The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 6, 1919, Page 8

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The Eatgest Audience 49 FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS | ry A ; the Northwest ves em at vias ' Lg ane ‘House. || © U Cl ASS FIR a) Read The Star's HIRE AND RURGLAR-PROOP IT f ANH OFFICE Want Ad } fate mabinets, t ht a WUD Wu Vu Uwe “a é 3 } And repairing Located at 610 Second ne ‘ain 600 Main &¢ Avenue 0 Witt pa RARTENI'S NRUC Rates Per Insertion Seeaaal nestle s tsb: -— * neld @* ) Nf ) Pranstent charge advertising. 11% 1c! OU Wwe & =e pee Sune wified ndvertixing mag be left at this address up to 1) a m. ne each day, for the regular after Hiatne 9% cents a tine per tnae 4 hoon edition Words to a line), Six Insertions ‘ foULP it -” the price of five. thour @ ' 0 Pe nonenernomne pumaceammsonanseti CMassitiod advertisements will Bey pay i eeteck cach morn.) U8ed Tin ACREAGE regulne = after: PYIN UYEE ASY Oot TRA | Rp-OF LA ALE, ‘1 F ' ‘ ‘ \ 1 ' ’ H 1 . 1 ’ ‘ t \ ti \ witht “Al Mn ‘ ni oa , a wnon, | 00 PAKM LANDS 1 PAN Raa ‘ spOWN, a LIT ' a ; t NWA Dreasea, coata| lievin”. Used Piano Dept. Du Barry . Open even until §] oF * oe | @elock. Phelps Co, 905% ThIFA WO PLAN FORA BON ; : ave. (upstairs) Uned Dept Mt f WANTED — BRIGHT ENE i y Pla W We LIGHTLY WATCHER, HIGH | ¢ WAIR OF THe FACE A MISERY Price Nok Third ave. ‘ E have found a simple remedy for. NEW FOR RENT, ret | Malt . ae “star. “ gpplied ee ee STOCKS AND BONDS WANTED — EXPERIENCED CHOCO ASKS AND FRAVEDING fe dippers. Pacific Coast Miscuit x al values, Bob's, | da LINERTY POND cage tly ae tie MACHINE, $8 XENNY HOUGHT FOr ASM Phone Rallard 999. ts —iicia neck tae STITCHIN PICOTING,-1b« — mer Sewing Machine All transactions strietly Very popular, Take arniture Go. 408 Pile. Mt. 4618 ntid f | ona. Stevens, 1823 4th » ' 1 PIANO Pt FOR SALE PURNITURE Canst Ba Feat ee ANY AMOUN 1 UP SCHOOLS AND COL a yi PACIFIC COAST ENGLISH SCHOOL KEW YORK STOCK & BOND CO. for foreigners. Day or night. $ Me iadet) § h. Washington F Lat ENGLIisiw TAUGHT —CxXPeRt Reacher, Elliott 4234 i SITUATIONS W ANTED : FEMAL cast . 8s NG OR YOUR 1 Wasren ss MAKT rORD—LATE MODEL FOR YOUR ! Y AR WANT t ANY DEN eligible for « elerks, $22 month tieulars rear aminers, 804 ‘ ; > co. finental Building, Washington w OCH, & DOwt WANTED A GOOD HLACKSwITH mati: for horsesh I re ‘ wil mY Reness, Wash. ' t € ‘i TRACH YOU HOW TO |61 ~ @rive and repair on all the stand- ; FE: x: pape ke trucks, tractors and au-| SOUNCI . / . the shortest time |The st pga got gone i o 1 day and night| STRIKE $ gt 3 ‘ dazcce -8 Juneau. $14 Cherry feetly i ar at th — wan ANT TO SAVE MON p A ' 4 "Call on us. We will sell un 4 x - fer suits and shoes cheaper than | Over at ; any other place in town "Rring h E : r : this ad and save 10%. 115 Wash-| AR EM f ! be +% ington ar . * « hy |" WANTED —HoYs Por Ke riers in all parts pe A w ‘ chance for advan ; 8 ; n 214 Untor te 850, | Apply to Chreuiat! t y Bock , i UR LIN T newspaper y MAL OF THE St ns Pe r pts to M Sea . . . " and Wa “a amps ff you have any plur + at ma or repair work, cal an Tian} . Plumber. Heacon 1311 and M son st Vita inenry HONBS eN. CRARN ik spot N a Dont nyin engine n ty-paid re 4 Teds atom colpte: will t Was ship 8 SITUATIONS WANTED—MALF . 1) ¢ ALDRIDGE n Wide HARGED CANDIDATE CEN t uM fine CABH » FoR Aral officers’ training school de 4 nde ‘ ree position as clerk with well | (TPT) <DEFER blished contractin firm. A.| almoat . b mgnaux, 2107 N. 62nd at mé| fy fave left ne monet is Kenwood 204 wonrcet tee oy at THE EX 1 WANT y GO TO FRIRCO—Fi96 ipts, any CHEVROLET ROADSTER. sition as checker « . 1 : HURRY. . Wholesale house or railroad USED CAR EMPORIUM, 12 & E. Pine Dw AT Henced. Address J. J. McLeod, | = fo ‘adotation | _326 Orcas st. Seattle | 6a AUTO ACCESSORIES receipts Rn LOST NI 'N UTO ‘OPS, ‘OP COVERS. ee a SOUND m coven, eurtale “ fis LOANED ON BACH Hi6 LINE closed and op o| ty edie y We monthly 4 eript every t given to repairs ‘ $100 REWARD OF BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES — sab and courteous service. | $100 REWARD fees right j ANOTHER KLONDIKE $100 REWARD PACIFIC AUTO TOP CO. 314 FE. Pike &t Phone Main 4243. Seattle, Wash “jald, and no questions asked. if |é9 MOTORCYCLYS AND finder of bar pin set with din-| _ ACCESSORIES SCHUCK CYCLE CO, 2177 WHF Monds and emeralds, which was} lake. Main @ & 4 tana | Feet Tuesday in Frederick & Net-| Sorier ana” 4 son's will return same to Lost and|75 FOR S Found Bureau of the store | Ww NSTROWENT k. Liberal #04 Dr Fore RENT—ROOMS FURNISHED ROOM FLAT oom could be sub-let. Aiso s hovsekeeping rooms; close in Ninth ave 36 WANTED—BOARDERS BAPIES AND YOUNG 9 CHILDREN | ry boarded. Enst 6 1237 i8th N. 4% ~WANTED—MISC x IWANT TO BUY AnOt Barb roots at plant about 299 red rasp! 200 strawberr , 004 ones x 185, Dee 100; easy terms {DA SMITH Ave We have pr used sore Main 667 THR OWL S MORE for clothing,| f* furs, furniture. We buy, sell and exchange cverything. 1317% iat Eliott 3221 PIANOS” WANTED. for ood ones Co., 108 Union 49 FOR SALE—MISCE i) WILLIAM °. t aPOT CA Ht! tun Barry Piar flor Du SASH and DOORS Hotbed sach for startin Diants, for immediate delive Hotbed sash 3-0% Hotbed wash Greenhouse 51 lights Barn sash 10x14; and 6 lisht» und be ready f ne THEATRE PLAYERS Elliott The rade of our Gold in equal to any on nd we are selling N Se WIL Fifth and Pine today. NOW—W x TODAY Sungalow Ho MATINEE at $3 6-ineh selling 4-inch dar siding. ce-| and $15/ per 1,000 feet | Our large iliustrated catalogue} 20u!! r it free, pr We sell ‘ $50 WINCHELL Dramatic SMITH'S Sucess an One price Ir 0. 1942 Firet RELIABLE no interest. money back sicknens With the Tat 108 Union at » LAND COMI WILKES PLAYERS SHOW US A HOME WHERE MUSIC | 55; fi cain f dwells, and you show us a home|**;,ACie® LANO Ty ) Nights, 90-506 where mother, father, sister, broth jt ud 5 ‘ : erand their friends love to gather | sy Mats., Today and Sat, 2 fine together, Du barry Piano| | The Largest Audience in Plus War Tax Co., 108 Union st., store No. 3, re-| Northwest Re ads Star W Hable plano people. The | DIRECTORY Seattle Star 61 wneyeat Law rani All EL wnen, I Bleyeles and Repairs WN for nell Mey Times #4 Chattet Loans Detect! Purniture ’ Physicians and Surgeon Rep Pr » 7 Ace Aa irin acking Turkish Maths na’ LOAN 4819 tone ae meet | cabinets Khew ty i | He’s Head of Public Service Division tor G road MAX THELAN One of the first things that Dires. | f eneral Hines, of the adminiatration nt Max Thelw more fornia rafire ctor of the service in the rallroad admin re did was to a former railros ae U. 8 ratt ap ad chair 1 com mn of ently men's the first of tv written by fem university, tlonships, the league of nations ix necessity, Tomorr will answer obje (Editor's Note: nubje of political ee Woe present, iMarnl elally nisive of inter TIE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1919 gees OF NATIONS ABSOLUTE: today, ating articles atu fT Irving Visher, y yay dy pre ale for this news nearcely fit to live in if we escape from such a future. Last Step of “Peace G | The progress of ctvilization rints largely, as Prot, Kellar of expromes it, of the “extension of Peace Group.” Juet as age® dred years to defend Parts led Germany and therefore France,| families sank their family Sm nigninet Berlin ee eee not up larger and united to form a state, 60 tie International commerce waa an) larger military and naval establish tates of the world are now ready, ’ important chuse of the gresest war,| ment disarm and form great league in all three ways Just stated, “Bor-| ‘Thus competition in armaments Peace, The procens can BeNee & in to Bagdi the prevention of|came, and each nation had to keep Until the peace group Sale Ruswia from acquiring mercial up the race, As long as we h no Practically the entire world. So lam outlet, and the desire to grab Bel-| voice in reducing maments and %4 It stops short of that we wium for commercial sea connections! navies abroad, we en yt drop out of ave world warn inspired the Germans. ‘The Balkans|this race, Tt tar mpetition 5 veted by Hu as the ga » cutthroat > somtmerte te rene thé, won ind ness: ‘There 1s|| SRG England's _ ired to regain A ' one way of avoiding such cut pg pm i Ng ae for their coal and trun Ja | roada or of nation name! submis” ny had oppont to @ common regulation *# in China; alm The greatest question of the hour nation had com HA WE COMBINE WITH n Africa. ‘Comr OTHENM AGUE OF NA nial expansion,” “the TIO WE ‘ tom of the eas,” and “our place in| TINUK T CARRY! the sun,” represent these economic| OUR OWN INDIVIDUAL Pt interests—real or imaginary we t either compete with the In wtriving for these prizes the na-|rest or combine with the rest th caused incidental fricti both If the ations of the 4d should BY PROP, IRVING FISH Of Vale University ted I teal # nomint, Member f League to Weforee Peace, and Authoritative Writer on Interna tional Problems) HAV? Contr Feb. 6 The uyn be 4 of international awebreaking until there is a league f capable of enforcing the aw. € 1 law also would be a ho! IRVING Fiche ing of ar » the for that if get r must onal can ond whieh growt er the ANARC m we ort with 4 world or regulat mockery w id of y for er mu if. we id for ae the ther t h indt t def want of kat good I ma are pe fc ma 1a end to we t which ke The ommentl tions out of » moderr (1) the rapid 1 inter t interc WITHOUT CON HY chance of Itiplied there war with the ave no inter © of neportation and nternational “ir t of the on ntact ommur hie the chances of a own up, Our od in Mexto An ar oh ie Oeenaninat copects f etween nations canal and other trade rights, sea heries and colonization or immt grat an from the Orient (2) By increasing the speed of army mob thus bringing na tions within orter military die tance of each other, When It is pos bie to from Berlin to Paris in only a few hours becomes far more pecers than ft was a hun FALLEN FOR FREEDOM | Total American Army Casualties to Date Killed tn Miasing In netion Total to date and other causes anded In netion (including 381 at sen) 232,282 “Washington State ‘Cécile: to Date Killed in netion ng in netion Total to date Stephe ler Diep erRom NDED, DEG A, Mor eland D—DHGRE WoUNDED SECTION NO, IN KILLED ACCID) UNDE SVE Y UN Addre Imond 9 ACTION Addre t Islane Meagher, 18 n, KR. F. D. care Ta t Joneph M Mrs are TERMINED as follows Mrs M Mat Eklund Magda Engerbetsen ary Pr M bi . Fra Stephen A, Moreland | gg eee ext ert of Kin rude V ald Ke eger | efore and after after nation was drawn tn aune| navies and arsenals international ineidents gr they are today, merely out of commercial contact. The upkeep of tania case, the Sussex r staggering addition clared war zones, and all ott al burden of treasuri er which we had frict arly bankrupt with Wilsonian Diplomacy war began ation | now enter the rac ry future increase re crushing of ite wealth town dn a long do not see ho ler such burdens. The ne truth is that this world w BY N. D. COCHRAN, itor of The Toledo News-Bee. President Wilson may make mistakes. He is human. But less liable to make mistakes than states- men who play the diplomatic game secretly. From this side of the water, Wilson has been able to watch the European polities at a distance. Probably he saw something European statesmen didn’t see—that back of the mere handful of diplo- mats were millions upon millions of people all hun however secretly, for more liberty and jus- gering, tice. Possibly he was able to read in their minds something of THEIR hopes and fears and aspira- tions. He knew, of course, that there was hostility to a League of Nations among the leading politicians of Europe. It had been discussed for years by a few dreamers, but was not considered practical. It was something new to want to make the dream come true Sut Wilson probably thought that there was no real difference in the inner longings of ALL people everywhere on earth for peace, liberty and justice. Anyhow, when he went to Europe he interpreted to the people there his dream, and demonstrated that it av their dr » too. And when he made them see that it was acroatittnar real, something they could get they not only wanted it but de- manded it. hands on, Before there was any meeting of diplomats in peace conference, he had made his appeal to the peo- ple of all Europe. And their response was splendidly sympathetic. From all directions there began to roll up against the assembling diplomats wave after wave of public sentiment in favor of the Wilson plan. And when Wilson began to talk to the diplomats he talked not only as the representative of the democracy of America but of the aroused democracy of Europe as well. Woodrow Wilson, president of the United States, took his seat in the peace conference as the leader of world democracy. Wilson didn’t seek to impose upon European statesmen HIS will. He sought to convince them that he was expressing the will of the people of Europe as well as of America. When he spoke to the people over there he expressed what he believed were THEIR aspirations. He tried to lead them where he believed they wanted to go. Diplomats of the old statecraft got their heads together and decided what THEY thought the people ought to do—or rather what states ought to do, for they played the game with states instead of with peoples. You will note in Wilson’s speeches both here at home and abroad, he spoke of PEOPLES rather than of states. The Prussian theory was that the state was everything and that man was made for the state, The American theory is that the people are every- thing and that the state is made for them—that the state is the servant of the people, not the people the servants of the state. As the situation develops in Europe it will be interesting to go back and read again the speeches Wilson made during the war, and especially his fourteen points speech and those which followed it. You will then see that he looked farther ahead than the rest of us did, and that there was more mean- ing in what he said than we saw then. If you understand his Mexican policy, you will have a good line on what his Russian policy is apt to be. He didn’t believe in sending a big American army into Mexico to shoot democracy into the Mexi- can ‘people. He knew his history. He knew that lib- erty and democracy never came as handouts from high and lofty thrones, but came from the ground up. He knew liberty and democracy came only by the people fighting for them And if you understand this, you can understand his probable theory of the democratization of indus- try. Democracy in industry won’t come as a hand- out from above. It must grow from the ground up. There will be pulling down and lifting up—an equal- izing process that is inevitable. The higher up one man thinks he belongs above his fellows, the farther he has to tumble when the leveling process yanks him down. ee Wilson is going about his job in the right way. He needn't worry about the politicians at home. If he gets what the plain people of this country want, THEY will make their servants in congress take it whether those servants like it or not. The people of this country just as hungry real democracy as the people of the old world are. What they have had in theory they now want in fact. They want something they can see and feel and hug to their bosoms as something of their own. They want a democracy that reactionary courts can’t take away from them, And they’ll get it, even if they have to change the constitution and get rid of some of the judicial kaisers on the federal bench, who seem to think their mission in life is to keep the people from getting what they believe is justice. * for would Our own would | sim: 1 be 4 Elsie Janis, who turned her al an actress to the enterta! * France, is most p among allied fighting men. But to the American girl, comes Engiand’s most Mies Gibbs is p hospitals of England fo Allied Welfare league, and ( brought forgetfulness of p a wounded soldier. /AMUSEMEN Comleie al February 9 JOSEF ROSE World's Greatest Cantor Shrine Auditorium Pine and Harvard, at 830 Seat Sale st § Music House PRICES—$1.00, $150 and MAIL ORDERS NOW 7~-MOORE = Jk, E HOWARDS Idiers in ) Gibbs, } | actrens: in the PALACE H Continuous Daily, 1 to 11 Ned Nestor and Olivette losten! Comedy; Dr. J. Clase Weekday Mats. 100; Eves & ORPHEUM The Now—the Shew of Novelties nees (except Sunday), 10e, Mata, 2:30; Nights, 7; Fifth and Pine, “Bltiott 253 THIS WEEK Cohan & Harris’ Dramatic “THE ONLY SON." Nights, 300-S0c; Matinees and Saturday, 20¢-31e; Pies ma NEW PANTA MATINEERS, 2:20; NIGHTS, 7” co SENATOR Also the Four equilibrists; Murphy and Kleln, t and topics: Regal and Moore, sketch, and Love and Wilbur, on the rings, General Adi Look into your 1 mouth Breeding. "IF ao, leedin, fw you ween Dismasia, So-CALLED— PYORRHEA THIS be = gag’ is. eee menace good. & should ne treltantak once to vent complications, such as matism, tion general stomach Teel le. The only dental office te attle that specializes ment and cure of the bene In our offie: you wi SN" icensed ope fete or the dental prof Special care taken of ch teeth. emanation? Ironclad i and their families, United Painless Inc. ‘6 2628 56 oh eee fe

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