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STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 5, 1916. PAGE 5. “Tin ce celebration of the passage of the jetghe hour railroad bill by con: | TABOR PROVES Later a celebration was held in Wright's park. HAPPY FAMILY SEATTLE UNIONS AT EVERETT | In Everett, Seatt! | laboring ofr ‘ clea Were represented by James | ith | Ppunoan, eecretary of the Central brates we Labor Council, who gave a talk Picnic at The Black Manufacturing Co., Park who uses organized labor, partic! pated in the parade. DS DAY IN DANCE! & P. Marsh, president of the = - State Federation of Labor, was the It ts estimated 13,000 members| speaker of the day {n the Labor organized labor and their/day celebration tn Walla Walla nds circled the athletic fleld at | His talk was patriotic and he said peered 1 park Monday afternoon |that labor should do everything tn d watched the sport program as its power to keep this country rt of the official Labor day cele-| from war. He scored the supreme Dpdration court judges for their antiemploy 4 From the minute the first kid | ment laws. 5 Degan to yell for his mother to ‘ sen the basket lunch until the 2 ast Hance was danced at Dream 7] fend pavilion, “Labor” thoroly dis CIRCUS WAGONS ported itself HUGHES IS HOT OVER HOOTING Hits Back at Hostile Audi- ence in Nashville, Tennessee emanates | |ATTACKS RAIL PEACE BY PERRY ARNOLD U. P. Staff Correspondent LOUISVILLE, Sept. 5.—-Only the usual railroad station crowd was on hand h oday | when Charles E. Hughes’ car was backed in, There were no cheers or other signs of en. | thu mm. The candidate is en route to Lexington, Ky., where he will speak today. He stopped here tong enough to expound his repub- Dig fountain pool near the zoo. /Mothers talked with other mothers tm the cool shade of the park trees, and the younger bloods rooted for H. Keene, of the Bollermakers, to The day at Woodland was {deal Children waded and swam in the Horses and drivers that conduct ed the rumbling caravan of heavy the Bakers Organized labor “kidded" all |th® performance Monday night fru the long, hot afternoon, and it didn't steer a straight, safe course the most friendly and in-| Before midnight al gathering ever seen, An. |*tarted phoning police headquarters jon Jentoft, who spears email | tell the authorities that circus rk with a broomstick and a nail, |{Mtoa cluster light etandard at such: gaid he never saw such a dig fam-|24-such @ corner, fly gathering before in his life. bending it The Black Diamond first aid| _ The final count on police reports team gave an exhibition of what |S20Wwed that « mail box at First ave they would do if one of their coal /@2¢ Madison st. a fire hydrant on miners got topped with a ton or|Piret ave. near University, and 80 of coal cluster lights at First ave. and Pike 8,000 CELEBRATE IN TACOMA The Seattle longshoremen jour- neyed to Tacoma to help out the jongshoremen’s celebration in ity. More than 8,000 union m took part in the parade there Union, had all been broken by the One wagon ran into the | auto bus and jarred the GREAT GROWDS _ GREET WILSON «: BY ROBERT J. BENDER United Pres state ( 6 ON BOARD Ti SPECIAL, Sept. 5.—"Theae have been the They Shouted for Beme ceived.” Thus President Wilson today characterized his trip thru West at every performance Sueday and Monday Mexice and the Treu- ble om the Border— GREATEST SERIAL EVER SHOWN and FIVE ACTS of SUPER- VAUDEVILLE Every One With o Puach RAN Third and Cherry Eugene Levy, Mar. Sc es Sonee 10c » sane George Yakich, the Montene ck and stab- at the grin, who ran a bed six street corner of Secon: and Union st. last February, got out of jail after serving a six months’ sen- tence Monday, and four hours later again ran amuck, knook- out three men at the same piace before he could be hand- cuffed by officers. He used a piece of gaspipe this victims, who were listening! Ito War arguments, were H. lL. Pe {ters, 38, printer, 1108 Post st.; W. | A. Kraghbon, 42, farmer, 8712 Pal atine ave.; Charles B. Gilmore, 50, San Diego, Cal., en route to British Columbia. NATTY BANDITS S | WE SET THE PACE IN PAINLESS DENTISTRY | It costs you nothing to come in and be convinced. 22-karat Crown Bridgework Plates that fit Silver Fillings Painless Extracting...50¢ Two nattily dressed hold-up men one Wearing gray topped shoes and a Panama hat, and the other sport day morning at the point of a pear! handled automatic gun Protective guarantee with]| And when they found only 20 ll work for 15 year: cents In their victim's pockets, they all work for 15 years. ra trcw the aden Or the National Painless Dentists aol and walked away, disap Fourth and Pike According to the story Barnard sip a defeat over on B. Brannigan, |Barnum & Bailey wagons from cir-| cus grounds to railroad yards after | pedestrians | es of paper bags about the|*8son number so-and-so bumped) breaking or| and First ave, between Pike and| 3 plause from the Southerners for his KNOCKS OUT 3 WITH GASPIPE ON STREET Virginia and Kentucky. He eviden ly was delighted at the enthusiasm with which he was received gE The president's journey into Ken : ¢ tucky, while characterized as non-| "0%" ; : political, has proved gratifying to) | ry — his political aides r . Thursday ht the president : ° an oe leaves for ie City, where he “ : will addres: * convention of the) " National Woman Suffrage assocla-| e tion. 7 ” "ee: Workmen in Japan wear on their, 4 n caps an inscription stating thefridon’t get the idea.” business and employer's name. He's at the city hospttal. HOLD UP AND GET ONLY 20 CENTS ing a big diamond stick pin, held up » KE. Barnard, auto driver, early Tues: 5 | tleaniom in a brief rear plat. | | form speech, in which he again | | assailed the democratic party's | | record on the tariff, Mexico, | the trusts and the recent rail. | road strike settlement and urged placing of a republican administration in power to achieve governmental —effi- | elency. The repudsican nominee was a different person than the man who a little over four weeks ago start ed off on a transcontinental cam. paign trip. Probably no public speaker, let alone a presidential | candidate, ever unierwent such an experience as Hughes did at the Ryman euditorium in Nashville] last night. He faced an audience that was “packed” against him and distinctly unfavorable to his views, | The crowd started a Wilson dem onstration. They hissed and hoot-| ed Hughes, Hughes, fighting mad at the {nsult which he considered had been given Mrs. Hughes, who was present on the platform with him, simply struck out straight }from the shoulder and rammed | lneme his bitter crittcism of the} democratic administration with a of hot shot. ttacked the strike settle-| went recently achieved by Presi-| dent Wilson and had the satisfac: | tion of hearing cheers and ap} fighting spirit and his determina tion to fight it out. finest receptions I have ever re-/ 'IS ROCKED TO SLEEP BY MEN WITH CLUBS, Albano Peireta, steamship cook,| early Monday morning and 1 into the eyes of a big co per at Third ave. and Wall st. With) another look he discovered that he} had been dreaming from an uneasy position on the pavement. Then he felt a sore swelling on his head The last I remember was five | men Italians,” he said, “one of ‘em bad a gun and the rest clubs. They didn't take any money from me. I j. Doctors will see if Yakich ought jto be sent to an insane asylum. He won't talk, and hasn't tried to ex-| plain bis enmity legers who « ave and Union » | Neither time has he tried to de} termine on which side they argued} before attacking his victims, but has waded in, swinging a gaspipe Monday, and a knife last January | Patrolman Guy Carleton, Detec tive Tom Hayden and Deputy Sher. iff M. L. Brewer were tn the victn ity of the crowd, saw the trouble! start, and all jumped in and helped overpower Yakich | The victims, all severely bruised about the head, were taken to the city hospital | TAGE A BOLD to the war col-| ‘egate on Second) ae man, told the the police, a party of fow the two men, hired hi m to 75th st. and Green at 4 a.m, Two of the yut- there, and the other they would settle the st, was at the end of the se of the trip that they suddenly! poked the gun In Barnard’s face| and pulled off their profitless rob bery. The King of Laughmakers ARLIE PLIN In His NEW Comedy THE COUNT | Gen. Foch struck south of the All This Week ‘Somme yesterday, while the main Colonial Theatre PALACE HIP (2 408, A. MULLER, Manager TOMORROW'S NEW SHOW W: DELL iDoyd Sabine & Co." <ers*” “The Third Floor Front” enture ny “A MILLION FOR A a CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 , HINDENBURG SEES | FORCES DEFEATED | {fighting despe prately but in the past 48 hours have been pushed \ aaiiy, eavtorasd Home of Real Hippodrome Vaudeville HICHA Comedy, ARNOLD & FLORENCE Halnoring Act LN xterm Atéraction THE RANDALLS 17 Minutes in Arizona A Wondertul Shooting Act Matinees 10c Sent. body of Teuton reserves was pre paring to resist another great north of the river. The} h successes in this new frive equaled the gains made north of the river on the preceding Soyecour has been ca d by storming attacks, and extending ir gains far to the south, the| rench occupied the village of| Chilly, The outskirts of three oth-| er villages were seized and about three thousand prisoners taken | While this great battle was go. ing on south of the Somme, the Germans continued their prepara ns for a counter attack ition aptured the French nd Brit in y's fighting north of the river The heaviest German blows are expected to fall in the region of Chaulnes, where the French gain ed imperilied German positions on| a very wide front Since the beginning of the allied| offensive on July 1, the French} nd English have captured 29 vil-| lages which the Germans had or. ganize highest defensive aegree. They have taken about 41,000 prisoners, 150 cannon and overal hundred machine guns. France's new 40-centimeter guns Jan important role in the victories over the Germans, ording to dispatches today, The existence of these guns was kept ecret for many weeks. It is be lieved it will work more wonders lin the closing days of the war than| aia the German 42-centimeters that battered in the Belgian forts, How America’s largest cigarette manufacturer has accomplished “the Impossible” dy producing a MILD cigarette that SATISFIES. ZI¢ is the CHESTERFIELD, Cigarette: : : $: : 3: 3 3 LMOST anybody can make cup of coffee. But there are said to be not over a half-dozen restaurants in the United States where they know how to make it right. Similarly, almost anyone can make a cigarette. Just roll up some tobacco in a piece of pure paper —and there you are. There are, perhaps, over 800 brands of cigarettes sold in this country to- day. But not one of them does what Chesterfields do — for Chesterfields are MILD; and yet they SATISFY. Some cigarettes may be mild, but they don’t satisfy. Only one cigarette does BOTH — Chesterfield! This truly unique cigarette has all of that refreshing taste-delicacy (or mildness) which any good cigarette must have. Yet, without sacrificing any of this delightful mildness, Ches- terfields go one step further — they do more than merely “please your taste” —they let you know you've been gmoking. They satisfy! ‘And yet they’re mild! A Step Forward in Cigarette-Making E are proud to be the firm that has brought about this important new development in cigarette enjoy- ment — for that is exactly what the Chesterfield blend*is. This cigarette is an outgrowth of long, earnest effort on the part of this, the largest cigarette manufacturing concern in the United States. *The Chesterfield Blend contains the most famous Turkish tobaccos —SAMSOUN fer richness CAVALLA for aroma; SMYRNA for sweetness, XANTHI for fragrance, combined with the best domestic leaf. The mild, yet satisfying Chester- field blend is not the result of happy chance. It is one of the results of our many years of cigarette experience — of the heavy volume of our purchases of cigarette tobacco — of the prestige and advantage these enormous pur- chases give us in securing the choicest leaf from the tobacco fields of the world. Chesterfields are an achievement. A New Thing Jor a Cigarette to Do HESTERFIELDS do the one thing you have always wished a cigarette would do — they satisfy! Smoke them and we believe you will find that ordinary cigarettes seem by comparison almost flat. Give Chesterfields (20 for 10 cents) a trial. We believe you will be glad to learn what they can teach you about cigarette enjoyment. * * bl] You have been reading here some rather unusual, almost daring, state- ments about a cigarette. If Chester- fields were an untried cigarette — if we had not been observing their behavior in other cities — if we did not KNOW that they make good with smokers, we could not afford to make these state- ments to you over our signature. But these statements, strong as they are, can mean little or nothing to you until you have actually smoked your first Chesterfield. You will find that your own dealer has Chesterfields waiting for you. Cppett Myers Srbasco C2 ingest cigarette manufacturer the United States as shown by ‘pleat Revenue Reports. Copyright 1916 by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., New York