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aC AAR NHR NR RTI I «se | TheSeattle Star =~ $$ LUDENDORFF FLAYS WAR PROFITEERS SAYS GREED FOR MONEY OVERCAME THEIR HONOR How to Steer Clear of the Shake SORRY I CANTY | SWARE , JOE — TW CHANDEVIER FELL iheliaienbts Ps idee MY HAND! 4 — powerfully heed ag: mda of | class was turning against the auto 1 | Mig Alb esd Ed d I jf; a entente was smashing jer- crats and trying to get into touch Seeing the battle of minds go i : i i man “home front,” even at the be- with other peoples. But they were| | Ing against him, Ludendorff tried | | ite ay Joseph Bucklin Bishop ginning of 1917, was told by Laden. | not trusted, to bring all the thoughts of Ger. | | ONT 1019 BY dorft yesterday. While the kaiser’s Germany's record of unity In am.) | Many under his dictatorship in | WOES SCRIBNER'S Bone, armies were still winning in the bition and ruthlessness when victory an he had : rat a itt The were } ; ”) ‘ IN Jat th He # more afraid of us with the ranch cat and kittens. field, he and the junker militarists had seemed possible made the world ity armies ai } A coveaR AND 1 ¥NX aw T Bi thaho. | He wae more Sfrsid Of SE we ee cad ca losing im the battle of the suspect these evidences of awaken ddustries, Mere | | EY SNORO, run, 14, 1901. |enw us he took a great flying leap|foliow' the trail, are the meek in walnds. ing and look upon them as simply direct conflict with | Pleawed ‘Ted: From the ruilroad|and was off, the pack close behind. | tionate of all, and moreover, they dle pre Stes any | Snether form of propaganda. How | | Chancellor oes » drove 60 miles to the little fron-|In a few hundred yards they had him | climb trees! terday we got a big evidences the anthmilitarist stir. earnest was the disillusioned and | Wee and whe | J wore " on . oe otnan' 4 Here 1 could lynx in the top of a pinon tree=—# i Tings in Germany came out thru probably badly frightened middie) | Was determined that the army pec pst ag Poy eG ffm fi 1o. quiet,|shot him (Tony climbed almost up |low, spreading kind of pine—aboutiaa Meutral countries in 1917, but the class in trying to escape from their completely dom- met by the hunter Goff, a fine, qu go AB peor cut of fect tall, Turk, the bloodhound, ae world refused to have faith in their plight is attested beyond doubt by To his regret, he was able hardy fell who knows his busin jto him, and then fell Poser ut of Oe itn un; ona se i e 06 he tree), but we waited for Stew jow ed O », nd jineness, The liberal r only partially to control the press thoroly, Next morning we started |t og coped genu middle Ludendorff. ud brepagemin. fe talle of Gas | | ep on horseback, while our luggage |to get a photo; and he apg sain, eprewting 7 tere padre very | THA, # went by wagon to Goff’s ranch. We) This time, after a couple of hundre¢ within @ co! Is him, struggle tomorrow ' vi went by wagon to , se . “MY THOUGHTS AND ACTIONS” CANT WOLD HOT AO AN Ret FORM | atarted noon after sunrise, and made| yards, the dogs caught him, and a en the lynx w shot ou Of YOUR HAND.-IT o hunting as we went across|great fight followed T couk after 4 Ir $4 ~ * ur way, hun a 3 i | 5 atime ook a header down thru the 799 y en. Eric Von Ludendorff REALLY ISN’ the high, exceedingly rugged hills,|have killed him by themselves, but git P oh a t and deluded, it x6 PROPER | ‘til sunset, We were hunting|he bit or clawed four of them, and | branches, landing with a bounce Fudiuned by The Sar yeu special arrangement with the McC om» which could | i Bail winatts, (Fo were: earn ee cas he mcatit Mil oney T tos ta| kia bade. ‘Toay ae & c eitain by y and the London ‘Times od |ealled out here, “lon” and “cat.” ‘The |and stabbed him behind the shoulder, | bulldogs, takes such headers on Lag Fratelli Treves; to Cana It was thus only too comprehen: | first cat we put up gave the dogs a| thrusting the knife you loaned me | ave’ at least once for every ae a jum, Holland, Russia and the! sible that it should hold to thom ltwo hours’ chase, and got away (right into his heart. I have always |imal we put up a tree, We have nies] a wit there are influential circles in Ger-|™D® either in fatal stupidity | among some high cliffs, In the after-| wished to kill a cougar ax I did this| little horses which climb the most Poe: “ ey, | Curked and criminal deliberat . Ath dows and the knife. extraordinary places you Even Masonic lodg: ny who would regarc ng as noon we put up another, and had a/ one, with dog . ve seased ty. |eo bad ans onitiary victory) ot|fered it what it had long ye Very good hour's run, the dogs bay |imagine. Get Mother to show werd, as had long been planned by | Ts ndortt.” for, and that it did not understand ing until the glens rang again to the| DOGS THAT CLIMB TRE) jot Gustave Dore's treem; the ¢ Tingland, worked vith the whole ee strangely well the/t® men who saw the danger of | echoes, ae they worked hither and Keystone Ranch lon these mountains look just Mike, s strength of bead brine | Words of Sprobel, member of the | “Uh conduct, and who, in anxious thither thru the ravines We walk Jan, 18, 1901, | them. of all secret soctet Prune: diet, and edito Vv care for our future and sacred love! four ponies up and down steep Darling Little Ethel: Most of the aad hervice of the AngloSaxon and thus, jo ori*" “ist. and editor OF VOF| cor the country of our fathers, mtill| MO DOUBT TWILL BE TW CAUSE OF MANY BROREN ENGAGEMENTS | Ctrl sung treeciad slopes there it trip neither you nor Mother nor Si, THE PIG NAMED MAUDE for us, of International polities. Omly vy contony quite openty that a com.| “sed them to fight om, It wax a ]did not neem porsible a horse could |ter would enjoy; but you would all of Keystone Ranch, the national lodges in Prussia re- plete victory of the empire would|*°TTY thing that men, aitho climb, and on the level places qe| you be immensely amused with the Jan. 29, 1901. mained free of this influence. |not be in the interests of social|t?*Y- too, longed for* peace, were | got one or two «mart gallops. WBt|dogs. There are 11 all told, but really| Darling Little Ethel: You would & In all the enemy countries strong | democracy on branded asx “neverendians | |last the lynx went up a tree. Then only eight do very much hunting.|much amused with the ee nda organizations had been| | was reluctant to write these itece| | I saw « really funny sight. Seven | These eight all scarred with the|round the ranch, The most @ ; established under the guidance of ex on clear and simple principles, and ) with ample funds. They had to the work In neutral coun- and let them go out to the world. TO ACT | | wide circles of society in a man | to our strength in the war their finer perceptions. Men stand. }ing im the trenches fighting the enemy had to fear that their jobs able accompanying disadvantages, | were bound to awake much Indigna.| Germany to her sons and did every | tion and to damage the morale of | thing possible to destroy the belief [ner calculated to do tnfinite harm | ‘too mental development during the war Even during the war they slandered in German strength. In these papers were challengen against our 4vil authority and order, to which Profit hunting, luxury and selfish.| the declarations of war against our Ness overcame all honorable Infly-|#0cial order were joined. jences, but short rations also biunted | I watched this development with | deeply wounded patriotic feelings. These were serious warnings to take care, lest grave damage should be MRS, DEAVER IS AWARDED AUTO Wins Court Fight for Gifts, From Holt ‘THREE CHARGED rtd Jury Recommends Capital Punishment WITH MURDERS, hounds had been doing the trailing #0 close to his horse's heels that they continually bumped into them, which This morning, soon after starting out, we struck the cold trail of a mountain lion. The hounds puzzled about for nearly two hours, going up and down the great gorges, until we |nometimes absolutely lokt even the |sound of the baying. Then they |struck the fregh trail, where the | cougar had killed a deer over night In half an hour @ clamorous yelling told ys dhey had overtaken the quarry; for we had been riding up wounds they have received this very | | esmen and politicians. tru tru hese words | while a large brindled bloodhound | week In battling with the cougars |them is a large white pig, which Mitsee o cnivea soar alae thay work: a aoa — ‘The press furnished an exact mir and two half-breede between collie|and lynxes, and they are always|have christened Maude, Sie | ed everywhere with united strength, | : | FOr of the party quarrels that divided and bull styed behind Goff, running | threatening to fight one another; but|everywhere at her own will; Po *S |WANTED CHANCELLOR the German people, and of their they are as affectionate toward men} (and expecially toward me, as I pet| independent and self-possessed picks up scraps from the dogs, bay dismally at her, but know “BY ED. L. KEEN (United Press Staff Correspondent) LONDON, Nov. 25,—Growing fear of another Balkan war— with Italy and Jugo-Slavia playing the leading roles—was expressed in the British press | today. } The anomalous situation cre- | ated by Gabriele d’Annunzio in WITH JUGO-SLAVI cl Only @ part of the press remained . ri . them) as our own home dogs. At|have no right to kill her; and ‘branch. 1 countries, where! The chancellor was responsible for he accepted with philosophic com-| them) a ; they Seaeved. thelr aims with that|the maintenance of morale at home, |‘TU® (© itself. Another part, from | posure, Then the dogs proceeded | this moment, a large hound and a|she eats the green alfalfa hay Stier tack of conscience which is #0|General headquarters would have! idealism, from motives of party pol TAME NO 6 SAL [Sons TO OTNE NS. Pabiin—aaee | literally to climb the tree, which was|#mall half-breed bulldog, both of the two mileh cows who live in Tharacteristic of the entente. Special |been glad to undertake direct| MO", oF simply from 4 sense of b EP MIANDS IN DOCKETS!” 3 |4 many-forked pinon;’ one of the|¥hom were quite badly wounded this | big corral with the horses. One tions dealt with the en-|counter propaganda by explanation, | N° ®**umed an an established fact The human band is the greatest pickup apparatus in existence. So, half-breeds, named Tony, got up cer-)morning by a cougar, are shoving | the dogs has just had a litter of pup ¢ of national aspirations, |but, in accordance with its duty, it (MAt improvement in the world that | isiqoctors say. The hand picks up something every time it reaches out,{tainly 16 feet, until the lynx, which |thelr noses into my lap to be petted, | pies; you would love them, th ferty in Poland and among |always approached the chanceilor|th¢ Advocates of a peace by under. | ve mmium way. ine hand picks up somethin looked like a huge and exceedingly |and humming defiance to one an-|their little wrinkled noses Letts, and no doubt also among |and begged him to act ent. oe aoe og Usually what the hand picks up is a flock of germs. Many of ‘em) Malevolent pussy-cat, made vicious| other, They are on excellent terms! squeaky voices. of the doutiie monarchy,| It was his duty to remove the un views i me held | se Glecase germs |dabs at him. I shot the lynx low, pre ac iy the Czechs and Southern |fortunately only too justified| °°)" That's why the docs say, “Don't shake hands!” 60 Ss not to “hurt ‘his kin, | ainae = pene diasatintaction, | | Finally. there seis sowapegicn Hut one Seattle man tried dodging the «iad handrhake of a friend} / Sa nme pe Ere ithe bob: and especially to take steps against | Who were ashamed of their attitude lang the friend took it insult and tted him In the eye. or hours, he dogs ran o yn the field of battle * ot and the friend took it as an insult and swatted him Ir ’ 2 . " on almost to the very |‘D¢ Abuses and excesges in war in-|in the autumn of 1914, and of all That you may not bave to take any such chance the kind artist has a and killed it among the rocks |dustries. (He refers to profiteering, | their thoughts of a good peace. It! pictured several methods of nideatepping the outstretched hand of friend ontesid vigorous scuffle, It was in « ‘ a} *trikes and favoritism to munition) ¢¥en seemed painful to them to be oe foe hole and only two of them could get workers.) They, with their regret-| reminded of such manly thoughts. | ssh jat it provisions decided upon for of Adriatic territory. If these 1 are not executed speedily, in opinion of this newspaper, Jt soon may find herself involyed im | disastrous Balkan adventute — cause of the actions of her terers.” D'Annunzio has become a “ses ous nuisance,” in the opinion 4 While England preferred to | and their trades were being taken | done our fighting capacity, a j hewn ay oS crests.| Fiume and Dalmatia has | the Evening Standard. Principally in economical ang ( from them by others. It Is very|Mene Tekel for the moral strength! xfinnie Elaine Deaver, wite of) PORTLAND, Sond eorenete | Oe es eatin hens one = brought the allies nearly to the The Evening News prints a | cal propaganda, mil oll os | painful to look back and see how of the German people, and thus, too, James R. Deaver, retired marine )JUTY here recommended the trial of pf — pte ree end of their patience, in the | markable interview with d’. ans questions were especially th the German sincerity and honesty, of the German army. All this la: . » David Smith, Walter Banaster and aoe me et, towards the) opinion of some newspapers. If | zio, given its correspondent by ical iy y iy y ly oquitted one of my companions, Phil) of France. This is type!) the spotiess personal cleanliness and | plain for our enemies to sec, and “*Teeantmajor, recently sequ James Ogle, charged with the mur-| ene, oF my Companions, Phil) this situation is allowed to con~ | poet three weeks ago under the selfish thought for one’s country much besides, and they no doubt of the murder of H. C. Holt, Alki der of J Burgess and George |) any ot "4 ake gh sew pad es te | tinue unchecked, in the opinion ite it would not be printed : were lost, and in their place came a gladly drew the inevitable inferences grocer, was awarded an auto, three Peringer, w were kiljed during a cornediy right beside ob: age | of the Evening Standard, it | @’Annunzio ‘reelased” it. | wholly an-German idea, that the in. therefrom. i angel hold-up at Claremont Tavern, near |“ 7 F path, Seon) will provide a new war. | D’Annunzio Talks | rings, pair of. Gamend carrings.| ve, inst Priday: night. |we saw the lion in a treetop, with! Phe Pall Mall Gagette fears a} D'Annuezio plans, according | THE GREAT CHANGE gold watch, $50 Liberty bond, bo: The jury recommended capital be the dogs so high up among possible Balkan war unless the/ the interview, to occupy the ine The chancellor should have toid, PROM 1914 nied, two blankets and set of furs,| punishment. All of the bandits|'"* Pranches that he was striking | peace conference takes action to|cipal cities of Dalmatia and |the people whither they were drift.| In August, 1914, the whole press,/ all found among the effects of Holt, have been ponitively identified, the enforce its decisions with regard to| Montenegro” of Serbian infh and | iN, and explained to them the whole | fully convinced had ranged itself on| by Judge Mitchell aunt me Mostay. police declare, According to con Wiad ane, Cate | He te * prepared to fight” to ald. of their serious situation. The gov-| the side of the war of defen and) Mra. Deaver wtifies jolt had feasions obtained by the police from | No agreement Italy can enter|out his ideals, in case remaining silies, generously e ain |had uttered words of determination | given her all these things, but her| the bandits, Smith ia alleged to have an be considered more than a/are “threatened with expulsion.” were also | *TMment should have explained again by American borat 2s and again what was at stake, that|“* the necessity of carrying the| husband had forced her to return been the man who fired the fatal “serap of paper” so long as her| “I am going to occupy the in vod aores, |an endurable feace could only be|War to a su0e eat issue. Un-| them. she also clatmed » plano 4 shots soldiers and sailors ny be winnel given Italy hy Se vact won from a defeated enemy, and that | fortunately, there was later a change household furniture, but Judge G 7 a | from allegiance to their government | the correspondent quot ¥ " of tone in part of the press, It fail-| liam disregarded this claim, J. L. : : |by an “egotistical rebel” and “in-|zio as saying. “I am going to fi we would otherwise be the victims Will y © : = , [ed to realize that such a war of de-| Raldwin, executor of the estate, was Legion Men 1 — Jauced to flout the peace confer-| Montenegro, which being : of @ peace of violence, Only victory uc . 4 r fepse could not be ended by a peace ordered to turn th aut nd valu | H ence,” the ¢ tte announced. nationalized by Serbian methods, — i , ° the latter or «| ence, ¥ E Toys George knew what he was|pould mtn of understanding, but only thru vic-|ables over to Mrs, Deaver Carry Appeal to Soviet Government Threat Sickie frases “Zuaue “It has been stated that the gaying when at the end of the war “ode tne tory, unless we were to be defeated! Deaver was called to the stand by People of State ened by New Plan sch iacBNGdien — government is helping me sec he expressed to Lord Northcliffe the } ME OD and beecor the victims of unbear-| Raldwin, and said he had ordered ~ = | sad D'Annunzio holds Fiume and Zara | This is absolutely false. The thanks of England for the work he | BOURGEOISIE | able condition Mrs, Deaver to return the things,| Elmer J. Noble post, No. 1. Ameri) 1)... So og (Unite |2Ot Only egainst tho request of the ernment “knows what I ask is had done. He had proved himself} Our political and intellectual im-| As with the government and the|when @he showed them to him.|can Legion, will earry the fight to| pce) Widespread plot to over.| Peace conference, hut in direct de-| right, but it would seek to @ master in mass suggestion. maturity and lack of critical faculty,| people, so also in this part of the Harold Deaver, 12-year-old #on Of | eradieate the “reds” to the people,|throw. the novint necaehiat in| Hance of the orders of his govern: | conditions by diplomacy. We found ourselves, bit by bit, at-| which rendered us unable to per-| press, the thoughts of an under. | the Deavery, said he saw his mother! oa. ty pian, formulated Tues. | Petrograd and co-operate with Gens,|™e2t this newspaper pointed out] “To frighten world opinion there Gacked by enemy propaganda, by|celve the emptiness of catch phrases) standing with the enemy grew ring the jewelry oe eae ng +] Deniken and Yudenitch has been dis.|@"4_ he cven has induced It | will be much talk of civil war in and writing, thru the ne: land impossible promises, were and| stronger than the thoughts of In not allowing Mra. Deaver the | “ay night at a meeting in Veterans caveeed, aocetting tn an eiheial wire. | Military forces to embark upon Italy, the menace of a Balkan war Igral countries, expecially across our |are the cause of our misfortunes. I/ tory, with all its heavy demands on piano and household goods, Judge; hall, at the Armory leas dispatch from Moscow today tacks upon neighboring countries.” |and the sowing of the seeds of Bole Jand frontiers h Holland and|had always hoped that the people|an-already suffering people. Many |Gilliam ruled no testimony had! 4 speaker's bureau will be formed| “Pho revolutionary organication,| JUKO-Slavia, the Gazeite sid, has|shevism. ‘This means nothing, My | @ewiteeriand and also thru Austria-| would force their way thru phrases,|/of the most widely circulating shown they had ever been given to| py the local post. It will be com: | «aid to number nearly 1.500, was de.| °xXereised “most exemplary — re-/ expedition is not the germ of a reve ot ry and in our very own coun-jcatch words and political trickery | papers became the prophets of the | her posed of legionaries who will go be- | clared to have been financed by the | Straint” in not taking action against | olution, it is the evolution of @ coums — try, and, Iast of all, thru the air,|to 4 view of the facts that really | new outl based on the recon ” fore public gatherings to educate the {atifes to the extent of tens of mil-|@Annunzio, assuming that the try toward complete unity as a great with such cleverness and on such a| correspond to realities ne ee eee no GUEST STUBS TOE ON general public as to the aims of the |jions of rubles, and to have been| Peace conference will carry out the! nation. Jarge scale that many people could | I was disappointed. The more the | air g Beet cg a bd t ie oe OME MAT: HURT radicals, and to Lion home md fact | headed by Editor Bakoff. According | . C . o ‘e unwil « ad ve e je . that while sta awe are sufficient po longer distinguish between enemy (fire of domestic politics raged, th ce WELC M H a to the wireless, the plotters planned and their own sentl|more the guif between class and) enemy's readiness for peace, or, at to cope with the situation, federal | an attack on the red army in the Propaganda wounded wus all the}the more did phrases, cateh-words | Our own fighting strength, until the | come” mat, Grover Lewis, 26, fell| should be supplemented by more |i, a fresh offensive. Communication| : more deeply in that we had to carry/and criminal delusions hold sway. | enemy had given some irrefragable \thru the ple glass of the front) stringent statutes. was maid to have been established] on the war, not with strong battal-| Soon parties and party aims were 1 | bona Loyegite! ey Magen te Lae door of the Donald hotel, +1823 1 with Deniken by airplane. | ' i v ore importance than the country,| those who thought Taingly Denny way, and is suffering facial . M hile, according to Moscow] Hens, but with good ones: ee aenied,| The broad mass of the bourgeoisie, |necestary to keep thelr #word a8 |incerations Tuesday morning at the| San Franciscans | clatwin’ tha chabeviin Ganithnine 00 oe ‘soldiers there can be no|a confused mob, always knowing |*harp, and the arm that wie city hospital. The accident occur J d b ke | Avance on a 60-mile front, from the | cag. But numbers alone are| better than anyone else and lacking |®* *trong, 48 was possible red Monday night } arre y uake Gulf of Finland to Churskoe lake | Clever sleuthing on the part of| being kept secret by the q | ipline, went its own way, and| poURT OF SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 25.—Light | «nestruction of Kolchak's 1 federal investigators has resulted in | authorities. nothing, without the spirit that ani-| all disc J struction ¢ K nak's army t e nd . gates them; this is true both at/stood isolated In its mental arro-| VICTORY SOWN thinking of the war alone. sleepers here we arred awake at/ Continues, and our advance ts yn-| the arrest of two men, who Capt.| True was arrested on the % and in the field | gance, its reluctance to act, its lack] 1, tniy connection another idea “ ‘ 4:06 a, m, by an earthquake sho rupted,” said the communiqte.| Thomas B, Foster, U secret He is said to have had one of the peng . haracter. It, too, had no sense , PRESS COULD Two distinct temblors were felt. Not re tadeens 060 service, declares have been flooding | dollars in his possession when fought the world, and| of chara 7 q | was put forward, that the war could BEEN LED » have taken 900 additional pris- oe Sue 1d with|f its responsibility to the country.| 1 i" PU Cire a military deci. | MAY : y : all those on the streets felt them, the cities of the Pacific coast with | rested, E. could just fight the world Wuts{Tt never thought what infinite dam.| "ever pe ened oye eeeerxoe of |, The press lacked the single guld-|/ Hut they saw hotel windows light up. | TCT flung back Deniken in| Phony dollars | ‘The federal authorities declare dence so long as our spiri a He it was bringing on the country |*0n—sthat is to say, by force of |ance which was so remarkable with! ‘Two men working on a pipe orgun|, “We have flung bac Deniken in| Pithe men. arrested are William! that the dollar, which corresponds _ sound. Just so long, too, shy Pea pay He eee ee oe ertnod tg | the enemy. Unied, it could #0 easily lin the Fillmore theatr n into the | the Kurahisott region, and captured | e.,0" machinist, and Déxter/in weight to a real dollar, is aan er Sane oot | tho. lnc et westeaias and prim-|anhanes the oftect of the military not merely a useless, but !street and notified a policeman that |three armored trains Smothers, 20, a clerk. Both men| cellent imitation. : ich is the same thing, ¢ } CRORRCS TAD OEEEEE ° a dangerous weapon Of! some one had blown a sit ’ are in the city jail Tuesday. he first specimens of the illicit bow to our enemy's desire| ciple in wide masses of the people, | cucceases. Hut that the last word rest { this was not the case in ‘ "0 aot ne ghia tae oe uta tenets 9 Evength fatled us, the whole position | socialists, found no counterweight | there was no doubt that ‘on the contrary, it followet Old Boys to Shake : |raided by the authorities. A’ num Pacific coast cites from was changed. We no longer fought) among the bourgeoisie. It Is» sad! were people really so ignorant of i, noteworthy manner the Instrwi * in Receptive Moo |ber of plaster of paris casts, acids, tt to San Diego. eh ame mane Grop of tsood, and miny |e Mee. ni ie rey A oald peng dll eee apt 4 pny ae as Oy Bag ogg bg Secret Terpsichore Of all the places to rap for ad | end other mataewils weed in counter evidence against both men, — Germa jonge’ ady to! inking men shou id not they understand the mind | readiness to subi oa jeade B” pences © 80 Fs ei ane Om — ee 2 ag ed “ps whee ar dee ead por Pik no action | fa th ; Pres moh fa Lioyd ores ee . : _ _ bei! aa me “Camoufiaged shimmie"-—it's a se-|mittance, Ox: Johnson, 34, choose|feiting were found, The address is | authorities declare, is conclusive, «ir country. and the speeches of a Lioy< OTK | ship based on mutual trus m y chelate a oe er | while they are robbed of all for) or Clemenceau? Why fight an-| There were, it ix true, a few stray-| ret-—will be danced at the Thanks the poorest place in Seattle. é | pw | Plc ney ay ere the Where for] ote batts it te really unneces. ling sheep, but, in the main, my e/g cia Tuesday Mbt The] jay eas Peared at, the codnty/ SAYS RICH CHILDREN BURLESON SERVICE © 9am E bourgeoisie must share the blame for| sary to achieve victory or to escape |quest that military events should bet Collewe « esday night, The | jai nday night and banged on | Ag The breaking of our morale at] the collapse of the country. eat? Hag ‘thay no iden of the |dacnasen train than’ er Mins Dean Ob neues otele, Yelm re, Lange ston the outer Sack ot the basttle ,| NEED WELFARE WORK| FOR POSTAL CARD home, with its effect on our fighting “ state of mind of the man who has fulfilled. re Tt mw x. J hinese gamer ¢ yhen Jailer arr appeared : 3 ™ 2 > 7 Bapacity the war against the home | ALLIES rom ul to leave his home, his wife and chil band pn thanks for this, - jnumber of other queer amusements | Johnson politely inquired: “I want} LONDON, Nov. —“The two| LONDON, Nov. 25.—A postcard front and the spirit of the army MOTATORS sia 3h 1 | dren, his secure post and to undergo | ‘The quite comprehensible efforts to |#"@ among the specifications 18560 Do you know where I can|occasions on which I have known | Posted in the piceass car Rpt ee se Us, Oe ee So Giger ‘te built. waa] Mrdships and danger, if it is after |satisty the reader's craving for nov: | |mot it aa infant welfare work to be most | 014, ‘ * of t en acteael Z Whereby the entente hoped to con-| edifice of our a Fata ne |all useless, if he ix merely risking |eity sometimes resulted in news, even Certainly,” responded the Jallor:|. reently needed were in two of the| pimtico, Tt t had ; uer had given up the| splitting; the spring that should re) 1. cutire of himself and his fam-|o¢ a purely y character, really P “step right in | Pimlico, It was found hidden away pope nny Festdsaey wwiskeuys I hadjnew our fighting strength was man ‘ai eacauet pint em turthbe uy | CAPTAIN TO SPEAK in a minute a telephonic voice|Tichest homes I have ever come in| in a ticket box in a sleeping car, Tt” po doubt on this point | muddied Could one not understand the m: aima of enemy propaganda, finding TO COCHRAN POST over long distance to the Western| contact with,” declared ~— Lord had be nd ecu iiey the German In the spring of 1918 a farseeing| Our war chancellors have done! who, in continual danger, alone on! its way into our press from neutral | Capt. Campbell, recently returned |Hospital for the Insane at Steila-|eauchamp, in a recent address at|°CcuPation ¢ elgium, entente statesman made the follow-| nothing to put right the damage and) 4 dark night in a muddy crater area,|or enemy sources. When one adds |from service with the expeditionary Com announced that Johnson was Walmer. a ing remarks clear the mind of the people. They | hay to work forward to some point |the sensational padding and heading |forces in Siberia, will speak before {under arrest, He escaped Monday | ee ‘EER FUNERAL HELD “In London and Paris there is to-|had no sree wry Bh ong where hell awaits peti - mts of such news that is so dear to &/the Lioyd T, Cochran post No, 40 of |morning | Funeral services for James i - damente siet | gathered the people together and led) who is due tomorrow for ¢ jong |section of our prés, then our en-/the American Legion eday night . - fT |Glenn, Seattle pioneer, who died day © general fundamentar West {them, lke the great dictators—| awaited leave, and who today has to |emiew could not desire better helpers [tr tite etd alts: halt ia pated et | BREAKS BABY’S NOSE _ |jilcm. Seatte pioneer, who di - mphadl will never be conquered by| Clemenceau, Lloyd George and Wil-| go on fighting, and perhaps to die? |in their propaganda work. exservice men are invited to atteria| FUNERAL WEDNESDAY LONDON, Nov, 25.—Sentence of |Mohday, were held at 2 p. m, ov ly military means, But it {s,|son. Ideas were thought out that were to| It is not In my nature to seek the |the meeting, as many important mat Funeral services. for Frank B,|tree months’ imprisonment was |day in the Home Undertaking of that the entente| What general headquarters could| bless the world, thoughts ran far into |causes of such stupidity in iilwill or | ters touching on the welfare of the Hi ran ; ‘ Elisa Day, 7, ‘for {lor He was 70, mevertheless, clear that he inter-|achieve by patriotic education and) the future, and the hard reality of |sensation-mongering. Short-sighted- | req chevron men are to be taken up | Sami 52, who died Monday at his|imposed on Elisa. Day, 937, ‘for | bate! 2 will win, and that by the in - f tt Ni | vas often at the bott f suc home, 1511 Stevens st., will be held/cruelty to a child, age wha she ‘ in Germany and|by transferring our foreign propa-|the present was forgotten. No one | ness wes often at the bottom of such | at the meeting. ven é national conditions in aeae will lead| ganda to horne uses only amounted | remembered the agony of conscience ‘cases, And oftener still the great dif ex Sia ileal at the Home Undertaking chapel at|struck across the face with a| When Paris was in danger of mae central powers, which ill te giving crumbs to the hungry. The) of the soldier who had to risk his |ficulties under which the press work 2 p.m, Wednesday, Sample was for-|poker because the child accidentally | ture at the beginning of the war, to the fall of the imperia ots o ii “3 le remained | life. ed, the calling-up of many trained| Scientists are trying to squelch a|merly a Seattle contractor. Later he|dropped a loaf. Her face was|curator of the Louvre museum of this year | mind of the German people re! life, 1 y : ad aot ord Sill break ‘out in Ger-| rudderless and uncaptained, the prey| We were thinking of every imagin-|men throwing an undue amount of |new epidemic, discovered in Japan, |bought a hotel at Kirkland, which he| bruised and her nose broken, The | ried a $2,000,000 jewel to Bord the revolution Jer. It is quite clear to us that of every influence that came. Ignor- able thing; we ought to have been work on to the editorial staft, and called the “tsutsugamushi, was operating at the time of death, woman was not the child's mother. | his vest pocket.