The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 21, 1917, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| The Star lilas the Greatest Daily Circulation im the Northwest--Avmd Stilll Growimg FLOYD RADER _NIGHTE EDITION He's the agriculturist of King county. He's the expert employed by the largest county In the state ‘Tonight and Sunday, showers. to advise farmers how to improve Strong south and southwest wind.” their crops, And he's the man whose That's what the weather man handed out again today. It's simply awful, isn’t it Mabel, the way we ch Agelbas Bagel ol [|THE ONLY PAPI ONLY [|THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ie e gia Gone gut &.ehahenitc Saban articles are appearing dally in The RAARAR Rn VOLUME 19 SEATTLI 1917. ONE CENT meen ‘COME TO WAR, ’IS T.R. SLOGAN TWO WARSHIPS SUNK | TELLS WHY HED ee ae BRITISH FIGHT IN FRANCE | Si eysaume™” gg) DEFEAT | KAISER NEW YORK, April 21.—Col. Roosevelt struck back t LONDON, April 21—Two Page 5 our spring hats and suits? WASH., SATURDAY, APRIL 21 LOUOUUOUUNUOUNAAANNOGSEEEEOEEOOUOUUUOOGOOUANAOANUGUOOUEOOOUUUOOUUAAA OOOO OA AO NAHAS HURRAH! bsststssetssssstcsstststes2 HE magnanimous board of trus- tees of the Chamber of Com- merce at a meeting Friday patriotically agreed not to sink the harpoon into Uncle Sam—DURING THE WAR. rhe patriotic resolution not to graft on government contracts—DURING THE WAR—was inspired by Frank Waterhouse, was promptly put in the form of a motion by C. J. Smith, was seconded by J. D. Hoge, and passed unanimously. The resolution follows: “BE IT RESOLVED by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and Commer- cial Club that in transacting business with or for the government during the period of the war, its members be re- quested and pledged to do so at no greater percentage of profit than an ordinary private transaction in time of Mii se who have been day at using his ment aga vice. In has granted accorded the ¢ German destroyers were sunk | peace. paltacaied sew and one other wae possibly de | stroyed when the enemy veesels ¢ > > are ¢ 3 Boda poll od gd ag And after the war? you ask. “t ality announced today he raid on Dover was at tempted fast night, tive Ger man vessels participathg. They were attacked by two Britsh patro! ships. The fight that en sued lasted only five minutes | The British ships suffered no | material damage, and the cas | valties ak ght. Ten Ger | man officers and 97 men were made prisoners The admiralty statement said | “At night five Gorman destroyers Oh, well, what has patriotism to do with a government contract then? volunteer force be sen Anyhow, we're at war now—and for the present the Chamber boys won't graft on our Uncle Sammy. HURRAH! : E fash ch aes ae Sete thes AL a a iit plowed field, and the enemy then| - —-— steered in the direction of our ship Souci)" GHIEF PROBES ALLEGED ABUSE two of the ene “I do not want to be fF in the posit of saying to my fellow countrymen, ‘Go to the war,’” he declared “I want to be in the posi- tion of saying, ‘come to the war; | am going with you.’ “T wish we already had uni-! ry training in this we are as Great SYUUMUNTNAAAUNENNUOUNNOAOUENEUOUGONAACURUEOUOUUGOAOUUEEAGORNAAAOUaEAAAAATnEATY versal 1 country Britain was when the war broke out She had disre rded Lord Roberts’ advice and But t € ee : ? ; fa When P. J. Bornstein, presi- hour before are when the dent of J. Bornstein & Sons, 0) bail were made, t, she had de wholesale notions house, 562 | As against Bornstein's statement, 1 a small militar | First ave. S., got home, at 8:15 Putna: head of the dry expedition once to ium | Friday evening, Sergt. Harvey, ad, who detailed Harvey on the nd had f it 1 | of the city dry squad, greeted j Saturday said and had retusec ' him with the information that | had every reason to believe unteers and Aw ADVERTISING MANAGER'S he was under arrest as a vio- | {hata blind pig was being operated, traliz a that sk DAILY TALK lator of the dry law It is not the pol the police to then in tended | : ept i corda © with the Over Hornstein’s protests that he| Taid private sre 9 simply es was not ir g to escape, he was|CAause an excess of booze may theory of « y mi vice GOOD a a alice bateol. waa Lane . but when illegal ship: not permitted to drive to t ments are made there, the legal Should Send Expeditionary Army FRCGRANS aoe eerie own machine, “The| method of procedure against thems “What she ought to done was to send her ex re on tap for theatre |¢r ad found beer and liquor in search warrant, should be ame mary army exa ‘ to use volunteers nbn ps i - tha mine |! had tained | Plied. We acted in this matter ac: . ee 2 goers the coming | ina r pert This. Bornstein cordingly. Complaints against the practly as she ¢ to introduce the ystem ling back ar and forth in the doorway BY HENRY 0. WOOD week. Full details, as ind . ned, is due to sep-| house have been coming in steadl- OWith all my heart, | approve of the president's plan fo r |that the gun would be discharges, WITH THE FRENCH AR bual, Will be found In. 2" s, ‘his-brother, who also’ tives |‘ d and accurate that T got @ universal obligatory service—both the present war { fled back into his own office, When! MIES IN THE FIELD, April today Star Thou-|in yuse, a friend who had spent | search wwerrant out see a we must have nthe hence; But we ought to treat as al ; *. drawing the; urged Hindenburg in their neople find the Satur-|found in t the Dry Squad Officer V. C. Harvey ' ' : : , made the following statement §& Great offensive. it is possible pecessary su to tk plan the u ng of volunteers Star the | lies state | nd, + | police now ave a theory, today for the first time to re da ir the handte urday noon P (Continued on page 8) | Pah By cat poten ty hed er may have acted, veal some of the strategy possible way to find has a vigorous Beek in was not in the house funtil last night, when | buliding diamond broker, Thurs Inasmuch as Reb which to date has swept the | al huhat they want to Chie gham over ween we. pot tare sire * acl ILL H. p serious relapse. day noon, followed a fight for in precious ston French forces on in their great =e CY Want TO the manner in which he was treated : i ra ‘ - = ae pe r bg ae possession of a revolver, was a etc eec = est victory in general offensive know about what's do- | and the chief is investigating urned and accompanied am 38 gg pl pollee sure working was found in bis office after) since the war began | Haat Gasttinic a Denied ‘Tsidpnone during the searc DEATH SHIP UNK IN | on. Saturday : ‘ It was whe me strategic su g at Seattle's place : ett er. In an upstairs dresser (oa bs of the t of he riorit h enabled he » » 4 he olve d comme | i ptered gets ke pha iee ade ft, by tending to show| acceptance of the ground pre is no exception. This nid, “I wanted to call) man saying that he knew SB Bt Rehfeld’s office, and who a that the act Was slot prenteditated viously chosen by the French is just another evi- 0 show how the| who turne formation, and H. Parry, republican member of the! yyttrtppN, Holland, A he first looked from hin office, BALFOUR ARRIVES Marne, ‘ s dence of the very val- ' repress dpi oni in the nara fe ee RS: federal tr sion, is critical-| The Belgian’ relief rail after hearing the commotion, ,_in te same fashion the French uable and convenient net me dy belie ‘ ly {il at E ospital, here.| carrying a cargo of ) tons of| Rehfeld held a revolver in his * ale ct the apenesat waiBe oF t *rvice you can get b s rred/to: the SAVE SPUD PARINGS and his death is sald to be only a, wheat, was wunk in the safety zone| hand, and that hie assailant | | WASHINGTON, April 21,— [Si® Of {he present Daitle ast Nt i > my residenc | matter of hours. announced by Germany by a mine| was endeavoring to gain pos- Arthur J. Balfour, the British (Continued on page 8) reading the ads 1 do not understand that it would) PORTLAND, April 21—In an ef Parry was operated on for galljor submarine yesterday, with the{ session of it foreign minister, has landed i give them the right to force the| fort to lessen the acute signin stones a week ago y, when| possible loas of one life Dr. C. F. Lathrop, atso a tenant, safely, the state department an- | pio DE JANEIRO, April Mutha Gn the’ abo rat. Harvey |ueed potatoes, trortiatit aurea it was found he was suffering from| This was revealed tod when 19 across the hall, confirma this, de nounced this afternoon Drazil formally announced today | THE FASTEST GROWING PAPER threatened to throw me down the hotel men today announced f; abscess of the liver. His vigorous|Amertcan survivors and 15 men of|claring that the fleeing murdere: Halfor nd other members of the| she will co-operate with the United IN THE NORTHWEST cellar when | protested inst such! they would save all potato peelings | constitutior to havelother nationalities were landedjcarried a gun war commission 4 on American! states in sending munitions and tactics. distribute them among the fought him t or period here. Snyder first saw the men 4v territory, it was stated upplies to the allies | | Bornstein was held at gtactarmerd ties Woman Reporter for Star Has Greatest Story of the Year in Her Grasp--Almost BY MABEL ABBOTT 1 The two broth had died with-» “Gee! ‘Thot’s a peach! I got the nurse by telephone | Miss B also thought, as we talked {story anyway } He got hold of the fellow—call {ter in Gorm: saying that her It was @ great story—perhaps|ir a few days of each other, in the iich did not at all mean that! There had evidently »n gome|the matter over, that she had! Meanwhile, | called up Mrs. E, at/him J. J had had the story from| husband had been killed and the the greatest story I ever had a|German trenches. The mother had|the editgr's sympathies were cal-|Mmistake. She had heard the story,|heard the story a few days before | whose house Miss 1 had heard the | Miss K, who told ft of Miss L, a/ children were starving. Censors. chance at heen killed in a food riot in Berlin. |joused. ‘It way the simple and {r-|but she was noi the nurse concern: | Miss D told it to her. It had been | story, Mrs, E sald it was told by | university student, and sister. | had written the woman that the It was told the editor by a man) W details of wretchedness,|represuible tribute of his profes. | She hoped 1 wouldn't use herjtold at a friend's house, and she | Miss G | Story Still Elusive daughter would be executed, Bate who knew a man who had a friend|what uncontrollable outburst Of | sfonal instinct and training to what | 24@me thought they said they saw it in Trail Leads to Oregon | Headlong search for Miss L re-| lessor N added that when he went who ew grief and rage, t igor nk | he ognized instantly as a great 1 sald I wouldn't. Call her Miss A.|the paper. She gave me the name Miss G, reached after an Bec aetealtnnrhast Shak it Won nat she Wome that night he told the bs urse who ha t cover, the Seattle sister | story—t rare story which com-| Following the reall of the friend, Mrs. E noon of searel uid she couldn't! Vig received he 5 ihitaks bun a by his wife, who had n the letter only guess would never, bined tn hort compass the uni.| Miss A was helpful, however Goes Down the Alphabet remember who told it to her, She | jicha of her n ee pains her laundress, MEPs ¢ letter was! know € eal human. tragedy,/She thought the story had been| 1 hunted up Miss D first. She | w e, however, that the letter eatin ia yy waging it from a friend of ' Tragic Climax the significance of an exa of {told her by another nur whose | had been told the story by @ teach-| was said to have been received in DanEhe MAGEE ana (nel on Beacon ae un he it at the end of the letter, alihe “Kultur” against which Amer-|hame she gave me. Call her Miss B./er, who may go into the record as a little town in Oregon chy she had told J that Miss L. had, The Young man thereupon tela r entt ent of a sentence . been her citize to align ‘o find Miss H, 1 telephoned Miss F. Dr. C, who } been following | cotved the letter phoned te the home of Professor ¢ editor's in-|left untouched, It said Lemselves, and a tremendous local |¥ell-known doctor, We may refe I found Miss F in her schootroom, |my course with interest, now re-|T CO ae N's authority, Miss O, Miss O's nt The and somebody ought to kill) “punet to him as Doctor ( use that|She sald ahe had been told the membered that he had heard the} 4.) because it made the story Mother told him her daughter had "| een|the kaiser! 1) Gal nach doe ea ee inter story by @ man at her boarding story, not only at the nurses’ meet: | ierer—-which dt While che beard the story from Professor Ny led en the, And across that and the pathetic! ....4 Ohne tn a bine {ec Immediate} he house, but she didn't think it w ing, but also a day or two before, | oe Tamitting eave uh canine it Was Great Story eattle Woman! little pet name that was signed to © beard the story, at a meeting of | be right to give his name es-|from a man in an official position. | "te name of Miss M, from wl Binh thane oak ollapaec im 4a heavy black serawl , ; hurses, lis ‘ecollecti of surance that | wanted hig name him Mr. H Ke had tana a - m hel tight there is where the chage ci mostt YOUR SISTER WA XECUT And | was the Ine} eporter | contents of the letter differed only for the purpose of finding the it turned o had heard Lbs ar' pest ee Pan sea stopped ; jole of the letter ED YESTERDA 10 got the assignment to write It. one or two details, but he was sure! letter, shook her determination to story from a nurse, He didn't know | iversity ‘ " eRe 1 am thinking of offering a re- een blotte fhe man who told the at Ko iting it, of course, meant ver ¢ could find the right nurse quick: ! protect the tleman, She final nything about it himself | ward for a photograph of the let the censor ' whole ion, in-;fying it first, and ge ly. He drove me himself to. see 1 to ask his permission to ly in the hunt, I had ¢ Tacoma Comes in ter and the woman who received it, ‘ fe en stea © corner wh he wau-'t t nee Misa I tell me who he was, and further ssistince of another reporter Hot « t tra ny assistant ne se it has only been located . ‘e on at net ¢ ma , Mi Rowa ot e nurse who. progre slong that line wa 0 * iusias He had now racke Professor N to his in four cities so far, and Olympiad, ¢ Hit With Edito name of the nur ad attended the woman who re-|ed until next day, when Miss F re 1 the ry only a few days He sa Hinghem, Chehalis, Spokane and € tio , the A 1, the editor, staring at ! his friend said another man jcetved the tler he had heard| ported that she couldn't give me,btefore and knew just where he| Miss O, ha i n sl ew a others remain to be heard from exception the t who wrote m, murmured with tbe emnity |said, had cared for the stricken|the story told) by # third nurse,| his name, but he said be didn’t be: | could get hold of the fellow who | German woman in Tacom had And it certainly was a great and the sister who received it, lof prayer jaloler, Miss D. ‘lieve the was enything in the! bnew all about it sreceived a letter fiom her daugh ory,

Other pages from this issue: