Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ATTLE STAR-—SATURDAY, SEPT. 28, 1918 MVNO PEACE BY BARGAIN,” SAYS PRES. WILSON | WE MUST SCRAP OLD IDEAS OF “NO REASON TO GIVE UP GAME IN ‘“) STATECRAFT, LEADER DECLARES BULGARIA,” SAYS VON HINTZE | COPENHAGEN, Sept. 28.—" ere, with the army or whether the gov- tenon give up the game in| ernment, more or less, acted on its own initiative. BY ROBERT J. BENDER cited we think more definitely than] found in connection with the peace “The sobranje (parliament) has U. P, Staff Correspondent before of the issues that hang upon settlement itself to remove that! WASHINGTON, Se 28,— | it and of the purposes which must be| source of insecurity, It would be President Wilson served notice | Teatized by means of it. For it has| folly to leave the guarantee to the “OVER THERE” WITH THE YANKS — ason te declared Admiral von | Bulgaria,” Hintze, Germ foreign minister, in | in address to the main committee of en summoned to meet September There various indications according to dis-| that Malinoff has become even more the reichsta on the European chancellories, | Positive and well-defined purposes | subsequent voluntary action of the Sather thar disfavorable to the sobranje by the allied as well as Teuton, that i< hich we did not determine and | governments wo have seen destroy | “You know that according to the|new development of affairs, they must scrap their old-style | which we cannot alter, | No atates: | Rusala and deceive Rumania, | liatest. military, reports the Bul.| “Thruout Bulgaria there 4a the Statecraft if enduring peace is |" or assembly created them; no Outlines Five Terms | | qurians between the Vardar and the|@reatest agitation against Maline to come out of the great war. jstatesman or assembly can alter! «nut these general terms do not| Cerna have gotten into a very diffi-| off's action. Influential circles of ate|them. They have arisen out of the| 4! " whine As cceaany Ee ese the sed very nature and circumstances of the | ‘Usclose the whole matter. Some Sehind his New York addrees last| War. ‘The most that statesmen or as: | behind as most strikingly |Semblies can do is to carry them out | edad ne three fold, namen.| OF be false to them. ‘They were per gona Hotify frankly ‘and open. | NAPS not clear at tho outset, but they | oy ytd spokeamen. that they{#Fe clear now. The war has lasted © tuarken to their people's wishes, | More than four years and the whole | vin critatively, as representing this nd openly clarity their war ppr.| World bas been drawn into it. governments sauamretatin: O¢° its Poses, as the United States has done. | “The common will of mankind has | Fy Uuty with reward to peace Second—That they may frakly! been substituted for the particular) “wives the impartial justice meted | discuss America’s views and say | Purposes of individual sta Indl’) out must involve no discrimination | f Swhather they think 1 am mistaken | Vidual statesmen may havo started|Stiyren thooe to whom mo wish ta $8 My interpretation of the issues,” | the confilct, but neither they nor | pe'ycer inawe, to Mnom we wiah te Decause unity of counsel and purpose | thelr opponents can stop it as they | io: wish to be just. It must be a 4s as esential as unity of military) Please. It has become wa people's) jistice that plays no favorites and command to properly win the war.) W", and peoples of all sorts and) ioe no standard but the equal TekG—That the whole world, bel-| "Aces. of every degree of power and) vents of the several peoples con: ligerent and neutras, may know that | V@riety of fortune, are, involved in| URIS seca sata ‘America will not be a party to a|!ts sweeping processes of change and a that sees one nation sutfer to| settlement. We came into it when tie Grofit of anothers that this ma,{it# character had become fully de re st any armistice’ or for peace altho, according to cult situation and with the dévelop-| people | ment of events, the armies in neigh- | appe: | boring sectors have also been hit,"| press reports the peace delegation |he said | started Wednesd it was still in “These reports from the front| Sofia on Thursday. Evidently there evidently have not been favorably | is some counter action coming. |explained by Premier Malinoff and| “With the earliest intimation ‘of |the Bulgarian government, for, ac-| bad news from Macedonia, the Ger- lcording to a press statement from|man high command threw all the | Sofia, Bulgaria has proposed to the | reserves lable into Bulgaria. entente commander that peace nego-| Austrian forces also were sent, These tiations be opened | reinforcements will suffice to re “Pirtance Minister Piatcheff, Gen.| store the military position. The Lukoff and Ambassador Radeff left | situation must, however, be chat- Wednesday evening for Joniki.| acterized as critical. But it will be Keports from Sofia are Imcomplete | clearer in a few days. and it is not clear whether the Bul-| “There is no reason to give up |garian government acted in ord|the game in Bulgari. | _ . ——_—_——— -Lib Fil StarLiberty Film || |LIBERTY LOAN details are needed to make them sound less like a thesis and more like a practical program, These then, are some of the particular and [ state them with the greatest | confidence because I can state them | ond, no special or separate in terest of any single nation or any group of nations can be made the tion insists . ‘lend | fined and it was plain that no nation ) and enemy — Rewgetedl : — could stand apart or be indifferent to bees of any ap be of Noe psa ee 5 { that onto on ‘lits outcome. Its challenge drove to| Which is not consistent with the ) a shan we bi the peace negotiations | 11. heart of everything we cared for | Common interests of all ) Will Boost Loan ; FLASHE ( Rei aierenents ce te rneedhocornd PTY lived for, Our brothers from| “Third, there can be no leagues ; Twenty-five hundred sailors, § ; Reali cocur witain the worid al.| Many lands, as well as our own mur-| OF Alliances or special covenants |\ forming the words “Buy a Bond ey her ur witnin the vores dered dead under the sea, were call- | 4nd understandings with the general I} tor Liberty,” and filmed by Cam A patriotic program featusta: aa a force peace upon which | ‘1-1, us, and we responded, fiercely | nd common family of the league of |) eraman Frank Jacobs from an alr- {| Fourth Liberty Loan at its weekly ’ | and of course. nations. |} plane, will be the feature of the Star-Liberty Weekly that opens {|/Uacheon Monday, has been sims at the Liberty theatre Sunday | nounced by the Transportation club bs, with Eddie Hubbard as }|of Seattle. Prof, Clark P. Bissett, pilot, ascended 5,000 feet over the {| of the University of Washingt university campus, and then cit (| yi be honor principal cled and swooped above the eail- {| Oe speaker. Lay Cards on Table “The air was clear about us. We Fourth, and more specifically, Standing out above his reiteration | saw things in their full, convincing | there can be no spec! selfish ‘our war purposes, his adherence to| proportions as they were, and we| economic combinations within the) of nations idea and like| have seen them with steady eyes and) league and no employment of any has frequently taken|unchanginig comprehension ever form of economic boycott or exclu the president's virtual| since. We accepted the issues of the | Sion except as the power of econo. the European spokes-| war as facts, not as any group of| mic penalty by exclusion from the gece : all their cards on the| men either here or elsewhere had de- | markets of the world may be vested | |{ ‘The entire film is devoted to the OSS oe Pe he j 3 | e e , rat . . A : 1 " bere a * rr eadquarters — ¥ nda ell negra name ese eek po comvavely S icgatia eo maaan aka cote | Herb—“Your official communique had the right dope, for once, when it said, ‘Our| aaa pang srr gear pen | kaa adie fen pans of the #2 Of thetr governments declare | meet and settle them. Those issues| “Fifth, all international agree | $lorious troops are advancing on Paris.” peraie "f Saturday afternoon, {| King county republican’ Gaal ly what it is, exactly | are these: Shall the military power | ments and treaties of every kind| te Director Joseph A. Swalwell {| ton in the campaign. . 4 it they are seeking in | of any nation or group of nations be| must be made known in their} Manded, almost every time they | |) ana other interesting features of §| RL suffered to determine the fortunes of tirety to the rest of the world, | came together, and are still demand America’s greatest rar arive in )| ‘ F,! 7. Ee L— ‘ of these countries, he| peoples over whom they have no/| Excludes Alliances ing that the leaders of their govern gaa ee Merk's, Hoses om et satisfied with what | right to rule except the right of| ears aS 5 ments declare to them plainly what 2 the Special alliances and economic} it ig, exactly what it is, that the | TURKEY T0 PEAGE PROPOSAL | eer ry Hotel Washington, Sunday at 2:80 p, | nee nae m., to act as honorary escort to the |the prolific curse in the modern| they think the items of the final | The Cathedral fair, Third aves) oi’ x6 ricy service flag in the united ite itarted coe} |rivairies and hostilities have been| were seeking in this war, and wh near University st., will end its ac g ig FE i F : i i i the clarified com- Wrong Weak Nations | be broken.” “Shall strong nations be free to| w | ol | = world of the plans and passions that | settlement should be. They are not! {commenting on th tt today, church Liberty bond parade. the tal ' he ‘ bei: ; . They not | & on the request today, Sect nant point me talked direct: | wrong weak nations and make them | produce war. It would be an insin:| yet gatintied with what they have|{ Continued From Page One || saia: oe wie F teks He fl z 3 ly at the en of our associates, | c ? — sedate D iecocsitions at Mose gr teripeor hen [Care aa ‘well’ Se an insecure: Denes | heen: told, | “The cza's offer indicates a Ger- | One hundred and fifty thousand Bey ~ that did not exclude them in def-| Tey «till seem to fear that they | therefore, acted quickly in her own|man defeat in the Occident.” IF |trained speakers are today speak- Bated, even in’ thelr own internal ef, |inite and binding terms. |are getting what they ask for only | interests. —F. LL. ing on Liberty bonde thruaeae sounded coe Seeress | taire, by arbitrary and irresponsible! ~rne confidence with which 1|in statesmen's terme—oniy in. the] “-rnere is every tease to believe . , jf an allen lives tm oxterve. || United States, 5 Warning that America| force or by their own™ will and/ venture to speak for our people in| tema ot territorial arrwngements ore is eh ere Bulgarian Offer {And has the grit and nerve, | Pi ; and the allies must think more clear- | choice? thuee + is a “that Turkey is tempted to make a Should he not be ¢ || . In Ts ters does not spring from| and divisions of power, and not in vd hat serve? similar offer.’ | ’ With the native sons t our traditions merely and the well| terms of broad visioned justice and | Doesn’t Mean End known principles of international mercy and peace and the satisfac: | |employes, who are now receiving Refuses Armistice | | f ure have freedom emp! | ce to the hard 1 of Great Struggle || “occr'countey and tts shoots, | large checks in back pay from tion which we have always pro-|tion of those deep seated longings; An armistice to the Aeodunents BY J. W. T. MASON ress hns forbid them || August 1, are putting these surplus fessed and followed. In the same | of oppressed and distracted men and | Bulgarian armies, fleeing before the! ww YORK, ‘Sept. 28.—The se of fighting tools. earnings ‘into Liberty bonds. -reabarigont me 1 hen — the} women and enslaved peoples that) allied forces in Macedonia, has been| american Deopls fust not “inter ave ni | —F. lL. L.— nited States w e' only rf | | . if ERTY . | am anseauiena | be, cae Nee ee ee that comalfa the |fefused by Gen. D’Esperey, who| pret Bulgaria's offer of mediation h great LIBERTY! Sing on Second Ave. ince we cannot shall it be a common concert to| «+, is : c »|to mean pe, o uy, || the Moheasbiieins | ces the observance of common |*22dngs with particular nations,| world, Perhaps statesmen have not |Commands the French forces in the) Sas With Bite eaten pape ( tl duis respons. H in Four Divisions to terms’ with| rights? jlet me say also that the United | always recognized this changed as-| Balkans, but he has again to meet|"", 00 any a Hacaeis Four divisions fave feancail A large percentage of the traction ly now than ever before of the issues| “Shall there be a common standard that hang upon the war and the pur- of right and privilege for All peoples that»must be realized from it.| and nations, or shall the strong do the United States, we are as they will and the weak suffer | interested in “terms,” nor will) without redress? | on barter or com-| “Shall the assertion of right be| Promise be sanctioned, the presi-| haphazard and by casual alliance, or | 8! of | States {s prepared to assume its the whole world of polic: ' ie you | i oN : : t of the wh policy | some representatives of Bulgaria if| : 3 ‘ ‘Therefore he points| “No man, no group of men, chose /f11 share of responsibility for the|and action. Perhaps they have not|the flag of truce and the request | America must fight Germany until|| “Remember, you'll sa 1) penkeg toe the SS ae ‘my peace in which the Teutons| these to be the issues of the strug maintenance of the common coven ty to the} |the kaiser begs for peace on Amer-|| on each FALL SUIT, COAT, DRESS)| Second ave., Saturday evening. must be iron-clad and|gle. They are the issues of it, and| always spoken in direct reply © \for an armistice are carried to the |ica's terms. and HAT, | These will be stationed at Pike, mn | jants and understandings upon which be hey did CE UPSTAIRS ‘Fiveted. The best machinery | they must be settled, by no arrange- | ws questions asked because they British lines. Bulgaria may sign a separate|| 4¢ the, hLORES | University, Madison and Cherry. to accomplish this he still sees in the| ment or compromise or adjustment | P°2ce Must henceforth rest. not know how searching those ques-| Gen, D'Esperey has Informed the! peace with the allies. That will STKecond and U |At Pike st, Montgomery Lynch, league of nations, which, he adds, | Of interests, but definitely and once aan at ; ‘ad Washington's im-| tions were and what sort of answers | French government of the request) he no concern of the United States jnavy song leader, will conduct a. be formed before the peace | for all and with a full and unequivo pr warn rd nee ‘entangling | they demanded. as follows: leucent-th we tar he it deereneen chorus of $600. voleais aml 2 (because it would be then) a! acceptance of the principle that | Wiances’ with full’ comprehension Makes It Clearer “Tonight a Bulgarian officer pre-| Germany's fighting power by Ic TATE ——- | Sing” Lyons will be stationed 7 ; | Rarely & new alliance, confined to the interest of the weakest is as | Or fapotial ana teelted rai But! put I, for one, am glad to at-|Sented himself upon behalf of Gen.| ering German morale, seas’ Prt tf.ts1.1 ieee Mations associated asainst the com.|scred as the interest of the strong. |ONY special and limited alliances) | Umut ft wer again and again,|TOModow, who says he ts com-|""Tets have none of it Peace | MMi Boy scouts and sailors will dis Re eeere ene it cannot be form: | ; 1¢|cept the duty of a new day in which |in the hope that I may make it/mander of the Buisarian armies,!_ dangerous word to think about tribute copies of the popular and Blated after the peace settlement.| ee SOS WS ROEM WHET WO oe ore permitted to ‘bope’ far |clearer and clearer that my one | Proposing an armistice for 48 hours! untii the kaiser is groveling on|Seeurity—The FIRST Consideration | patriotic songs which will be sung. | Essential Part of Peace peak Of « permanent piace, if we! — 3 i aon fh to satisfy those who|t? allow the arrival of two ac-| nis knees. With the words before his eyes and : speak sincerely, intelligently and|*eneral alliance which will avoid| thought is to satisfy 7 credited delegates of the Bulgarian) ce the band: ying th Tt must be an “essential part of etl entanglements and clear the air of| struggle in the ranks and are, per —F. LL is carrying the tune, Mr, pe a with a real knowledge and compre- he air o tijed to a|fovernment, viz: the finance min Py Average Citizen can sing. whether, ) peace er nt spree | panaton of the ventiar We@aml with, | tv? eg for common understand: | haps, stave all rhein pa — can | {ster Liaptcheffet and Gen. Lou- |Carlton Is Injured he knows the song or not. f ident declared. “We are all agreed that there can|! and the maintenance of common | reply whose meaning no 0} koff, commanding the Second army, ¢ A e e- enti y excuse for sunderstand: | ‘ y | —F. Ll. Lo = Re eittoe oth subse-| be no peace obtained by any kind of | “hts have Any CXCURC fOr nelanguage{coming with permission of King in Auto Accident \Gi W. ‘ quent = a, “ © BV"! bargain or compromise with the gov-| “I have made this analysis of the| ing, if he understa vet | Ferdinand to establish conditions of Sergt. Guy L. Carlton, Seattle po: HE WASHINGTON MU- ives ar Bond to — ernments we have seen destroy Rus-| ¢-nments of the central e1 be-| international situation which the|in which it Is spoken or can Ket} » ar lice force. d 0% TUALS s y . 2 we umania.” | ernmen ral empires be late it correctly |@& armistice and eventually peac . an mes Dorning, of Bi Sold: S kk ge st eage ata oa ey ; lcause we have dealt with them al-| War has created, not, of coures, be-| some one to translate A” ion. Ts acatey eats 1811 16th ave., were injured, Carlton ‘i will be open TON! | uy ler Smokes the resu! | . his oF ¥ + . om 6 to clock to ac- hope that the allied statsa |Teady and have seen them deal with | cause I doubted whether the leaders |into his own, == a! 1 am unable to grant an arm-|#eriously, when their autos became Commodate those who can-| T. ©, Fenstermaker, 2027 First expressed that the | other governments that w ties | Of the great nations and peoples with| “And E ; listice, but will receive the delegates | interlocked on the Sixth ave. §S not conveniently transact | ave, who is in the bakery busines, men “will speak, as they have ocea-| 1, this struggle, at Brest-Litovsk and| Whom we are associated were of|of the governments with which we Shay, present themselves to the| bridge at Spokane st, Friday after aoe eee surtaspsne | Walked into The Star office. noon, plunging to the tide flats 12 “a NOW will earn three| “Here's the receipt for a paid-up flag of truce.” feet below. Carlton is reported in months’ interest on Janu-| $50 Liberty bond,” he said. “I want Gen, D'Esperey also said that he|#" improved condition Saturday, ary 1. to give it to the smoke fund, EF } “8 Plainly as I have tried to pucharest. The t the sa . a associated will speak, as they chares ey have convinced us same mind and entertained a|are 6 2 | British lines, accompanied b the general belief here is | that they are without honor and do| like purpose, but because the air| have occasion, as plainly as I have | pal y t Lloyd George and Premier | not intend justice. They observe no| every now and again gets darkened | tried to speak. I hope that they . 2 will soun openly discuss | covenants, accept no princ by mists and groundless doubtings | Will feel free to say whether they aA) WB President's latent speech. Yor! force and thelr own interac, wWeland. mischievous perversions eg | think that I am in any degree mis-|had denied an armistice because he te oom For 29 years this [bought a bond last time and gave it Several days there has been an un-| cannot ‘come to terms’ with them,|counsel, and it i# necessary ones| taken in my Interpretation of the|feared the request might be a ruse| Poultrymen of Western Washing- pesNacless than’. [tomes meena dercurrent of feeling in official and| they have made it impossible, The|and again to sweep all the ir lasuea involved or in my purpose |t© gain time for reorganization. ton met Saturday in the club rooms ssaitierlects | Two years ago, on the 28th of Au- iA pale Bat hy wagrwpiaiped ard oe des co La Liberte, a Paris newspaper,’ of the Chamber of Commerce. gust, he says he borrowed $40 to diplomatic quarters here that this; 2 | ard to the means by which a jerman people must by this time be | sible talk about peace intrigues and | with regard to the m y = _ | start in business with. On the should be done. fully aware that we cannot accept| weakening morale and doubtful pur. | Satisfactory settlement of those 1s % h. 28th On ; of Se 8, he’ |the word of those who forced this| pose on the part of those in au-|sues may be obtained. Unity of Donde to help etn iit att NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—Five thou-| war upon us. We do not think the| thority utterly, and if need be, un-| Purpose and of counsel are as tm —F Li iw c gand persons heard President Wilson! same thoughts or speak the same | ea¥ings cits nig, 4 | ceremontously, aside and say things | Peratively necessary in this war as A give his striking address on world janguage of agreement. |in the piamest words that can he| Was unity of command in the battle Presbyterians to : Hold Loan Meeting issues last night in the Metropolitan No Compromise P: found, even when it is only to say | field; and with perfect unity of pur Washington Mutual | 5, stack a. Matthews, pastor of opera house. pose and counsel will come assur- | ie predident.was repeatediy cheer.| “It 18 of capital importance that |Ver again what has been said be fore, quite as plainly, if in less un-| ance of complete victory. | | Lyons. 4, and received an ovation at the We Should also be explicitly agreed | 1 . “It can be had in no other wny. | ° oF Prantl that no peace shall be obtained by | Yarnished terms. ; ; the First Presbyterian church) iam BE ieee rie be de soy uind of mont ackion fers. state. “Responded Gladly” | Rekha devel!’ Gan ve. Seteotyey | Savings Bank hold a big Liberty Loan revival in clared, smy govern: | ° . oo ee neutralized and silenced only by bis church Sunday at 7:80 ps me ments: “We cannot ‘come to terms’|™ent of the principles we have| “As I have said, neither‘ nor any | showing that every victory of the Established 29 Years Bands will furnish. special sate with them. They have made it im.) *V°Wed 48 the principles for which | other man in governmental au-| nations associated against Germany | " . ena’ the congregation will ten pes possible. The German people must,| “° “f° fighting. There should exist | thority created or gave form to the| brings the nations nearer the sort | American Savings Bank & Trust Co 810 Second Ave. |horted to song by “Everybody Sing” by this time, be fully aware that we 2 doubt about that. 1 am there: | issues of this war, I have simply | of peace which will bring security | - Resources $8,000,000.00 oe , cannot accept the word of those who pg pa by rs the z be Sd of| responded to them with such vision|anq reassurance to all peoples and | forced this war upon us. We do not *P®*King with the utmost frankness |as I could command. But I have| make the recurrence of another such think the same thoughts or speak | 22Ut the practical implications that! responded gladly and with a resolu » of pitiless force and blood the same language of agreem | are involved in st. |tion that has grown warmer and) «hea forever impossible and that | “We are all agreed,” he declo If it be indeed and in truth the| more confident as the issues have| nothing else can. Germany {s con: | “that there can be no peace obtained common object of the governments | grown clearer and clearer. It is stantly intimating the ‘terms’ she} by any kind of bargain or com. **8°'*ted against Germany and of| now plain that there are issues! will accept, and always finds that Promise with the governments of the | th? MAtons whom they govern, as I| which no man can pervert unless] the world does not want terms. It eantral empires because we hay pee he id eed be, fed achieve by the) it be wilfully, I am bound to fight| wishes the final triumph of justice dealt with them already and hi a caine aggregate ppy to ‘fight for) and fair dealing.” _feen them deai with other govern ng Dy as time and circumstances | intsthat were parties to this strug- |_ One hundred soldiers from Camp Lewis under Lyons’ direction will OS NA atriotic songs. Neal H. Begley will sing the Mar- | selllaise. Musical critics claim he can do it better than any other | singer in America with the exception M.A.Matthews ~ 13 Muratore, cee will preach a sermon Sun- 500 Sailors to Sing American Bank Building Second Avenue at Madison Capital and Surplus, $700,000.00 4 Per Cent, Paid on Savings Accounts |for them, and t e, it will be necessary | them that all who sit down at the peace The American Safe Deposit Vaults in con- nection have the strong: best protected and most commodious private vaults in the have revealed them to me as to all day morning entitled 4 * table shail come ready and willing a | Dr. Gregor McGregor has reopened | J at Meth tah Ch | gle, at Brest-Litovsk and Bucharest.” ‘ the world. Our enthusiasm for A q ‘ “$8 Se cael ; | t 4 ‘od: urch | The president's speech follows: |‘ ,Pay the price, the only price, that | them grows more and more irresist-| dental offices at 616 Leary | Bids, Northw , boxes rented at $4 per year. You | Service | Five hundred sailors from the Beat fot here to’ promote the|™%° y 1100 | more vivid and unmistakable out: | business proposition in which you may be In the sermon Sunday night sity will sing a patriotic program the only instrumentality by which it | os Joan. That will be done—ably and enthusiastically done—by the hun- dreds of thousands of loyal and tire- he will discuss the subject on behalf of the Fourth Liberty No Room for Loan Sunday evening, in the First Methodist Episcopal church, 8 p, m., Discussion interested. Our directors and officers are men of wide business experience, line. “And the forces that fight for | them draw into closer and closer | men and women who have 1 array, organiz he 0. | eer ie gwement it to you ana bripeecs {every item of the lect an a | more and more unconauerabie might, | fellow citizens th © co! y nae te eee Ii y become me is- | Batt have not the leant dourt gi] tf Whose interest Is crowed, and not | tice" the thought and purpoee of their complete success, for I know | OMY impartial justice, but also the| the peoples engaged. It ix the pecu: | their spirit and the spirit of the|*#tisfaction of the several peop! hase vp pact he pgs joe eountry. My confidence in confirm. | Whos fortunes are dealt with. That | laty un nave seemed t0 cast about A, 100, by the thoughtful and ex.|Mispensable instrumentality is a/ 0.) Gerinitions of thelr purpose a fenced co-operation of the barn, |l¢#sue of nations formed under Hintke ‘thal nate pie hate | yep here and everywhere, whe nk, | covenants that will be efficacious ie ri a ee ae tga perig? EMER italy invaluable’ nid’ cea Without such an instrumentality, | round aml om pe empl A ihe TiMiee come. rather to|0% Which the peace of the world can | thought of the mase of men, whom guidance. be statesmen are supposed to instruct opportunity to prese: es guaranteed, peace will rest in i at d only upon that wo! 2 vleithe unclouded, more and more certain perve to give you, in perhaps fuller nly upon that wor For Germany ive than before, a vivid sense | Will have to redeem her character, | of what it is that they are fighting Economy Mk Lunc Of the great issues involved, in order | 2?t_ bY what happens at the peace | for | First€é Pike (westa/rs) et able, but by what follows. And, as “National purposes have fallen | ounumnineesadentiain’ tha ciate and accep i oat Det erihnsteen then Accept |T wee it, the constitution of that | More and more into the background | oan ; S16 league of nations and the clear defi-|nd the common purpose of en the Soliton Be ae nition of its objects must be a part,| lightened mankind has taken their| The joy of feeling fit and eaition ‘and self-denial, No man or |°f the peace settlement itself. It can | eve become on all hands more| heed the laws of health, .. No man or | not be formed no’ ormed no simple and straightforward and o has really tak at | t be formed now. If formed now it! simp! apply stl poe ermal what | would be merely a new alliance con-|more unified than the counsels of | @nd keep the habits regu- this * 2 BIVe | fined to the nations associated | sophisticated men of affairs, who lar with n be made certain t ments of the pea and fulfilled * " “The price is impa the agree » will be honored Fifth ave, and Marion st. Special features for this program other than the community singing, will Great Patriotic Song Ser- be solos by Seamen H. J. Maul- vice at 5 o'clock, led by betsch and S. F. Allison. Mrs. Alice Weatherwax, yeomanette, will play JOHN HENRY £& the piano. ‘rhe program “will” be bs under the direction of Montgomery Everybody Lynch, song leader for the 13th naval distri J. P. Gleason, President B. B. Luten, Secretary John K. Bush, Cashier A. 'T. Drew, Asst. Cashier F. L, Kerns, Asst. Cashier Puree of Green Pea Soup au Croutons .... Roast Beef Hash on Toast, Southern Style ..... J. A. Murray, Chairman, Capitalist. L. BE. Meacham, Meacham & Babcock, Ship- builders 3. L. Webster, F Insurance Co. Martin Woldson, Railroad Contractor. J. C. Ford, Chairman of Board Pacific Coast Company. 0. B. Baker, Vice President, Capitalist. H. P. Preston, Preston, Schaeffer Milling Company. W. J. Johnston, President Plymouth Shoe Company J. H. O'Neill, Manager Puget ‘Terminal of Railroads. L. i. ng’ LYONS \Shipyard Men All or Ea eerie Set for Big Drive Spadtad Skiriovic Melections Representatives of the different ic crafts in Seattle shipyards Saturday early started the work of listing the THE SINGING Liberty Loan subscriptions of each f individual member, the anticipated SQUAD result to be a 100 per cent quota, | ch shipyard has organized a (75 voices) of Camp Lewis. Loan committee, each of which in turn has organized sub-committees NAVAL BAND for every department. ‘This means that every individual in the large yards will be aproached and given A Welcome for All. H the oportunity to subseribe to the limit, or explain just why he is un- First able to . Skinner & Eddy corporation Presbyterian A ployes, 13,000 strong, are planning to again carry off the honors for the, Church steel shipyards, based on a ratio that, Seventh and Spring. | will allow a fair epmpetition with jother plants having, lesser men emi ' ployed. \ . <a i Xe presentative New York Life AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK & TRUST CO, SECOND AVE AT MADISON STy aa “gi s 7A con boaghomd beer | 1inst a common enemy. It is not | still retain the impression that they anteced ax an afterthought. ‘The| Statesmen must follow the clarified Well-Defined Purposes |reason, to speak in plain terms |common thought or be broken. | @ fresh consciousness of what we|that there will be parties to the|of the fact that assemblies and as. | iméan to accomplish by it. When our! peace whose promises have proved| sociations of many kinds made up ale of in the World | \arfsta Eecepwhers. tas likely that it could be formed after| are playing a game of power and try to make it clear once more what | RR reeeaies oc wit noea|Me vetlement. plain for Maly” alaken That is | no other stimulation or reminder of | Ria tha Goase Po rage the | a to aa a aekeiek | duty. Dp a n¢ Pp nnot be uar- | peor . statesmen's, | | “At every turn of the war we gain | again, why it must be guaranteed is| “I take that to be the significance hapes and expectations are most ex- untrustworthy, and means must be|of plain workaday people have de- boxes, 10c., 256.