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tes an extra Vieeght * Mow t# ite mentality? a THE GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST | _YOLUME 20 UNREST SRS AROCIRNONS ee SEATTLE, WASH. THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1918. PRICE ONE CENT in tter up S PRESS ONWARD )AMERICANS CRUSH %20%04S iBRrrisH YIELD TO FOES IN RAID. WORETO COME HORDES OF ENEMY | air in ‘ , “Come On, America!” Is| WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, April 4 | phere carefully prepared German attack in the sector, Cry of Allies as hacia BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS northwest of Toul was crushed by the prompt and effective s PSs nward United Press Corrcape 4 fire of American batteries ef} eee |__ WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN — Two Germans prisoner declared the attack was) wink THe prirsnt At | FRANCE April 11 The Germans have 4 chearsed by a fore f a’ h . . si ed, MIES IN FRANCE, April 10. Ld = 4 te the Ataecieaa ee. | Be aia Whatever cards A ‘ » {reached the neighborhood of Steenwerck The attack vee preceded A) a penn barrage, the : (four and a half miles west of Armentieres % American guns replying immediat s ¢ os tae | _There were n were no American casualties. | w i beste 8 ser “ 9 Lys river), it is ; aqua ea ported, as 1s 18 Cabied. my The enemy also is reported to have reached the edge of Estaires (four and a | MORE SAMMIES 'SENATOR URGES DUE TO REACH DRAFT AGE BE | oad to be in the caster half of Poop WESTERN LINE RAISED 0 40 o , |wood, just outside the ruins. of the villages ‘lof Messines and Wytschaete. £& BY CARL D, GROAT WASHINGTON, April xcept | At 4 a. m. German artillery began shelling Martine af. United Press espondent Ps ae divixions between Armen: | 'd Englebel 5 WASHINGTON, April 11 — nea co! co ; ne sart an glebelmer. Shittin the tain “American geo sedis ee nan ; Wednesday’s fighting continued thruout the night nag sg Pyle Ate «tages at ats in the new salient north of the St. Muir bridgehead, Gen. Von Quast enlarged his gains. sg Once the enemy occupied La Creche, Nieppe, Ploeg- € 4 News that # small portion of tie second deat pl this army of freedom has been The storm center was the draft aR aRB disposed in the brave and hard : 1 Pressed Bettany battalion wae quota bill, bas — allotments * a ag pa rset "| steert, Messines and Wytschaecte, but the British coun- — followed by information that oth- | men the various dintricte must send | Bethune and outflank ny is fet lll soon be doing ele ke en eee oeaee cy ur|Afram, and, more important stii,|ter-attacked heavily, driving them out of La Cone in withstanding the boche, | 14s, Matin: asleds tae te nae | Nieppe, Messines, Wytschaete and retaking the west |half of Ploegsteert. | Around Messines and Wytschaete the fighting Kies Firitiah this ambit have been tr checked early the Other amendments, to give the 1H bow ong rts’ sedate a Gee oe ake to Decora |terday was heavy. These places were taken and re! | kind A » can cour n fixing qu several times in hand-to-hand strug_'es. brought shar; Steenwerck and La Creche were the scenes of sim: Others to Come long the men who have not same toast of battle will be go ne of the mont vig brigaded with the ve nents of the draft ori« y Whether the first coi urge that the draft age be rain | : “lila ilar fighting. on the new battle bea to 40. en hg ner bi ot nnn (me, rie > VANALYSIS OF GREAT FIGHT i in assumed that jand to do that " must have 10,000, pe ee app ning | RAGING ON NORTHERN LINE Hindenburg’s forces are the big- \— kent in the history of tne world, and| he has the greatest network of rail- ways ane tative Shallenberge {f the battle dev lines, Amerte biuret nig the noribarn str. | DRAFT BOARDS : Se aie, TO BE CHECKED WASHINGTON, April the British line frorh the La canal, just eastward of Git ard to the Lawe river g this river to the Lys, at 7 Crown Prince Rupprecht was continuing his northern _offen- sive today on the entire 20-mile front from the LaBassee canal to the Ypres-Comines canal | neral Crow present © Ger In making thin ouncement tod Amer phase ia merely o thoro f oon | ingularly «mal | Lawe and Lys rivers fr ent develop mans to relic ardy flanks and to MARCHING IN REVIEW BY THE EDITOR “TO MAKE PEACE inh ae , can nt ON WAR BONDS Sct cent = stint os COPENHAGEN April . rattle was going down the | Comines canal Thirty thousand young soldiers, comprising every unit of the Wild West division, today are marching in proud réview across the broad Nisqually plain, at Camp Lewis. stretch of “Honor Week” sday in the Third Liberty nome local bor . Loan drive, determined to reach a policy her quota of approximately age of $12,000,000 within the next 48 their quotas lower or Anderson lated with ¢ in Vienna and Budaport, re: |" aa ng the possibility of a separate |" peace between Austria-Hungary and the United § oa din The German officiel statement n merely confirmed the British: _|admission that the Lys had been crossed and said the British I had been penetrated on both sides Warneton th I can imagine, and every one of you who knows a soldier can patoh t eblatt from An earlier German statement imagine what a thrill each of those men will experience as his rank J} % ¥ienn UPHOLDS ALIEN |; sn pred erro sn "yrsoners a - uns had been taken. . trian ¢ bombardment on the 7 sweeps past the reviewing stand, where stalwart Maj. Gen. Greene > “had ‘udmittod __ RIGHT TO SUE tak awaits to salute each brigade commander and each of the regimen- ae taitieted “WA bie a0 to each peace 1 Many of yesterday’ 0 tal colors. Seer shutinna arene aka ta hae een be ° wal : — P ‘ conducted by Emperor Karl with - . 4 raid on on As he goes by, every man in khaki will pay the army’s tribute to J) numerous persons "pt international ployer’ subscriptio termined raid on one 6 he the two silver stars of their leader and to the colors of the 91st divis- J/°°°""" — equipped with blank gerous Salient pia astea > ion, emblems of our nation’s majesty. “PROF. ANDERSON” NOT | t Been an tei ae (an ae ae 0. * A np KNOWN AT WASHINGTON consequenc t PAGE SEVEN 2 - It will be a moment of consecration, of exaltation, of uplift for because of its position at | WASHINGTON, April 11.—Re ported peace ne wor Anderson resenting of a dangerous salient aid the city was gas-filled | tions were at id t it & : foo mark, | Haug ald tne city wae esis] ARTILLERY DUBE! Te Te gtinaed‘on Baga a3) | "Nord at Armentres newey tune: ON ITALY FRONT Doug Fairbanks and Wife Agree men Monday every wearer of the olive drab. * But why, civilians, cannot we obtain a like thrill as we go about ants Andr ee Upon ‘Separation cea el ee FRONT s. our more humdrum part of this great business? Are we not also on ; NEW YORK, April 11.—"We |g ies n the neighbor: |, Aer an review r neh nid Mra. Do NOW OVER $100,000,000 ; : belies Bs ‘ t P 2 J i lay, following WASHINGTON; Apr M1 three towns constitute a ae 1 I have just seen a McCutcheon cartoon, in which the artist pic cemment that the and her |] | Liberty Loan subseri front midway’ between | AMERICAN SUBS ARE ll tures the American people “jam in a Liberty Loan drive before mutual agreement of final || | mark tho there will be no nPop | Simuns | Geclares’ AFTER KAISER’S DIVERS horthe| CHICAGO, April American aid-| submarines are fer y in history | Kaiser's undersea pirate ork of rail-|ing them in their own w i was known of the inci MUSIC TEACHERS MEET a flag-draped stand where Uncle Sam, Lincoln, Washington, Grant and other national heroes look down. ng Mrs, Fairbanks says she took this action to protect her son. Douglas jr., aged Fairbanks Never was a truer picture! WE ARE ON REVIEW. All the Dany eedihe ata cei Seok © up the stage to marry Mre i Daniels told 20,000 rT music credit bank daugh r of Daniel I now have ing at th Lak station, great spirits of civilization have their eyes upon us. Our children and our children’s children—humanity of the future—await to salute as we come in massed phalanxes there. Unless our lines move on in endless array until “every selfish dominion is cast down in the dust,” all will be lost. We MUST present ourselves, ready for our fullest responsibil- ity of service. Are you in line, Citizen? Are your bonds spoken ut his hotel tor his arduous program yes: of Watch || porting firms fices in Seattle i Liberty Loan Bond. nearly two and a half milli the West front, “with more coming.” | ¢ Haig's statement last night traced terday THIS YANKEE FOUGHT IN AIR FROM CHANNEL TO VERDUN Lieut. Pollack, American Sky Soldier, Who Battled Under British and French Flags, Will Write for The Star » broker, Sull Publie Lieutenant Granville A. Pol rN gian capital, and went 0 had been trained and was_ be On July 18 he reached the ess for? Will you pass the reviewing stand a soldier good and true? lock, whone atories of fighting In a Sinister of War De Broquevilie ginping to go across, and. the’ frout, and the next day ad iil thew 1 in The Star . of Relgium, who t naval gunners who, in the first fight with a German air Gaye Where are you ? As Artist Yardley puts it in the above cartoon, has been “in 2 was not at the emergency, had composed the man, Since then he has been in “ oy 5 since the outbreak foreigner e i Marine Artillery Brigade, were the air fighting in Flanders and a. Are you here or over there? { needed for the new unite of the northern France, grom the Nort . I was on the n art tritish Grand Fleet. sea to the Verdun front aking, : . . An ae ane motor expert by ie ee vas n own In either place, you must march in review. training, I int Pollock took Py ie, fr Sate) tO Aulat in Shp: EBA See naIeeHCr Wel Uimeeere Joins U. rvice m3 1¢ first available steamer f f . enc Foreign gion, whe disbandec : other ne er : sea ‘ word reached him from La: Joins Lafayette Escadrille When it was ded to dis. other I nd after the outbreak of R pede ici nded. war. Arriving in September, that he could returned to the United 0 Ly cen ore re eon 1914, he immediately tried to Availary ant Williaa world-famous group in the Amer ‘ty BATTLE “SHOCK |HANSON USES VETO |124 AMERICANS SN ec ete cavalo ance vibe moaeek wan ea vb A Yetuened \ first Heutonancy in the Amert ben. » SOON TO COME | ON PAVING MEASURE IN CASUALTIES Works With White bbe Senet: Ona can alr serv He promptly a still | WASHINGTON, April 11.—Am Mayor Hanson his first! WASHINGTON, April 11.—The : At spe time it ive! sherri ment and on the 10th of Janu the next “ pted, and wh ne awal — ‘or an American citizen to secure 4 s enrolled e uz Dec department orders, was ‘ur i 4 fean homes must prepare for ordinance “Fharsday | wh » went ity list issued today by the war ce taataadinn stil’ tha Beltane. aly Sey Sane wea arate 200% vine De v8, 1814. OR De: Trea to. the “Unite aaa eT ati ne council ordinances pro he WON wait 3ritish army cember 2 ns fo « x ‘ i Besbock, which will follow larg viding ving with brick of Ral tment contains $8 games, di service. Pollock went to his With Marine Artillery listed in the Foreign Legion and Until his permanent assignment tictffRion of Gen, Pershing’® 1, ave, , raham and, Vided as follows friend, Claude Graham-White. The Marine Artillery Brigade issigned to the Lafayette flying could be made, He has just been forest A the heavy West front! Tr noun! One killed in action, tp died of |} at Hendon, London, who had just | Mitteharaeat vartlaitcoatt ar is cane ed to active duty with the OLS ve War! Wounds, five died of acdidehts, 13 of been given the first contract let ganization in the British army to He began training at orice at an flying corps, “some Butte ? Cg htben, t these| disease, 69 severely wounded, 30 by the, admiralty for building LIBUT. GA POLEOCH reach the front. It arrived in the Bleriot school at Bue, near in France. Ger ; War department officials warned without | slightly wounded and four minsing|{ aircraft, White permuac Shp Gainetdia GRE Tada “gene. i: erenob ta Marg NA and went: Bade coeutesmnd’ olasa® lat aaa aera memmeserco. Che casually | sewer 1h ag ns A pce a ae Ae ng could he decided, in December, 1914 into action at once at Neuve Pollock finished his course in at Fert Worth, Texas, He is Nat 4 swell commensu’ hese two stretches would have inti an ring could be ied te, Ate For a year, until record time—about 26 hours of 9 years and most of his ae alled for an expenditure of $102,000.| G | a alr service to go to France and enjat in the 1916, young Pollock actual flying time—never having life has been lived dn New Or, with the extent of America’s par-| that the Nat | Seeks Foreign Legion Foreign Li », He got as far fought with this organizatior 4 smashup or accident of any leans, W » both his parents an ia : ticipation. The big lists probably Minute Men of precinct No, 88 will p: of New As the chances for getting into as Havre, the temporary Bel By that time Kitchener's army kind now reside. \ will not begin coming in, it is be-;meet Thursday evening, at the ot $250,000 of its bond purchase to} lieved, far some days Queen Anne branch library. Seattle, r