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WHOLE REGIMENTS WIPED OUT | mrrratttrittttsastiiscisitiiistsrscsrreeetertrt ttt ttt tt ttetth Ce ee ee ee AAA AAR AAA AP PAL PAP PPP PPL RPP Wt 8 ga” = atitssietitiisisietisstsitestisety 3 | i WHO IS BOSS? ~~ LAST EDITION | |) # WAannnnwnnnnnnnnnnnnnnww,, th Some say Doc Matthews bosses the to ' {a ; re, HIG nartie Beckingham, her . " i : Labor Counc And all the time the Traction _— # pedir lene pt lag apap ts fea g sy eager Hi 4 eet oe rer ~ NNN AN AAAS LLLP IIL EAL ISAALS Aen 3 park board edict. Th ather a Company cece avout as \¢ pleasea, See eaora # | GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY NEWSPAPER IN PACIFIC NORTHWEST | cast: “Tonight and Saturday, falr; : fii saseaasenssetssazse: VOLUME 19 SEATTLE, WASH,, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1917 Yisyiin ONE CENT Miss Echo Zahl Pays Night Visit to Military Guard Line | Watching for I. W. W.’s Up in Lonely Passes of Cascades | By Echo June Zahl jwith the rumored object of paralyz ndustry and destroy-, peech and laughter in that no-man’s land of blue heaven{ I sat, paralyzed. A graceful black and white anjmal sped Lt Wh th ar ob waht |S S thru wa © strik and cold stars was strangely 1 from behind a stump, cleared the open space in front of me, Hi . I visited, too, the state troops, high uy the mountains, | Ve reached the end of the guar post, but he was loath |and leaped o the darkness } ire guarding Seattle’s water supply to let us ¢ Vhere was someth ominous in the whir of A polecat! ay . . rey lle R : 4 ae 4 ate ; the breez lulled cedar | But I escaped unharmed i oe j : ; \t times 1 dug my tennis shoes into the treacherous turf We sat on a stump and rested | And I had only one suit of clothes! ; tut out in ¢ mountains, where a miscue would have sent me hurtling 150 feet down The men talked of bears, which were seen often on the 5 oe eee ani ild thin artled out of | t« nthe w . rht . 7 } t ltd f qi ‘eh i A tartled nied t ling wate below me 3 caught the flashing pray path, They talked of stumps which assume the forms of men tle of a train in the canyon! ; Aa prea ner mete ca mnoonlig t seemed ager—deftant.| Tita he treacherous light ; forgotten my I. W. W's! di Bin a sae Ai " en te, attle newhere in ashington-——up I drew in bi & breaths of mour tain air and wondered how Stumbling, slipping and skidding on my Oth vertebrae i] e iaie- tte et ne bate Vssceces jmuch nearer to the stars the next climb would take me down the precipice to the station, I arrived in time to see { of igger fing You are the first woman who has ever been up he aed. 0; 8 oldiers spring aboard the 1 fre: 4 | ; soldic ring aboard the moving freight. } All ng these silent{a boy in khaki told m | When we left the guard, he wed u flash The train stopped. More soldiers opened doors, examined | . lie far vin thin bal t e tre pyemic ' diatanc ‘ 2 : iat re pacing, pacing \ or woman permitted to pass the first guard light up the hill until we were pygmies i tistance e "ro and brake beams, and every little nook where a times to the rhythm of |} He feared the dark up there on the mountair Id us so mig be concealed wei rain the noises I had the strength, too, to hoist But he was a soldier in the uniform of Uncle Sam, and When the cars pulled out, three untidy men were herded | of woo u the me ide, slippery with pebbles, and | CYS" h ms he paced his one-mile beat with a steady trigger) up the track in front of a man in khaki. One was a mere boy, i] acing ¢ ilent dawn teered me on the strip of a path ny ang it lips : ; , who said he was on his way to the harvest fields. The | with r re « For two i ' ts me my two ards and I slipped second was a colored man from whom the soldiers separated | ready ae oul the dark. “Who's there igi P ; TE aR No 2 |#, mean-l ng razor. The third had $14, and said he had } night 1 4 ee bead : , ° LT en Ww red I ¢ lookout at NO. <.\ his registration card in another suit of clothes. All were held \ A ay i The an the man was » ig On & apparently undisturbed until deputies could arrive from Seattle to take them to the ; nae : Hhe y arm. The man} But dus he had made two trips across the canyon|King county jail } 5 A i i x gis ince we t The soldiers said the s” must be getting wiser, be- | . Hes im all, strugg } a eply | ht suppe Os No. “ ec 1 c1ous } , f 9 ‘, 2) mile A a 1 ; i | ght supper at Post 1 awaited ¢ Luscious |cause they had hauled 16 from the same train the day before, | hills, sliding into canyons and We crept toward the ham toast and cofiee, all made on a blazing spit} i eon balancing on tiny boards It was the guard at the e 1 post Jon the hill ; ? It was long past midnight. My night’s work was finished. I fraternized with the citizens, and deputies ac rs He joined us. He was gle for company in his mile As we there on the hillside, with the sky for a roof | Seat was still slumbering when, having sped back the 48 | who are guarding the mountain passes against the | es of | walk of st and silence nd the earth for seat and table, there came a sudden crackle| miles from my mountain of wonderland, I taxied home from LW. W.’s who are reported en route west, intent upon in We ta vard 1 fast about many things. But I felt) in the undergrowth! the railroad station for a few minutes’ rest before going to vading the agricultural regions and cities of the uncomfortable \ Chree rifles were lowered—fingers ready on the triggers!'the office SHERIFF'S NET —{2rats2226 | state must ish to Amer. ! TOMMIES DIE IN § HOT RIVER FIGHT Increased precautions marked the opening, Friday,| ica’s citizen army, was an- BY WM. PHILIP SIMMS man guns had wiped out the be ° re ¢ . ‘ nounced by the war department United Preas Staff Correspondent bridges. of the second day of King county’s participation in the) today. The figures are based WITH THE BRITISH AR- Send in Marines of = , ° orevati upon a total initial draft of i The battlefield was a maelstrom wide movement to prevent the congregation Of | [B?0c0' men, in assigning the REE ee eee ey te «1 obi emoke,, steal,” Seige. Wane al —History’s fadeless pages will | janrj. record the heroic deaths of | Between 7 p. m. and 5 p. m., most of the King’s Royal Rifles | the enemy planted a barrage around and the Northamptonshires, in |the front line once again while sim ultaneonsly the German marines, fighting between Lombardtzyde {the kaiser’s hardest fighters, and the sea. |charged both flanks They died almost to the last man! ‘This fragment of the defenders, lin fighting the fury of which has with one or two men to each un- surpassed by any of the| broken machine gun that remained, LW. W.’s in agricultural and industrial regions. | quota that each state must Chief Criminal Deputy Sheriff Frank Brewer de- Tue deat’ Saheag oominten (ared Friday morning that the hunt had only just be-| fun and that he expected it to continue for some days. pegradtped: His deputies and special details of the Second Washington infantry arrested more than 45 men all others, with a} on's quota to yh of the Western. states Tut : : ve que unusually low because mot Thursday. Thirty-nine of them are held in King County |the registration was only 50 to 80 |titanle conflicts of this greatest of | worked desperately striving to beat j sf emainde e P rari ati per cent of the first estimates of all wars the Germans back jail and the remainder under guard at various stations he census bureau. ( pr states in British army headquarters today Guns Jammed on railroads leading into Seattle. the Middle West—Ohio, Wisconsin, | permit the heroic story of this fight) Many machine guns were jammed Iilinols—ran over the estimates by to be told to American readers with the nd Then came the ‘The majority of the men arrested | Seattle Friday morning were sch’ fad 1. W. W. membership cards or|tled to appear in Justice Gordon's | 10 to 20 per cent court to plead to charges of misde The quotas were sent to the gov Dations in their possession, altho meanor. Those who were afoot are |ernors of each state and territory @uards say that many of them! eujity of treepa while the law and the commissioners of the D| firew the emblems away before! makes it a misden t of ( bia, who were direct Survivors Swam shock of man to man fighting. Scarcely any of the meager group | British officers, with their walking vivors of this great German |stocks, their revolvers—even the ame out of the battle un-/ fists 1 with their men, armed nd clubbe or to steal a capture railway ride. The maximum pen-| ed to apportion the quotas thru the ody-to-body mass. It The largest number was taken at/alty is three months in jail or $250 local boards bombardment of » fight to the death Gelar Fails, on the Chicago, Mil-/ fine Ailew.:fer. Veluntecrs began at 6 a. m |. One soldier, winded, wounded and Waukee & St. Pau! railway. Here! peputy Sheriffs M Starwich| In the announcement the The fire of shells rested for a/battered by the shelling and the ® mectal detail of soldiers, com-\and Frank Elliott brought in 17/War department allowance was near the front lines of the |desperate struggle of man to man, Manded by Sergt. Charlies Koski| men from Lester and sket on| made for men in each state in the Brian See and then shifted |swam across the waterway and then #84 Corp. George Alexander, caught |the Northern Pacific but one| National Guard and volunteers in yack to the support lines, deluging | went back with a rope so that those 19 men Thursday and thre bUrs-|are gaid to be of registration age, the regular army and militia sin Lage : jof the few remaining who could not ay night Nine were £. W. W. and seven had | April 1. The were sub. ‘hen it lifted across the river)swim might pull themselves across. Koski says the migration from/|no registration cards. Steven El- tracted from the gross quota. In and pounieg the British ressrve/ __ Includes Killed Gesttle is heavier than that into! rinwich, a Russian, one of those this states that have answered positions Thruout the day the ee nae German official version of fhe city on the Milwaukee, and this| captured, says he is an anarchist, the president's for volunteers of a iba ed . is struggle on the sand, declared $05 to bear out the statement of d that he will not fight for any| ill carr lighter burden than end Fighting Planes there were 1, British prisoners Mien Washington officiald | ceatrs ‘ sailthe stacker. stat It arose to a hell fury of fire late taken. Here at headquarters it is < ee sagp : country. He is bitter in his de 1 in the day and then droves of|declared this figure obviously that the members of the organiza-|nunciation of the American army,| The credits allowed Washington sie uteclambs, terse sbinielie Lilletiant otk MU Gathering to winder the lace’ the aeration Page Htc codatiei Gat to) jenemy airplanes, flying low, spat cludes killed and wounded Mike of the atate’ | 8a) ' 1 | their machine gun fire on the Brit-; British troops gained back in crop} 4, enlistments si April 1 in either addition to this number ish, redirecting the artillery ranges. | least one section of a trench 14 t Northern Pacific (Continued on page 14) By this time many of the British }of Lombart, in counter attack defenders were gone. The re-|mediately after the German as- mainder stuck to their posts. They | sault " i) NR awaited calmly the attack they now | pares DEN LI LAS ioe oa MTAR RS ay caro knew was bound to come, The Ger ty e lag ’ ont a caught on th Northern Paritic teak ne Kae Ane | Military, guards at Kanasket are bam Thursday evening by Deputy | Rlding five more, captured Thurs Geeriffs Matt Starwich and Frank | 44¥, Msht OM Bier, The system used in arresting tif ny men ia simple. All trains, whether rvest ADVERTISING MANAGER'S td) Large Party Reported ie : ~ |\— eestor os ses et, Neat | passenger or freight, are stopped i Understood | that Deputy | ang squads of men run along both MEN HURT WHEN ing on her head. Hassman, the DAILY TALK ~e Hill, Peter Johnson | siden of the train, peering under Arties: Gk Lasvos “Waba! ta LAs JIT BU pane saan ths the ‘Gr Northern coat of {neath and between the cars. T Saturday will be a busy day, p front seat Si j ne @ laree warty _|hoboes found are summarily seized | Hassaman came to the Oregon | |judging from the quality and num pewnrg have @ large party UM-| 114 after being searched and book hotel, where I live, at 4 a. m., and | ber of bargains in today's Star | go ed, are held by the soldiers until wanted me to up an auto | |The best business institutions in *O reports of armed resistance BISRER, Ariz hendred armed de nd to the arrival of deputies, who take Hurled to the pavement by | party,” Riddle told police ; ; |Seattle are represented with their ear. ba4 been received by Dep-| them to Seattle | the impact of their automobile | "Miss Brown, Larson, Reed and I Mayor GIll fea appointed |choicest offerings, Make up your Cobb, at Cedar F to strike one ARMY OF LW. W. TO | and two men were seriously in | Riddle has lived at the Oregon | “emergency policemen,” following | ads- MP With the butt of his gun in| a 8 bd jured at 6 a. m. Friday, at the |for about six months, with Reed ; P i e8 eater sig ek a € ro |Standard Furniture Co....Page 2 et prevent hin escape GET FOOD AT EL PASO corner of Brooklyn ave. and E, | Riddle says he does not know Barred from the use of the Sebel sibisenet lp! le genes pace said joue who are atill | oteRankin Co Sjob Those of the men who were in 40th st soo tn Seen, ealee ie, Mageets over which traction shiny countries, Jud a Frater ‘About 50 drivers of four local of-| Red Front Clothing Co...:Page 3 i This ; un | my United Press Leased Wire The woman is Doris Brown, |and Reed were riding in the back| company cars’ run, 179 dona enemy countries, uage id pho drivers-of four to eet re et pad eal | | EL PASO, July 13.—Telephone ad 115 Yesler way. The men are jseat of the machine with Mie® tion busses will begin opera riday ere aa bs ed eae Ae sy . Ae ad tone McCormack Bros ... Page 4 BISBEE CITIZENS tem pevalved today by Police Chief| W. H. Hossman, 136 W. 79th |Rrown, He declares the party had| tion Saturday morning on | ‘uest of a i. beypigedi) or ye ny gg epee ese goes Carl Schermer .......+...Page 4 |Zanriskie, from Columbus, N. M.,| st, and a man whose name is (not been drinking routes which do not touch Bee ye ieethanaMoht ef |tlon for Aba. ceeentatug’ raed ara | Wood uoKametiein alii Page 5 it 1,189 1. W. W's deported | believed to be George Larson. | yap street car lines Press, for a postponement of ition for the. remaining men wes) 7) "ps tes Co. Pane 0 RESIST RETURN stated that 1 Sesrt-te ; ‘ + i his naturalization application |asked for by the companies and|7 i +++-Page 6 yesterday from Bisbee, Ariz., have| The three were taken to the Se Attorney Crawford, representing} his hy . ranted by Gill subject to council’s | Eastern Outfitting Co.....Page 5 Br United Preas Lensed Wire been detrained at Hermanos, N. M.,/attle General hospital in an uncon Treat ewels the drivers, succeeded Thursday in| “til! after the war.’ NAb pbeahedon i! §okee Blah ihe a Rated Pear" 1. Vekavt Hee Pe dade Bilscious condition. X-rays were tak-| bhtaining a modification of Federal | .When court opened, there were |approval Monday anand Ne yeiet Sag and are marching ove »plicants to be heard for Ameri n the nature of their Judge Neterer’s injunction restrain Page 7 woarded & Pago, Three women are reported in|en to ascerts | Frederick & Nelson.......Page tain here today f t *. Later Hossman and Miss ng the operation of 179 drivers ©an citizenship, At noon ten had lhe 8 \ ; day te the ranks of the agitators, who have | injurle water ama ing 1 79 « ree W |The Shoeteria 4 8 to, actor east of hae waa food for 36 ho Brown rallied from thé shock, but re O en and was busy Friday arranging nes Ro ti nit olteeie. ware I T 0c Movie News and Ads 8 a Was taken fo! uthorities are making yara-|Aat noon Lar till was dazed from) “a , new routes for his clients ey ores: POHUN ORS 1 eae ee OVES Tailored Ready Co.... 9 that the 1. \ t rd st 41 rine. betiatons hart the a ut. They may have sus Burglars entered the residence 3 in the courtroom © protest against BY i ER M MacDougall-Southwich 9 for an , aay heap psdigaaad adage 1 dract lof Harry Whitney ‘Treat, Seattle granting naturallzation to Ortmann , ' : ; é hey arrive here. The chief of po-| tained skull fracture ' He P ; Away BY CARL D. GROAT Wes Market 1 i T ard Lae Ganaewiiaadto cell aut clisens C. Riddle and his roommate, | capitalist, 1 West Highland drive, Hot Spell to Last mes nee agen een apt bag ae United Press Staft Correspondent {Central Public Market > 10 stra Thee ate iste on| Reed, also of 115 Yesler way, escap-| 7, alg \ ed the ‘orestalled any possible demonstra ASHINGTON, July 13— | pine Stre e ) ope overnms for duty by a signal whi tle wh Re i 3) io faba, r aD: |p day night, and plundered the Over Monday, Says Hon by quietly asking. the judge to sete eR Nat ae Bite siren ara 10 } i os oe the part of I W. none t Pe tent ontaining the party|J°Wel boxes of Trent's daughters he Weather Nic postpone his case, Judge Frater! tomal reform. ‘The reported |pulic Market Center 7 fer in Pisbec F Tt a ear d A came down Brooklyn ave., striking| Priscilla and Loyal the ather Man promptly con sented, and set the| resignation of Hollweg and his |x, A. Gottstein Furn. Co i altho there still are the city mediately the street car a glancing blow as it gold cluster ring, set with Continued high temperature — time ese inate ae ~ we associates meant to officials ||. Vv. Westerman ........Page 11 | Mareh for 1. W. VW \ Joxen or more arrests of indi-|crossed the avenue, ‘The machine| seven diamonds, and one green em-| In Washington, Oregon, Califor. [Second Priday jn December, “if the) here today merely a shift of | Hon Marche Page 14 na have been seized and viduals sata to be I. W. W. have|was thrown head-on against a tele id, two gold rings, set with! pig and Idaho Is predicted by | VOCS OVCr MhCh. | men—not principles. pay * ! it Pending investigation been made here today All trains | phone post at the corner |pearls; one brooch, set with Weather Man Ged. (Ni Salle | P Germany is throw |e, ont =—_— == SS { Foresee an Encounter entering the city are being stopped| According to Riddle's story to the|pearla; one gold chain, with 4! busy Friday. The hot spell A conference to settle diffe sop to world opinion, it is be- |THE FASTEST GROWING PAPER Shunted from place tolouteide the city and searched by|police, Miss Brown was thrown|heart-shaped pendant, and two ¥ > Pp Jences between the street car men| lieved, while, in fact, she re- | IN THE NORTHWEST unwanted by any state orlofticers before being allowed to|from the back seat, out the side|chain bracelets were the robbers’| WIl! last over Saturday, Sunday |and the traction company was held| mains a great military autoc- | { (Continued on page 4) proceed into the eity limits. jof the to the pavement, land-| booty and Monday, at least, he say: Friday at 1:30 p,m | racy. Ss 66 1] 39 oes MUTT AND JEFF, EVERETT TRUE, TOM DUFF, AND GENE AHERN SQUIRREL FOOD” —ALL BUILT FOR LAUGH PURPOSES— PAGE 12