The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1917, Page 1

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OV’ Monday, the direct appeal for money for the Red Cross will be made. Seattle is asked to raise $300,000 in one week, so that medical and surgical aid may be furnished on the field of battle--to whom? Your own brother, or son, perhaps. Your own sweetheart, or next of kin! Think of that, folks, when you dig into your pockets next week---AND DIG DEEP. SESSSSIDERESISISI LETTS T La asses sss sess y 33303333 MARCH MONDAY The Se attle Star i Every Seattle man who registered for select service Is needed to help in the appeal for Red | GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY NEWSPAPE Cross preparedness funds by marching in Monday night’s pageant. Meet 8:30 p, m, at First ave. and sssttsbasssssssotisssstosts isso ssissit ssbb ss sists ssi ttssistes ies, J N LAST EDITIO Better qreat open the ng in Sunday r Red ¢ attending Volunteer 5 Weather “Partly and Sunday R IN PACIFIC NORTHWES H ‘ ONE CENT Blanchard st VOLUME 19 eve er KAISER'S PEACE TERMS GIVEN SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1917 nyw At Echo Zahl Goes Swimming —_— ee’ Inspires Some Summertime Thoughts NO INDEMNITY FOR BELGIUM, THE KEYNOT 6, al THE 71ST DAY OF OUR WAR | and may b the famous It mark we thought the deed worthy of a medal It is such mingled courage and mercy in youth brave, true men. Michael will he edit to , hum! that makes our mind on serious things like war, America Smile, and the world smiles on you this sort Mope, and you mope alone Our swimming Weatherr that Saturday far, changed his partly cloudy and cooler today Well, we'll be thankful, the “cooler” part of it, much to ice cream sodas and thor Cleanup days are here Don’t stop at cleaning up your lawns and cellars. Get the rubbish out of your minds, and the hatred out of your hearts. These are serious days, and they require effective think ing and effective faith Minds full of rubbish can’t think straight hatred can’t feel straight. Give them a good airing and inspect them for the things | you can better do without CLEAN UP! Jackson Over the son found his got hot, and. shoulder. This case will be watched with eager interest by a large and steadily increasing army of flat dwellers everywhere Remonstrances with janitors are of little avail when that individual’s mind has turned from firing to fly screens Shooting the landlord is an extreme application of the ory, and, of course properly shocked THE SAME, WE HOPI PEPPERY MR pans 2 WILL BE TRIED BEFORE JUDGE WHO 18 a hf, of The St it’s a job at HIMSELF A FLAT DWELLER he ught of And he won ‘28° aie gale in downtown Another summertime item gleaned SAW TAEMIN perusal of the exchanges ming WIMMI Michael Ravolefe, 10 years old, lives in East Hartford, she did Conn. ( Little Michael saw a nging by a leg high in a tree. .The bird bad carried a piece of string up to use in nest building, Wind had tangled it about one leg, and for two days the little harbinger of spring had been held a sway ing prisoner Michael climbed, 75 and released the robin This was a great thing a little boy to do It is good to read that the president of the Humane society * * Carlisle lives in Chicago aph wire today too cold downstairs, last night of the year thus and decided it would be and over Sunday the last few Salisbury, after threatening telex apart & for comfort, whereupor shot the landlord in uld be the hottest day news Jack the mind today & Hearts full of for fter days, nyway thru the exchanges this mornin we noticed Evansville, Ind., paper about Howard Rollinson as a new job. He's going to be manager of a n in South Bend, Ind that? Oh, nothing Howard ever Looking am item in an Howard soda founta What ¢ much better pay it by a pleasant Howard is that of knowing more other man in town. This reputation got to a man who owns a string of soda THE A ” Publication of the approximate terms on which the kaiser ig ready to make peace by the socialists attending the Ger- manized Stockholm conference was the most important event of the 71st day since we entered the war for our freedom. Those terms fall far short of what will be considered by this nation or our allies From the initial item, refusing to indemnify Belgium for what that little nation has suffered, down to the last item in the list, the terms, as outlined, are as preposterous as most of the kaiser’s other arrogant mouth- ings about the war. Gen, Pershing, his social duties in Paris disposed of, lunch. ed with Gen. Petain, commander of the French armies, at the front, and thus actually began his real work of co-operating with the fighting forces or our sister ally In congress, the food bili fight began in the senate and promised to rage with intensity next week. The people are awakening to the need of demanding action if they are to win over the powerful lobby maintained at Washington by the food speculators. In the diplomatic field, England and Japan refused to join the United States in its request for a restoration of peace in China. ar, te r r swim- th women layed except that what got before i SWIMMING ing from our morning 2 His there was uit—and their Evansville. women by reputation given names than any the h Phe pher Jacobs snapped Has she not found the when-it’s-hotter-than-blazes the edit narried and too lengthily upon this pleasant top By Echo Zahl upon pietu Staff robin bh a what-to-do- opinion of f dwell Let her real solutic In the cant of and Howard in. who Crane,” at Fourth worked He noticed came, and the “House Howard as times stepped conversed pleasantly with all was always crowded. offered Howard the into d to He Main, and Two Howard his co Then bi that that or ° he whois 1 better, bigger job. you herself SEATTLE’S GOLD TO FLOW TO RED CROSS TUESDAY makes little ex give a little. The jot will be BY ARTHUR E. MANN : STOCKHOLM, June 16.—What may be considered to approximate the German government's peace terms was outlined here today when the German majority so- cialists gave out their program for peace. The striking points of the plan were: : No indemnity for Belgium—because “it would be difficult to determine which belligerents were responsible for damages on the various fronts and a one-sided liability would merely mask an indemnity.” ab st Return of the German colonies—under the socialist doctrine of no annexations. Would Keep Alsace-Lorraine Retention by Germany of Alsace Lorraine, “because they nine tenths German.” The German socialists outline ikewise insists on political and mil itary independence of ali nations Russia is to agree with her Aus trian “comrades” regarcing the fu ture of Serbia and other Balkan nations. Poland's and Finland's future is to be left to determination of those |Lrovinces themselves Sympathy Gag Overworked To Greece, Ireland, Egypt, Korea, | |'Tripolf and Morocco, the German} <ontraband. No censorship of let- socialists extended “greatest syni-|ters from belligerents and neutrals, pathy’ and socialists in those prin. | No trade war to work for} Full freedom of the No protective tariff. German} No secret diplomacy | Giving out th itline, the Ger- The Sinaloa is heported to be a man socialists urged that the gens eral ist conference declared it was not willing to discuss the ibility for the war unless delegates insisted on man who pected to man who makes a ked to give a lot. / Barrels, too, will be wn} parks and on the streets Friday. If (Continued on page 2) | U.S. SCHOONER IS DAMAGED BY | SUB SHELL FIRE: WASHINGTON, June American ooner Ritter tacked by a ¢ an submarine damaged by shell fire, the stat partment was tho badly from the t not sunk The announceme t department did ne date of the ‘Money is certainly goin hands next week! Six hundred keen, determin: td men and women, aided by Boy Scouts and soldiers, are going to step out and collect | $200,000 in seven days and | to | Fs | } turn it over to the Red Cross. You've heard a lot about Red Cross this last week. You've seen white-clad young women, boys in khaki and sol- diers handing out posters. But no one has asked for money—YET. That's because da armament” except measures and for for a “police ybitration and for defensive rhort enlistment ermy.” There should be an international decision on all war-provoking dis cussions. Listing their suggestions for fu- ture international law, the Ger- mi would require ‘No exportation of munitions by neutrals No prizes to be taken at sea. No merchantmen to be armed Canals, straits and sea routes to € ternationalized Food and clothing not to be held all this prelim-| was designed to} neces a noble 16. The Tuesday was at picked Arcade scatter starts early hundred drive morning. Three men strike out from tailing headquarters and tery way in teams. ify Lists the shells ip was sha boat's gun, the big fel i u equipped atistics to know contribut 9,000. n made or Bradst ipbuilders i anes state Pith en whether thonid be seas. sila: Aaah attack or the locat 000 or $ the SCHOONER !S TORPEDOED ELIZA HN. J., dune 16.—A cablegram announcing the te ing of the Anna R. Heidritter our-masted sailing schooner with tiling, reached here toda was 1 off Gibraltar ed sinking b of nths Germar io r If the the originally and then to Fr returned to e annexatio r pe: international bankers soc oade now awee would After | mans would PERSHING AT FRONT |Goes to Headquarters to Visit Gen. Petain BY W. S, FORREST PARIS, June 16.—By arising at an early hour this morning and attacking a huge pile of || letters with relays of stenog raphers, Maj. Gen. Pershing cleaned up his pressing busi respon the entente this ttac fro! appearance yatrols which ar J tin | British jea | With her crew into port | at the fe bufldi or final ir eet t re the French towed 1 have itrnetions These tactics will be contint four days | TOKIO. Then, Friday morning, 300 Red| Cross uniformed women, divided into precinct teams, and accom and khaki 1 soon be June 16.—The Japanese ver Sakki has been tor in the Mediterranean, it cially announced here today officers and 54 men perish remainder reached port in sa’ Love’s Young Dream stea Center picture shows stern of the the middle the speed Australian crawl stroke, At the the board upright beside her, At the surf-board while traveling 20 shown standing on photograph taken hour in the wake left she is the right miles an Miss Zahl approaching the float swimming the which towed her surf. a She is holdi Washington, showing Miss Zahl balancing on the ! he | in of speed boat of Lal boat a , Hotel Crillon is decorated with pic- of famous battles, and the ndows themselves overlook the istoric Place de La Concorde. Pershing’s two-day ceremonial program concluded with an im- scene at the tomb of La are to start ires campaign to give! diseased Mme which Everybody is The A ES, of the athe | pressive ADVERTISING MANAGER'S DAILY TALK Rudely Shattered by © Two German Officers Hele f There are many things} Coming up during the com-} ig week for the amuse- / public. Full n in today’s The excur- for one um the- under man- agement Eugene Levy and all the motion picture houses have fine programs, Mission Coliseum . Colonial Class A Strand Uberty Semmer Rer Orpheum experienced in Mine Valesk « his is another story of what Red Cross when the war began, ax told to M the Seattle iri whe w Kadler blames able atrocith went wrong By Mabel Abbott Orph of Jeanne it 1 cattle um, when of f taken by 1914 be wa had tabl tabli tell the hed Red enough beds, bedding, to the that poured in upon the the friendly uddenly uffering in food thousands of hastily ¢ re were neither nurses bodie She bandag medicines nor care for hattered hell-torn the of the into day wh to them a 1 ad told, too, treet Charleroi, as homelike a treets of Seattle are to u change unfamiliar death and avenues of mitrailleuse It Look in AM ser, part a Jear wa the Belgian maid whom the English consul, Harry Le Fanu, and his wife, left in their in Charleroi when they fled injunctions to guard the 16 he told me the stor where Jeanne; and at last | was able to |realize that Charleroi and Seattle lare in the same world; fo Dat |tle between duty and desire, be-| house tween loyalty and subtle tempta with en THE FASTEST GROWING PAPER IN THE NORTHWEST creed to sleep in the hou Jeanne was to take care of them and the cats she promised faithful th loyal nature monsieur and madame. moment, after they hiding the they had Jeanne knelt a She tion Eve spare had gone, she clothing and left behind h onl what the ore--and hikying thelr valuables in the gat the coal bin, and wherever she Id think of a place. She moved hiding wa the devo. f to the in spent in bele they} der the inother, the inter ung place to ing place costume nu the best ceremony or madame’s best ostrich plume. Her responsibility al ways on her mind Hides, Then Rescues Cats ; too Ruarded like a dragon, — carrying spitting and. scratching that seemed less likely to burned, and when, by the blind war time, the consul’'s (Continued on page 3) Hot Spell ty-five in aturda \ was she ros them house he toa chance of Broken the shade th 10-degree rise for the aftern pell is broken, “Monday will at noon eath er man scheduled ‘The bury was ” says Sali be cooler There's no rain Seattle, be says, booked for ‘Girl Writer Conquers Bucking Surf Board on Lake Washington By Echo June Zahl jborhood had to be away at wor! I've Ah! Say And I've looking Tw an id, care and I s living ain when T felt th been swimming got the battle of like a str in my Ver water ¢ dun swharry fe ingly, it seen tival e w out into the try a surf want a regu kingdom But my A raucous v shore Reluctantly I turned and crawled folk board, *-* s short-lived called me I told you yesterday how I went |the rounds of the downtown store Jlooking for a bathing suit, and how |they were all lacy and. frill nd how 1 determined finally to dig my rs sult trom my trunk, and show you what |REAL swimming, sult is } And I did, And I Jat Lesehi park, in I ton Jake too P Say Mr. Carman, “you're much strength swim there, if you're this surf board board riding ort in captivity It re strength 1 said wasting too ming Thi vreatest out last tround to ride out surf is t on iand bit ” went ake W in—out ishing } only a skill when you're along picture’ And Stephen ( the Leschi boat house, got ¢ Neuss, and Charlie's speed nd Charl surf board |And the water was fin audience was more than coul«| have been expected, considering that some of the men in the neigh ‘ ? (Continued on page 4) Why He Got Th New sui hirts ir al de and blazing colors were plained by one who sells them urday “They are bought,” he s |men who want their shirts match the wall paper at home,” Arman, who o at Shirt boat for And mer ex me Sat the ness at headquarters early and motored to the headquarters of Gen. Petain, generalissimo of | the French army. He was to lunch there and expected to re- turn to Paris later in the day. A number of Pershing’s staff officers accompanied him An hou jusnal Paris l¢ ut by the Pershing was The round qnets and the Am bright lia as expeditio! He h breakfast at | shead of almost that hostelry and \< nee to his office |the Rue Constentin, There, he |jumped into an enormous accumu lation of correspondence. | Wants to Go to Front The first Yershing taff offi fore the time that the office even caretaker, Maj on the job today is wept Gen receptions, b orm. anc 1 task that American » rea he forces d of the ary typically the Hotel every one else in motored off at headquarters in American Crillon the an for hi and short, snaj out of calling rush wa beg gain to his ste int 1 and an en made almost bac ogre of dete work ttacked it and enthu headqua: ter with activity \ with that ling Visits La Fayette’s Grave Pershing lives in an atmos oay f usr the hum Gen. | Payette, where he placed a wreath simple stone slab marking of America’s friend. JAPAN REFUSES TOHELP U, S, ~ QUIET CHINESE WASHINGTON, Ju turned down America’s request that e join the Uni States in her recent a to China to come pose her internal differences. This fact developed officially today, on sceipt. of advices showing that reat Britain had spurned the Amerjcan tion for joint ac tion in the Chin situation, n vice sug | The Greatest Love Story| j “dane Eyre” || By Charlotte Bronte In Monday’s Seattle Star phere of battle, His room in YT

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