 70 csc \b\ photons cm-2 s-1 sr-1 angstrom-1, and I(ff at 9.5 mm) almost-equal-to 6.5 csc \b\ mu-K. These emissions will account for all the diffuse [N II] far-infra-red line emission at high latitudes, almost-equal-to 20% of the observed far-ultraviolet continuum, and approximately 10(-6) to 10(-5) of the microwave background near the peak of the 2.73 K blackbody spectrum, where the free-free intensity is comparable to that of the synchrotron and thermal dust emission. The angular structure in the H-alpha background implies the existence of high-latitude emission features with intensities about a factor of 2 above these average values.