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What Do You Know About the Port Commission Candidates? The Star Will TeH You About ’Em. Read About Thomas Lippy on Page 6 . TheSeattleStar 3% WEATHER FORECAST THE GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWI VOLUME 1 ED PRESS TATIONS SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, NOV. 19, 1917. PRICE ONE CENT ¥yeg RUSSIA TO FIGHT TO THE FINISH * * Wilson Backs Lloyd George's S Fight for Allied War Council | PREMIER STANDS "2°" ag carvan MAJ. WASHBURN GROUND IN HOUSE ; waxgva~ BRINGS MESSAGE Didn't Have Before Dense Crowd, Welsh Ste atesman| ae gis =| Quick End to War May Come on East Tells England of Mistakes Thru Cavs beh cated ee tha mr Front, He Says; Present Upheaval 4 Reval . mitteer of the Ministe aa Loose Organization inirstion ve torah evtaare'® ‘Incidental; Millions Fear Kaiser jed Press Leased Wire | ‘ tag te rg hig oe ee LONDON, Nov. 19.—‘‘America would have pre-} Fefesed to furnish the corpere. |) Russia is not,out of the war! > erred a council with even greater powers,” declared Hon counsel's office, was the (@ Backed by the sympathy and confidence of America, even ] Mk Sek ty statement Monday of U. G. Mur Premier Lloyd Centas in commons today, in defending | phy, secretary of the morals new Russian armies will gradually be built up to strike committee his plan of an inter-allied council for the direction of the Be ae kee being wah va |e eran War. sled to furnish it,” said Murph @ And Germany is vitally vulnerable on the easterm * case in whieh Kennedy was Gen. Pershing was among the commanders v forced to turn to the ministere whom tront—a quick decision can only come from the east agreed to the council last July, the Pr emier declarec i HM denounce me Sake Oe lat 2 ar ia 4 Ueenarelg Perehiie. Foch the French : ma cpthe diy c es pao @ All the internal turmoil in Russia is merely incidental Robe r i Cadorn apreed. I neil,’ vd ; . cerns Dick Fleming r male to the flow and ebb of war. Americans must gain the opertson and adorna, agrees th uncil, Oy hgaper and prepriese : ally Pi giod Baga, vel like th > up ties George said. of 44 Fits ave s clon Dig Perspective, and not feel like throwing up the spongé Continuing, the prem f every time news of some reverse reaches home. iieeted inte aneil Fe bility © , aj. Ger Gree This was the message brought to Seattle Monday by 6 that th tary aut jee pro: ¢ " Taking © a : sate ein is Stanley Washburn, U. S. A., and members of the sj ie cial mission sent thruout the United States by the Russian Gay GF the inter-ailie ‘ o}. remit t f . c cepir embassy, to inform the public with respect to Russia. lowing the oper of debs . erbia an mas . " With Maj. Washburn, who for the last three years was former Pretie 1 id pou emg cago Meckingham Refuses Aid war correspondent in Russia for the London Times, are George deciared th > ertt : vutumen ene % sa the OOF Te originnity eet: t Lie ut. Com. Basil Hwoshinsky, of the Russian navy, and tes, ne eee er ee ee, °'A. J. Sack, director of the Russian information bureau the commandersin chief of England ‘ > Naa on Chief Beckingham and . parte @f any other country. in his speech gage seam ae ep" dence with which to combat Plem of ew New York. “s drawn together from all ranks of all | ing’e suit, he was told there wab no Franklin Reading, in charge of the Rare " the! P* noure of commons by : arty, and James E. Neville, pub & opposition against e| Darties tn the how evidence against the according party . om femtier, headed by former Prime arm lest England's army system be in the heey. Maroy sage Kennedy | | hietty ‘man, accompanied the mission, . ter-allied ie arrived from Spokane at 945 a m. a Sinister Asquith, apparently mwitch.| changed by a supreme inte told him. ed its plans itice last week's open-| War council, and further cemented | “Mr. Kennedy told me that hy % ing fire on Lioyd George, and today |by the Welsh stateaman’s “brutal 7S crea soe gpngregh sd ag al To Speak Tonight GtMAsduith summed up against | frankness” in hie recent Parle cor ot ringing 5 at el Am | The visitors will address a publie ponement, so that he could dig up| mass meeting at the First Presb his successor, he centered his apeech, the premier was regarded as hacer - the evidence that Chief Reckingham rian church at § p.m, and were hot 20 much on the proposed war certain to emerge victorious , i refused to give him. aid Murphy . council as on Lloyd George's “bru-| The declaration for unity of pur- | orl gle yan Bratg trepicoll fests of the Chamber of Commeres tally frank” Paris specc pese ina war council included in Sak, aa = et 2 noon luncheou at the: GaaEE | bered having heard that the morals “The Bolsheviki will be run © Responding, Lioyd George declar- Pre iiteeate eaaeenee te Col 7 embe of - on sent the us n embassy to explain condit ' t f val | COmmittee of the Ministeri: fede n ow ed his speech was “not an impulsive & M. House, head of the American Members the special mission t Russian emba al nd ein Runsia. after arrival | Comm c ites ae 4 Wir of control in a few weeks, in my ui 2 ruse he A "| flere at King st. station Monday morning. Reading m left to right, they ‘are Stanley Washburn,|tion had submitted affidavits to | Sy United Press Leased Wire opinio j. Wa ‘ne. mission t was timed too aptty|—"s St Mine # ey " fing fron « t Maj. Staniey Waxhburn a WASHINGTON, Nov. 19— pinion,” Maj. Washburn told The “ tines sunshine asd i }U. 8 A., famous wa ponde A Sack, @ x of the Russian Information bureau, New York, and| Chief Beckingham some weekn back Star. “We America Tt was carefu maidered and | with the crisia in the Lloyd George |1j.0 ‘Commander Hal Heoshineky of the Rassias cave » 3 besicany he ae He exptained that the chief told him | Twe American seldiers were Kile (een at tee ee coe oe) Da Submitted to the cabinet.” he added. ' matter not to suggest to many Brit | —"~ a : - | he had no evidence with which to| ¢@ and six wounded in an en- in Russia, and that no matte 1 resolved to assume the risk in or. ‘ | gagement last Tuesday night, gp fe . ish politicians that President Wiison | . der to arouse publi sentiment, not ss ; ; 1 HUNGER STRIKERS IN! |combat Fleming's a apt > re] “ faction starts a rumpus in Petre Ererety ‘here, but in France, italy | 02% the chance of aiding the British |atrain the city from keeping his place | Ge oe reported today... |KTad or Moscow, there will remain . premier to achieve that unity of pu Al toned, and he asked if we would help| .The KILLED ars: | Sergt. John f1, | Millions of men willing to fight the and America A ~ fm “The allies’ ultative machin-|%o' winning the war bir panos oa aoe ery has been In sate an yp Prasn ~ . ‘ By Untied Press Lease tr | Chief Had Evidence Two Months | 2°°"" Ve ta — in War to Stay ‘ ay, ope in de ¥ ~ baongne grinned te ayy MINGTON, Nev. 19-— re of the committe Mase n the war to stay. Even tho aaore ¢ members — inl Sixteen woman's party picketers EVERELY WOUNDED: I were possible for the Germans to the supreme inter-a ’ cou a a calaiae Aer ip . FIRMS are in a dangerous condition CHIL ts we had submitted to the chief | ong Harr a a | dest ng » Russian army, it is no tai ten emphasis laid o1 " oj rane arrisburg time Americans to ery about ¢il, and beginning t rat ae alte the from hunger striking since Wed Septemier 4, and which the chief] ig Blevins; father slevins, |e ee oe of his life. His strongest , ‘ 1 . yas President Wiigon’s natrt Ameri nesday, according to Mrs. J. HL Uattel Press Correspondent sciteh tharvie-uallididatbaisarnc kman, W. V. Private " If Lenine and his followers ¢ n i mother, Bridget Cahill, Baker. < even make a separate pesemy | , aeert on . Big Business Takes $s Ad- Short, Minneapolis, Minn, who | MINEOLA, N. Y., Nov. 19.—The | expr ay set out violations of the], Pp; } repent ss : s eee See commmecs “t| ditional Velvet- for Each paid her $25 fine and was releas- | death penalty for Mrs. Biance | “ance hall ordinance and all the rules {HTLY WOUNDED: Sergt 0 tong on there ere cae 2 ed from Occoquan workhouse to | de Saulles, beautiful Chilean | 0% “eceney in joni ‘ hn A. Logan; father, Charles Lo-| Russia, a certain per cent of them EP gyn complete su b » clear in} $1 War x One was made b ¢ . > > alte *y nai th s pbate was that BY BASIL M. MANLY day. heiress, was demanded by the |v nig ty they. Leos P eS ee will be fighting Germewy, Se made by Rev. Leonaré ster Johnson; father for us to back the last man with our permit.” ; » scheme for a su WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 — prosecution today, at the open. [who wrote the exter rep yhnson, Forest Hill, Privat sympathy and confidence. 4fhe former premier ne preme n n pe How gently congress and the rg jo Py " : 4 Matrangly deprecated the creation o itish uncils or | gedersl executive officers have ing of her trial on a charge of | the extent of vice, and « mad ed; mo ’ Will Build Up New Army an organization to super co dealt with American profiteers mordering her husband, John | %Y N. ©. Nelson, @ volun ‘ Burne “1 believe, with proper support, CA is is the se d casu: IR will build 1 great new s strikingly shown by a compa s, fo | — Russia up a is strikingly shown by np Longer de Saules, former Yale Whole City Knew It abi etths ta tation of the profits of repre a : Y : sentative corporations after the football star. | “Not only were these ‘ .. 8 ment took ; payment of war taxes, just made Attorney Weeks exercised | Beckingham, but they w r f Rg Ssaveuher ia. qvontinuee én Saab by Eastman, Dillon & Co. a con pirenh tabaL> eee y_chalies against |in pamphlet form and distributed in ; ershing’s report gave no de Bae servative banking firm Heaketh, Monday oman cLaughlir arab | all churches d and’ Theltatin W bs ericane wore] ATi, Ac. SALE Italian Artillery Holding Piave River Line| > nad gh ro Briain pe nvewndity: taba "Gi a |Wiand, tha SIME Dedapledtive Susce, ts.| Rese eetoea them iccheaae rttacked by | Allen Ate 24 Fried By United Press Leased Wire corperations, show, after the pay n the city coun-| could send a woman t 1c | tod Kennedy th na not indicated the war depart WITH THE ITALIAN ARMIES, Nov. 19.—The| ment of all’ war taxes, the av since 111. ans ne ve [ME puesta pet e. | ment’s announcement ; Ended Up Hungry . ‘ . P 4 | erage net profits will equal 21.5 Seale mig ond ie hastly pale, Mrs, de Saulles dm 1 r led to ¢ ted Press reports from the Sddie Hawley, of the Seattle Light: SPiave siver line still holds. | per cent. Before war taxes are 1_ more « than any other the courtroom shortly before | fy y ‘ ell as the ont last week told of further cas . net Allen Odell, of the same ¥ : dd the « parni = - Manning went on th nch. | tary at c eT t ialties among the Sammies in the | , dager ssa © p rs Today, with what seemed to be the most desperate] Sean’ am ne fo as oveHHO by’ hes, | Seatece eeetnate cease | thorit si allies! nino. tie eer ono ys he couldn't eat 24 feted pressure the enemy has yet exerted in the; shove ‘ - "The single standard of morals, | 1hinneas A. Seamong wife o »| vigilance in the at, anc poise Slsinre Ag: crag: ‘sonny eieoe! Ae n took Eddie up, and the oot Italian lines held firm. Intense fighting was in progress) tiving in the Ur ‘ y ager eed Mrs, do Saulles w 1 y in backing up day's official an-) 1429 Fourth ave., Monday nogMy along the whole front—a violent artillery duel, inter-| manutactur nitions excluslv Pak aey 4 uncement, Hee-|bair wan drawn straight back from |in enforcing the law, w pur | ment s made of an engagement |e¢gy in nine minutes, but consumed Spersed with attacks and counter attac but relate prin r noth oaid her forehead and tied in a Grecian| begt to furnish the neces ee the Graak rapes eeated ich roll, & piece o¢ a : ‘ os ed, as the press reports state » and a glass of milk, and ended by Py» I believe I am in close touch with | knot. The short trip from the jail to | dence It was reported today that at the few points where| the 21.5 per cer of the courtroom was made thru the up hungry the people, and know their desires the Austro-German forces succeeded in forcing a crosse| wa" taxes | ulated on the basi! r have kept my finger on the public neu nel of sighs,” afl underground Hydah Hotel Ré tided VENIZELOS COMING oe _H. Wordman, the referee, gave ing a few days ago the vigor of the Italian attacks had securit ecember, 1 ; ee ee ee the vice squ \ — sete, ir Hons 5 sat “vy were . ad | the market ¥ the hetg oll level w err Unlike “Tiger- Woman” ne eae Msordert ‘ ERE 2 constricted their positions so that they were menaced| tie flout rie te there are thove who believe they are| ina, meck and gentle, slowly) raided the Hydah 1516 Fitth TOU. 8. IN SPRING 5 U-Boats Sunk wi imminent annihilation. Je to arrive at rofit of : linking her great dar a, Mrs.|ave., at an ear " lay morn. | By United Press Leased Wi ‘ ! front have been plugged very | act ; 1. More Pa like to sheet ther.’ : aulles seemed the very oppe-| it en persons, six women and| LONDON, Nc Premier Ven t Saturday fighting lay were on t ing oint except at Fagare. The enemy « k market vale ORE aie “ the tiger woma who for were arre and booked | izelos, of is to gO On a spe I « 9.—Five Plateau, far to the north euftebed terrible 0 iors th er ommon stock, practically | 9 Have you a house for at t « usband the night) on rly charge They we | jal mission 16 United Stater , i estroyed on ard ext o great centers of the middle of the Piave line water,” and doe epresent | | Use Star want ads. of ‘ ecause he would not|turned over to the city hospital, next spring, according to authorita alone Lloyd € Momentary breaches in the Piave (Continued on page 5) (Continued on page 7) give up where they will be examined tive information this afternoor |told the house of commons WOMAN PSYCHOLOGIST ANALYZES DE SAULLES MURDER CASE BY TOSTA JARL more to do with the individual psychology » es had killed something in his wif mportant | nfidelity is infidelty; the mother of a child is the mother of a child, HIE De Saulies murder case, which « (dkesy in’ the ‘court zuris- Vergara De Saulles than would a bill | ous to a woman than her maternal inst he had killed ete T - " 4 0. — ed oy the now | have de with the facts, and all m ern psychology her love-life He went scot free, unjudged, admired on all sides | This wom not mentally deranged; she is merely following out ae nd otneatt oe th Skies tells us that the facts are aimost always a blind to the real Bianca De Saulles, in concentrating her entire mental and emotional the strongest instincts of her kind and race; the instinct of the mother Dest truth | life upon her son, was doing what thousands of mothers do to their | to kill or die for her child, and the instinct of her race for primitive ey seew LL law » wtill-born; but there is a peculiar horror in the fact children; she threatening to rob him of his love before he | direct action To the average cit b A‘ made hundreds of yeara ago, oper had really im to I Another of the many. trage like D. H ACK DE SAULLES brings this kind of woman into our civiliga: But to the few who w afything about peyohoas ee ; pend ge rtead (h und arranges that the courts, built up on our’ particular Be rich and thre em r o last ‘ overte mother ¢ H Freud m, THAT wou ot a I ology, shall take her child away from her. Many normal women igen will g y murder t a simple mechanical act, producing or simple ar would have acted just as she did, But here is a woman suffering f humanit Lawrence 01 ons of Lovers¥--fastening u ehild 2 tion America t hile t me fi t " « halt not ¢ the mere physical Vea RE w omet hin ‘ crud 1 brutal in the assur a This is r for Dr. Jung's hospital in Zurich, It is Phijg; he proposes r « c te to Paris and t arder with which Jack De Saulles assumed the responsibility of mar certainly not for the United St courts. The law cies he k to New k his 1 I ew years his ardor | t the r eater men who h chi » fuller and rying a woman of so different a race and tradition from his own does not t count of racial temperament and tradition. gools, In court truge fs »ver the custody of truer intery Or, rather, in the way he did not assume the responsibility; he seems This is a case that should be handled with the tenderest their 5-year-old son, whict ¢ ta clin en the wife shoots Biane the prototype of the woman in Du Mau | to have done it with the same self-assurance with which he would patience, amid the subtlest technique of the greatest artist her husband in th 1 hia entire famil passant's masterple The Soul of a Woman Married when but play the real estate doctors of th of sex in conflict » the obse backgrounc dern psychological a child to a man of the world, that woman's faith and love-life ar Here situ: " § 8, a product of a civiliza with the social syste eae ne ugically tanctn > wat w the REAL uttered at one blow the cheap infidelity of her husband ne on which obseu et of life behind a screen of “decenc J of thi ‘aulles will be further tortured ution t r id, a ecomes her one hold on ecorum, prudery, or relis , a t Alues of » courts, dragged fa from health, and probably loped out for ea t le behind these scre convicted of mu t gs should n 5 n Nightly cope wi © problem of marryi man Howed to happ race ed ft im i elt A race of people who Mrs. De Saulles i# a victim, She has been outr 1 in a place ome a victim of a © implic hat t € the facts of life barely ere no one had a right to touch her, She has been hurt in a part To such 4 woman matters i very definite and simple; | of her life that must lie forever outside law courts and justice, th, w © the sensation of next few week from soul-sickness of their lega! bund 7 When the De Saulles trial is over it will probably bh “0 1 omprom. ‘4 € ves oO to bee been only a briltiant exhibition by legal experts, having no tragedy.