The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 22, 1914, Page 1

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If You Don’t Wan’t to Take This Big War Too Seriously The 1914 war model is a self. Lieut. Porte a fect! perfectly good It will be a good many yeara of the news from Europe our It begins to look as if Elihu eral distribution of ultima. For the moment, talk of an Italy prudently decided to keep gtarter—indianapolis Star, polls Star before we hi flanapet 8 0 ear a ' na a's ar atone Lament aidan tatk reapect and admiration for the Root and others who accepted tume—-New York Evening English channel tunnel has out of it—New York Amer TT, colonel Ressevelt on RS P ut disarmament. been postponed. — Springf oe Pepe ‘ de of the water.—W @ Nobel prize will have to —Boston Transcript. je man Increase very rap: Nobel peace prizes ought to Post R i ingute 13 0, me oi ab Wash: be bigger for the man who Peale Idly—New York American step up like gentiemen and Pe. bes g . : aie bees b rate vines “- ing! nee ume” this year.—To \ qurepewe government offi Sa give back the money—New Somebody please page An It yet may become necessary There is grim irony in the | Tuny, taridenh: isis it one als will not have time to go Peace-loving citizens of this York American, drew Carnegie. New York to land marines to protect Mr newspapers, just coming In : i measures are taken by rulers, Really, it look f hy on the Chautauqua platform country will now rise up and Vo © American. Carnegie’s peace palace at The from’ e ‘de 10 ing WF i HH} HColumbia State been sending calaibhek 4 he wemmen - Washington tender a hearty vote of thanks The republics of Paraguay, cee Hague.—Indianapolis Star ‘ dont: Wilsen'o areake 601 Pg i { > the wrong plac orate erald, eat to Columbus for having discov Andorra and San Marino are Huerta should find Europe's it Mexico and predicting trouble f TE war alec: ‘eneitied te bey 9 pe een ered America—Chieago Her inclined to resent being over atmosphere thoroughly con Rather than be forced to send ae a consequence.—Springfield * | read more and more ald, looked by Germany in its gen genial.—Columbia State Enrico Caruso to the front, Republican : JOSH WISE SAYS: RPE 20 AST The Seattle Star mo EDITION || | these machine guns mow down : ore inant aa ell ee The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News WEATHER, FORECAST oo Ths ' ike ter trade his 1907 model Se - — . ——— se w. m. evidently changed his mind ; nerveater er one, VOLUME 16. SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1914. ONE CENT Sk" F0400".% night and Sunday! southerly wind ‘ | BEATEN AND KICKED IN JAIL —_— ES IN (SIGHTS You SEE AT JOHNNY CLAN sg phates tte ene ees teste tt - : drunken brawl on Yesler way, was kicked by a fellow-prisoner so badly that his AN GER OF Pe el | face today looks like a raw beefsteak. . | Acting Police Judge MacMahon, highly incensed, promised today to start an in- vestigation that will stir things up around the jail. Allen says that a short time after he entered the receiving cell a fellow- prisoner approached him and declared it was Allen’s fault he was in there. An argument, then a fight, ensued. Allen got the worst of it. He says two jailers finally heard the racket and took the other man out, at the same time calling a city hospital doctor, who dressed Allen’s wounds. az The police say no report was made of the occurrence by the jailers. By J. W. T. Mason fPermer London Correspondent of the United Press.) NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—The ‘mppearance today of German thirmishers at Audenarde, Be!- 25 miles north of the | Fave city of Lille, was aston- | ming so soon after | To give the jailers a chance to present their side of the case, Judge Mac- Mahon continued the case to Monday. He placed Allen under $250 bonds, ordered him held as a witness, and also ordered him transferred from the jail to the hospital. “There is no excuse for this thing occurring in a modern city jail,” said the judge. ‘I don’t care if a man is a murderer, he must have the city’s protection | while in the city jail. | “Following so closely upcn a similar incident recently, when a man was |kicked to death in the same cell, it demands a thorough looking into. It seems to — thing of common occurrence, not worth passing mention on the part cf the jailers.” ; The judge will be backed by Mayor Gill in his investigation. PROGRESSIVE. |/orszezz°-"".-c==] AUTO. DRIVER equal to— Two-thirds total valuation | of grounds and bulidings of all the colleges and univer- Tey rig RIGHT INFRONT a in Ohio or Massachu- OF FOLKS. , CALLED HERE ae seeaat ot 500 locomotives F [ G | N RACE $1,000,000 per year to aguas maintain. Rewas a move of great signifi- indicating the German gen- ‘afi is considering the danger- jient of moving westward is to the north of the position. Fellow Original Route. fs the route the Germans have followed if they had uninterrupted on the river ft “The line of march runs almost due ‘west from Hrussels to Audenarde, [war the Franco-Belstan frontiers the main road turns to the it and proceeds to the fron- $p northwest of Lille, where fas planned to begin the march French soi! Dt the allies have done nothing 4 this route, it may go hard pakh them, since they will be forced fate about, the turning of a de- front being a difficult mili- Maneuver. Allies in Bad Position. Antwerp is too far away serious fo threaten the flank of the Rorthern advance if it ex-) Qo further north than the from Brussels to Audenarde, i should this force drive west-| "Nard along the northern route si- Bultaneously with a German frontal ; it along the Prussels-Na- ‘Bat line, the allies would be caught Ba vise and forced to face two at once Squeeze Allies Into France. The allies’ position is somewhere the Andenarde-Brussels-Namur Mele, and German strategy having Wparently been prevented at Din iat from delivering a southern at ek in force, it seems now to be ping simultaneous move- Rents from the north and east, Shieh, If successful, will squeeze the | Giles southwest into France, leav- Weg the kaiser master of Belgium CHEER GOOD-BYE TO CANADIAN TROOPS VANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 22 | trative crowds today | farewell to 2,000 volun- NOW AND THEN | Roosevelt in 1912 and two dele lof 647. |county conventions are to be held | September 12. | ceiving the next highest votes, | HEAR OSTEND HAS FALLEN State Chairman J. C, Herbsman today issued a call for a state con vention of the progressive party to) be held Saturday, September 19, at the Armory in Seattle, to adopt a platform. Each county fs allowed one dele- gate for every 200 votes cast for) gates at large. King county is to have 136 delegates out of the total Preceding the state convention, Delegates to county conventions are to be chosen by the rank and file at the primaries on Sep. tember & The delegates are to be the pre- cinct committeeman elected at the primaries and the two others re LONDON, Aug. 22.—Though It admitted the report was pos. sibly true, the official war news bureau here announced tonight that it had not received official notification of Ghent, Bruges, and Ostend’s seizure ‘VILLA’S ARMY Its life, 10 to 14 y then the scrap-pile. THREATENING WASHINGTON, Aug, 22.— Advices received today by the constitutionalist agency that Gen. Villa had launched a counter revolution against Carranza worried administra- tion officials. According to state department estimates, Villa's foree is com prised of 40,000 men, and this} army is said to be in readiness to! move against Mexico City It is also reported that Gen Angeles, Villa's chief of staff. had gone to Zacatecas to effect an ar rangement with 5,000 former fed eral soldiers who left the capital) prior to ¢ Carranza’s entry Villa's army will outnumber Car. ranza’s force in the capital by sev- Spencer Wishart ELGIN, Ill, Aug 22,—Driver Spencer Wishart was killed this afternoon in the automobile race here when his Mercedes automobile turned turtle on the back stretch during the eleventh lap. He received a broken leg and suffered internal injuries. Wishart was leading when the accident oc- curred. Mrs. Wishart was in the stand and saw the smash. She rushed to her husband's side. Mechanician John Jenter’s leg was broken, and he was also in- femed as the soldie vere 2 soldiers were given story in considerable detail. cedes car, won the Elgin automo. a og a ters who left this afternoon for + ] eral thousand if this body is added Wileartier and will be sent for by German ‘cavalry’ sedierth ‘| to the Northem army re oue agenneia’ > ore! Gils I (ty at the front in Great Britain. lery. Piel : - lah Ther teste aims ee ee Many touching scenes were wit The Hague, Paris and Rot- «| . ve nt to hospitals, terdam newspapers carried the UNCLE SAM CAN Ralph De Palma, driving a Me ear e y the 7 eases heir wives and bile race. Pulen was second, and Meethearts Lt LJ Jarning that the allies were | o— Ane, use Haven of Cit Jo riders aunt torreetve dhe orant ‘oe Se] GQ AHEAD NOW [res ie OT es NEARS Get at givet, on the French fron-| ,,TRAY’Ml probably revise) the 25 000 FALL ae | ’ tler, today them conform to those of the PARIS, A 12.-—German cay Chaney's roadh hej few weeks, in spite of the that; said, “The crowd is just beginning der his ear. He had a lovely ‘The Germat he said, “are 8, Ang. 22.—Germa z ohon y's roadhoure , ne Germans, a | fe reported today sighted at|scsdews wae raided Thursday nigh aid to keep to come.” Jbun on advancing like a tidal flood, and| leading maritime nations, be. Midenarde in extreme north-|aunntlty of whiekey . It was close to 2 o'clock He'd brought out three janes. 4) signs point to a conflict be-| + sabes yester ay t e insular and | Set of Belcium, only 26 miles|*™ciamey's that a0 me taken we aboard | h . party | We couldn't place two of them, but| tween the contending armies along| foreign commerce committee of ftom Lille, France bal | Maldents, have occurred Me’person: “Clancy insists his place Ien't| One of the men in our party|ine third, we knew, was an enter-|q front 20 miles long | the Seattle Chamber of Com- ile, Fran aceiden nirondhouse, buts private club, This Is] showed him a card ax we went In. |tginer at’ a downtown cabaret Al * gomt Miman. who commanded| Merce wired the National Cham. Rap what # Star man found who visited it! Tt w cad, of inataberaniD. he i eman, actu the other might. Mr. Kounder will ee | Ie nent ae Ste neh ay Johnny | t#!s lanky girl with dreamy eyes. |the Relgians at Liege, was report ber of Commerce that the local | next week about joyriding | OXDIM nt te slacmed wa on the back, |? @/ed today to be a German prisoner| organization approves such ac- NISH, Servia, Aug. 22.—The Ser wd deattie night life, Wateh Monday's| laughed and clapped us on the back, THE CLANCY TWOSTEP. ot te Nien, viene teeny ate. wll pursuing te Star jovially. I've heard one could get| O’ assebidaan retreating Austrian force they de- Into Johnny's even if one were 80)" 1 danced with ner And—say, ENGLAND OFFERS UP |REPORTS A GERMAN _ feated in the three days’ battie fought on the bank of river Drina By Robert Rounder, | unfortunate oe i toca though, | Co7e, In my innocence, 1 glided Int0 BR AVER FOR TROOPS| VICTORY AT METZ carly in the weet There were five of us in the card i That's only hearsay, though the rag’ two-step which the “pro. party. We had made a night of it.) ! don’t know fessor’ was pounding out on the 7 igick! They are cutting off stragglers When the cafes closed there was|@ @ piano, ine the fashion I'd. been LONDON, Aug, 22.—Prayers in-| WASHINGTON, Aug. 22—The hammering the rear guard, captur. no other place to go. 80 0 nurse, JOHNNY HAS A FINE taught to affect back in my dancing terceding for all of the nations em German embassy received today ing guns, and making every effort we reat out to Jonuny Clenoy’s PLACE. i was soon disillusionized, | brofled in war and spectal prayers | the following cablegram from Ber-| completely to shatter the beaten Thess ia & long etveteh of pave |? She gripped mo tighter for the success of the British arms|lin via New York Germans | army. ment beyond Georgetown. When| Johnny has a nice place “No, no, she said, “Like this—| Were offered up in practically ev-|gained important victory between| The Austrian losses are placed — = we reached {t, we hit it up like! gone to a lot of trouble and expense | this.” ery church in England yesterday,| Metz and Vosges mountains. at 25,000 killed, wounded and cap: King George, Queen Mary and | tured, am told b the fall styles will enable! Pilly-bedamned, and showed our|to get it fixed up right. There's a| She put on the brakes and slowed | 5, 4 : rat T - ; y a friend, a tailor, that the fa y bs a “ - | Princess Mary attended services ‘AN! E’ Entire Austrian regiments wi he wearer, by some little touch in the costume, to indicate with which hind-lights to more than one car) big dane floor, with a piano on|us up, wiggling strangely from i \vectminater Abbey bs sei W the warring nations her sympathies lie. Though American made, | that fancied Itself for speed one side, and a cozy corner for|side to side, We were barely mak IMMEDIATE RELIEF | Pe? vt, it is declared. the styies are designed to look something like militar: Ours was not a joy-ride, in the errs aee SF age ERR Te, {og prod one ow, Ane Lee quae BRITISH STEAMER Ne datLNe in ic as \nour | BRITISH CRUISER Ps 4 vernment| TAKES GERMAN SHIP y uniforms. , Any womah who|true sense of the word. For, on a toh jure. ei ey tehes ea ene te oe children will not joy-ride, one must have girls to two smaller rooms filled with | beginning to fill up with dancers CONSIDERED SAFE) 1.500.000 deposited in gove Make kindly to this attempt to exploit war's excitements and tragedies. cuddle and hug while the auto nego. tables and chairs, v you cani{t didn't take me long to acquire) SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 22--A| departments here for the relief of Women are the last persons in the world who ought, even in so tiates this bit of road. And we had ‘get anything to eat or drink, And|the motion, three-stack warship, answering the| Americans abvoad will be distrin.) WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.—Dis- ta matter as the etyle of dress, to encourage the military spirit. no girls, If we ited ‘em, we) there ure some rooms upstairs One of her feet slipped between German cruiser Leipsic’s deserip-| uted immediately, eecording to an- patches to the st department Moreover, this is America, a neutral nation, “with charity for all | had been told, we would find plent The Lumber Baron got there be-;mine. We were locked breast to tion, is reported by the Yucatan| nouncement tod’y by the National from Rio Janeiro declare the Brit Malice toward none”; and it becomes all of us to soft-pedal our of them out at Johnny’s fore we did Anyhow, they said, breast Her eyes were sparkling, just in| from Portland, lying off! Relief Board Arrangements have ish cruiser Glasgow had captured sanship We turned in off the road into a|he was a Lumber Baron, and he|up at me. Her head was thrown Point Arena at 11 p,m. Friday. If} been completed for the Bank of}the German steamer Santa Kata- Better a peace than a war style of dress; if any uniform is to be| lane. And there, at the gate, was) looked like one. A big, florid man} back, And now she raised herself, so, the safety of the British steam-| England to make payments injrina, It was also said the German ont let it be the uniform of mercy rather than the uniform of Johnny himself, all smiles he was, His hair was rumpled and ——__—_—_—— ship Moana, which sailed Thursday | gold to Americans with proper|cruiser Dresden sank the British | “You're a bit early, boys,” he] his necktle was screwed ‘round un (Continued on Page 2.) for Australia, is considered assured, ' credentials, steamship Hyades off Brazil

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