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STAR—FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1918. PAGE 11 MUST NOT EXPECT ANY REVOLT IN GERMANY” Teutons Won’t Go SUL TOAPPEAL NOTED STUDENT OF |~sXse= Sess’ Kaiser to Accept e : __to Neutral Point OFDISBARMENT WARNS THE ALLIES | Few Wilson Terms n peace negotiations at voting Gen. Hoffman, one of the three or four kin ait 7h inka ain the light of United Press reports of sk have been sus | “*Fman delegates as protesting an-| @ay¥ by Mayor Hiram ©. Gill, EDITOR'S NOTE.—Frederick what is ordered. Hie. Brest 1 Utes erent Serveneresens ieoteny's demapation tien 4 grily to the conference against wire | Heber B. Hoyt and Hermon & Wiliam Wile, former — Herlin Litovek tacticn, far from irri WASHINGTON, dam. l-— | vin fight on rather than aoe according to dispatches | joss messages signed by the repre | Frye against the decision of the correspondent of the London tating Hindenburg, were dictat 5 Germany will not agree now tO ir veriatintic perce. While here, after the German | sentatives of the Russian govern =_— board of examiners yeuter Mall, is regarded as the beatin ed by him—and are alterable if . ¢ than the first four or | war preparation had refused the Rus. | ment which, he says, “inwulted" the | bow ded bom be er poet al formed British journalist on tn and when Hindenburg desires. f resident Wilson's 14 ough to make ked military for transfer to | *F™man military command by ure pau om = yoy oe side conditions in Germany. He Kuehimann will go or stay, ac é + peace terms. } y could hi the effect of ‘soil. ing the German troops to revolt ie om in & native of Indiana, went orig cording to Hindenburg's pleas Authorities were vineed of | stopping Germany from converting 2 Hoffman protested that such mee | "riday tnally to Kurope as correspond A bgewer B ‘ Secretary Kuehimann de " | le ead thad Just a0 coun as w . this today in the light of prelim- | Rus#ia into a supply house. im Thursday's session hina) SUNS Cerancarenned the spirit of the} 4)" board files ite” findings, ent ey Mage emerge — The reichsteg is exactly what inary press comment on his The war department is proceeding "Meatons maintained their fixed | : Bismarck founded, 47 years d speech to congress. But they on the theory that Germany pro tee tion not to negotiate peace| Other central powers delegates | Revere] eats helio days, he Around the Kaiser ago—merely an imperial : doubted that Germany would | poses to carry on a spring and sume than at RBrest-Litowsk | Joined in his protest. | ‘The supreme court has the power —en " ing society, where the p aie f dare to ignore the world’s chal mer offensive in the hope of rein mB was presiding at the| It was following this assault on|to revere: the decision on Manda y bod po hg te ag haste wi K representatives, blow off steam ‘ lenge to state her aims. | foreing her political position by fim the Russian plan to establish har-| case to the board for further Inveati- | teste tg —, en and can call ¢ government Officials gathered real hope from| portant gains on the West front, n Foreign Minister Trotaky,| mony of effort between the plain| gation. This is provided under the ghrink from, cine ths dase = without police Interference |e of the Bolsheviki conferees, | people of Germany and the Russian act creating the board. The suprome| parding tren edt nr as, Its only vestige’ of power ts in | tcemeima, 23 : pro! x c eng ‘sermany the votin, f funds—which dut paren Worre cases than yours On his motion, the sitting | proletariat that Minister Trotsky for | court also may affirn t eciaton. We prefer comforting theéries wl sad ‘i . guapenided mally moved suspension of the sit The jon of the board was an to dunateeatiin ahteatities ‘t hae performed dutifully ips lave recovered, Anton,’ he sald to ¢ the suspension is indefi-| tings. nounced Thursday afternoon. James Tals lo coneemtent. tet tt te Only 22 Free Socialints ‘Have faith. Pray.’ There im was not made known| Before this, however, German For. Raley, who had been named in| not war The only ye ine ype i é | the hospital he taught me to pray, jelgn Minister Kuehimann asserted: | the original complaint, was previous Thru Duteh, Swins and Soa pay Berg ccetn Senersny ich x A new light came into ite Czernin, Austrian foreign| "I do not consider the difficulties | ly acquitted ara Dateh, Swi a Scan A total membership of in the e my dinavian channels, which serve and I began to fee aft. . followed Kuehiimann | now developed ax great enough to} The disbarment of the mayor and “sca dle-esgy ste pl and they are the only and 3 began to teel that sau aa filters for the alleged new " ten days which tho central! make our peace efforts fail, oF force | ht law firm, which has existed here | Germany anid the taxes rei ever oppose war | he , : er all, I wasn't going to die. allotted within which the| resumption of fimhting.” psince 1904, will take effect as a00n a8) world belleve, we again hear the ‘ After 12 months I left the how te were to participate in the Willing to Go Thera the findings of the board are filed. ol@ familiar word, “criaia”--polit government haggles with ce pital almost as good as new, phys proceedings have expired,” hb Regarding the points in disagree | Court Room Packed teal “crisin”—tood “crinls,” et wwoeme barr endive BY C. C. LYON ‘cally, and an entirely new man “andthe entente have not| ment between the two sides, Count] ‘The room was packed with spec | cetera merely for the purpose of saving WITH THE PERSHING ARMY) spiritually. 1 NOW BELIEVE IN to the invitation to take part. | Czernin recalled that it had been de-| tators half an hour before the board Wish Father to Thought Mtwelf trouble IN FRANCE, Jan. 10—Controle| GOD WITH ALL MY HEART. Cer the central powers are | cided at a previous session to place| arrived. There were several women| In view of our inclination to The food situation probably 2 Americain—There in more genuine| ‘ly God is behind the surgteal concerned with a general) them in the hands of a committee.|in the crowd make the wikh father to the Saver’ wae Ge: Ree—-but it te Dette Keane, Amisthan lage to-| J ¢* | wonders that our doctors are dally but only with a separate | The central powers, be said. had! ‘The findings, in part, were as fol } thought, let me present, in tab. not critical to the breaking elt hae teak ‘tatemne ‘G age story réligion in France today, after three) performing in our hospitals.” | now decided to conclude the negotia- | lows: | Jold, the elements, personal and | Point. Regularly near the mid- | ¥° Decl Byéne : ev ti " ctor, Years of carnage, than at any time) Anton's experience in the realmaot of these negotiations to/ tions on the basig which Kuehimann| “We hold that the corporation was | otherwise Glo of winter comeh the “star~. |. "oo oringe tosh place in Lin in the last century. religion have been duplicated by milk s0llgwould enable the en-| and the Russian Gommittee members! the agent of Gill, Hoyt & Frye; by Hindenburg > story out of Germany, | 7°°_ be seer table I arc Thruout France—in big cities and| #98 of French soldiers. to interfere with the central| had already considered binding |itwelf it rendered no service except| tater of Germany The soal shortage hes undoubt- tiny villages—the churghes are| @ — Shells Aid Religion “If the ssians’ intentions are! thru the attorneys. Its acts were) is the actual generalinsim: edly nm aggravated, but the revolution, Hein, the keenest | crowded and it is easy to tell from| Put ‘ihe " sasend ae , We are willing to meet/ not altered.” he added, “satisfactory | the acts of Gill, Hoyt & Frye. The| der Hindenburg. whose popt way the Gert ® stuck | student of Prunsian prycholoxy, | the look in the faces that the aver-| rant’ linc srencs, « few irantoaa and formally cisewhere to) results may be expected—{t not, mat entire plan and the manner of it»! ity ix now so great that prac {t out so far indicates they will once remarked that “revolutions age Frenchman has come to find a| yards from the eneeay end pg A peace treaty.” | ters will take thetr necessary course, working wan no less improper be tleally anything can be ac survive the present winter in Germany were imponsible be- | new comfort and solace in bis rell ynalla com pea p Ato ay ee Protests Wireless and responsibility for the continua | cause conducted thru the agency of | complished by invoking it | All Are War Weary cause verboten.” gion. stant pede their thoughts will tian the session was more or leas| tion will rest on the Russians.” the corporation The kaiser has never been so The German army Is unques- Revolutions “Verboten” + The story €2 due Pielich etbblar ta Caaskty luce to Cae pi religion. “The corporation was here when| much in the hands of the mili tlonably war tired. The rman This ts cynical it te tt. interesting. Why is it that one man will be 8 solicitor was here; when he tary dea is an he is toda ie nation ls war weary wt this erally true the r hine gun | jit h hy had y deape dny. H fon ii but thi On two Sundays in succession I| spared while the comrades on either |fone the corporation was gone; it} rules no longer by divine right applies also to others. There awaits every German with rev hea met Anton and his wife at the| «ide are plerced thru? | jose no office, no property, not even ‘Dut by grace of the great god is probably no more popular olution in his heart. Lieb They ttle church in the village. It's always unanswerable. | denk room; so far ax Seattle is con-| Hindenburg. growling in Germany than here, knecht, the only Prussian who , rep o yw} 4 keep a fruit store and several times| And that’s why an overwhelming | cerned, it existed solely to draw The crown prince Is a thick Munitions trains roll to the would ever lead a revolution, 1 had stopped and bought from them.| majority of French soldlera have | '’ business to Gill, Hoyt @ Frye. and thin supporter of Hinden west and Germany ts + is now in penal servitude, The Anton had been horribly wounded.| turned to religion for comfort and Took Any Clients | burgiam aeroplanes, submarines c Germans won't stop fighting “I never believed in God before| courage in the hours of their gremt * It is not @ trivial thing to create} Chancellor Hertling is Hinden shells at a hitherto unequalled until we make them see that | the war,” he told me. “When they | est perils ’ the relationship of attorney and| burg’s political manager rate. Two or three million militariem and war do not pay took me to a hospital and told me One old priest said to me, “The client. We quite fall to understand Hindenburg Dictates prisoners are making munitions —that is, when we are I was going to die I accepted their| passion for religion cannot fail to how an attorney would permit this Foreign Secretary Kueh! ne form or another. | impose peace on a o! verdict. continue after the war. It means BY L. G MARTIN seaeese lretationstip to be created between| mann is permitted to do only As to the posstbility of a German army and But _& good priest came to my much for the future of Press Correspondent BY WEBS MILLER Iniameemt adh B00 pertain Oak GORROT cea eae (ASHINGTON, Jan. 11—The| United Press Correspondent tions, collected indiscriminately in — "President | of the nation’s women for full], LONDON. Jan. 11 & large city lke Seattle, by a eo Wilson's references to Russia show | Heitor whose sole interest is to got pe swung into the senate to | oe, hh = sympathy than those of other ag many clients as possible as easily Fresh from a complete vic | stateamen—but the question t*: Wl) a4 ponaible | t Fy in the house last night, where | the ta ge ings toward achieving &| ~The most cursory examination of suffrage amendment won by 4 | general just peace | the membershi; liste would have of 274 to 136, leaders today| M. Litvinoff, named by the Bol | poi them, had ey wanted to know @emanding immediate action tn | sheviki as their ambassador to Great that many of these clients were un. senate. This gave the bill gy Britain, so summarized for the Unit-| desirable and would not have the more than necessary. ed Preas today his views on Amer-| ciaes of business lawyers generally th President Wilson's infinency, | ‘ca's peace terms | desire, unless the lawyers desire to paychological effect of the house T am afraid I will have to tak®| make @ specialty of the defense pf and the growing strength of |4 most gloomy view, after the state-| tne lawbreakers of the city fs Movement, suffragists predict «| Ment of Britain and America,” he) rng scheme was entered into de —~ but winning vote’ in the sen | Suid, referring to the just, general) iherately and no member of the | ae ~ : They admit, however, ths| peace aspirations. firm says that he saw any impropri-| om id | ty of a hard fight H! One Group Considered lety in it. We fail to see how a} | poll of the senate recently “Poth of them «in In the same ¢i-| lawyer of professional standards and A . 4 | . r } suffrage lacked 11 votes tO/ rection. Instead of putting forth ideals could have such a point of the necessary two-thirds. March | certain principles for application all | view. 1914—the last time a vote was around, in order to obtain a just/ Got $1 Out of $10 taken—{t was beaten 35 to| peace mtisfactory to all nations, the| “A solicitor went up and down the senators not voting. | demands af being put In only one| streets with flamboyant literature, | ? ny ” a these days of high prices, it th 26 war has come since 1914, and | group—for belligerents pointing to all the great advantages | Ss it many changes. “Therein they differ from the! of being represented by Gill, Hoyt &/ house resolution waa reported | Russian proposal—which applies to| Frye for $10 © year; and, of the $10, | poor economy to worry along SU ae Wer cilidan ”” louuanty, pantaer tiny baone wo the| ty (a tas tires of Git, orl & Pore WS aE 3 Z with a bad back that makes the hundred and sixty-five repu> | central powers or to the allies “It is impossible to somagh she n | > i voted for the amendment and| “The only way to general peace clusion that the name of Mr. Gill, \ / J . demo | ites thru acceptance of the Russian | displayed as it. was, with nothin | = Sy \ | ao ly / simplest work a torture, and a the women are planning |formula of ‘no annexations, no in-|done to disabuse the minds of the| h H : ; full day’ k ij ‘bl If + fight to have the amendment | demnities, and self-determination’ as prospective member of the sugges if ai aflf ~ ied by the states. They are|interproted by the Russians at Brest-| tion that he was interested in the | ' Pa FW u ays work impossibie. of 36 states, Mrs. Catt said Litovsk. We can't insist on appli: firm, was an important considera \ y—and included New York. | cation of this formula in aych a way| tion among a large number of that | 1H an / Cit | \ 4 every day brings morning lame- as to satisfy only one side. class, who must have known that) Milt | 1] ~ Uy, , h . h ° p j Driven to Separate Peace in ail reasonable probability they f! } ns f id : Sic cenins AGMeOMGn for Wildl Glatt to te treende pate toe bates | tl / : WNL ness, sharp pains when bending ny eset oy cocci Bases ae cece ao temeeis ty ee hy >e eN : or lifting, nervousness and a dull, Germany in order to win conce® | tact, and there is no such proof. | ly v 2) Under the facta shown in thin | tionartes’ design to crush the Ff case, ‘© bell «© it was highly im} / | '] y jo 7 4 H S49 4 IB | cian wockirs 00 patsants' rewstu:| oreter''to hont'sut tho where of Me fl / TT thing wrong. Likely it’s kidney | George's speech o permit the solicitation of this 4 j ij c i i Pa tectea netentisbiond’ with | Sermnt toe sotalintion of tla I weakness. Urinary disorders may a view to obtaining a general peace;| which jt was done. Practices of | 4 4 », fl wi give further proof. Don’t neglect & separate peace.” . and necessary profession under +1 . ° ‘ 4 2 esc” ath? rcaene” “Wigan's save eriuciom and injure every MY It! Though easily corrected at first, delay may run you into gravel, dropsy, crippling | speech?” M. Litvinoff was asked. in accordanc ith the highest pro $ ° , : P ° aa ["Psrrue, the speech Goes not|fewional atandarde rheumatism or dangerous Bright’s disease. Get a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills TODAY. | threaten—bdut it is a war speech i z land {t means war. Russia cannot i . i rie tae Man With $30,000 They have helped thousands. They should help you. your formula?” | PORTLAND, Jan. 11.--Specit: - 1 ‘Then Russia will fight—no, make | charene with having a forged chi | ? ft rather, whe MAY fight Jin his possession, and suspected of q. \ Zimmer, of Onkiand, Cal, is under |ONE TICKET PLAN MAY | Zimmer. of oniiand, Cal. ix under bey feats sea 18 for $20,000, supposedly certified by ‘Train service between le and) the cas of a Minneapolis bank a 7 'RNITR « IRS RNY = 1a Portland may be cut trom rine to atx vaca agri er gg tx ng THIRTY-EIGHTH AVENUE 8. FIRST AVENL AMERICUS STREET ltrains a day each way without incon e dis i iste i |& prominent business man and caus is honored by all lines. Jed him to give the name of Samuel MH. PB. Claussen, mail carrier, 4437 Thirty-cighth Mrs. W. G, Smithhale, 413 First Avenue W,, says Wallace Pike, 3913 Americus Street, saye: “I got This was brought out at a meeting | Thorpe, This was the name used Avenue S, says: “My kidneys were in bad shape and “Doan's Kidney Pilla cured me of dropsy and other wet and caught a bad cold which put my kidneys the four North coast lines Thursday.|¢irst declared that Thorpe £ him sharp pains caught me through the small of my act at all hardly before I 1 Doan's Kidney PYls until I was bent over like an old man. I just couldn't The proposal will be made to the|the check for shfe keeping, and in back. My kidneys got so they didn’t act right at Doan's flushed out and strengthened my kidneys, get up and had to walk around with my hands general committee, acting in ©0-OD | sists he came here to collect a note all. Everyone had spoken #0 well of Doa Kidney and I got back my good health, Since then I have pressed on my back, trying to ease the pain. My | day. ‘ | Zimmer has a wife and two chil-| © just what I needed. They straightened me \ and prevent any of the old trouble coming back & gravel-like sediment which was difficult to pass. After a 13-day tie-up, the Northern | aren in Oakland | ie Aika. GAAk Wed these Soate Ube sae f have I owe everything in the world to Doan's after what Peter sbih se nasice” Gis aul thes pon oe BS Cascad: when the ‘orth Coast lim seed loth are lant night | HOUSEWIVES ADVISED The Great Northern will resume | Beggar lpervine Wien the Oriental Iitaited TO MAKE WAR SOAP) TWENTY-FIRST AVENUE SOUTH 1014 First Ave |time by the soviet that the allies | Proof is not necessary that they PE ORME TCI sions from Germany in the west, inv Name Used Improperty Hy 5 " / tired state there’s surely some- — a aa aaa " conjunction with the German reac " ’ m jtion, gained ground after Lioyd iii as a member of the firm and| she is being driven by the allies to| this kind tend to bring an honorable | member who endeavors to practice ] | “What if Germany refuses to WALKIN |meot the Russian interpretauon ot] Check Is Arrested | |. SAVE TRAIN OPERATION |" exctusive local hotel. The check Oakland when his actions attracted — = _ ~ ~ ——___— — venience to the public, if one ticket | of traffic and operating officials of| on the check found on Zimmer. He I believe it was caused by a cold. When I bent over, kidney trouble, saving my life. My kidneys didn't out of order. Every day the trouble became worse eration with the government: Mon | due nim. Pills, I thought I would try them and I found they twsed Doan'’s occasionally, and they keep me well kidneys didn’t act right and the secretions contained Pacific resumed service over the had no kidney trouble since Doan’s cured me." they did for me and I shall nover stop praising them.” cured mo.” leaves, at 7:30 tonight | Grandmother's favorite pastime of | { BF Fa DUWAMISH AVENUE EAST CHERRY STREET | making soap will be revived during * tthe war, if Seattle housewives follow | Mra. Margaret A. Nesary, 1513 Twenty-first Avenues J. A. Reed, of Slocum & Reed, propa, department Mra. T. P. Carroll, 1116 FB. Cherry St. says: “Sev- No Six-Cent Fare | the advice of Miss Mary F. Rausch, South, says: “I felt Teak’ across my back and had store, 5917 Duwamish Avenue, says I recommend eral years ago Doan's Kidney Pilis cured me of | special lecture ¢o c, a dull ache through my loina and hips. I was dissy sbaula Rinna ils Mecaiine ‘ Rae f ” Plan for Spokane | +» jal lecturer in home nomics Avi Ane inreudn fe leled Ga Bins 3, wae, Gieey Doan's Kidney Pills because my experience with them kidney trouble and the cure has lasted, so I can ay Ps NE, Jan. 11—The 6-cent|@t the university | my eyes, My kidneys acted much too often and other has beon moat favorable, The first I used of them recommend them. The first symptom of kidney . SPOKANE, ot be to| She advises women to make soap | aymptoma showed they wore out of order, D was some six or seven years ago, At that time my trouble | had was a constant aching and weakness DR. P. L. AUSTIN, Pres. fare problem will not Dut Up tO! o scrape of fat Kidney Pills wore the first thing to relieve kidneys weren't acting as they should, and there across the small of my back. It rapidly developed ¥ he public service commission at this | (Statement given October 29, 1915.) into serious suffering until | was all out of sort: E 5 pag dow-president | _,A* substitutes for cooking butter, | ‘On May 31, 1917, Mra. Nesary sald: “T shall soon was #tiffness across the small of my back, I thought For three or four. months I couldn't find any com : for Business ee oe ten taped i 860 she proposes cotton seed ofl, peanut | be aighty-four yenre gia. Moat old people have Poan‘s Kidney Pills, would help me and 1 ed thom. fort, and It seemed as though my back would never 0 e e T | oft, oleor 0] - trouble, bu on't, because Doan's Kidney ‘They noon relieved me and short. tim xed me ease Up. , ys cel ly needes 4 ={ gums are sloughing, sore}. oany, announced yesterday. > cme nen Tnas, Aenean Mere, Pile caked we'aed the pure hae lasted, Tuse & tow up fine, I wouldn't recommend Doan's Kidney Pills I read in the paper about Doan’s Kidney Pilis and bleeding, you have thine Partiend bag been grantea |" Putterine of Doap's occasionally, however, ax a wort of kidney | unless I knew they were good, and I am sure they tried them, I was soon all over that trouble and I é-cont fare, We are not considering EE RAN regulator, and they keep my kidneys in good order.” are reliable,” have felt fine since Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me.” PYORRHEA 8 oct are the Washinnton core | GERMAN PAPER MAKES Come to me for advice for thie|™ission for a raise on our lines,” he DEMAND FOR WAR AIMS| free of se. said. pe Te introduce “our” aiming | SOMETIMES THEY DON'T wos nents “voiced by ‘the Neuve PPP sss. vs s0'cxinct| SEEM VERY NECESSARY tec atpthe tea at oan S ] ne y . ] S DR. P. L. AUSTIN, BELLINGHAM, Jan. 11.—An auto a ve laughed at Lloyd George, ecensity. newspaper asnerted, ut the P manager of Painiens Austin Meer oe” ine aitian deale ty \entanie unantooudy appioves tilt, ational Dentists, " vhereas Germany's equivocal yal Judge Hardin yesterday, when he or: | w y's eq po : < : aig dered thet an automobile seized to) tion arouses suspicion Every Druggist has Doan’s, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. Third and James St. satiafy a judgment against Virgil 1. The editorial demanded that “elect- b D PAINLESS STS 'Reimberger should be returned to od representatives of the people be Elliote jas Kf him. wf heard before final decision.” FEA OAAAAANAA AAKAAAAM AAA