The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 21, 1918, Page 4

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PAGE 4 1 BRITISH SAY OLD SEA LAWS MUST THINK PROBLEM WILSON HOPES | WILL BE IRONED PEACE WILL BE RED. OUT AGREEABLY RIGHT FOR ALL [ig ae ee 85 RR r Yontinued From Page “One (United Press Correspondent) ‘. PARIS, Dec, 21.—Cireat Britain | oan of the general sentiment in re is willing to go as far as possible gard to the problems involved to meet President Wilson's point President Wilson said it was his first wish to visit the American of view regarding freedom of the | vimy, and that he was also anxious seas, according to the advance to visit Italy the country from skirmishers of the British peace o many of my fellow citizens delegation. They say that G fully cognizant of th tor revising antiquated sea laws. But they point out that any such revision must be consistent with Great Brit aln’s insular position, which. t be lieve, Wilson will ager quires spe cial safeguards. tion « forward also with pecullar and satisfaction to visiting t Britain is inter Rrussels, now happily delivered from necessity st the hands of the enemy," he said. <) regret that It appear suld not be able to visit adding his apprecia ad watchful sup He expres ed now he w the grand fleet of ite strong These Britishers, who, while not t in maintaining communication offidials, are high In the councils of | betw the alli the empire, ar on There has been a very hearty that Anglo-American omradeship and a loyal co-operation garding freed seas and oth between the navy of England and et Wilsonian principles are not fun. the United States, and Iam sure all damental, and will be reconciled | know the full significance of this sit when the president and Dléyd George | vation, and its bearing on the win have the opportunity for a direct ex-| ning of the war,” the president said. change of opinions about the details. | Glad to See England The greatest regret is expressed by these unofficial diplomats that! President Wilson said he was very Lioyd George's conferences with | glad of opportunity to vinit Eng Wilson have been delayed, inasmuch | land, beca knew “with what as the French are busily utilizing ev.) unanimity nate conviction ery opportunity to cultivate the pres-| the people Brit and ident and the American delegation.| America entertained the same con They exptess some apprehension | ception of justice and liberty that Wilson, because of his lack of It is ensential for the future direct knowledge, will acquire eFro-| peace of the world,” he said, “that the | there should be the frankest possible HE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, DEC. 1918 FIRST PICTURE SHOWING GERMAN TROOPS IN RED FLAG RIOTS DURING UPHEAVAL IN BERLIN | niet " a CHANGE POLICE PROBING LEWIS COLONEL NO BODIES ARE DEATH OF GIRL = TOCOMEUPIN DISCOVERED IN BY STRYCHNINE COURT: “MARTIAL BURIED AUTE SPOKANE, De ACOMA, D. of finding a tery of Mins city, che atrye clue that Rosa Kempf, a mortem Il three or four Meantime William Delaney Jent suitor of Mis empf, it was first reported married next weeks ts Mil without bi oh to whe held in ged with cash. | com ing ® bogus check ngton, D. The girl's real fiance, Karl } Reiniger, at the Puget § p ‘Training fon, came he ye day. He told police that he girl had been engaged three and were to have beer ed wervice h marr tain wuftic chersrank to t Generals Edw J. MeClernand Ww " e been or his discharge from Dr. Erick T. F phyaictan that the sir taken po a few naid to have ing candy ¢ Delaney wa and Pet lered « » Kearney, | timousin which json when he Meyers, former judge n her by Delane advo at the home when Dr Het Dr. Richter asked Col. W n for a sample the but Delaney told him he wa had thrown ON A DECLINE and Public Is Saved From Gas Strike When you feel that your campaigning than he himself intend ed. He is said to be prepared to ad Yoeate a cooler atmosphere in the quai d’orsay (French foreign office). On the other hand, it is known that Wilson himself is ecnbarrassed, owing to the delays he has experi | enced in getting into touch with the British leaders. He would have much preferred informal conferences with | them and the French together, for the purpose of a proper comparison and co-ordination of views. He also is extremely anxious to/ complete al! this preliminary work as soon as possible, and be ready for th informal inter-allied = conference, which is expected to begin the sige week in January He wants to give the conference | his undivided attention when once it) starts. a | OOR. FIRST AVE. aXD PIKE ST. Phone Main 4065 “IF 1 HURT YOU, DON’T) PAY ME.” | ‘This is my message of deliver- an island empire The correspondent sald he was confident Precident Wilson is con vineed in regard to freedom of the that nothing will prevent a solid guarantee of future peace and that the president has no anxiety that the “horrors of peace” will be | worse than the “horrors of war.” “rT am confident thru common | counsel,” he said, “that the states he said. what ts in the minds of all the peo ples. It ig necessary for us to put all our heads together and pool ev- erything we possess for the benefit | of the ideal common to us all.” Lord Northeliffe, publisher of the | Times, gave a copy of the interview | to the United Pre LODGE DOUBTS WILSON PLAN TO FIX PEACE “No master mind eapabie | jof settling today's problems exists. | dreased the prince as ‘You | A man is a fool who thinks he knows | neous impreasions regarding a a British attitude. moperation and most generous un ‘Dike thiisiieeis laurctending beteden the Mnctah Here’s an auto-load of soldiers racing riotously thru the famous Brandenburg gate, | Speaking democracies, jin Berlin. You see one on top and one on the right fender with their rifles ready to In regard to indemnities, even| “We comprehend and appreciate. fire: another on the left fender is waving the red flag at the crowds on the sidewalk. | Lioyd George's closest friends admit I believ grave problema which f h he went much further in the heat of |arise from your peculiar position as Said crowds seem very — to be far away from there. SCHEIDEMANN _ DENIES ARMY _ RULE IN BERLIN Cut out this review of the week's news and mail it to soldiers, sailors or other Seat{leites away from home coT mene The Seattle Star Weekly News Latter 1 for Men In Service — men of the world will be able to| SATTLE, WASH, SATURDAY, I reach a just and reasonable solution | p-——_________ a Waller , of the problems presented and earn | Continued From Page One Ree ido peekaas (HL deen dentate hae tron he gratitude of the world for the| —————-4 {fifth floor a fe bull most critical and necessary service were stopped by the crowds of so! which has ever been rendered to it.”/diers and were unable to reach Wh Seattle i tans pops alin Mra. Olive. | granted Ebe: emory a fig ean When Fever Dees Altho Paasche was imprisoned, 1 Red Cross “+ all” drive for ’ Wilson compared the Vienna and | nad obtained a story of the collection membereh we yarren petitions city coun- Versailles congresses, pointing out | of war-blame documents. Two wagon! , sks ON oe seat en and th | that. the former was composed Joads had been brought from Brus guiity ct robbing “flu” yictum at bosses,” and that the delegates| seis, Many had been burned at) sinermency hospital were more concerned with the inter | army headquarters. ests of themselves and their classes| Paasche had searched Pot nine shipyard workers ar- eda | rested for riding on fenders of street than that of the peoples. | palace just before the empress de Suspended ‘The Versailles conference must be | parted He had questioned Hite! ee rs inlie: ‘iliiate me ma gress people's serva: ot me wife ° ° im rata hehgow an cee bby would-be benedicts’ in? letters to conference, t “I am the first man to have ad instead of ‘Your Highness,’ he told me ‘Then he told me how he had sum moned the empress. Mayor Hanson. Fr service men. s of contraband to Camp Lewis howpital Central Labor Council starts pro- btain $300 for every Amer- Idier mustered out of the “I gave her audience," he said, ‘ = a 7te Bateet, roomer at Y. M. C. | -ut ghe swept haughtily into the malt hundred and ten, quarts of A. held by pélice as burglar suspe } room, saying, ‘What do you want of eorge Homer held, “Weary” Wiking, W. 8. 8. aalen- me? I thought I shouldn't be mo e ring. man. stages pavement dance Sto lented.’ stimulate sales ert « Yuletide ea ra to serenade Se- I replied, ‘I am the representative attie residents Christmas eve. | of the sovereign people.’ “She answered, ‘I am the empress “She protested against the search ing of the palace, saying she waa suf | fering and that she had six sons on the battlefront | “I replied, "But even in caae one of them Is killed, no family will go food. leas the following day” “Then we allowed her to depart for Holland.” + A Christmas tree Santa Claus and extra eats to be features of Christ+ mas day at naval training station BERNSTORFF IS FOR LEAGUE, HE TELLS U, P. MAN Dr. R. C. Simpson, formeriy of the city internment hospital. charged by grand Jury with accepting @ $160 bribe from former inmate to obtain his release. Broadway-Lincoin high _sehool football title game ends in 7-7 tie. Thru Conference stomach, liver or blood is There will be no strike of gus Sacurdays when os "out of order, renew their made ce mn conference late A leaths Friday evenir t death rf high Forty thousand homes are there the number of ca fore saved from idle gas stoves and : po Mipefitters who e@ been on strike since September 21, will re turn to work next week ITALY CENSORED HER Music FOR EXPORT t Sale of Amy Medicine in the Werig Bild everywhere im boxes, 106, 25. Brown Dental Uminary sur ROME, be Mall)—To board The edhe tunat bang, ive auewn of erevenune en Beat Offices Bex that established a strict censorship tions dow ¢ i 106 COLUMBIA 106 on music during the war Exportation of printed music from ets clear Italy in #0 great, and opportunity 5 t eoting Established in 1591 for clever spies to utilize it as a w y entiol means of conveying information to ed 11d Was >. the enemy so unlimited, that Italy the city health comminss andr son organized an entirely separate cen-| Dr. J. 8. Mcktide was notif Dental Offices in Seattle, sorship for surveillance of all expe The board decided ® Fo ps a ges h tations of music teachers sho cops emy by ‘the ‘dentists doing ment of an » during the va ARMY AIRMEN “BATTLE” ABOVE SAN FRANCISCO BAN FRANCISCO, Dex Four army airplanes maneuvered over the| GIVEN U. S. pasha your work will be ¢ city today in a make belie battle WASHINGTON, Dec. £ rat. best, apd satisfactory to for the benefit of the Red Cross./ing contracts today were by | 70% Pufts of white smoke, followed by the railroad administration with the, EDWIN J. BROWN faint reports, indicated machine gun | Northern Pacific and its subsidiaries, Owner and } activity The FIGHT dropped Red Cross literature. what they say they will ac cation period Our work ts goer teed, and our business is referred to us by our satisfied patro: NORTHERN PACIFIC | IS Brown Dental Offices guaranteeing a stand: turn of $30,13 TWO FIGHTS d annual re ance to you from the fear that ac- — Dental operations. EXTRACT, FILL, CROWN and) THEAT Teeth absolutely without | pain in all cases but acute abscessed conditions. Contents of RR SE Continued From Page One One’ pbs world with a war of conq’ Reiterating earlier declarations, Lodge said such a peace treaty should include these provisions Asks Money for United States publication Lowest prices high-class, guaran’ STERLING DENTISTRY ted gah city for understanding. Paasche had collected were unobdtain- for he is guarding them pend. " ing decision of the cabinet regarding We were informed that the arrest | of the soldiers’ cil members wi Twenty-four men arrested in gambling raid in Prefontaine bulld- (Ing, 100 feet from police station. the documents which Captain of Ruby Is Arrested Here and workmen's coun: | as the result of a mis but warned of di Ut warned of danger | hin vessel's cargo of mining supplies Charged with disposing of some of | {Continued From Page Page One a |exambassador, as with every oe | German tn official life, seems to be | the paramount issue Berrtorff said “All classes of Germans are hope ful that the league will be created of the hour, Indemnity for the United States of trouble in the streets because of a This sentiment is not new. A ma- | for ships destroyed and people mur- | simultaneous clash between repub-| Without reporting to the owners.) jori1, of the Germans have long | dered on vessels. lican guards and the Liebknecht| Capt. D. 8. McAlpine, master of the | heid the view that the whole future Rewer iomater pada hc < bes oo proce cag in which hs power schooner Ruby, who abandon: | of humanity depends upon a world | orted there t , Soecmniae hited rep ir were od his ship at Seward September 18, re ch of this sre Rapid of b us Were already consisten vo. Restoration of Belgium; return of We re-entered the automobile and | after terrific gales had nearly) Oho the idea even during ihe ange Alsace-Lorraine to France. attempted to return over the Wil | swamped the vessel, was arrested by | when the German armies had every | Return of Italia Irredenta to Italy. | helmatrasse with our guards, but Deputy U. S. Marshal A. Rooks Fri-| propect of victory in the field. H Establishment of' Jugo-Slay state | now the streets were blocked and we | day “In order to further the plan in ii and an independent state formed by | were forced to detour The arrest was made on tele|any way possible in the Czecho-Slovaks. graphic instructions from Marshal) have founded a German leag Security of cece and the settle Brenneman, of Valdez, who stated! nations society, with a memt ment of Albania and Montenegro. Restoration of Rumania and tne | consolidation of the Rumanian peo ple under one government. Putting Constantinople under in ternational protection. Independence of Armenia A large, powerful, independent Polish state. |__Return of Danish Schleswig to the | Danes and the neutralization of the Kiel canal, JOIN THE | RED CROSS All You Need Is a Heart and We heard shooting of snipers al! about us, but nobody was hurt, Then we dashed into the Friedrichstraase, where stood a tank in the center of | the street, its machine guns firing A Chinese student running down the street was just missed by a bullet We were the onl to proceed on Unter-den-Linden Running the blockade of maased aol- diers we saw the machine gun bat- & that the arrest of McAlpine had been ordered by the Kuskokwim Trading | of the Ruby covered from a present illness ones permitted | — enthusiasm ple were misled by militarist Ii continued. representing all opinion, These Friedrich Ebert, Max of Baden. classes of pol members in Hugo Haase, myself and num Transportation company, owners tame rous Capt. McAlpine denied the charge other men prominent in German emphatically. He will return to! government Alaska for trial as soon as he has re-| | Kaiser's Party Opposed It | “A few months ago such an open | soclety would have been bitterly in 1914, when the peo | sailed by the pan-American press, but he | now the society meets universal in dorsement as “But 1 awakened Doll “These physical guarantees,” he|tery in front of the Brandenburg be ° a ar explained, “all have one object, and | Kate, and were returned to our hotel, | #hd convinced, even before America’s | “Personally, I have felt sympathy that is so to hem Germany in that| Which the soldiers were now permit. | @ntrance-into the war, that Germany | toward such a.league ever since | she cannot attempt conquest in Rus: | ting no one to leave could never be victorious. When! President Wilson's sepeech on the sia or in the East, and that the Slav-| Everybody was excited. The au-| America entered I foresaw disastrous | subject in 1915 thorities were nervous with the ex. | defeat and fought with the censor to} Unfortunately, however. my ie populations which she has merci lessly used in her wars can never be | used again.” | Must Aid Russia pectation of serious trouble. A ma jority of the cafes and other gather- ling places had been closed must play her full part in the reator: | ation of Russia, where the hardest task of all lies, |the permanency of the German re “Peace being our object, the first| Public, tho the future of the present step toward peace is to make a peace | government is not clear, with the country with which we have | believes the men at its head are| Maximil) Harden has faith in| been and are at war—that is, Ger- |honest, but they are representatives | many,” he declared | of factions. "If the peace with Gernany is to| He holds himself a neutral and be durable, terms must be exacted | 40¢s not support the advanced posi- | on of Liebknecht which make it, so far as human fore- | 4° | sight goes, impossible for Germany | This he told me in an Interview in to break out again upon the world| his home at Grunwall, | with a war of conquest been ; “This can not be done by treaty en-| Harden's workroom is chocked gagements and signatures to docu with books and scattered about with | papers. A portrait of Bismarck hangs | @ suburb of | N Res ments. At this juncture of afi . Germany would sign anything on ted ‘all : | does stop itching | cr vice’wou'ie ar worticor an, arene 5 smal man, with a) the guarantees she gave to Bel-|!*Fs¢ head and an upstanding mop of | and relieve eczema | «om \tair siwaga in acetone clans shaven and from his seamed face, | peer from beneath | Use 13 Jurors to |bushy brows. ‘Tho first impression | he gives is of youth, tho he is obvi- | | Avoid Flu Mix-Up| ee svi ilies: ously middle-aged, | SPOKANE, Dec, 21—The influen-| While he gave me a word picture | Many sufferers {rom eczema or simi- lar skin troubles have found Resinol Ointment invaluable in stopping the itch- ing, in soothing and cooling the irritated | piercing eyes pits, and in most cases, clearing the has played such havoc with court |of the former kaiser, he illuatrated | trouble a | recently, that Superior Court Judge | it withd ramatic gestures and grim Its g ingredients make | Hurn has ordered the choosing of 13 | aces it safe ‘or sc tenderest skin,| jurors to hear cases in his court, so| Harden repeated his assertions and it is ou » flesa colored that.it] that in case any one juror is strick:| that the kalser was not responsible may be used witout hesitation on ex-| ascendency for the United States, or | for the war and affirmed Wilhelm « posed surfaces. pass on the evidence lassertions that he was sent on a Ask your druggiat for it, Norwegian trip when Day came aay “ ‘admit that I was intoxicated with | WSSIWSS|WSSIWSS) pha Ie Del tell the German people the truth admire—published his 14 points, I ad views then found little sympathy in "When Wilson—whom I intensely the imperial government. But 1 . vocated that Germany make peace | only since the break in relations be y| Lodge alzo declared that America | Ht Benge A | because I knew it would never be|tween the U, 8. and Germany, but T HONEST | possible to win a favorable peace.” | before that even.” Cor. 5th & University GRAND OPENING ICE SKATING TONIGHT, 8:15 SKATING F RY AFTERNOON AND EVENING, INCLUDING SUNDAYS Seasions—Afternoons: 3 to 5 o'clock, Nights; 8:15 to 10:30 o'clock CHILDR S SPECIAL--SATURDAY MORNINGS, 10 TO 12. have always favored the league, not | —— BY ENROLLING IN THE——— Red Cross Christmas Roll Call 1—A Fight for Democracy The Red brought France the first help from America to turn back the racy’s foes. 2—A Fight for Health By Italy millions Cross heroic to appropriating tuberculosis Red share sending health workers and France—by for fighting both there and in Cross gives every onrush of democ- America, cagepeey a care and Henith: America’s Then it provided healing to strengthen great democratic army in a winning war for comtorts funds enable American tuberculosis ociat to combat the disease that most of all kills those needed workers and_ sol- diers. Red Cross ass 1ons Also it fights now beside our sol- diers over there by looking after the as needs of their loved ones over here. You are not asked to buy Red Cross Christmas Seals this year. They are awarded to you as a Red Cross member for helping in the health fight. Either one of the fights is reason enough for joining. SO ANSWER “PRESENT” IN THE Red Cross Christmas Roll Call The National Tuberculosis Association

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