The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 22, 1917, Page 4

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ee oa en ee en ee * a3 STAR—SATURDAY, DEC. 22, 1917. PAGE 4 The United States of the World | Is Vision War May Make a Fa BY N. D. COCHKAN | Democracy wan coming along too, but an organization of the world into a Speci Jorre: fast to #uit the kings and kaisers,|a league of nations, universal din at ' armament, freedom of the seas, the THE SEATTLE STAR niom St. AUR OF NEWSPAPHRS 1307 Seventh Avi KIPPS NORTHWEST Le Telegraph News Service ef the United Preax Association iti * Matter Entered at Seattle, Wash. Poatoffice as Second-Cl WASHINGTON, Dec ‘The| Something had to be dane to save i * i, | autoorac the kaiser did it. | right of all peoples to self-govern- By mail, out of cy, 0 < m0 2.00 appeal of Finkand for recognition of | Autocracy—and es Mi, out of city, 40. $1.15; @ montha, 62.0 her independence under a constitu:| AND RIGHT NOW THERM Aitm| ment first as the necessary step 0 |NO MORE DAN ROUS ENI¢ | international government. tional government, together with the determination of Poland, Ukraine,| MISS OF GI Siberia, Crimea and Coucasia to ne |THAN THI LIGNIN code trot . may indicate TROTSKYS, WHO TH Siceate conrnmeeition of the ‘creat | ARE INTERNATIONALISTS was leading up to bis ae Ttussian empire into the United| Fight here in the United States the expansion.of the Monroe : | States of Munuta the worst foes of real democracy are | trine, the spread of democracy unt! In other words, the old state that, the Prussianized socialints and pac: | it becomes universal, Then lasting Daity by o Main 600, Prt: . " MOCKACY Wilson's Mexican policy was & b part of his South American, or rath- er Pan-American polley, apd that | ifists, who preach international peace will be possible was built from a cear down may be . r tis tale | eces and - brotherhood and help the kaiser| This war has proven that ther ponies ae. seceacrlact teed 3" can be no internationale .of the yeople ui " \" ‘the von of the United States of ‘The courne of the American Feder. | working class under autocratic gov | America {a before the eyes of the | *tion of Labor in toward internation: | ernment. Competition, oF hg? 3, world. If we were organised ae| Siam of the working class, while| sential to the king business Aeaes Warese ‘ts 4. With numerous | te course of the American socialist | what it thrives on. But it wou independent kingdoms tnatoad of 48) P@rty is right the other way | in with domocreey re Gompers evidently has clearer vis Real Ingne | unionized states cooperating under. than any of the Hillquite or| ‘This te the real issue in the War. one federal government, we might iu 1 4 er M Joubted . ent Other issues are temporary. have as perfect and warlike hell right | Bereera, And und ve no Pan poe democracy wins, then internatto herein America a» they have over! of the international leaders, Under |isin wins, and the brotherhood his leadership, the new state is rap-|man triumph» On the other hand, if the warring iaiy organizing in this country, and| And that’s why it is necessary that staton of Kurope were organized 4% ne is pointing the way for others.|the last ounce of strength of the the United States of Burope, with jis is the real dream of internation: | American republle, if need be, must j|Kovernment “of the people. by the aie —the dream has @ chance to| be thrown into this war on the side people and for the people.” there come true of world democracy against autoc- might be the same peace permanent Not political internationaliam first, | racy. ly over there as there is here pov santana ————__—— Her Terrible Loss The kaiser’s man, Chancellor Hertling, wants this kind of a peace: “Not a self-denial peace, not a peace or conquest, but @ peace which contains the guarantee of permanence and of a competition between the European nations in the ser-| Vice of kultur and humanity, on the basis of mutual respect |! and mutual confidence.” | That any part of German autocr Buch a peace possible shows that Germany does not yet understand the war and its irremediable effects j Mutual respect and confidence are not matters over} Wilson has the clea cy can even think Holding With Club Fo If Austria Hungary were the f} ° United States of Something-or Other FOOD Hi Editor's Mail with the Germar Magyar which i i TT Cxechoslovaks, South Slava, PPP PAPAL PPP AS nations can sit down and make bargains. The hu- Little Russians, Ff nd} ‘The occupation we follow datens| WOULD LIKE LETTERS ™man brains do not exist which can restore Germany's loss | Italians separately organized, and) mines to a considerable extent the| qajtor The Star: If you will be jthen ubsequently organized punt of 1004) ind enough to let the Seattle rend- im respect and confidence of the nations, for respect and Junited states, the different peo we need : can neither be forced nor secured by bargain. could get along together much bet Generally epeak-|¢rs of The Star know that ‘= 3 Germany is in a class with the notoriously bad hotel, pecmetbaggelivegdiappecedt niga! SS ruccotel commune © pane new tole bad woman, bad dog, bad actor, and all the sacrifice she |ing to hold them together with a does not need go lace many Seattle girls who will be might be willing to make at the peace table cannot lift her wre arring Balkan governments ee a o ory y sacs eg to oom tn { of it, were organized as the United Bt | street car cond da store pcr 7 . Alas! at the height of her power, culture, progress —— ————— m——— | Mitocrutio rulare cvertoaa.” their| ocd on crocs tosh ae a taachieaats | Mate, SU Tet Tue ‘and influence for good, Germany has branded herself with| Britains War Aims S |shance of ‘getting. along together | or an iron worker, oF a hard working | Que" Camp Lewin, Wash ‘the barbarism, treachery, ferocity and vileness of the Hun,| rains War S$ OamMe without manding armice would be| farmer, an athlete or mechanic | ‘and Hun she will remain long after peace dawns upon a ° Bl | And finally there would be posst y tools or to swing @ sledge ‘civilization that she has brutally ravished and betrayed. aS U. Dy DAYS riters es, |e ooae eaten es eet eee ee aden DEPOSITS he hi é . ne Work fo inte re are, of course, different peo Peace may give Germany much. It will not be able to ° | national navy to patrol the seas and | ple of ‘aon the same size and in this bank are er the respect confidence of other oples if the t i} Ma Aft W, keep them free for all, and one in-| physical make-up, some of whom are » dosay peop Cae Ge oe Pictures OP DP cin Sy" Sn interactions | mail enterss ers oe stom ses GUARANTEED nt rulers continue in control. to preserve the international | hearty or heavy eaters, Roth classes the BY LOWE have the military pfficials MELLETT [ritorial boundaries is held by Great, f ieeteneie Maamaatind from the et not United Pr respondent . jem for decision | Peace. neem to get along nicely as far as? " iueis Wal Gousets over to talk to tre LONDON, Dec, %2—Great | of the international peace bo@y—| But the first empential, the abso-| weight, strength and energy are con at 'y’ army? A READER Britain is in full, accord with st with adherence to President Wil-|lute fundamental, fs that ALL cerned BY ae ‘ Seu ies a President Wilson's outline of war | son's principle of lines of nations to|ernments be governments of THE| In the former clasn, the light eat A street car stops near one of Seattle's great shiP-) 1 sey pinep JOHN pos Mims that the fight of the world's | be drawn on the tasle of nationality | PEOPLE ers, there is some phyxical or di . ” HOME ees Sn ay Pa A of the peoples thereof, It ts felt al No Fundamental Difference gestive or assimilative peculiarity by 4 ‘ oat or ward realization of | selfish the Palkan countries could never| ‘Phere is no fundamental differ-| which a large proportion of the en o] "4 Be Rec forme 1 i ‘oo! ‘ee PD v The men pile aboard, after a day’s work. eee ern fh we sires. come to 4 agreement among them-|ence between the working class of|ergy and heat furnished by food is TRUST & SAVINGS Two of them sit in front of you, and start a conversa-| fen frees ee rene OF Aue | irttain seeks no territorial exten: | selves . jone country and the working class| made available for body uses for the city saya that if ny parson MOM except that which an interna An actual of Italin Irrede@ta is/of any other country, Labor lead-| Piet should vary in hot or cold BANK D it » onal peace conference agrees ia by Britain including |ers in all countries—that is, leaders . eather “ke ue Pome »_ |discovers a restaurant keeper over: + weather. In cold weather the body “We worked pretty fast today,” says the pipefitter’s|*sover ® restaurant keaper over: 1 necenmry to future ex wey Trent sean i taination “and “viston-—have needa more heat-producing foods Cqrnen ine ee Ries: a 2 _” as ake Giwa" a6 ote a tative View cannot suppe a} | sensed this fact, and they have aim-| Care must be exc $ so that the end I think ~" get thru with the tanks tomorrow.” |e: the “iow a dn (PEP -nomanp nih pa rar uaa’ ter Gniain amd stiear lah at tesecaneieal Gascon eyutam 14 ‘tet beer’ e other grunts. “ee to state that L territory of this character | Capitaliom has sensed the universe) tein food-meat, e “I didn’t have to do any work,” he says. “We were ' . nd Page ongh “ rowel ck hee net el : peg preoasy | net prompty Gaetan « . mous view n the British vie ° oll, as represented by Standard Oil,| ed, theese may decomp n where nobody knew whether we were doing any work DAYS " aitted to work out her own des: | com enkedt to international orgaa| testinal tract” pa not.” = Of ali the ringing u oe of the Ts ‘ a rig pha imation F any it hasn't gone the full nervousness, insomnia and billous premier in his war aims speech of | ™ ed Cour and Lithuant route. Steel was headed | pe And then they buy papers and read that the speedy INE} yentertay, including the demand of| egarding Belgium, full reparation | direction tixedios yy ee - seattle ike struction of ships will win the war, and that Seattle Testoration and compenmtion for in-| After relinquishment is the policy! We have delayed the game by| HEALTH QUESTIONS rary transaction, and our ous- vaded territories-those which, in ef: | » ‘iehting organization and coopera. L. A. J. anke: “What causes one’s || tomers are accorded every fect, pledged adherence to President | tesy consistent with sound it assume three times her present burden to meet the = naa |tion, and inet | ve sega rer Angie W Fooled Lach insisting On competition | feet to swell? Would heart disease | 1 Sudgment. »s ih set by the government. * senauauen spear oa’ cae ‘eet R meee cause this condition?” _. Men in the shipyards are entitled to good pay. And work out their own aeaunies, were| BY Banker’s Youth |sision, ‘but tre moment the wort|a wéaknes’ of the circalation. It 4% y should give good service. regarded today aa most riking | Who'd Wooed Her|"™ plangse tate war, they became | would not necessarily be due to heart | saa eae a : ge aati sation ¢ ve putting En, nm | nation eon the Prunsian kaiser | dixease. + a But their individual responsibility is far greater than 4 able t a *tarted this war on democracy fer Accounts Subject to Check Are ‘that—because the last ship on the seas may win the war utline of | Great that’s what tt le—the German #ocia Now that Chief of Police Warren Cordially Invited. yw is . vom various higt ints lost thelr vision of international-|has shifted his cohorts about and —_ The fellow who loafs is a slacker. i ra jeans’ bashes: Srecean seees| canta ea ts era tine toe ee : of Ens ready to be brutaliged and murder| those who are left are beginning to|{ Peoples Savings Bank their clase comrade of other nation | admit out loud’ that he is surely || sBCOND AVE. AND PIKE ST. ulitien, some officer 9 licy Not After Territory While the German colonies garded as returnath the paace ence mui the future security of the Britiah ur jon of South Africa, yet Piritain actu ally ts not desirous of further terrt-| TYRO, Mias., Dec. 22—Angie Lyon, tory there. the age coquette, kept a dicta-| She demands only the elimination | concealed behind her par lof the standing menace of German|\or sofa. When suitors knelt to pro-| military outposts. |pome, their knees pressed a button, |p} ftarting the machine. She recorded || | their avowais in a acrap-book, which sold to an Eastern publisher, But When Fire Threatens : Governor Lister expressed the opinion, not long ago, ‘that 90 per cent of the I. W. W. are all right, but the other 10 per cent should be in jail. Governor Lister has had investigators busy. He probably knows what he is talking about. e Because 10 per cent of the I. W. W. are criminal in their tactics, Uncle Sam and the police must take such | @rastic steps as raiding their Seattle headquarters, arrest-} ats ing leaders found to be obstructing the government pro- ~ gram, and confiscating pro-enemy propaganda. Dear 2 ‘But this is un-American!” the 90 per cent may pro- e «6 | pearented “Saving Thru the Universal—It’s the Way to Be | Successful.” SPORTS th RUSSIA? pay the} 1 readjustmenta are neces. | on the old home, foreclosed | only for the purpore of DY the village banker's son, one of| « future sec the suitors DID YOU KNow? } To Divide Aleace-Lorraine | a ? The Wahoo river, In Bonkvt Regarding Alsace-Lo e. Divoree Proctor Lonergan says a . & ‘ oe It is not un-American. flows no, fast the native engineers |land holds tf the Cermaniee! portion [night watchman {san inefficient per (f| Are the two Important Features for the Saver to consider. Our Divi- n itand of Lorraine desires to remain ( w it up| man, that section should be a edjchanced to forget himself to be rt of the German empire, | worked late into the night. Having has done away | ut the Eritish empire holds that|no key, he sought the n. w. to ob- ¢ putting sand | greater part of Lorraine, an well|tain a release from the county-city . boat akidded, |@# Alance, unmistakably belongs to| building, and it was 3 a. m. when France. thin individual was located. No, he In the Ralkana, adjustment of ter- wasn't asleep A democracy, warring against a great'and efficient r.|son. The other night the 4 military nation, cannot make war half-heartedly. Innocent persons may suffer unjustly from time to — for the past two years have been as high as any association in the city. r brakes on , October 20, 1917, C. W. Karner, state inspector of Savings and Loan Associations, completed a thorough examination into the af- fairs of this association. A copy of his report to the State Auditor is on file in our office, and we will gladly show it to any one inter- But a whole world is suffering, and the people of Ger-| phe : Many are suffering because of the “10 per cent” of Ger-|*tt th a mun dial, | ss Many—the military rulers, who should be in jail. i ry gy wguan Pande terkaer petcidior | Po - Ge mecmenien 3 | COMED When fire threatens human life, keep out of the path |c«r¢ ES OF CAMP LEWIS LIFE pf the fire engine. pe = eee ested. ce ates enamel the fr ne mark have won Regarding the safety of our funds, Mr. Karner makes the fol- lowing statement in his report: MEATLESS MINCEMEAT i# the latest war recipe Just one step Pore and we'll have meatiess hash. in the stone age, when a person — a mistake while writing a let NOW THAT the police he either had to erase all the Biot do a complete job and declare an open season on the hicks who g with sledge hammer and Walk left-handed’ chisel or start all over on a new - sheet of granite is only a oe NUTTY NOV ETTES BY BERTON BRALEY Melancholy Hannah (With Due Regards to Eleanor H. Porter) THE MONARCHS of Norway, Denmark and Sweden have 1 CHAPTER I. 0 continue sticking together for neutrality It's some job, too, with Melancholy Hannah beat on the fittle save home-made cheese in the house jsides of her cradle with her rattle LRN aE jand howled. Her mother hung anx ike for shorteg hours 6 started a jay-walking clean-up, why “A personal inspection of the greater portion of the loans made on property within the limits of the city of Seattle evi- dences a compliance with the provisions of Section 8, Chapter 110, Laws of 1913, which requires that the property mort- gaged to secure the loans ‘shall be worth at least twice the a” value of the loan. declare tment has 4 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN calls Russia “a kaleidoscope.” Viewtne| the way heads and tails change ends over there, it looks to us like cat fight. “Loans are all made in accordance with your definition of improved property, viz., property improved by buildings.” “WE ARF the salt of the earth!” declared the German kaiser in| !ously over her and searched for pins B® speech at Bremen March 22, 1905. And now the peace loving people|#"4 things that might be sticking @ust fight to keep him from salting down democracy her, but there was nothing | “What's the matter with her?” FT TAKES ail kinds of men to make tho well known and popular|***ed her father World, including thove who believe a coal man will not sell his product| “Not @ thing that T can discover,” Gor less than he can get for it, Mr. avid Whitcomb. | lied her mother; whe merely eae | na to be sad about something. ACCORDING TO Ordnance Chiet Crozier, we had to buy guns of| gov hoe mete A Aa ra ig England before going hunting for Villa. “Too late!” maid the kaiser, when|te oi and with bee” aan we declared war on him. Wonder he didn’t add on “Too stupid!” ee te tc CHAPTER U. Your Savings Are Absolutely Safe * Regarding our plan, Mr. Karner reports the following: THE KASS@M has decorated Col. Von Vorbeck, commander of) “Leas play the sad game,” gaid ‘. * . SEE Atsoan forces, and we're glad of it. Poor Van Vorbeck haan| Melancholy Hannah to her doll. ft “No fees, fines or forfeitures of any kind used.” fone @ thing but get lickings near three years past. Suffering should| Was a beautiful doll with a phono. have ite reward as well a® herciem graph inside, and most children —_ — = —-- — ~| would have been tickled to death with it, but not elancholy Hannah Ise dus’ as sad as tan dol she ‘told her mother, t tan't talk wivout bein’ wound up. The increased cost of living makes it necessary that you receive profitable returns on your savings. W. W. Houghton & Son It's awfully sad when you've dot to Successors be wound up to talk But Melancholy Hannah ®oon had ‘ the doll so wet with tears that the sw W W 4 works rusted and it couldn't talk ATCH OUR INDO nt all, whieh nade her sadder than ete, Over 29 years over business. Lowest Leus play the sad game,” she re prices aa usual. Fin Watch and Universal Savings and Loan Association Jawalry sepairing, he doll only kept on #miling bie rental will, and Me choly Han 7 aa eave Ul 4 to break the doll in orde ‘a Wiel trou 46 40°26. per cent on fine goods 1 in order ‘These reports should be written so that the most uneducated could 316 Pike St. to be sad about hi ving brokeh it, pegd them!" (Lo Be Continued) “Well—ah, what part—don't you understand, sir?”

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