The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 25, 1918, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

{ SURRENDER OF | WUNS ASKED BY OTHER READERS y must establish her right i Dusiness” with other nations ae! ft good living for an ap period.” according to a let t to President Wilson by ‘ won E Claypool, a copy of S ined 4 game thru the mails to The whieh fur, slong with dozens of other let gore declaring for unconditional sur tater ce the only safe and sure of attaining 1 war aims H She Fourteen Points’ and the of the chief magis were not understood by the people to be a tentative for German consideration. ‘were taken to be the general of the fundamental prin by the United States, and oaed to urge upon its eee allies in the final t. ‘This final judgment will | Pinging upon the allied nations and security for its execution found their honor and consequent credit pd haa entirely forfeited its among the nations of the and is internationally bank yt ‘These | not ‘do business’ with its rth in the matter of | contract for «ny - national nti! by consistent good liv appreciable period it has ME ehed itself among men. A prerequisite to the appli the principles announced is and unconditional surren Peace may then be established allied nations, and imposed Germany, which may then not, ‘berated,’ but ‘paroled’ during Dehavior.” Teter to The Star from Felix Snohomish, Wash. says: » for no peace until Germany unconditionally. Peace time would be a victory for Yours for freedom for all in a letter to Th ‘of the vast discussion of g the Huns a peace of justice, why not start a ‘nize “Bertin or Bust’ clubs all ountry, and a button for you think this would serve es 8 means to make it mighty dis r for any person who v' tolerating anything short of that who have written The Star 2 favoring unconditional surrender ‘ash.: nh av a ay Pith ave NW. Mt ‘Levi W! 12 46th ave. 3. Cc. 1517 Lith ave Marshall, Gold Ba Fate Picks Unknown Eugincer te Little Fami for Intermediary Between U.S. | and Germany in Peace Queries eestinns BY A. BE. GELDHOF (War Editor of the Newspaper Enter- Prise Assoc! } WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—Freder ick Oevderlin, originally a mechanieat engineer, has, by a twist of fate, been called to oceupy one of the most important posts in the history of | diplomacy He ts charge d'affaires ad interim of Switzerland, who has transmitted to Berlin President Wilson's two his tory-making notes to the German government, and also delivered the “peace notes” of the enemy power to tha United States. You would not suspect that the brisk, businesslike, plainiy dreased young man who was introduced to me asx Mr, Oederlin was the interme: | diary between the United States and Germany | He looks more like what he was UP to last month—commercial advis- er to the Swiss minister; an enter: | prising young business man. He wears an ordinary business sult, with |@ soft collar, and bow the—none of your black-Draided cutaway coats and silk hats for him. Story of Diplomat He ts only 38 years of age—per. haps the youngest diplomat in Wash ington, Here is his history, as he fave it to me himnself-——with a mod est protest that he couldn't see why the American people should be inter ested in him He was born in Zurich and gradu ated from the University of Zurich as a mechanical engineer, after which he went to England and was employ ed by a firm there for four years. Then he went to the silver mines of Cobalt, Canada, as mechanical expert for an English concern. A year later the General Electric Co. discovered him and brought him to Pittsfield, Mase. America had been his goal, so he was willing ” ™ In 1910 he was called back to es" from H. G. Smith, | ‘uggestion o Star, ts. | S¥itarcland to work for an engineer | ing corporation there, and when the | war began, in 1914, he was sent to |New York to take charge of the work | of supplying the industries of Switz \erland with raw materials from America. He. rapidly became an expert on | American commercial conditions and | shipping to Europe, and when ¥ | Sulzer was appointed by his govern ments, last year, as Swiss minister to adviser, the legation. On Septembe: FOR EXCESSIVE TRY THE TREA ‘WILLIAMS TMENT 75 Cent Bottle (32 Doses) 4 FREE wate ane LE" Ah Scie ad mert: en deck——-worn Tae da ag ‘4 ore 1 from st} murelea, ffering. ach: from Wiliams ‘Freatment. we will give Pp. I John West, $11 Highth Andrew! J ¢, Box ¥. Noel, 1334 Terry H. Todd, 6042 15th N. BE; ¥ Ae "gd Wash; H. A. 2. Mrs. W. L. MeSorley, 3932 at; M. Edin Winslow, 4 Goerner, 307 Chicker Michael J. Verdon, 3540 ¢ ; 0. F. Davenport. Bothell in service): J. A. Gieschon, at. (returned soldie: of service): Helen La ly: Prank. Ht Newhall, 2264 Frank W, Lapham, 724 6 26th DT LET A COLD KE YOU AT HOME Dr. King’s New Discovery almost never fails to bring quick relief Small doses once in awhile and fiat throat-tearing, lung-«plitting foon quiets down. Another Ge and w hot bath before jump- into bed, a good sleep, and Normal in the morning. ing’s New Discovery is well For fifty years it's been coughs, colds and bron- Le ped Attacks. Vor fifty years it been sold by druggists every- Where, A reliable remedy that you or any member of your Can take safely, Those Stubborn Bowels| ~ Order a Ca hot eee? “Mture take its course, not Violent, habit-forming purg- mtie but certain , jaxative, Dr, King’s ¥ Pills. Tonic in action, v nay ave, but wi the lax bowels. Sold everywhere, with your name and address, and 10¢ + L-714, New P. 0. Bid Conn. Send at jthe United States, he asked Mr.| Oederlin to serve as his bepeanlity 2 | Last June Mr. Sulzer returned to! "y | Switzerland to confer with his gov- | ernment, leaving Dr. Carl FP. Hueb- |acher, his seeretaary, in charge of 13 Dr.) |and Sulphur. 4 |cause it darkens so naturally and jevenly that nobody can tell it has| E lone The bottle (32 doses) free if you | " |will eut out this notice and sen: it ltion It becomes beautifully dark a ti king, ete, to|and appears glossy and lustrous. He be DA. Williams Company, | This ready-touse preparation is FREDERICK OEDERLIN Huebscher left on a few months’ va cation—and that is how the young mechanical engineer, being next in rank at the legation, became the Swiss charge d'affaires. “Of course, it Is @ great honor to me to be in this position,” said Mr. Oederlin, “and I am giad that Tam able to be of service to the American government “I have always admired America for the tremendous energy she has shown in developing her resources. “I greatly admire the high plane of idealiam which has made itself mnanifest in the American people. So many Europe had thought of America as a nation ruled by dollars and cents; as a people actuated only by material considerations lofty and democratic ideals that in. spire the republic of Switzeriand, and has filled me with the hope that in the future the two great republics | tofore.” jis Grandmother's recipe to bring color, lustre and youthfulness to hair when faded, streaked or y That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. | When & fades, turns gray or streak. | ed, just an application or two of Sage and Sulphur enhances Its ap pearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the mtx- ture; you can get this famous old by the pound. This can always be depend- ed upon to bring back the natural color and lustre of your hair. Everybody uses “Wyeth's” Sage and Sulphur Compound now be- been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disap- |, and after another applica delightful toilet requisite for those who desire dark hair and a youth It is not intended is a true Northwest | Home Product farthest point north in Alas once lived an ordinary little girl whose life was destined to read now the mother of two) Sin) | small children and the wife of | granted, one day she found herself in San Francisco, where she met Mr of Norway, a student imo people and custome, late Dr. Sheldon Jackson was in this tale. charge of the ge with five other Little Diomede inland Kood | strait, Little Diomede in almont ino- | to the | lated, and those who live there are handicapped by superstition. were landed at San/long period after a death, they will neither eat nor hunt certain game | perminwion by the medi-| Exkimo girls, he brought Ar laluk, for that was her nan American education. n route to the Carlyle nh Pennsylvanga, the home: | until giv wick Exkimo # | But after th y were duly impreaned | with the long distance from home, became obedient Eekimos and | proceeded to school for an American | precious gifts that Fide have again returned After eight years at Carlyle, Anna! States. Jjarne, just as soon as he ts old enough, will enter an American »0l. So will little almond eyed Margaret, if her parents do not home with decide that duty calls them back to benefit of her | Little Diomede island. duty calls them here, for Mr. Bide, | “Tt was here,” Aaya Mrs. Eide with | having taken out hin first naturaliza- enunciation, “that I inter-| ton papers, agrees with everyone Eskimo folk lore | that this is the time to bulld ships, for Vilhjalmar Stefanawon, the Arctic | and he can be found any day at work xplorer, who was at that time gath- | in the Skinner Eddy shipyards. Strong, Forceful Men With Plenty of Iron in Their Blood— “The spirit of your people shows | that they are moved by the sme |These Are the Ones With the Power and Energy to Win ed by the government Harrow, where she | public ac gave all the little ignorant Bakimos who had remained at preted some of the It in estimated that over 3,000,000 will come closer together than here: | people annually in this | country alone O6E TEA TURNS —_ CT NUX2TED IRON For Red Blood, Strength and Endurance | COFFEE—IMPORTANT “The Food Administration is destrous that every one econo: mize in the consumption of coffee tn order to decrease the demands on shipping and free as much tonnage as possible for the trans portation of the American Army. The extent to which the Ameri- can public, by conforming to this request, can assist in the trans- portation of our Army to France may be realized when we con- Of coffees into the United States per annum exceed five hundred thousand tone. “Rationing the people is not contemplated, the Food Adminis. tration preferring to depend upon the voluntary action of our people to reduce consumption by careful avoidance of al] waste and over-induigence, and by careful preparation of coffee for the sider that the ‘Use lens coffer, but use good coffen Gold Shield Vacuum-Packed Coffee is n lo-day = STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER ly From Top o’-the-World Now at Home in Seattle Point Barrow, the, ering material for his life story there | Stefanason, who han juat left Seattle, akimo | paid us a visit while he wan here. Tut after three years, to return to the land of civilization all of Anna's wishes were | Bide at a Y. W. hey were married not end the story. with her family tried to escape. | cine “ALWAYS” GOOD Roasted, Packed and Guaranteed by Schwabacher Bros. & Co., Inc. Seattle's Oldest Business House Established 1869 Save on Your Hat! Do you know that by walking up a few steps make a saving on your Hat that is well worth your while? Let us prove to you how we save you money. Come up tomorrow and see our great variety of new Fall Shapes. UPSTAIRS PRICES $9.50 © $5.50. An Upstairs Selling Plan, With Low Rental, Etc., Enables Us to Positively Save You Money on Your Clothes The bride and bridegroom ment school at you can While here, little Bjarne and Mar | garet were born to them, | And it wan because of these two | Mr. and Mr. | undquist-Lilly 4th at Pike Joshua Green Bldg. | This year’s crops of Chicago war ak Saucht tr | gardens re worth $3,50,000 ite of the fumes, firing | Lewis gun, and held the enemy | when they at-/| ted to capture his tank, inflict: | heavy casualties on them. When TANK FIGHTERS ‘AMONG BRAVEST the war office show men of the) hole, he killed eight of the enemy | most | With his revotver, saving the tank | and its crow. (Acting Maj) Brooms, M, C. (D, O. 8.-—Commanded | nostrils open right up, the air pas- tions relate the following instances | 59 tanks and handled them with the | sages of your head are clear and | greatest courage and ability. Temp. Second Lieut. Arthur R tanks cleared the way for the infan- | hawking, O.)—Saved an In- try to a most important enemy posi-| charge, headache, dryness—no strug- fantry battalion from @ desperate | tion, and enabled the infantry to con-| gling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone. Gaieaienenenne stay stuffed up! John Edwards, grocer, reports | small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. this fragrant, antiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it pene- trate through every air passage of soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous mem- instant relief. Ely’s Cream Balm is just what ev- it, seys|ery cold and catarrh sufferer has It's just splendid. NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH snaps | Your clogged tank corps to be among the fearless and efficient of fighters. A few of the citations for decora- ‘What relief! His | you can breathe mucous dis- from some strong points When darkness came on he was surround- Germans, who climbed on to the top of his tank and sized hold of his machine guns, but he drove them off and inflicted very | beavy casualties upon. dispersed the enemy, who were as-| sembled for a counter-attack. Temp. Second Lieut. Frederick W. | McElroy (D. 8. O.)—Drove the enemy back and captured two strongly held | got more than a of sugar at his grocery. But he had to come at night and cut a hole in the door | been seeking. $$ OLDEN WEST ., VACUUM PACKED COFFEE) Cosserd Pe ers PORTLAND SEATTLE _ ATT

Other pages from this issue: