The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 4, 1918, Page 1

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your vote unused tomorrow is a slacker vote. It becomes thereby a passive aid to the disloyal vote---a stab not only to Seattle and the welfare of its people, but to the whole © country. Vote tomorrow and VOTE FOR AMERICANISM. {LEVENTH-HOU JES! a : ___ THE GREATEST DAILY _CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PAC. IFIC NORTHWES VOLU ME PULL, LEASED WIRE SERVICE , : rr Sitio SocTRTONS ATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1918 PRICE ONE CENT. Bregehere n_ Seattle SLAVS IN RAGE BEAR STEAKS! _ REDS BLOWING é Bloody Days Ahead, ‘Bite | UP BRIDGES ON DEMAND “HOLY Now in War to Death | \| fee SIBERIAN R. R, WAR’ id. oan : |Believe New Outbreak Is Special Cable From Star Reporter With Pershing’s Army in France = \ \* Protest Against Japanese a len sented Aiea “ort ae Lace WS Intervention BY JOSEPH SHAPLEN the point in this war where the wounded. . r Bard jolts begin From. this ide of the Atiantic iS MAY ENDANGER FRANCIS capitate ash noe nietieteroag Our troops are in the first | reading American newspapers, it AES PETROGRAD, March : 3.— The peace trenches, facing the G . was easy to get the no! that . SEARIIMOGON, Mascn or irme ar yo" weaned states nin America feit ~ - * arch —_ ° . ie Gitiaie Gre qaw ‘@uaned Sany otatemmnen in Amerien fel f ‘ The Kussians are blowing up (treaty with Germany, signed at Brest- from their French and English that the war could be ended by 4 bridges on the Sibert il . . : TALK and PROPAGANDA \ ie? ast \Litovsk this afternoon, is now regarded as instructors and are covering near China, according aru their own section of the front I lunched not long ago wit SK ‘6 9 German submarines have «unk some high officers who not lon | " ~ Ses ° mor forwarded to the state de only a “scrap of paper. hr American troop ship and before had received valu n - . ‘ partment today by Chairman 2 4 2. $ = ; Stephens, of the American rail The highest enthusiasm for fighting is many lives have deen lost formation as to internal p ~ ‘> P A oid hge san \ ission to Eussia, now Our troops have been gassed conditions in Germany , , Wy m3 5 : prevalent thruout Petrograd. by the Germans. 2 one of them . . : . . Must Feel It Get rid of the idea that a SECO: . pet The Petrograd pan-executive council has Up to this time America ‘bust-up’ is coming in Germany, : y) Na i he Chine r ° . Utet ‘contribution to the s which would result in the oust : ee called an extraordinary session of soldiers, cause has been MONEY and ing of the Hollenzollerns, Th: ; —“s \ v tate depastr FOOD. But these things did German people, apperentiy, are : * : f t * peasants and Cossacks for Moscow, March bring the war close up to the therely convinced that the kai. of this report c . ervers American people ser stands next to God and that p 2s ; ; f io fie ow ph ga ae rs 12, to decide whether to accept or reject “America will never put forth anything he does ix just the : f 5 the Russians were a izing the Peace. her best efforts until she SUP. right thing. They're with hi : : ~ | Japanese interven Siberia. PERS,” a French general tol and they're going thru with him, y ; [ooehe trek tees jer As a result of the German advance, this wae months ago, when our troopa even te inglorious defeat, which P oF apssaagy yrartoepatelh righ “py 2 id ee eee cnee - oven te tegearions dafens, aled endanger Ambases sncis’ conference may decide to tear up the treaty FERL deeply before he fights in “The way to win this war is planning to 6 \ sok or and declare a “holy war.” The movement deadly earnest.” not by coddling the German p lintd Chis ° . ° ‘And eo must the people at ple, but by KILLING EVERY | ee eutication with Moscow ang't@ reunite all democratic parties for the pur- home. DAMNE NB OF THEM . , ‘ ; 1 | Petr. 4 4 H i Thin same general has already 2 AN ALLIED || | | Petrograd in atiii open a» witnewsed| Dose Of fighting defensively to the last is Jest three sons killed in action ; x Wein, department received tolay. Te was| SPOWING. and a fourth is now ina hospital © THiln ix real war and the only || $ | ee Bayes eo 3. Geaperately wounded. way to settle it right, so the ’ . meet views aba ° _—_ If anybody in France has suf- world will be free for democracy . ans Francis intention. and had no WILL CONTINUE fered, he and his good wife for all time to come, fs to kill off 4 news about the supplies at Viadi- » have. so many Germans that the kai ‘ Ba t - PS Vostok WAR ON HUNS, Yet they have not permitted ser will be forced to do what we : Ww . their sorrows to evercome them tei) him to do. = } SAYS RUSSIAN D of prevent them from putting It becomes more apparent ev ec Rd “in : HY JOSEPH SHAPLEN forth their most determined ef. ory day that this war is going to i] ayy, . United Press Correspondent to help defeat the Germans. be settied WITH THE SWORD os 4 | (Copyright, 1918, by the United Press) Prepare for Setback Bloody days are ahead for the | I : | ENTRY AT ONCE PETROGRAD, March 3— a ‘The more I see of the warover American troops (PETROGRAD, Mare signed at Brest-Litovsk, the war BY JOS. SHAPLEN yg the more I realize what is The Germans indicate a desire 3 d = ' ghead for America before a vic to make it a knockout fight. Sash -Sees, : g ~ 4 7 will continye,.” Agricultural Com- (Copyright, 1918, by the United Press) torious peace comes. America must be prepared for : ¥ . | poi Halenerett told the |United Press Correspondent America must set her face and enormous casualty lists Uae ireetaio: | “tke | Ferbomane 71 | | WK, be prepared to accept with grim German militariem can be || ' me : nae BY CARL D. GROAT die revolutionary war—already (Noon.}—Petrograd is dazed to @etermination whatever comes crushed out in no other way > —| United Press Correspondent begun thruout Rassla—will not | day, following the action of the WASHINGTON, March 4.— ond. Russian peace delegation at in the way of sethacks—because The troops know exactly what every arm: tbacks, no is ahead for them and they are It has seemed to me at times It ta only to be hoped the folks pact signed, it was expected [a real war against Germany, but a| mandictated peace. (het tho Aaseriean people hed s back home will show the fort | here today that the question of |partisan, life-or-death struggle, is The city is like a man with head: th a re | would be quickly settled. Jand White Guards. It will be 1} in mid-air—still an; eee ot the ect ane. chewing | Japan believes th » peace|and class war, similar to that in Fi “| certain, or ae | fr. Bradford, in one of his meetings Saturday t ust act at once. | land. | The Russian delegation wired: ls ‘ } BRITISH FRONT night held a copy of The Star before his audience With m xpirit, it is quite con o'< Gok) eecened: tie. sen The Russian delegation deck 1 and, referring to The Star's editorial, said, “The Star celvable, authorities way, that #he}army, as such, will not participate. |{ts refusal Saturday to discuss the STAR ADVISORY || RECALL OF MISS STRONG BY WM. PHILIP SIMMS lied about me.” s conc pe pic aapear i By pbpne nian bela pemrvagretenipiehtigaeted body taroteayyeninom oo BALLOT | gthet ve re yg soap Hi fupsie Sapo ~_ enters 3 The Star this morning asked Mr. Bradford for a 1 ons are that Japan will be a ‘ig We vsti Nipte the mn ey maehatinr Pr he ecce OnE wer 38 io” ents mikeaenl| | sect dancer ieee, ee ieabante ne tee statement. We asked him to specifically say wherein permitted to play a lone han >| “The provinces occupied by the |The demand to cease the German of T Fee © a. activity in anti-conscription and | | speeding up adler pagihen Fara re The Star mis-stated a single fact about him, or his bro ge pis De 4 a be » BUt) Germans are breadiess The Ger.|fensive has n denied BOLTON, HAAS, COTTERILL antigovernment matters some Bellowing artillery; quarreisome, support. 2 sind ienitatlone on"the'e y]mnee om vey = vse pos me : ba vee, An Ultimatum (Three to be elected—Vote for months ago, now professes | | snapping machine guns; jostling pa. Mr. Bradford wanted time to consider the matter. be made perest COCR nrrayes * “nder the circumstances “the three) f° agian nd patriots: trols and wild, dashing raiders have After a consultation with his campaign advisers, Teuton Plans Puzzle ge ah ne : Sai AR | yk pen core Per Corporation Com a on Pogo gal a all Increased their activity in the Manager Otto A. Case told The Star, over the phone, Mtficials here are in a quaadary | ney mest fend 3 000,000 ataate The Russian delegation, - sii ang M. CALDWELL. Beattie mast have none except || that Bradford would make no statement. , what Germany will do in Rus: |rhey] need bread—and won't get it.| Signing the treaty without discus: YES 100 per cent Americans in pub- ||, There have been a dozen raids on Mr. Bradford could not make a statement sub- eee eee ee oe) ee Tightens Noose sion, considered its duty openly to asia is considered probable, pro- tell the truth to the workmen and ‘ sigfh <n be pare 7 this front alone in the past 26 hours Wieester ot bends for munici- Ne offi Miss Strong fadled on “ome important enough almost to stantiating his absurd charge, because The Star was | vided it suited her military leaders| "This is equi true of Ukraine. | peasants of Russia, and bring Be elevated railway to shi this iasue at the beginning o : : : yards) «i the war. If she has been nom | | D*. called attacks absolutely right and correct in every paragraph of its [| to do »0 Y erefore, military victories fore their judgment all that settalin “ verted now, it is up to the vot Marsha] Hindenburg 1s probing editorial Saturday. On the other hand, her plans for|simply t the |occurred at the signing of peace Nos, 2,2 and 4 YES P and testing everywhere and losing . E | (Continued on page ten) |German imperialis Suna Bonds to give small home eF ecnurow | to Gecide as to | | neavily in each raié.. Apparently he Mr. Bradford knows, in his own heart, that The ff} nore starving territories they occupy | “Une whether or not her conversion | | Nevill , pparently h Stes baa t sre than fair to hir pr cig aldo dh rani to Ae Remarkable rumors regarding owners equal standing with fo’ genuine i worried at the loss 0 or 60 Star has been mor han fair him. |Alli d Cc L worse will be their own ¢ the details of the treete nian big property owners in Shil- | men if the remnant fetches Mr. Bradford now proclaims his personal patriot- te onsuls basseropencige city. One declares it "previa shole ave. a - > _— | peat inl ppg of the British ism, but he has refrained from ying one word or Reach Moscow) “" t' Germans destroy ihe soviet | for German occupation of Petro. ‘ , |e | hameknescare xtiotiniten the doing one thing that would drive the un-American ff) BY JOS. SHAF Poon tie i eehore mad Deweantsnct| &FMh pending establishment of BS s+, -~ an |2 ARE KILLED; | British methods of raiding. But and traitorous element out of his camp. Clearly a tf Correspondent | all Russia. They can't do this |: Sseveromens to ts 2 ae Bonds for addition to municl- dosage rapa) ote pi Se at hana Glihda ,wodld arencetiigie ase ‘opyright, 1918, by the Unit os) least 4 ment able to pal hospital at Firlands tu. || 390 JINJURED IN |? “k ters dash and cun. man who, in these times, would even willingly accept ns iso Re lh Mo Mr age Th Yre, peace cannot be real-| adjust th working eal berculosis sanatorium) | —, instance Hea ap lery of raiders the vote of an enemy to his country, is not fit to hold lathe American, British and French |#e@. The civil war against the Ger M Kerensky’s . ool oF instance, in a ré jean, British ar onc ' ; es|| TRAIN SMASHUP. er insta. rad seals the OM Ore [arc nes met osmotic | cee oe w 1 highly technical | this Amendment No. 1 ..........YES t : lanne BOONE, Ia, March 4.—A thru Fort y officers rehearsed fre Mr. Bradford is not only accepting every disloyal Sieff, it wa: nounced here today do not ne (Extending terms of city [inane x Sn nine ofilcete Fe a fe ir. } M4 y g 2 ‘y | materials to cond partisan war The t a ed provision for and comptroller Dodge, Des Moines @ Southern pus quently for many days. Yet the: vote, but, by his silence, and by other tactics, he is é . « ’ > ue . . or A eh 1 fare. Our methods will be entirely | surrender of the ¢ ‘asus district to irom two to four years) senger train, going to Des Moines left 21 dead on the I prtensd i ‘ mans . rel The Amer Kieft i ; r sg || #mashed head-on into a freight train cluding the commander and also catering to the traitor SPAPER W WHINE S | Douglas Jenkins. " sul at Mos. | different rkey, contrary to the treaty Of tt No.2..... NO | near Creed’s crossing, five miles east some prisoners BECAUSE THIS NEWSPAPER WILL NOT SUP- cow is Dewitt C. Poole. It would| “I beli because of this, peace not be made permanent be possible when the bor- ijl ratified by an international (Creating a police commission) | of here today Also in a raid in the Polygen PORT HIM. spear that all American repre will only tives in the affected parts of Rus.(ders of Russia and Germany are no dment No. 3 NO|| The passenger was telescoped. Two | wood region, five Germans re nar . bs © moving to places of safety longer defiled. ¥ are re in agreement (Pension system for city em- dead bodies have been removed from | the British line. Three of these were — RITER GERMANS ROAST . eer re ee Se lin while uninpertene in| UNITED PRESS W JAPAN | | - |with Germany for the formation 6 Principle is just, this particu. | been killed. The, aids, while unimportant tn] mnSTAYS IN PETROGRAD PARIS. Maren 4 The Rheinigehe |MEYER LONDON WILL | RUSS GIVE IN |S new ‘asses gouecasm whieh lar bill is not fairly worked ———— would ore ite rds’ out, having born eotien wp im | ALLENBY FORCES MAKE ine. ve tinson. “Tuore nome) St von. stanton shay iene Zins. conn” of PROTEST JAPAN PLAN) TO GERMANIC (iit! Sioa watt te a last-minute rush) enem nell 3 az 4 | i | > , 1, United Presa ataff correspond: | charges Japanese interventi. WASHINGTON, M troops to fight the soviets. Some of Scarpe and Cambrai regions. A| len arges Japan 1 ntion in th ASHING » March 4-—Repre — NEW PALESTINE GAINS) fare ‘and cambrat rogions. || len» United Dress, tite er aepoor | agen Japanese intervention in the| WASHINGTON, March 4-—Repre| DE ACE TREAT Y | ror" totirtt ihe worlets. Some | DON, “Seaceh tAsisiGe ot apow stormiand a thaw has succesd.| Peper: mas: remmining in Seiseree ton of Mibetia,” today introduced a resolution pro-|_ BASLE, Switzerland, March 4.—| volved in an intrigue for a separate ot y and Russia | peace with Germany VOTE TUESDAY the westward road leading from Jeru. *y r¢ |today, representing a press servi |testing against the “sue 1 inva w signed at 5 p. m. unday, accord Failure to vote tomorrow | |salem ‘to Nabuls, Gen. Allenb wired the United Press general of-) | | War's horrors are kept from | |sion of Russian territory Tapeh | | means that before you can vote | |forces advanced a maximum depth DRY SQUAD BUSY fices here | the children of gallant France. | | |ing to an officiat statement from Ber |FRANCIS Vi WILL rials All w Please convey love, re) | Lillian Chester, wife col || PETE AD, March 4.—-Three {lin today ates yiewwea| MOVE EMBASSY again you will have to register. | | northward of 2,000 yards on Vote tomorrow, and your regis: | |front Saturday and Sunday as 3 Gordon, Twelfth ave. | assure | Iaborator of George Randolph | | persons were killed and five wound-| ‘The Russian ° Ided ‘ | rin jouneed today. nd Peter Simonson, 216 Bi rs, § jen resides in. Philadel. | Chester, sends a story about it | /ed when German airman bomt ed | tration is good until the tion | |officially announeed today » 1 Peter Simonsor Bell] M n resi y ven German airman bombarded | without opposition argument to ot 1920 . || The enemy offered little oppost-| at taken into custody Sunday phia, where Shaplen formerly was| | from Fra It will appear in| |the city. Little material damage! the ‘Teuton terms. is evidenced TO VLADIVOSTOK ee 2?? — - —44! tion _ for alleged violations of the dry law, on the staff of t vening Leader ‘Tuesday’ ‘Star. || was done. by the following to Petro: | BY RALPH H, TURNER March 4—David R, sky Francis, American ambassador to French Hear Wild Rumors but Still Carry on Their Battle ee | worse, in comparison with the ulti | Jiji Shimpo received today * |matum of February 21 | ‘The dispatch quotes a wireless — laughter in the busy little Cafe de! Trown crossed on the previous boat.| lanky Smith, at the inner end of/on a march to Verdun, a million! “And you have this from a good | Bruilie; but not for them! Hut they met him in London, and the table, voices it hoarsely strong! They're murdering every- authority?” pipes up little Dingbat Gispatch received there from eae This is the seventh of a series The seven Americans at the corner he came all the way from there to “What have YOU heard?” one who refuses to take up arms and His upper lip seems to be shrinking) “In view of this fact, and in conse. | ISP Wabllis, Tapaneeh Taian of articles written especially for | table, from frecklen, red-headed big | Paris with them, he and his crowd verything’s gone to the join them. By the time they reach away from the six hairs of his little|@uence of the Germans’ refusal to | Cou’ Lehida, Japanese ami rane The Star by George Kandolph | Jones to little Dingbat with the six. so he's all right !” Brown gulps, and tigh the German frontier there'll be four mustache, leaving them to stick |cease military operations until peace | CF 10 xy “ de aye tal | Chester, who went to Europe | hair mustache, are steeped and wat 3rown ordinarily is a hard-cheeked P| grip on the coat lapels. uate ee sa A ae straight out, alone and unsupported, | 8 signed, we Dave. reacted to: alien.) See Seamer We be move ay to tell_the story of FRANCE | rated in glo 4 they wait for fellow with squinty eyes, but there ° ioup Is Unappreciated HL affirms White vq | the treaty without discussing its con f Te agli eo. (wreigyy ed ‘Ail they're walt- | ‘The waiter brings the soup to a) yen atneme White jn "| tents and leave after we have attach-| 200 RUSS IN WOLMAR aa TODAY for this and associated | their soup; for they have been in is no trace of a squint in him now cartridge left! He is accompanied by | Paris, the center now of all big The eyes are bulging with excite ing for now is to decide who | table which is cold and clammy, and — jirrrrrr! A chill like a * .je¢ ur signatures.” HANGED BY TEUT his wife and collaborator, Lillian | things, for two whole days. ment, as he grabs fat Dooflab « gets to shoot it; then they're tensely silent. The eight sit like gcends on the assemblage, but little; The new treaty adds a clause to| ONS Chester. ‘The only comfort they have is In little Dingbat by the » going to evacuate Paris, and let statues, They do not utter a Syl Hingbat, who is hopeful, not because | the previous one submitted, demand.| LONDON, March Rol- each other; they are firm friends— leans as far to the center of the the Germans in; and goodnight!” lable in the presence of this little ye is an optimist but. becaus: ing that the regions of Karabagh,| sheviki in Petrograd have issued a <page ‘ having met on the boat coming over table as possible, and Russia is united!” explains man with the down-dropping black hates to die, moistens his lips, and| Kars and Batum be detached from | circular jaring that the Germans, - and they can confide in, and trust, plercingly White. ‘They've been drilling for mustaches, He may be a spy! and auKy | Russian territory, on the pretext of on their entry into Wolmar, Febru: in each other. “We fellows had better get right months under German — officers! their information is secret, confiden: tow do you know?" the rights of the peoples for self-de-|ary 20, arrested 200 persons and AND LILLIAS “Say! They are electrified by the out of Paris!” ‘They've assassinated all the allied tial, val : , k ° termination. ‘This was put forward, hanged them in the market place, Copyright, 1918.) wudden appearance of another friend,, There is one instantaneous representatives in Moscow and, ‘— and goodnight!” finishes White I'm not at Mberty to state,” ax [it ts declared, in the interests of Tur-/ according to news dispatches reach: care, March ae and | ene not quite « firm one, fori thought in the minds of all, and Petrograd! They started yesterday/as the waiter moves away, ‘ (Continued on Page Siz) key. ing here. whispers = “All

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