The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1919, Page 13

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or PAGE 12 EPTEMBER 12, 191 | EACE DEMANDS EMBARRASS LUDENDORFF | ee | P i ny 1 final oan, With them our coun. | - hem our coun: | difficult, and the end of the war w ? ory kno GEN. ERICH VON LUDENDORFF | try waned the titanic conflict apninat |e, tnd the end of the war satistiy Soh tat oe otmee enel tt ——e ‘4 -agb qpicrn dys + pire pontpe perfectly well other peace |! 4 , War I€ was impoanible to| the world, even allowing for the as Chancellor n Bethrr naj was to he there was lat eulan where the sphere of the uietance of our allies and the ex:|Count Crernin were both co for it but to fight for vie- [) 4 army a Q began, and that of | plolta upled territorion a8 | obsessed by the influence of the tory, once the war had started. | if were « The work? witn mitted. imitar trophe in th own |e y thought as I did, although ||] oh war of nations in the most | ‘The army and navy had thus to countrte And thought of nothing | he, too, would not admit the truth b t sense of the word, The . ‘ " t poaait ‘ hb hadiin 2 h of Decon 9 Sena the rd ts te enmand for te ese lt Me epceh € Decombe Th At Last Season’s | pe renewal and rejuvenation tt beg hrs pyr 4 he tant ie moult None the wan it between the ale, numbers and equipment been attained da tales RoOuaihas Uk caworaind hd aa agg le the very. so io 1 ee ete ceane:| morale and war spirit of thone at) cute the war ntill be expected, to propone a ist Uetous Donute— ery soul and vital force of the} nome at the highest pitch, Woe to| They Ought to have rataed the; peace which, while invalying cor ¢ enemy was attacked in order to cor |. if rale of tl bl a cup of extra rode and paralyse them, us if they should fai The longer | Morale oF © nation by ereative ter wcrifice would per nud . ern, the war lasted, the greater were the| tivity, just as G. HL Q. had 1aps have had a chance of bein Hy fine coffee—and This workt-wide war of nation® | dangora be 1 the ithe 4 evel a che oded in improvir f fieht pted by the enemy, But the Andi ans 7 i wale Oh! Boy! made enormous demanda on us Cer: | 1 imperious grew the demands |ine strength in a truggle| more t nt their successes, nd it means a tremendous saving > | net mana, on whom its whole overwhet 5 ere eel psra-oe me: , Py 3 Soe rvng i ‘ 4 Pike at 4th ag ts individual | and moral reinforcement Was, their pe perpetu man militar adorn become t ¢ ee ad to give his very uunost, if we ne ver \ concessions at home, and they ave after their great victories it was i Wc Mee Clas were to win, We had literally to| 7" gp Fco ge orgy both Ml up the tank of leading the nation.| lean possible than ever to per nied fight and work to the last drop of /Men and material, had to be madeimn. wnoie tendency of thelr {d suade them to such a policy of , 4 and sweat, and with it all main. |*VMlable and devoted to the prow | nats them overlook the uns; abie| renunciation akan : all, our confidence in victory; a Mard work and an unflinching a / strength of their respect! cour was one, and only one, moment me hard but Imperative necessity, In| termination, helped by the Russian tries, which ought to have shown a| in the course of thie war wher ! He spite of the dearth of food which the | revolution, had enabled us to relleve| united front to the ener and the such an attempt really seemed : 4 enemy inflicted on us, and the om | the military situation in 1917, But! aig not realise how they were preju:| very likely to succeed, and that nas slaught f his propaganda, which meanwhile, as had already been the dicing tha conduct of the war 4 was after the tar yus battle of | ah was of amazing foree, if unobtrusive, | Case In Austria-Hungary, the breaks) Neither of these men, whom des | Gorllce. it Our army and navy are rooted in| 'e Up of the united will of the Ger tiny had placed at the head of thelr . | Fi nation, as is the onk in German |™an people, under pressure of thie! people at this terrible crisis, pos. NO PEACE TALK | Ml They live upon the homeland, | WPheaval and of economic privatlons, | seased the strong character i 1, EN VICTORY DAYS and from it they draw their atrength. Combined with the growing influence | events demanded , OT] The battle of Gorlice wan fought ». Dut cannot produce, Of enemy propaganda, waa to bring) No dount they had to face serious |!% May, 1915. Subsequently, there what they need, and can only fight |About events which steadily lowered | internal difficulties. Count Czernin, | fOFe—according to Count Cxe ) the moral, material and phyaieal | the fighting strength of both the all with nis conglomerate crpire hed | there was no chance of peace caddie ‘Saeecul means which the country provides, led states and jeopardized our mill-| oy Inrintale. - Can be climinated by wearing the| These means make possible victory; | tary gains. ' Lundberg Rupture Support. faithful devotion and unselfish self-| From this time onwards the hope|Hethmann were probably easier; he eo free trial to prove its supert [mace © im the daily contest with | of the entente for the inner collapse | had only to act ordance with i aemantiie Ooi © miseries of wa of their enemies was continually fed. | the conely 14 be drawn! 5 nin t all task. The /@¥en at the cost of considerable rifiees. And even if there had ber 4 chance, either in May, 191 later, not only the German millt marty, but almost the whole ( comp ms presented to Herr von fe] $15 | j 2001 Third Ave. Seattia _ They alone could secure Germany's Peace would be Immeasurably more| with overwhelming force from the M4" people would have refui it " = ~ ——— | nature of the war and from po.,!0n& as they felt proudly confident sition in face of a foe dete od | Of their strength to destroy us This confidence and strength Instead of harping ever more and|#hould have been fostered by the More on the idea of a peace of rec: | *tateamen, to keey will t onciliation, which was always out| ry alive in the country, and pre | ve it from the immeasurable dis eat. The determination Raincoats of all kinds— of the question, he ought to have knitted the nation together, and pointed out to it the # being what it wa eat tanka be | Of Our ener fore it and the objects to be attained, | there could be no middle course. Our $7.50 to $35.00 and then have given us in the army | Will in the matter was of no account Store Hours, 9 a, m. to 6 p. m. a free hand. The German people That of the ememy was not yet = , 4 Ought to have been shown again and broken, When this had been effected Leather and Wool Vests—Mackinaws and Separate Trousers n what they were fighting for, bY military victory the diplo what the enemy in hia heart of Might talk about reconciliatic hearts really wanted. ‘The majority THEY STILL WANTED TO 2 . 7 : ther hha dees te shave’ Tim 981 At the besinaing of Apeti, 1917, the Officers and Enlisted Men of the Pacific Fleet: We extend a the jone :. pape $a * ry There are alwayn some who can|K#lser recelved the Emperor Charles hearty welcome to you and invite you to visit our Uniform never be taught aa thére really |°* Homburg. ‘The latter was aecom Department. any room for doubt regarding the | Denied by < Cxernin and General eas and objects of our enemies, as von Are. Ti chancellor, the field — = interpreted in the taht ef. ehete | Marshal and I were also summoned whole history and their whole men. | Jeff Yon Bethmann and Count r . |tallty, not to mention their answer | "!M had already met. | e to our peace offer of D. ber these gentlemen had a nc waren on seme allored Ready Co. at the weakenine of the was mulets | 20 smeteded the @ mum ‘conditions * “5 ? ‘ " . ik Weinics tamet erieiole tie esabant ori peice, based on the status quo Seattle’s Largest Upstairs Clothes Shop FP pens nte, and in case of a favorable out 2p; : ’ Tow verlounly the position wan re.(come of the War, a program of set 401-403 Pike St. garded be Cl Ht @. the deciion for Moment in accordance with the idea the autmarine campaign and the re | fepresented. Neo mention was treat to the Siegfried line had shown made of any renunciation whatever This important document was first —— nown to the secretaries of «tate and | ! Hi. Q. on February 5, 1918 | pistned his views to me in a private |trian Empire, though he continued! an reserved. a Covrriented * © ‘ish for for some te urge that lia | AP pring ne) earnest and thoroly conscientious ef-| While king» and councillors were! conversation. He based his wi | time Rumania | Brits ch ‘Com- fort alone could pull us thra discussing affaira at Homburg, Gen-| peace upon the internal condition of | should be incladed in Austria-Hun- | iiire ‘eels peor nee, eral von Ars, the field-marshal and | the dual monarchy. I had no reason | cary’s sphere of influence, and the Fratelll Treves. ™ drastically and enough even ae | to the lay mind. It must have been obvious to the government that |“ Youre Snoozing It’s time to arouse yourself, and prepare for chilly | LONGED TO LAY T held a consultation on the sttua-|to conceal my personal optnion.| Hast, including Poland, in that of |tralia. All sights Sean and tho Oeil ED 1 i 1 , a | te r . Reigium, Holland, R ys. |DOWN BURDEN tion. We had occupied the Sieg-| After all, I wan the son of my Fath-|Germany. These were broad and | Gietvien countries) on 2 The enormous responsibility I had fr line, and were expecti the! oct ex-| Clear generalizations with which G. ' y pecting ertand, and had « perfect right to ex-)| If you continue to slumber, you may not be able to | de brane Monie tos loo for thee exoebes | creat Antu cetonatten. “i conantovea | ten nant Eethocents 1 Wend Cones |: Could GAY Soren J0NGy were - Jalon of hostilities; how could t have|the British attack fmminent. The|Csernin that he ought to lead the|Fecorded in the Kreuznach Agree-| , In the next installment Gen. Lala get coal when you want it. : |been otherwise? I often expressed remult of the aubmarine campaign in| peoples of the dual monarchy more |™et of May 17 and 18 ee ae ene eee hae a This is the serious warning sent out by Uncle Sam [mame Sa Shes Sees, “st onl a wr March had been good, and the min | firmly and raise their morale., He) Soon afterwards, however, Count! upset by the Russian peter © istry of the interior began to batid |repiied that this was Impossible. I Ozernin supported the Austro-Polish tively fears of a revolt in Germany and it deserves immediate attention. Coal production r of our country, the war thigh hopes upon It. The importance | then turned to his proposals. His| olution with great energy and skill! were held in high circles, . Publi rs A z would be lost could not see how | of America was given due weight Polish project seemed to me very |and thus revealed the real character hoonmnd arked that Hind. is falling off at an alarming rate because of the steady peach was possible unless the enemy | Our verdict on the situation wae|dublous, What would Poland's atu. |o€ hie country. For Austria, to re-| Uirest became 00 matted, Gas Si also wan re for it. T thought It! grave but confident, we hoped to re-|tude toward {t be? What effect |nounce Poland would have produced to remove Ctnnesier| aan return of miners to their European homes, and the very dangerous for us to be alone | pulse the entents attacks in the near’ would It have on our eastern prov-|disastrous effects in the monarchy. |Petrmawn Hollweg. ‘They wet pes scarcity of men to take their places due to immigra- i eutecesine & Siuire Gir poate for the rest had to await inces? I was more aston. |The prestige of the young emperor | puffed and told such affairs were not . . . 1 wae fully aware that nations of the submarine cam shed at his whole echeme, as Austro | Was ateo at stake, It was obviously tion restrictions. : not get peace merely by talking abe the deve ts of i on Warsaw |Count Czernin’s intention to oust us| "0% CORES = . e . it, or even heartily ging for ‘ ts uswia showed of honest concern | | nd as v tums Unless you fill your coal bin now, while there is The pacifist idea of a peace by un.| Ger Are had wimitar| about ¢ tereste, ‘The Poliah| ‘The Austro » derstanding was for many a weapon | hopes for the AustroHungarian | project was q Ite; the aur tailed grave dangers for Priesia and 7 coal to be had, you may slumber too long; then sud- leguinet. wa. Blany dthere sincirety | front aded that. in consequence | tender of Als + te ranes | Garmony. ‘the SaMedarenel Waa t ‘. . beleved nm it ein moved y hat ¢ la raw mater s and of the | howe ree ted a pe clea red tha en he bree up o . denly sit up, rub your eyes, and exclaim: Rove lo Rage lle gets Ald F Sue aa cacanese pee So hat it meant the breakup of Gives Strength to the Nervously |p a dealt , an | heavy is on man we ° 2e, ch, in my . there tl ance, and was a direct threa # ‘i as ee ae, H =) not yet been realized in this world) Austro Hungarian army could on could be no q nm as lon we |to our eastern provinces. The Poles Week and Rtn- ta ut its ¢ y: gs! sd ve a fire—but f strif But dia th Jealinte | figh until the wint There w t n ¥: ald al Posie their claims to} 4 ’ 4 . ” Me 2 tg ep rcme ene goa | whoo pci ig tlie Ae ee “ * to] Peptiron ts both medicine and ‘ haven’t any Diamond Briquets or coal. know whether the enemy thought sno . oti Ale {he | WOULD NoT peiebengllieee ect seri rap Prussian | pond tor the blood and nerves. It is ey did, and if he did not, was ne ty for ating the wat! CONFESS WEAKNESS Poles would play into their hands. |, | not cle y epreadin os for the present with the utmost er - 7 * ‘ it «in full accord with advanced sei- You can GET Briquets or coal NOW. Rot clear that by spreading the no-|for the present with the utmort °°-] “asses nation stands or falia by tta|? nna government would find lence ag to he proper treatment of : : + i : . ° that we ald , a | ere ie Gircckete: nor. All German parties—even the |! bin Padua e agent Of anomie and neurasthenle conditions, i And NOW is the time to order-—while there is still peace, at any time, they we how events sight hee Geveloped by | (ore, socialiate-—ere united | "ol" wishes in which the need of more and Bete! am Alsace Lorraine as Ger and in considering it a point o: honor for us to fight to the utmost as these views were ad- tor nourishment is so apparent. It an lated Poland, G combines {ron and manganese with were inevitably weak. | tation between the Cerman imperial r 1 deal with them, t nux, celery, pepsin and other tonics 1 r. Count Crernin, the field © of th osseasion. Any |) igievthorr mith getriber vee pp ce at all c¢ ste ave been at nethen 471 ma al, Gone A and MY | Avene wisithad' eteik ob: iieicaes c assumed a different ficiency of red blood corpuscles if : They made our pe n for |geif. ‘The chancellor asked me before | \iicn failed to ceoomnize thie w . many’s vital interests | anemia, repairs the waste of nerve peace, without making the enemy the dincumsion began whether I/ 1. heen rightly swept away by would be seriously threatened, con-| tissue in nervousness, gives eoloP 7 ready for In fact, they m thought the time had come t ake | atenant public pein Ay OF Ue" fict would arise between the two em-/and etamina, and restores vitality, 7 | peace more difficult of attainme a move for peace, I could only an Mi “ 4 would find Germany in an| «1 was run down and nervous, Our situation waa certainly seri As difficult | a an the entente knew all the | «wer that the entente were about to narily position, | Peptiron has done me great good.” m the military and politica rena Rifenburg, Tivoli, N. ¥. 4 | used it for thelr own pur These aid not think the moment favorable | UNE UD & agg Sve Deceg view. The provinee of Silesia} Made by C, I. Hood Co, Lowell, 4 ts alno impeded the efforts of from the military point of view. The | {1° Wil '0. would bane been an| Would have been encircled and our| Mass. J eral hea rtera to make the estion was not further dir 1 va . — Pe mmunicationa with East Prussia, | ——— ki my inclined for peace by leven in connection with the Russi. n confession of akness, and) ritnuania and Courtland threatened y thone meana which al nd to sue: | revolution. a have Geom cond see ae te The annexation of these two districts || Anyone Now Can Have a supply on hand, ready to be delivered and put in because, wince human nature is made| About midday there was a consul your bin, if you’ll call your dealer or that way, tt ening our war spirit, which eho om th hancel even by well-mean Main 5080 eas in war, In epite of all their! ggug . wes at that time by no means a fan-| : idealism they are responsible for the| ASKED. TO GIVE time there was no need for sueh §1 testo dream. Pretty Curls and Waves ‘ isfor e of our country. ‘ 4 bace-rcagpin | N al (563 Railroad Avenue South) ee ee ee Count Czernin proposed that in|expected that the entente would aee| Norner ait ® see How from the | 7 vate curling secret that js Fi f the followi ied and t J CH nom tus order to obtain an early peace we nothing in all these proposals but &| ould reconcile heraelf to the Austro. | {0° seals iin wie iimering or any g a als: NCE FOR PEACE shoul © Alance-Lorraine tol trap oF & confession of military weap time apply -@ little Uquig silmering or any of the following tried and true coals: CHANCE FOR PEACE ould give Alance-Lorraine to| trap oF & confession of military de-|Poush solution, which in Poland | Linh we ekeas Letty Weueh, “aeawing I know of r tude of the ¢ when the atti | France, Austria-Hungary was to|feat that would make them ralse|iecoi¢ was bound to entail the grav-| {his down the hair from root to tip. tifled our hope| hand over Galicta to Poland and) their demands considerably lest difficulties and to cut us off A the: eee ee | race of under: |support the union of Potand and) Count Crernin could give no deft | trom the Russian market, We knew | and delighted to find your haif has Diamond Briquets Sea Coal (for foundries cade of Hyde Coal Franklin Coal tanding ‘ South Prairie Coal King Coal from Utah Everything that has been Germany. At this moment our|nite answer to my Inquiry aa to ; 1 . rom experience what an obstacte| dried in as beautiful curls as you've said or written on this aubject is wide | mee with the two statesmen, | whether the entente would really be! Austria Hungary presented as aiever Worn. |The waviness will tool ? |so natural no one will guess was ted about 10 minutes, | satisfied with the surrender of Al f the mark The government never | which had . Py * ‘ * 7” route for our trade to the Balkans, | artificially acquired. Black Diamond Coal Blacksmith Coal indlented to general keadquarters a] waa interrupted. ‘The chancellor janceLorraine, | He expressed Views the question was often to be die |” You can obtain liquid eltmeripe SS gy rt ~ * i “ . . ad cussed by us in the future, and the wil 3 o ; th Itt ithe Ey Newcastle Coal Anthracite Coal Could at any moment |to the two emperors. This ended the| ternal conditions. "He must have| Verner assed upon It By the Ger. [eyes one timmy Le te Dele have had such a peace as has now official part of the imperial meeting n in possession of excellent in-| been forced upon us. What chan far as 1. war concerned, In the mation cellor, what statesman, what man afternoon I was received by the Bm rhia closed our interview, Count with true German feeling in his peror Charles Czernin did not again mention the blood would have even thought of, Afte man government to undergo strange | use. It is doubly useful because of tr an rmations go strange | vis serving as a beneficial dreasini pe ean keeping the hair soft, silky and lu (Publiahed by epectal arrangement with | trou After one trial you will never : the MoClure Newspaper Syndicate. Copy- | gc to the barbarous curling lunch Count Czernin ex-! separation of Gaitcia from the Aus-| righted, 1919, by Harper and Brothers. | vertisement. 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