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#: P| STAR’S ADVISORY BALLOT | mits an advisory ballot for the primary election Tuesday The best candidates in each of the parties, where there are contests for the nomination, are recommended The Star's purpose is to secure the nominations of the best andidates in each of the parties | Sos ny tad fe rateable guide in marking your ban. ONDON, Sept. 4---According to a Rouen dispatch to the Chronicle, ho Sapraees Court Jealges ‘ the French are considering the surrender of Paris without attempt- cant tater Ta my vos Hine ws to me oer ence | ding its defense, to save it from destruction. The report is not credited. from the party ballot. The election of three judges of the supreme MIs Sela Gm chute eae $0 pus cans oe the tetas vote Tomntes.| ‘was the most valuable member of elected. they won't have to submit to a further election in November, That's what the law says. There are eight candidates | VOTE FOR THESE THREE: W. H, PEMBERTON, O. R. HOL-| COMB, EDGAR G. MILLS. | Pemberton, Mills and Holcomb are supported by the right-thinking | men and women of all parties and by the joint committee of the Labor | federation, Farmers’ grange and Direct Legislation league. Vote for/ them and defeat the present reactionary judges—Crow, Chadwick and | Gose. The other two candidates are E. B. Preble, who is not well enough known, and John FE. Humphries, who Is unfit | / Democratic Party hae - 2) CONGRESSIONAL | United States Senator—Vote for George F. Cotterill, first chotoe; Hugh C. Todd or James H. Dege, second choice. You lose your vote If you do not vote both first and second choice. | Under no circumstances vote for George Turner, either first or second choice. Turner-is a standpatter and reactionary Representative in Congress, First District (Seattle and Kitsap County)—Vote for William Hickman Moore, | LEGISLATIVE State Senate—There is but one democratic contest for state sena torial nominations. It’s in the 30th district. Fred Nelsen of Orillia. State Representatives—There is but one contest. It is in the 40th district, where Isaac P. Calhoun, C. V. Lochridge, Frank Field and Archie Smith are candidates for the three nominations, Be sure to! vote for Calboun, no matter which of the other three you favor. sntlianiptahjasi In that district, Vote for} : — -@! Progressive Party || CONGRESSIONAL | United States Senator—Vote for Ole Hanson, first cholee; J. A.) er, second choice. Be sure to vote first ami second choice, or) you lose your vote. | Hanson ts The Star's first choice, because there is absolutely no} question of his progressivism, his honesty and his ability. Hanson ts The Star's first choice of the candidates in all the parties. ) Representative in Congress, First District emma: | Seattle and); Kitsap County)—Vote for etther Congressman James W. Bryan or} Austin E. Griffiths. Bryan has made good in congress and Griffiths will make good. Representative in Congress, Second District (King County Outside Of Seattie and the Northwest Counties)—Vote for both John E. Camp bell and William J. Biggar. Give the first choice vote to one of them and the second choice vote to the other. Either Biggar or Campbell will make good in congress. LEGISLATIVE State Senate—There are no contests for the progressive nomina- tions, only one candidate having filed tn each district. State Representatives—Contests for the nominations are to be de cided in two districts. Fortieth Representative District—Vote for A. D. Cowan, C. 8. Fol- Jett and Ephriam D. Millis. Three are to be nominated in this district. | There are four candidates. Forty-second Representative District—Vote for Thomas F. phine first. Then vote for either W. D. Lane or Ear! G. Rice. Two are to be nominated. There are three candidates. Bo sure to vote for Murphine. ig gee el opal neg ore Beg re Mur- COUNTY Asseseor—John H. Fletcher, a civil engineer, and D. C. Ringte, a \Candidate for U.S. Sen- The Seattle Star e Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News eee WE VOLUME 16. NO. 164. | ate, in Noonday Meet- ing, Mercilessly Flays as “Fake Progress- ives” Rivals Who ‘Attacked Him. Standing alone on the roe trum of the Grand opera house, without chairman or the ueual panoply of public meeting, O| Hanson, progressive candid. for the senate, huried hi: de- full and fair at hie op- = a ponents this noon. The the atre held the biggest crowd of SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1914. the present campaign, and Han. son's speech was time and again cheered to the echo. He said when the progresstve | party came into being It came to answer to an insistent call that the people of this nation should be freed from the domination of| bosses, little and big. He sald “Today you behold the spectacle In the state of Washington of an ex-raliroad lobbyist and a man tn your city who is to lobby at Olym- pla for certain special interents, trying to deliver the voters of this. atate to any candidate in any party except myself, because they know they can nether influence nor con NEWA nT ON TK ONE CENT AST EDITION ATHER FORECAST — Mr, Salisbury is sorta undecided today —probably fair morrow. tonight and to- ON THE ROAD TO PARIS, Sept. 4.—Paris today awaits inevitable siege by the Germans. The kaiser’s army is less than 25 miles away. Compeigne and La Fere have fallen into their -hands. leaves only the Leon and Rheims defenses between the invaders and the city’s: outer fortifications. es GREAT CROWD CHEERS HANSON: Kaiser to Coop Up SWEEP FRANKEL Paris and This | dairyman, formerly a carpenter, are the candidates. Paris is nervous and ex- ** i Sheriff—Vote for Bob Hodge. He has made good as sheritt be-|'T! "iru 1 Am siectnd a, cited. The plan of i ; fore and will again be the best sheriff King county ever had. His op- “T desire to say that I defy the a 24 pk ae | ponent, Cal Rutherford, is being used as a dupe by the standpat gang.| sy parasitical, political payroll Germans is believed to he : Commissioner, Third District—Dr. Walter T. Christensen and 8./j 14. to fi th li t 4 F. Woody are the rival candidates. Christensen has been a valuable| rng, nave ag much chance of ‘0 force le allies to give 9 member of the legislature for three sessions. His record is perfect | defeating me in this campaign as them battle before the gates Woody has been mayor of Bothell and is a “livewire” mayor. Vote |they have of being elected to office of the city. pi fey eso themselves yt Par . ie Prosecuting Attorney—Alfred H. Lundin and Frank E. Green are! rhe people are listening to no Failing in this, it is as- the candidates. Lundin has been a deputy prosecutor who has made | gictation, but thelr own conscience, sumed they will press the } good. Green has had experience in the law business in the Philippines/anq 1 feel certain of nomination y saa Pp _ and In Seattle. Vote for either. and. election | French and British to the Constables—Vote for any five of the six candidates. “Rvery standpat paper in this! southward, at the same ti Bi: state would rather see me Gofeated | attacki th it ime Republican Party Gendlentes tor tensed Whore | pose ae e city at some Fas He Brands Paulhamus Ge | ft ni sass CONGRESSIONAL Without mincing his words, Han. ey never In‘ com b Ww. aw ns, 01 pletely to invest it is a 4 United States Senator—The name of Wesley LORIMER Jones is| 20" Dranded W. fl. Paulhamus, of hing to be believed, Oa the only one on the republican ballot. Progressive republicans can 40) sciative in that county, as an Instead, the impression te : nothing élse except to write in the name of some other man enemy of progressivism growing that their plan was to % Representative in Congress, First District (Seattle and Kitsap) ji. cited his record as ratlroad push on past it further into the 4 County)—There are four candidates—Frank Hammond, H. E. Foster, William E. Humphrey and David P. Rice. You must vote first and sec- ond choice or lose your vote. Vote for any two except Humphrey. An enemy to the public good, Humphrey, under the Wilson administra- Hobbyist and told how Paulbamus, | as president of the senate, stifled | the bill providing for amendments | of the constitution by the initiative. | Interior of the country, driving its defenders before them. % * Passing, however, no doubt ex- ists that they would leave behind a tion, has behaved so ridiculously that he {is useless in congress, son denounced the mileage| force sufficient to keep the and a child could do this district more good than he. Scola ho whem | colanenane | gon bottled up, bombarding it game Representative in Congress, Second District (King County Outside! oat 29 cents a mile for raflroad| the city with their huge Krupp of Seattle and the Northwest Counties)—There is no choice beltare while it actually costs only siege guns. tween Lindley H. Hadley of Bellingham and George W. Adamson of} 9 cents a mile. He also denounced | In short, the Germans are Everett. the abuse of the franking privilege La Feare thought to be planning to repeat at LEGISLATIVE to help the campaigns of candi- Gaucwer Paris thelr program at Namur. : State Senators—There is no contest in the 20th senatorial district, | dates. Noncombatants Leave and unless the voters write in the name of some one else, Howard D. Taylor, former standpat speaker, will get the nomination Thirty-first District — There is little choice between Robert H. Evans and Senator Ralph H. Nichols, unless you give Evans, who has not served in the legislature before, the benefit of the doubt Thirty-second District—Vote for E. P. Moran. His opponent, for- Explains Money Plan He then explained the Hanson plan for 4% money for farmers “Every year the cities outgrow jane will make their | on the The brunt of the fighting yesterday was at Mont Didier, north and a trifle east of Paris. south of Mont Didier, and on the Oise river, is in the inva t stand there. When you have r of the second siege of Paris. ‘s’ hands. id the dispat |the country,” he said, “Every year |the fight for existence becomes} Mont Didier fell. And now Compiegne, 10 miles See the tiny speck just north of Paris, marked “St. Denis"? The Paris- ch study this map. It will help you to understand the lineup of forces Gen. Gallieni, the military gov- ernor of Paris, announced that ev- ery avenue leading into the city is fully fortified. He is rushing troops to strategic points. The exodus of noncombatants eevee mer Senator Robert F. Booth, is a special-interest advocate. more intense. The cost of living | continues, : Thirtyfourth District—Vote for George U. Piper. While not a sat-| keeps climbing. Jobs get fewer. | Pedestrians are passed through isfactory candidate, he has occasionally made good. What is the solution? It is to | e 0 en Specified avenues. Automo!l Thirty-fifth District—Vote for Lincoin Davis. He is much better| bring land and labor together, to | may enter at will, but cannot lea: than Josiah Collins, the Chamber of Commerce bell boy in the legis- latuse. Thirty-sixth District—Vote for G. E. Steiner. His record 1s fair. make farming more inviting, to lift the burden of the banker from the neck of the farmer.” MILLION A DAY BOMB TARGET Through Paris Siege @rithout permits. Trains are still running in and out of the city. Half a million Russians are ru 1d to be in England in readi- Thirty-seventh District—Vote for Miller Freeman. He showed how the present more: é STATE REPRESENTATIVES postal savings bank law is ia “s sta an on the continent Fortieth District—Vote for Ira H. Case and Walter J. Lunn. Cen-|% Joke. He proposed that the LONDON, Sept. 4.—Finan- . Northen: France. aa ter your votes on these two and accomplish the defeat of elther Fred J,| Postal banks law be amended s0 4 4 PARIS, Sept. 4.—A Ger- The r Mess or F. H. Tonkin, Standpat Speaker Taylor's tools. cial losses through the war to mit as to the the nations engaged in the con- }as to remove any amount a man or woman may de. man aviator flew over Paris _ Tells of Its Horrors caar's troops, mostly Cos sacks, are said to have landed at Fortyfirst District—No choice. timated by British Aberd Scotland, from Arch. # Co —Vote for Fritz Harri. He’ . | posit flict are mated by : 3 5 re endence. ‘There tn no choice between the other two." "| At grasent no deponite of more] and Branch statiaticlane at 888 | today, hurling bombs into! — od’ 'to; Southern, ‘Englien teem 4 : Vv, 7 than $500 are accepted by the gov- i a da: ot * | P tedesrgs berger. Wate; for. Vietes "Maeaiok and “Ralph ‘Koapp.| (ctneat, He then wotild have the Turning to she opt ceca the city. Riflemen opened By Fred L. Boalt 1 trios ocrtes tthe steenetial e aad ,, le t - jon, th cla’ ir wu . . 966 « Becle , ” Fortyfourth District—Vote for Eugene A. Childe. There tx no|S0vernment loan money to farm-| thon, te ofthe British alone |fire on him from the Eiffel Tell me about the Paris of ’70,” 1 said. Ostend to cut the line of the lm choice between the other two. Forty4ifth District—No contest. Write in anybody's name in pref. erence to Robert Grass, whose record proves him unfit Forty-sixth District—Vote for Fred W. Hastings. Defeat Stephen A Hull. While Eugene ‘T. Hurd is better than Hull, he is not satisfactory Forty-seventh district—Vote for Joe Smith and Leola May Blinn Do not vote for E. H. Guile. had had 10,399 men killed, high interest charges wounded and missing thus far. vate banks. of the prt- tower, but the underside of his aeroplane was armored and the bullets produced no impression. Dr. Daniel B. Strong, who lives at 1006 E. Thomas st., is a good friend of mine. ‘I like him for a number jof reasons. One reason is that he hates some of the things | hate—such as imperialism and militarism. 1 | ers Belgium. Gen. Gallieni’s authority is abso- lute. The strictest martial law | prevails, | Germans Only 20 Miles Away | It is understood the Germ communications through e COUNTY French aviators then as. admire him because he is honest and wise. And I find |are within 20 miles of the outer County Clerk—Vote for Robert A. Tripple. Pn att “|him interesting because he has known the great men of | "ts The Sickles family should be kicked out of this office, which they | cended to engage him. la generation that has passed, and fa i dg z Pj Frightful French ‘losses tn Thurs. have been passing over from father to son at public expense Ui Seeing himself outnutr.| 8 peak yal d aah art bneaie and | played a part in aay n Gentian, sebtch caleaiaeey in Treasurer—-Vote for John A. Bennett. He has helped make Will Bee Jisr Cue MAvS QRINIOV : the big drama of international politi ferman cay of Amiens, Hanna's administration the best King county ever had in the treasur |bered, the German veered) were admitted today by the milk — er's office. Sheriff—No choice, except that John W. Roberts should be de 1 |The Frenchmen pursued | *out the siege of Parts | They tell of boundaries changed... | trol of their men, it is stated, 4 . r _ ¥) | asked an old civil war veteran; Leave Out Important Things and they ins on chargin Engineer—Vote for Samuel J. Humes, He's competent, and will ena maple = _————— him for some distance, but| once to tell me about the Battle of . . a thor “ . the foe, wh not, like his opponent, train with the Hamilton crowd. A Sléah Ot nine dowd taba das A 0 Fae . But they leave out the important wi mowed them Commissioner, First District—No choice. Commissioner, Third District—No choice. Knudsen is bad and Cox Belgian, who, a few gnonths ago, was a leader of cotillions in Dallas, his machine and escaped. failed to overtake him. Somehow I had never dared be- | an intriguing statesman’s dream. fore to ask Dr. Strong to tell me They tell of wars and victories won. Gettysburg, and he sald he didn’t even want to think about it, 1|‘hings. They say nothing of the wishes of the people set at naught, tary authorities, The French officers lost con- down by thousands with their machine gun Th Tex. He is now a war-stained, disheveled soldier, and he wrote: . knew the doctor went through the They are silent hone th oh ware declan is aoe ent Attorney—Vote for Fred C. Brown. Don't scatter your “We expect the big battle soon. I wish I could kill a few!” stege, and suffered in It, but I) misled and betrayed Ther > agent to have been suicidal, French Ss Miaaias ba Brew, 0 0 to detent: Wileun BR. Gay who te atign You can't blame him for the wish. He was facing men ‘who, from never had the courage until today |61) of boys torn from mothers hue | aviators report the Germans i otes. Cen 4 j NMeTY! nis point of view, had as little right to be there as burglars in wour| UJ gh to ask him fo tell me about it, | hands from wives, and driven, iike| numerically far superior to the | an B “ home “How you happen to be ov ahha 2 Gallic troops. nseee: et she 29g in ag sek ake Wolette Oli oe eee Pree. Similarly placed, you and I might have the same wish there when it started?” | os pro reggie wounds! The latter's mistaken gallantry Oot ei earrollcare up for reelection, There are seven ottee ain’ | Yet what a feeling to take root in a human heart NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—That a| pressed. “And what happened | iow foul from lack of coon ie) having availed nothing, the French | a ee ee eee of thative te bb tonne ae Suppose this young Belgian had had bis wish granted and killed a| vessel flying the American flag is} to you—you, personally? We |fel ele and moans that’ rice) finally retreated to Piequigny, « ee eee eee eee ese Meee dace cr) few. By no possibility ean the few thus killed have been the few who] providing food, fuel, ammunition| know what happened to Paris. from the blood ecalad finns fter| distance of eight miles, destroying © | ety el preety mma ss rm candidacy Of| were responsible for that great Invasion, or even knew that it had been and other supplies to two British| We get that in the history (jon, the Blood-soaked denies fer| the roads and blowing up bridges. Miss Bhea M. Whitehead nea Ske | planned until ordered to take part in it. cruisers. lying ten miles off| book succor, for waternfor deatht Hey | The former the Germans were Quite far from the reach of bullets are the rulers who produced the| Sandy Hook, was charged today by “The history books,” said Dr. a repairing and the latter they were a ~ Socialist Party — There are no contests for any of the socialist nominations, “atmosphere” out of which the war bolt flashed. The system which develops hates and insolence and swagger, com- pelling nations to arm, counterarm, stagger, groan and fight—THAT 18 WHAT NEEDS KILLING. Count von Bernstorff, German ‘tm- bassador to the U. S., who said he had received positive information to that effect, Strong, “have a way of leaving out the important things and putting in the unimportant, The books tell of @ king’s ambition, for instance, or jbo NOT TELL OF THE MOTHER WHO WAITS FOR THE BOY WHO WON'T COME HOME; OF THE (Continued on Page 9.) replacing as rapidly as possible, it is stated. So far as known, only two cit! sens of Amiens were killed,