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mannan APR AR ALR AR AAA RAR AAD ALR ADL DAL LDP PD ALP PLP PPP PPP PPP PLP PPP PAPAL PAPA PAPAL LDA PDP ADP ALD LPP PDP PRP PDP L LPP PLP PDP PLL PDD P PPP P AL Put on That Gauze Mask and Smile; Help the F ight Against Influenza! Three thousand sailors were vaccinated with anti-influensa As to other preventive regulations, the thing to do is to conact Fortunately Seattle is attempting te ou sires * ’ gerum, and, altho they had all been exposed to the disease, only three entiously observe them, Don't lone any sleep trying to figure out — it exacts the frightful toll taken In eltie Kast and South, where — Problem, What ' to wa ain tha $ took sick, and their cases proved extremely mild why it i# that gauze masks have proven effective in preventing the — people died so fast It was Impossible to bury them per so eit Pay, Brenan mere: . ; In Seattle, health authorities say no one properly treated with pread of the disease. Hxperiments carried out in army cantonment It in ensy to be cynical and skeptical, to deride gauze m ur wate don usthonie ‘teleost itte he > the serum has died from influenza so tar they can find out have shown that gauze masks of #ix folds can s life, and tend to erums, the closing of theatr and schools, and churche It in ea of influenza mx to & comparative r “ § Certainty those results justify the appeal that every one make materially check the rapid spread of influenza. ‘The thing to do is to to khock every effort to stamp out thin dise Hut kno nd kreat number other cities where # measures b ' t ) paste to receive an injection of the serum wear a mask and be thankful that you can benefit by it scoffing aren't going to keep down the toll of deaths taken as prompt § PPI PIPL PP IPP PPP DDD PPP ODP OP RAD RAPP PDP PPP PPP PPD PP PPP PPP PPE PPP PPP PPP PPP PDP PPP PDP PPP PPD PDP PPD PDP PDP PPD PDP PPP DP PPP PP PPD DD DPD PPP PPP PPP PPD P PPP PP PPP PP PPP THE GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST Por Yous, wy Mall, $610 to $9.08 Entered as Becond Class Matter May 9, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash. under the Act of Congress March §, 1879, YY FULL LEASED WIRE REPORT OF TH E UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATIONS __COMPLE TE SERVICE OF | THE NEW SPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION a a pAARAPAPAAPDPDPS VOLUME 20, NO, 209 SEAT’ TL, bE, W ASH. » WE DNE SDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1918. _W aS — wan ee — ————— TEUTONS SEND NEW NOTE Turkey and Allies in Peace Conference, Is Report RUSSIAN REDS ‘Serbs Race Take 2, 00 ARMISTICE TO ARE PLOTTING "ow" tay Drive MAKE FOE PAY Home Front HUN REVOLT Troops Are “Now Near Bel- 100 Villages s Are Liberated; FOR OUTRAGES Allies Sweep on Thru Foe Lines AMSTERDAM, Oct. 30.—Constantinople news- grade and Within 20 ba CARL SANDBURG Miles of Hungary ‘Papers declare that Turkey already has begun official YANKEES CROSS PIAVE | ccotiations with the entente. The Turkish @ildgeben . E. A. Staff Correspondent. aes ee Corian Today on Hils Way to His Permanent N. E- A-/SUCCESS SPECTACULAR | ining in, itsctt vital te eur tetera geome Tene ete net * Dispatch Ton tan it is said, have left for the conference. News Post at Stockholm, Sweden, on the Borders of = public will have everything to say abont transportation and that the R err : While Austria Hungary is torn Public Service Commission will no Jonger control our street car - - (PRR Co SRS DISPATCH FROM ROBERT J. BENDER PAPA A PAARL ADA RAR ADP PPR P ARADO ed; prob ant winds ather Forecast: bly "tmin"tren ! i ! Why Labor Should Vote for Car Line Purchase! By Councilman Robert B. Hesketh Former President Seattle Labor Council “I voted against the company charging a 6-cent fare and Icent transfer, as proposed, all the time. I stood for leasing the lines and when we could not lease, I stood for their purchase, because I felt that the present service was intolerable and that the city would give service at cont The wages the men have recelved during the past year have been the lowpst paid by any one in Waahington—33 to 38 cents per hour. a9 any one knows, is too little money to exixt on, The city taking over the lines means the workinen will have a fair employer, It means, further, that the citizens of Seattle will have good service, a CHRISTIANIA, Norway, Oct. 30.—Bolshevik Russia is} by internal dissension and fran. problem fomenting a Bolshevik revolution in Germany. Ucally seeking peace, the allies Another point comes to my mind. Every man who works for | Direct to The Star (By United Press Leased Wire, Direct to The Star) i PPAR as elit Fifty “Red” couriers cross the border daily from Russia, are battering her armies to bite. wages at the present time wonders whether he will have to return vw? | PARIS, Oct. 30—(245p.m)— | WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—Germany has sent a supple- - io the ha vey or ons prev ‘or ’e por has into Germany. and Austria, with pouches full of Bolshevik! $",ths jaan front and rapidly” || Checrfully done ite part to win the wee ure ‘le war, Kahor } | af several points in the Balkans. “The boys have gone to the front in France and have gone to the | 4 {mentary communication to the United States.on the subject taken 25, pie sx sy.s I hopat than vo jof peace. It reached the Swiss legation this forenoon and guns In their present offensive, | was delivered by the Swiss charge shortly before noon. i i i | ‘The Italian front offensive is rap- |] front in the shipyards and other war industries, After the war is Russian sepemanicr, Joffe, in coe bas issyed| camming the praportices: of ani] wen, they wentfalr treaunent an6 fait wages a0 dosent Bving oot a declaration pledging all the resources of the “Red” army) vitor rout, The italiane and British | it wae officially ‘nmoanced teday. The new message described what Germany is: doing: int™=* a |the way of constitutional changes to make the government ditions. I have always stood fer the principle that the city of Seattle of Russia to the support of the German people in case of are acdoms the Piave on a 40-mile LONDON, Oct. 30.—(12:07 p. m)—/responsible to the people. should set a gvod example to private employers in the matter of pay at Se Rohanntiens front west of Valdobbindene to the |] and treatment of its CoRR RORENT edey ‘eontune “che aey ‘The Intent estimate of Austriam prt oners in the Anglo-Italian offensive WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.—-That President Wilson will attend the Now} Treviag-oderae ‘They hays | done ao and will werden r FE aot thin information from = C we - ee Miles beyond “The tity now employs 3, men and women. “Phere are approx: 000, with total casualties of 40,-/| great peace conference whenever and wherever it is held, is the belief I werian newspaper man who returned |). iver on this front, capturing |f imately 2,000 atreet car workers. With the city establishing a wage 000 of his friends. today from Moscow, seat of the Rol- for 5,000 workers in Seattle, it will tend to standardize decent condi se For some days the report, without official confirmation as yet shevil ussian govern! more than 100 villages, including the ret Mae, Bea rms nets Fo important railway center of Conegti tions and fair wages for all the workmen in the Northwest, both now ; and after the war l Get of “n0. More than 15,000 prisoners |J and | | Norway. which pel sot praia have officially been counted The street car workers have not received sufficient compensation one oe raw. for their labor to live and support thelr families in decency and com est union labor dailies in the world OHIO MEN ENTER FRAY; fort and live as inen should. The city Wil pay them fair wages, and Hansen declares 2,000,000 people PRISONERS CHEER KING after the war is won the city wage scale will influence all private 1 : ‘ { been circulating in official and diplomatic ers he will }have evacuated Petrograd, former American troops, comprising Obio | employers to be fair to their emplo aa agl Csi Re aul “9 eval 5 plomatic quarters that he wi | Russian capital, reducing its popula | units, are across the Plave, ready to By voting ‘YES' on the car line purchase, you vote for better —The allied advance continues There ts nothing to prevent it, the constitution making no stipula ton from 3,000,000 to 1,000,000 since | participate in the advance wages for all the workmen in Seattle, which I and men who believe ‘on:the whole 60-mile treat, from tions against the president leaving his country. Precedent alone has March, 1917. All this is under a com King Victor Emmanuel passed [as I do have always worked for the Brenta to the Treviso-Oderzo guided the action of former executives. President Wilson has broken mission appointed by the government | over the river at the head of a regi railway, Progress is greatly ae many to arrange the evacuation ment of Bersagiieri. He is reported wd eee “Economic improvement in Russia to have been cheered by Austrian contuated on the right flank, 7 r | north of Treviso, It w id that it doe ot alter} > he A a is slow but” steady,” Hansen said. | prisoners as said tha 6 not a pass on the Austrian appeal to | “Coal shortage limits munitions man The allies are within seven mil Perro ee the peace situation, as it stands to-| Versailles for settlement, notifying ufacture. Grain and oil shortages of Vittorio, the principal Austrian 5 a day, not making any new proposals. | Austria of his action, was the con- also exist. supply base for th ave and are ready to take up the | It is understood to have been un-| viction he: al b whole Venetian | c ¢ here. | “The Red Guards’ war department | plains region FOR IGNORING BY FREIGHTER bau arg bot gh Italian and | solicited and constitutes a voluntary! With armistice terms about ready | issues bulletins dally from 15 ‘inter In the Grappa district the Italians | | f] move on the part of Germany for presentation to Germany, her The Italian and British armies) The text may not be made public | broken ally, Austria, was today mad- nal fronts." Their latest claim is that are advancing slowly in the face of ren ~ " | they have defeated all the anti-soviet stubborn resistance. The battle completely piercing the Austrians’ | immediately ly scrambling to get a separate peace | forces in the Volga region. This. if front ix blazing westward clear to line of resistance, are advancing The supplementary message was! before the complete crash comes. } a total rapidly eastward between the two|by way of amplifying previous true, releases immense stores of sup he siago re mt aki . 1p: ae rn ip en gor) * Seven arrests in almost im- Rammed during a heavy fog as |Tailway linex feeding the Austrians| statements of the ¢ n- Appeals to Lansing | plies. active front of more than 50 mi H Pesagelle “ Gk tis: Shave trunk iamat - that. . 3 er latest reported note—an ap- At the same time as they seek re) The battle front now extends in Ettiott ot formed. ‘The note, which it. sup-| Peal to Secretary Lansing to use in- Cari Sandburg, well known Amer- volt in Germany, soviet agents are follows: South of Asi " t lared th the esi-| fluence upon President Wilson for fean reporter and famous poet, has/conducting a furious propaganda eastward of Mont Sinem plements, declarec at the presi us| mediate succession for “violation she lay at buoy No. », north of the health ordinances” were bay, the sailing vessel A. J. Ful They have cut off all lines |; eastward made Wednesday morning by ler was sunk, after being hit by commune m on the Venet renter a act: ehasia: Sie such a peace—had not been re- een sent to Norway and Sweden/campaign against what they call “al of Foza; northeastward to Mont| Seattle policemen, alert to en- the big freighter Mexico Maru, | plains {Gent “knows at os = nile fe rune, | ceived. oo u cee expected to pny by the Newspaper Enterprise as-| lied imperialists.” s ‘ola; eastward to Alano; east) force the regulations laid down only a few hundred yards from More than 100 villages and com It was regarde@ here, therefore, as a last minute effort to persuade | !OW closely on her peace answer de- nities east of the Piave have been the president that the kaiser's pow-| livered yesterday, which was before liberated. The Italians occupied gy had been effectually shorn and| ‘the President and Secretary Lansing The sunken ship was loaded with Coengiiano, an important railway |fhat armistice dealings would in re-| ‘day canned salmon and was 1,600 gross and communication center 15 miles aity be with the German people—| Unofficial advices from a neutra wciation, of which The Star is a) This is seen In Scandinavia. ard thru Valdobbiadene, San Piet by Mayor Hanson and Health the Seattle waterfront, between — », member, to find out all the news| In the Norwegian elections just ro, Parra and Refrontolo; southeast | Commissioner McBride covering 1 and 2 a m. Wednesday. from Germany and Russia and rush held, in which the conservatives and | ward thru Conegliano, Cimette and| the wearing of gauze masks dur- f to American readers. | socialists gained and the liberals lost,| Frontellano southward to Ponte di ing the Spanish influenza pan- over 210,000 votes were polled by the Piave. demic, Six of the arrests were 6. 7 > Treviso. erday. r ce bie ™ a. fendbure left the stale ot sane |socialints on a platfor-n indorsing ex ace | made by Police Officer G. Ww. |‘? rota blevele corte entered tha cits, {Bot the Hohensollerna sind te eder hae Chicago Daily News to undertake nae Slinovten. ALLIES SWEEP SERBIA Wilson The A. J. Fuller now rests on the | * re = yele corps — the city : How the government regards the| >#* “co th bpp Pong new this mission. He was picked be- y LIKE PRAIRIE FIRE : om o' bay, in 30 fathoms of} Airplanes signaled their arrival) sncority of the e \c pest etane oD inh cis ions: The evidence is overwhelming, two new deaths and 178 new | vom Of the Dey oe oe ate auton (and a Rome brigade completed the|Wncerity of the explanations was —— however, that all the nations of East-| The allies are sweeping thru Ser were reported Wed not forthcoming " 1 . mie aay ere the o abo: | occupation p | 1. He is one of the very best) oo, rurope join President Wilson's |bia like a prairie fire. At three |" | m man were the only men aboard at th The Tenth army is advancing rap-| The Versailles conference will q . ontl- | viewpoint in his September New| Dointe—northwest of Negotin and! rnonsia c, Moore, $2 years old,| {me fC the sinking. They were res). ward, employir 2 ban | Sree to adhere to President Wileens | nent, having years of training in northwest and southwest of Usihtze ~ cued. The Mexico Maru was on the astward, employi any aban | race points Teporters on the American conti peech partne the Garvey and Moore ; don S patteries to she the hard Chicago newspaper game. Tore o9 they are within 20 miles of Hun. | Partner in r nd Moore way to Pier 6 when she rammed t Joned Austrian batteries to shell the achooner, which, sinking This was stated in authoritative billiard parlors, 1120-5 eivdatiny 4 r garian soil rbs, in the great | Die : RY ar ogee pe mbling over the | American official and entente diplo- buoy down with hi Investigation ve 12th seramb! over the |v atic ¢ sao s ia t mountains northeast of Valdobbia mans aan today As a corollary as arrested Tuesda Morava v are within 40 miles | Wa Arrested Tuesday of the winking was under way early to this basic acceptance, the question | 2. He is American-born, but of} wore RY EDITOR.—The last par. Parentage, and under-|agranh of Sandburg’s cable is taken Wands the language of the Scan- | ty refer to President Wilson's Liberty failure to enforce the of Belgrade, their former capital failure to enforce ¢ ee ‘ eguiations in his establishment. He | oy, > as dene, has passed Refrontolle, seven @n 4 Jugo-Slava in Montenegro have |" ae Wednesday by Port Warden Paysse e ! of an armistice hasbeen given over| ZURICS, Oat. a state of } wal — among whom he | joan speech of September va vain passed Ihepek and Diakova and fur. ’ means a nth halo prt M. Haskell, captain of the A. J m ~ govia ont of V ittorio, whic th 18 oe the militate envehure ‘and, accord.| Siege has been . nies in Buda- | 7 York, in which the president said: t10, to the westward are nearing en And Ls court | Puller, whose home is in Seattle, was the base of the Austrians’ whole #Y8-/ 14. t) the United Press’ informa. | pest. following the attempt of a hun- 1 % He is a student of labor and| “There can be no peace obtained by | 1), ¢rontier of Herzegovina ot Tamnie, 24; R. Vomato, 50, ana | Shore at the time of the accident tess of communications from the | son armistice terms will be forth.| dred thousand demonstrators to en- ine Scial problems, the very problema|any kind of ‘gain or compromise The battle line in the Balkans ap. £d,, aie Aygo ema 0, 0, and Lights Dimmed by Fog | Venetian plains from the north. coming before the week ends. ter the palace of Archduke Joseph. 4 (that are being answered with vary-| with the governments of the central | po entiy runs as follows bap oes i Sens SOeNere ee a King Is Cheered Any differences as to the applica-| The demonstrators are demanding a eee fo | 3 teurs, were arrested at 711 First Mate Thomas Torgenson pp | ig success by the elements in con-| empires, because we have | ‘irom Negotin in practically a|teUrs. ¥ os inet ve 4 wha in Johane oth of |. King Victor Emmanuel crossed the | tion of the president's 14 points will | Tepublic. ® ‘f0l of various sections of Russia|seen the-n deal with other Sovern-| wraight line westward to a point |" prep Rial hes d yay gees ig Ph hag aboard. the vease |Plave with a regiment of be threshed out in the final pe German troops are reported arriv- BR 824 the nations that have thrown | ments that were parties to this strug: | thru Monteyegro to Kukus, in Al ater a aad on: BE bail cack They, ries chi atedide u carne out of He was greeted with che idjustment, it was said. It was em-|ing. Students in the city have form- ME ot the German yoke. | gle, aa gy saith: bie ga got bania; southwestward to the Adri a> iri the East waterway at a moderate|contingent of Austrian prison phasized that the Versailles confer.|¢€d a council to co-operate with the ian |\They have convinced us tha’ ey °, 0 orth of Alessio. a 2 - i . ey ante PO y up aleo cheereé < ose a comple a ci | 8 Tn ie Bl a post admits) vy without honor and do not intend | “weit m Pont north of Aleamio. erai| Jacob Krakkovaky, 23, jitney driv-|rate of peed, A heavy fog hung |°omine up also cheered him. || ence cpa, Soe pila patience ke confidence of the Nort! “we oe tatent te 7 os er, waa arrested at First and’ Yester | over'the acéne, the lights of both ¥ 1@ constant charge of Italian and | united dip jo fr | European jeaders of thought and ¥ Pid Prog ie Pigg KE nr sources indicate that the Huncarians, | 6: was arrest —— es ag hens yd nels being indistinct. | British troops across the Piave is one) President Wilson was reported | Surope” that have ma peace w' ‘zecho-Slovaks and Jugo-Slav: A ay ro ny ped of the most spectac eats 0 8 mol g as pre "4 Soverning classes, where a less Blau Gone. Rune. ot. Sree a = os picwryh oe ley > Slave ave | teased on $5 bail, Torgenson immediately set the fog: | Of the m Rete hh nay Ay be iy the. sie yao ee at reporter might fail to make yak) and Rumania (at Bucharest).|Gount. Kk : ~~ C. Larr, 24, shipyard worker, | horn in action, and assisted Johanson | ¥" he Austrian artillery Is mak-|to tho Intest Austrian peace plea, | | 2 impression. j titers ) ans ania (a Count Karolyi as its head. Street). arrested at First ave, and Yes.|to lower a boat, in which the two|!0& incessant efforts to destroy the | which was expected to be completed 1a rs cable shows that Sand-) | Sighting ae pec Uy ie Pep rome lor way don-semoving ‘tig kana while | mile, aunaoed evening maine compe cH ep gk and fort aoe “ape a to ‘hi WR bare got right on the Job as soon | where some opposition has develop: sake tie ty Gt wn Oe toa ag EO A: any of the largest-caliber shells|but probably not until late this WE & he landed. Yo p cases | Company Short of led to Karolyt’s proposed govern |!" % stor out mao ena ps nbtlsig thas uller was! strike in the middle of the rushing ft oe ae A ill lL ieent James Murphy, 16, shipyard work: | damaged cannot be determined until | oot exploding on the rock 4 RICH, Oct, 30-—The Turks have | i y ther stirring news stories Labor; City Wi | 7 (Continued on page 7) (Continued on Page Ten) v aoe ranasated. tive sae ‘ p from Sandburg, who t« at the one H Pl M | GRIM STRUGGLE RAGES and sending great columns of Ww ver evacuated the great oil center of MB fontler where German enty en AL MEL DEFEN hundreds of feet toward the sky. Baku, on the Caspian sea, without i e e y has access ave ALONG } 7 j; 4 large section of the outer| i tant have ‘tes! me tch of 60 kilometers (30 =niles) re- | | fighting, according to a dispateh re- World, ; = * e outer! if the city votes to take over the| No important gains have been embles a vast field of pelved from Moscow today. | 3 ade at any point on the west front | &@ vaat field of geysers. | | |) treet car system, there will be no | ™ Atay . | | nape ana I bos dmrute to settle, and it will not} within the last two days. The plridtecere!s eh aeraras | _— é | Americ re still fighting des When several thousand Austrian | i be necessary for the war labor board | Americans hl ve f | ] Ir " # to hold any hearing, according to| perately to conquer the tora | lc ére reached ah datand {i mild: | Semen ita YOU HAVE SOME- Raymond Swing and W. R. Kelley,| helghts on both sides of the Meuse stream, the enemy artillery cut the)’ Dispatch From William i THING FOR SALE, THE ton » | which will give them command of bridge, leaving the prisoners under a 1 the board exacniners, from Washing | Philip Si 13 8 CHANCES ARE THAT 4 t the valley extending northward to| terrific bombardment, which was || ip Simms aa YOU WILL CONTINUE ton, D. C., who held a conference she, Vall |_ LONDON, Oct. 30.—The ferment In tion touched off the recent out: | Kone up for hours, in an effort to pre. || BY United Press Leased Wire ia a “nN vet) ‘Tuesday with the officers of the | Mor d mary ‘nty on| Budapest is becoming chronic, it is | break d K 0 . in an effort to pre ¥ = ce i. wg bd street car men’s union. f The ¥ reach advan . A lghidy pe Fe uieed in-teporta trdea Biavich anal’ GOMMMECAL “yp bets vent the Italians from rebuilding the i Direct to boil Star ‘s _ COPENHAGEN, Oct. 30.—Count ITA SECRET. NOW, Pa | ‘The unfon men are thoroly satis.|@ seven-mile fiint eet ot aeettn | Copenhagen: Czecho-Slovak national council was | praze: | The oners wuffered | MTLLES, Out. B0ocit wes|Andrassy, new Austro-Hungarian | ¢ chedule provided | and improved th en alc ne “ neavy casualties | wSATLLES, ~ 80.— a sc ANB ae os i BEST WAY TO DISPOSE | fied with the wage 0 boftule provided | Tine. ‘The remainéer of the front treet fighting, in which machine |in complete possession of Prague is anticipated today that the armistice | © ign minis lh he Sopeee be oe 4 OF WHAT YOU HAVE In the city's budget. ject the propos. | Wis comparatively quiet yesterday. | guns are employed, is common, and | capital of Hot on Monday, a | terms to Germany will be similar to| #0 Girect negotiations with aly, FOR SALE 18 TO TELL DB gusngy gf mgmt ig pe ee.| Field Marshal Halg reported that| many have been killed and injured. | Vienna dispatch reported — today {| those offered Bulgaria, altho extra | (you. NE '© Mlvices receive ir TO THE LARGHOr ed car deal, the War a the election, {in Flanders the allies took 18,493 | Great demonstrations were organized |The populace was enthuslastically Wilson’ s 14 Terms { autions will be necessary and|Oay: a f AUDIENCE IN THE jvene icanmetints “ | Neen have| prisoners from October 14 to 27,|hourly yesterday. There were fre- | celebrating 5 may be some harsher clauses. ment NORTHWEST. oe ee ener ic iuia| making a total of 30,000 since Sep-|quent violent combats, generally be-| m ~ — Senator James 1. Lewis, of |] ‘The interallied conference is un:| _ ISSUE STORM WARNING jauit since Saturday, when the old) i mber 28. They also took 609] tween loyal soldiers and students Austrians Fleein Illinois, democratic whip in the }| derstood to have already agreed on| Small craft warnings were ordered | tract expired, Business Agent | gs | { ’: Wednest: jae P. Spomencavad f the car men’s union,|’uns.between the 14th and 27th | ‘The republican movement is still | senate, and often the spokesman }| the main political points of the | displayed at 7:40 a. m, nesday | one Sterennen. & age lott or, iene “ | brewing, and a general labor revolt From Montenegro of the Wilson administration, has (| armistice. at the mouth of tho Columbia river | ‘ expennens tof the employes to| VERSAILLES, Oct, 30. — Col.|is feared | RICH, Oct, 30.—The Austro-|{ prepared an article on President {| ‘The terms must be severe, it was|and all Washington seaports. The Main 600 j has induce oe hae until the wage |House, representing the United! The Chronicle and Daily News sug-| Hungarian government of Montene: |\ Wilson's 14 points for permanent {| agreed in authoritative circles, be-|storm is centered off the British | remain opr thtoed States, has called on President Poin-| gest the trouble perhaps is the begin- | gro fled to Vienna, following the up-|) peace, This will appear in The }| cause Germany began the war, the| Columbia coast and will cause mod YOU CAN HAVE IT |*ede aig takes over the system,’ j care and conferred with other French | ning of a revolution against the|rising in that country, a dispatch |) Star tomorrow. mepnins Sale is nionres of which must be made im eres te nee po oe J " ; of “ | ‘as received Greek | Hapsburgs. It is reported that Em:|from Laibach reported today. Mon-|) a former congressman from Se- {| possible. day, ere CHARGED says Stevenson, “many former trac-| leaders, He also has received Greek V v Hien hava ition able Soe on the canst ané Shittind $o.euhe i . Carl's opposition to Co Sar-|tenegrin ¢ turn, and the elt | Premier Venizelos and the Greek | peror Karl's opposition to Count Kar. | te | itt ena Bi of labor.” . minister to France, olyi's proposition for a majority coali- | Cetinje, the capital, | That the president would merely | easterly. « ‘