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me 3 GREAT RUSSIAN ARMIES ARE DNDENT VISITS ENGLAND'S BIG WAR STOCKADE WITH ARTHUR CLEAVER BH ARTIST; SEES 6,000 VERY POLITE, VERY ORDERLY MEN, NOT THE WHO woos COMMIT ATROCITIES OF Wwaion WORLD HEARS SO MUCH ( )) All Say They Dig't & A Cleeverh ° Sketohes by Ch left, German promptu showe! ere play the Eng! star halfback | prisoners havi canteen where t jer getting 3 In center, eground; at drink; they rmans may Special Staff C By Harry FRITH Nov. 7 Fritz?” tossed the one of the 6,0 roaming over th pound England her _prisoners-o' tight little valle amid the hills o! “How goes kid! And whe see the Wool last?” The Ge er answered t JUST THAT W those English w very lips smac York” with ea “Well,” 1 said, YOU doing here cap on when you fectly good Amer! tke that?” “Oh, just what HIL built for ar in a ucked in rey. yourself, question| fin just} s, and his} id “New! syllable! ‘what are a Jaeger na per- in accent thousand doing— finish 90 “To the States! ; our jobs! No more Europe fame. | get My naturalization papers the minute - hit New) York time. my mone from nogon didn't went her did ad | Want This War. j > Fritz” was 2 cof sample of! of these “priso@rs,” I found They are all pretty Bopy and are) ‘Bore or jess glad tify are out of| the battie line | } ped all tell you ti and they add, Bu Prenchies fe little they fat of the fight ing * Belgium bay je them rea | —————— (Continued on + GIVEN CHANCE; _RE- pall | back home tofour wife and nd make food. I'll let * add Judge Tall L. Cramwell on a grand for senten: out of the met at tarted| but wal Peontems of court nedsed of appro to his part nced him to the peniten suspendet raise 1| release | for The Star: game of football; a The SeattleStar SWEEPING TOWARD BERLIN; WOLVES ROAM BATTLEFIELDS PETROGRAD, Nov. 7.—Ru " Official statements in te was celebrating today what was acclaimed as “the greatest victory of the war. g of the resumption of the Slavs’ advance on Berlin announced that three armies were on the move. In the north, Gen. Rennenkampf was said to be well across the East Prussian border, with Konigsberg as his first objective. The central body was described as rolling irresistibly through Poland, crushing all German resistance. As far west as the river San the czar’s forces were declared to have defeated the Austrians every- where except at Przemysl, which was being heavily bombarded, and to be headed again for Cracow. German and Austrian losses recently were said to have been terrific, the officers being accused of many en« tirely needless sacrifices of life. In the past week 15,000 prisoners were reported to have been taken by the Russians, including several |high officers. Quantitie present suffering fearfully to hay and Fight in Freezing Sleet LAST | ;: EDITION of The campaign has At an im. prison (Cleaver ay right, have a buy. unitions and many cannon were also said been captured Rus se the ared for the nly clad a he were declare ere weather, while f late in rhe been 0 the mids€ roads have x country is a quage numbers of wounded on Tetanus was also said almost _ The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News _ VOLUME 16. heavy and and ecom bottomless and the mire admitted that great both sic ve died to be prevalent from exposure | The Germans, it stated, ‘were burning the villages through which they pass in retreat, so that the non-combatants awful hardships, to which many were succumbs .was h SATURDAY, NOVEMBER. 7, Boalt Tells of British Admiral Craddock, Dead War Hero, as He Knew Him in Vera Cruz By Fred L. Boalt. bring the ON TMAINS AND NEWS TANDA, Be |A MAN AND A WOMANERR, BUT IT’S: ALWAYS WOMAN WHO MUST PAY NO. 220. SEATTLE, WASH, 1914, ONE CENT were endurir ing Wolves Devour Dead Wolves were said to be roaming many of the battlefields. at night, devouring the dead, often killing the wounded, and sometimes even attacking small parties of soldiers in camp or on the march From the Turkish frontier troops’ advance into the uncheckec Reinfc jinvaders TO SWEEP JAPAN WILL HOLD ‘GERMANS | dur wars over OFF SEA that was came news sultan’s territory the czar’s continuing rcements, it was stated, were being rushed to the | | | | | HE DISPATCHES ing of Rear Admiral being set on fire by shells ffom German Chilean coast Saturday night None of the officers and crew survived The British admiralty adds that Sir Christopher belonged to the old naval school which believed the enemy should be engaged whenever and wherever encountered, whatever the today English admiralty’s confirmation of the founder Christopher Craddock's flagship, the cruiser Good Hope, after warships in the battle which took place off the TOKIO, Nov. 7.—“For the present Japan must admin- Ister Kiaochau,” announced Vice Minister of Marine Su- zuk! here today, “but when Peace Is declared we shall take up with China the mat- ter of returning the terrl- tory to hi *._ *+ + = @ @ ELL, I have no doubt that Sir Christopher Craddock went to his. death calmly and with dignity. He was a familiar figure in the streets of Vera Cruz during the early days of the American occupation | I saw him the first time under humorous circumstances. Bill Shepherd, of the United Press, who knew the British niral by and I rode out one day to the north out-] post, Vegara, on the gulf shore, and were talking with the captain of marines in command | there, when the latter's attention attracted to man standing some distance away,| who was staring at us He was a dapper suit and a panama hat. He leaned sharp-eared fox terrier be him “Ask that man ver what The marine approached the stranger, his head and called “He s ir, “Ask him what his Again their lips moved, shouted “He says his name is Craddock, At that the little man turned the dog trotting at his heels ptai said Shepherd, “d Craddock, rear admiral of the The captain whi [he marine retur { ~ This’ was- interpreted as disposing definitely of ne rumor that Japan would de- mand title from China to the captured district. ENGLISH PORT IS SHELLE BERLIN, via The Hague, Nov. 7.—That Great Ornain's ent will start immediately to hunt all German warships from the Pacific, it was stated today at the admiralty. | In this work they will be aided by the Australian and New Zealand! naval strength, and by the British and Japanese fighting vessels on the Pacific const of the United] | States, making altogether a fleet | far more powerful than Germany's} jin the Eastern ocean | | The Anglo-Japanese conquest of | Kiaochau came at a very opportune |time, as the destruction wrought] Against the British by Admiral Von ” |Spee’s squadron off the Chilean| the lines |coast made action urgently neces- | sary, and yet, owing to recent indt-| cations of activity by the katser's | warships outside the Kiel canal, the) admiralty hesitated to detach any | vessels from the home fleet for duty jin the Pacific. | The presence of so many German| ships off the South American coast| stroogly suggests that the kaiser/ as a base somewhere in that part of the world was a } and he wore a duck onless, did the th jaun The a close-trimmed, ly little man pointed beard cane. He motic called the sentry and ) as capt said wants fe c ere | The marine turned and we saw their lips move ys, sir, this is y and he’s inside me o * and uld see that the stranger was angry. The marine} three German British Yarmouth, ‘England, crul THE WOMAN PAG THE MAN GOES FREE. He is Sir Christopher | EVANSVILLE, Ind., Nov, 7.-A man and a woman forgot mate, home and children to be with each other. \ The woman, Mrs. Mayme Jarvis, was divorced by her husband, | who said he would never live with her again, and the pretty twin chil-| This, it was sald, dren whom she loves she Will see only once a week, |find and demolish But the erring man, James M. Colwell, has been forgiven by "| AMERICA SENDING wife and has been taken back to the bosom of his family | SCHMITZ QUITS COPPER TO KRUPPS? The pair frankly, admitted their guilt. They admitted that for a] year and a half they had been tntimate, and each declared they liked the other better than thelr legal mates | Mayor Gill Friday received the Saeed | resignation from the park board of WASHINGTOD Nov. 7.—Ssir Ferdinand Schmitz, for seven Cecil Spring-Rice, British ambas | years a member, and now its pres says Alvo Von Alvensleben. He 18) sador, notified Acting Secretary of|ident. He said he was retirin now serving as lieutenant in the/ state Lansing today that Engiand|from business and would spend t Fourth culrassiers regiment |believes American copper ship-| winter in California, afterwa The secretary to a British Colum-| ments are being sent to Germany striding the midday,| | living on a farm on Hood can bla official, who, it was stated in| via neutral ports. The mayor at once wrote, askli The Star Friday, committed suicide) He said cargoes held up at Gi lured from him to reconsider, saying he wo! Bodo Von Alvensleben of Austria | following the reported death of Alvo) braltar show some of the ship-| consider his California trip a leal | el te fe c a) ° es m x »p | ence. | was not captured by the British at} VOn Alvensleben, took his life, ac-| ments were destined for the Krupp | of absence | cording to the young man’s friends/ gun works, | Gibraltar : today, because of family troubles INSPECT STOCKA 1 | ere: tonnd tor? tan he NEW YORK, Nov Through STOCK YARD BURNS Mayor Gill and Police Chief were found on him, declared | brother, Alvo Von Alvensleben, to/ secret agents the British govern-} KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 7.—|fiths visited the city stockade § The Star Saturday ment is trying to locate a gorera | Fifteen acres of Kansas City stock- | urday afternoon to take note of tf Bodo Von Alvensleben left Brit-| wireless station in the Maine woods, | yards were burned last night. The | crowded conditions there, and 1‘ used to communteate with the Ger | damage was estimated at $100,000. | see if a plan might not be devi ish Columbia when the war star _and went to Germany, without be- man government |The yards will be rebullt at once. _to relieve the congestion. WHEN A MAN’S MARRIED 8 shelled the swiftly away along the beach toward the 2 forts at city ye who that Nov. 3, was officially announce British softly report " man is ed today by the he admiralty led ed te nar the the allies must When he his as Craddock, did he say anything else?” the captain asked Ju that, And what “I told him to beat it, sai s marine him then sir!” sai e 2 8. 8-8 very proud. He never came ashore in uniform, and| WAS never all thre a the streets of _— mercury was he shadow of the portales They fellows | games, those English naval officers, land they came ashore to play games They played ‘dobe walla peppery { ing detained once by the British, s subordinates ashore dozens» of his heels, could not with t a social way hi times in be saw him winging, his dog and when most m on the tables walker he was Cruz the the Englishmen, a great \ at sha n ice and E ATTACKED a__ superior! H force. The Good Hope sank In the dark. Both the Good Hope and the Mon mouth caught fire, but the latter es. caped, and |e reported ashore and crippled on the Chilean coast the { { detent drinks are terrible for Against the British Pacific fleet d heavier Scharn. horst, the Gneisenau, the Lelpsig and the Dresden. | wonder If Sir Christopher un bent toward hie comrades of the quarter-deck at the last. Or did he choose to die, he lived alone? And | wonder, too, what became ‘of the dog and shot because plans Esquimalt as every opportunity his} ia, using fences and ltor nets. They played golf on the beach, knocking the balls into the {ttle holes the crabs had made in the sand But Sir Christopher never played games in Vera Crus. O tomed started The American provost cuard un | dertook to escort them to the Sant daa r and send them back to thetr ship. Britisher resisted, and was roughly handled by a too- capable Am an marine. Finally, bloody, helpless and sub: dued, he shouted “All right ! blimme, just you The Glasgow, it is known, haw ar rived safely and not badly damaged at Puerto Montt, Chill ——17 i" MISTAK DUFF, | A LADY WANTS TO SPEAK To You hed DE PhONE NP day « party of English sal Mt pe BpT- Listen — Listen Heuen) | 4NSo57 JUST A MINUTE ~ LISTEN | /Gor Away I'M LEAVING RIGHT Now~| (WiTh THAT Listen - "4 LEAVING MR. DUFF, SHE SAID I WAS LYING To HER AN’ SHE WANTS TO SPEAK To YoU RIGHT AWAY ) TeLt HER | LeFT POR HOME ApouT a rump But the 00 Ko wyte ti h miral ‘ears of this! E WAS #0 proud, he he self so of, and h #0 H careful to maintain the dig nity of his high office, that we won dered if he was ever lonely But the rank and file of the Brit ish navy and army do not like a freeand-earsy officer. They want aristocrats to command them Christopher Cradd was to his fingertips him Nov. 7.—Gen. Carranza is reported to have received from ex-President Huerta an expression of the latter’s sympathy