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| Full Leased Wire Report of the United Press Associations * Complete Service of the Newspaper Enterprise Associate | (teers) Mhe Seattle Star “20 there, It will be bri 5 7 ot ore le eee THE GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST ve ae cet tee eee Entered as Bocond Class Matter May 3, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash , Under the Act of Congress March #, 1879. VOLUME 20. NO. 159 SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1918, Tonight and Tucsiegam : : e 2 nthe ortherly ; oe 8 8 8 oes # 8#@ @ @ ses 8&8 8 8 @ *-* * * B8 & || SEATTLE SEES GREATEST LABOR DAY PARADE | RUSS GR THOU . Brothers in Arms | ALLIES SWEEP Germans Are. Frantically ‘ Rushing Work on | Rhine Defenses \ (By United Press Leased Wire, Direct to The Star) One Report Says “Red” | Assistant Labor Secretary | Premier Is Dead; Another Post Speaks Tonight That He Is Alive at Arena RUSSIAN FRONT BOOMS PICNIC AT WOODLAND COPENHAGEN, Sept. 2.—Nikolai | %————— ~ —— ~ Lenine, Bolshevik premier of Rus | | sia, is dead, according to dispatches| | Monster parade of 50,000 to from Petrograd today. He succumb-| | 60,000 workers, at 10 a.m. Line | } | j t - PARIS, Sept. 2,—The allies captured 128,302 men FOE FIGHTS FIERCELY the fighting on the West front in France between July: eae and August 31, it was officially announced today. » és cae xe this number, 2,674 were officers. During the same pel Dispatch From William || the allied captures included 2,069 guns, 1,734 trench m ilip Simms tars and 13,783 machine guns. 3 | By United Press Leased Wire | | Direct to The Star i ed to wounds inflicted at Moscow,| | of march from Seventh and Pike Friday by a girl revolutionist. to Union, west on Union to Third Dera who has been tn-/ | av¥e., south on Third ave. to Pre- volved in revolutionary activities | | fontaine pl, southeast to Wash fm recent years, has been arrested| | Raton st, west on Washington charged with shooting Lentne. to Second ave., north to Vine st She was born in Kiev, and in) Afternoon picnic at Woodland | her early years besan to operate i}, The victorious armies of Marshal Foch are today p «x ing their advantage against the Germans on a front f PARIS, Sept. 2—From Flan- (the northern area of the western front to the vicinity Of) ders to Saissons, Germany's re | i . : r i i i alles nA Be op vat the Chemin des Dames, above Soissons, increasing captal | Sag ber ah {0 chaking today un- | Of mre and a pe Seng | der the incessant pounding of the nnouncement was made that merican troops ' with re ated their campaign | 4 : French, British and American ar- | attacked in the Flanders area, capturing Voormezeele on 1907 she was arrested in con- x “fj = 5 Marcha Ludendorff is continuing Belgian front, and other strong points south of Ypres om with tis activity. and dur- . : = ; Hy, 3 | nie desperate struggle to hold the AMericans and French are smashing ahead on the * , 2 / | allied forees back until the Hinden- Laon, adding*to the confusion in the enemy ranks in | Soissons and ise regions. P The Brit Fourth attacked tod in the ) enntouticed fiday p er strong points in the ‘and den re} Py. = some neutral sources that the enemy | been occupied by Haig’s troops. Canadians are ' Sa | is showing ene of & panic. and is|their attack south of the Scarpe. Australians in captur : ushing work on new Rhine defe: | 40 day and night. “Tne capture of Pee | reromne Ste reported to have rounded up neatly onne, which dominates the country he ‘ for miles in every direction, certainty Evidence is increasing to show that the enemy ns ‘ — wa oor vee eed pee German }in Flanders is giving way to the strain of pressure fal mander in a sector, al ] SENTENCE 5 000 | ered tue hicehet becvbenn: Nie presenti? fe south. wa igh, of the ground lost in the gj 4 send troops across the Atlantle, They | position and St. Quentin, just west: | ing regain y the allies. i " 2 workers would not flaahce a war. ward, thru which ran the lines from British frocns, aso advancing in the region of | jerman people have seen thelr | which the enemy's March offensive | are slow i ‘ indenb REVOLUTIONISTS “ They don’t call it a mistake. They are con-| started, if Gen. Rawlinson, the Brit Love hes ing the boches toward the Hin ling clase deliberately lied to them | ish commander, presses his present . 1s AMSTERDAM, Sept. 2—Five| procession. million soldiers in France within the first years. ae American labor conditions, just as they have | advantages. Intention to do this vir- it thousand social-revotutionaries have| Erilisted men of the various units) to them about everything else. | orously forms part of Marshal Foch's _ been arrested and #entenced to death, | on leave from camp-and training sta- | That was one error. “Germans, government officials, newspapers and tactical scheme 9 . tion headed the march of ther re.| “They also thought American labor would not back | people, are astonished at the remarkable war strides | diiie hitt tities } | i |up the U. 8. government in a war in Europe, That | made by American labor, German newspapers no ‘The dispatches declare they will be mist No, 2. | tonger play up litte strikes of workers in American Only a hasty withdrawal from the , zecuted if the party persists in ac: | gations were represented in 88 march-| “German governmental officials and German news. | cities as ‘great labor riots,’ and the Germans have Noyon salient will save Gen. Von/ 1 opposed to the Soviet govern-| ing sections. Uniforms, banners and | papers for the past three or four years have declared | come to a realization that American labor is Just as Huter's army from serious conse: | men‘ flags, specially made for the ocea-|sgain and again that American working people were | firmly in the war as American soldiers, and they now | duences of the French advance in| eo Al sion, colored the long line of march. |against war; wouldn't fight, and would resort to | know that there's over a million of the latter in| that region. Already Gen. Mangin’s| 1 4.10) ; ing thousands a® they. wound their | strikes and sabotage if their government went to war | France. jguns, joining those of Gen, Hum ye ew way thruout the central section of | ————— - — | bert's army, are making the roads up the streets of Moscow are tn- der guard, military units patrofling them. The inhabitants remain in- Sept. 2—The British] The British have crossed the | have occupied Neuve Eglise, in the | river and are approaching La Flanders zone, Field Marshal Haig|on the Estaires road. ‘dikes. ts Mey. A. véat: maddority of Beat |to the Oise, past Chauny toward La | “ eae x " 4 ty 2 es ee ak marr, Mayor Hanson May ASSASSINATE CHINESE |Labor to Get What [Here unpicanant speedway for aj announced win. His trope have) Clear Gancy,Wosdt q 1 | 2 dendorff'« convoys. 3 bs » Meanw! le, al e southern end Semenoff’s Troops Fe de sn deeae Talk on Car Case EDUCATION MINISTER It Earns, Daniels [“n2r's convoys. enta| Astrid the Arras-Cambrai road,| the battlefront, the Freneh aan P rosa and Liberty loan floa ae ee ; vs P ese , : n Take Russ Stations 22 by union workers were fea: at Arena Tonight) | V1T08!*. bc. Sept, 2 ans Declares in Talk) (Continued on Page 12) Lee ones oe miitals c8 the tite | They ave claeree tne a *_ 3 + tures of the’ procession. Behind the “ been invited | Mul Lung, Chinese minister of ed-) pnt aANAPOLIS, 8 2— ene a ' ae 4 west P LONDON, Sept. 2.—The capture Mayor Hanson has been Inv! . oe 218, Sept. 2.—"Amer- s 5 es ‘ }denburg line, on a front of at least |Coucy-Le-Chateau and were by Gen. Semenoffs cavalry of Red Cross flost marched union wom |), 40x tonight at the Arena,|Ucation, and brother of Admiral ican patriotism and confidence in| _BY JOHN DE GRANDT |two miles, it was learned today. today to be advancing along the roa@ en who are members of the Red) Ting Fhi Ah Ming, of the war victory mainly rest on the knowledge | United Press Correspondent » > rr 4, Hadabular, Chinadant, Daluchest Crows or who are giving their time|where Seattle will hold its bic . ‘They aptyred: Doury, OF She | towards AON, Whi tao . ie department at Peking, was mur- that American toilers are loyal to| PARIS, Sept. 2.—(10 A. M.)—With| western edge of Cagnicourt. nine miles beyond the Hind and Ibarakal stations, was reported |i), the organization tration. Louis F, : ” fa ted dispatches today from ies phat oa Pay | Labor day demonstr: rere dered by a Chinese barber here the core : French outposts at the gates of] Australians in the Picardy region | line along this route. undat ot ie Cen' ‘abor council of Post, assistant secretary of labor, sunday night. The barber com-| Secretary of the Navy Daniels de-| © Le-Chate: less th t a ~ tore > in. The ehemy is retiring | p, . ney ‘ 2 ‘oucy'Le-Chateau, less than two| have taken Peronne. Appreciable ad-| French infantry units have 4 i remerton was given the honor posi-| will be the principal speaker. Han-| nitteq suicide followifig the kill- lvered this encouraging note to the| miles from the Hindenburg line. the S a tiie Onna Giver, “tha” Ghe-{ tise of sha’ aed o¢ too praceamton a0 | ce cessed to take a, state. | irkurc te Aneel ae anor ocr Caen, - 5 | vances are being made along the | the Somme canal east of : of J c «bor day|French-American troops are ac ns 0 c ae ome | guests of Seattle union men for the| ment on the street car situation, | c t round Lens allied se court and, further south, Taig ys taking 250 prisoners. Pa’ Scarpe, and - ca mee cof aor pr eh tae na | vabeing. eastward slong ithe road | tivity Sha -_ 7 * ‘orld, afte: ce aid,| toward Laon, the most importan: i oO" . Post, lata y we gO ond m” Ct pt . New Czech Forces Loe pe 2. aera elenck Action on the street car situa- 50 Japanese Killed will not 2 re to th nditic ne point behind this section of the Hin: Poe ong eagehe ra for, the oe — South of the Ailette, Crecy-Ats © " ‘e et * ach | 5 . as existed prior to our entrance into | genb line. bn Be bul E lay, C€AP Aront has falle: | Craton tion end less talk Mtr denburg, “ S “ Mont has fallen to the French, the Fight in Siberia) Presiaent witson's doctrine of ar in Russian Fight (1. iiicng struceie.. The people All the woods between the Ailette| turing Voormezeele, which is a mile) bari. war office announced. RARDIN, Masibenin Aus. Si-—| raven £04 conciliation to Pacific) —Thia..was, the sowed of Capt. J. TOKYO, Aug, 31.—Gen, Semenov's | will take on new dignity land Chauny and the railroad in that| #4 4 half south of Ypres. They are|" me German war office admits The arrival of allied troops at Man. | Coast workers, will be chief speaker |. Blain, district officer of the | anti poishevik troops have captured | “What labor earns will find its] vicinity have been occupied. also reported to havo taken several -iinguishment of Kemmel, exp cnarlan border has given additional | Monday night at the Arena. He | shipping board, in declaring Monday | ry, uria, on the Ussurl river, and the| way into the pockets of labor. New| ‘This afternoon the French were | "Tong Positions between Voormezeele | ing that “between Ypres and Czecho-Slovak prisoners in Central | #t@fted out in life as a printer. He that immediate steps to give Ship-| tananese have captured Simakovka, | conditions will impose new duties. | reported approaching Coucy-LeCha- | #24 Ypres. | Basece, we shortened our Sraneiial Siberia a chance to rise against the | #4¥anced from the union ranks thru | yard workers better car service| ast of Lake Hanka, it Was learned Statermanship of vision will create| teau, pushing northward along the| Between Doury and Etaing there giving up the salient, which project: Rolsheviki, according to reports here | the study of law and later took up| must be taken,at once, and the|today. The enemy left 200 dead on | new opportunities for American com-| road running from Soissons to St.|has been considerable heavy fighting ed toward Hazebrouck.” today. The Czecha have attacked | P°WsPaber work. Ax an ardent iM |ieganity of the method determined |the field at Simakovka. Fifty Japa:|merce and guarantee to the labor| Quentin. More Austrians have been |@nd many prisoners were taken. | ‘The presence of American troops sepa Be da a eae Gotscnee vn the subtest: " later. nese were killed and 120 wounded in| the bread it has earned.” taken prisoners in the vicinity of] (Doury is eight miles west of Cam-|at the northern end of the battle treating to Petrovsky and Kiakhtka. Members of 21 Bremerton lahor “I believe in civic ownership of| the battle. - — | Coucy lbrai and Etaing is two miles north front in Belgium has been revealed. organizations organized rooting lead-| public utilities,” he sald, “and |—— as ——| PARIS; Stpt. 2 n. Hrugiere,| ~ Franco-American pressure between | of Doury. Both of these villages are | They are co-operating with the Brit+ U. Ss. Troops Enter rs Monday morning for their base-| would like to see Seattle own not| shipyard workers adequate service. | author of many books on artillery | ajlette and the Aisne continues, | just north of the highway from Ar-|ish in pursuing the Germans north * + |ball game against the Skinner &|only the traction lines, but also the|'The needs of the nation take prece-/ tactics, is dead at the age of 77.| threatening enemy positions on the|ras to Cambrai.) |of Kemmel Battle in Siberia | ps1, team at Woodland park in the| gas system. This, however, is no|dence over the local problems of He has served in the French army' tablelands between Vauxaillon ABO) tnd: enemy. folight Nard woul]. NeeS Figlise was the scene of des VLADIVOSTOK, Sept. 2—Amert-| afternoon. Other numbers on labor’s|time for delays. We must give’ Seattl since 1870. Margival front, which extended five miles both | Perate fighting during the German - ~ : ~~ advance last spring. It is less tham Ff = sides of the road. Seven enemy divi- ¢ sions have been identified. (Continued on Page 18) 4 The Canadians took some from can troops entered the battle against | sport program at the park included | ———~ = the Bolsheviki along the Ussuri front | tugs of war with $110 in Thrift ; e ite | Sidelights on Labor’s Gigantic Demonstration Today Aton were sere SPAIN TO TAKE. i on Tuesday, August 27, it was an-| stamps as prizes, and races for men, stream | era marching in ranks as wide as the | between Bapaumne and Peronne. Le nounced here. | women and children American flags—hundreda and {said: “We Are in the Front Line| Twining in an endless a pte > -Aleoond d| avenues would pe d the be-/'Transloy has been outflanked from a vere ied by Trenches—The Huns, Rent Hogs| down Third ave., up Second and/ avenues would permit an < hundreds of them, were carried by n winding down First again, the pa-|ginnings of the parade were dis-| both sides, and its capture is believed | THE vorkers. ‘Their patriotism | and Profiteers Are Our Common En in aa ae ag Soa They peo Profiteers Are | rade still wound out of its begin. | banding, hundreds of marchers still| to be only a matter of hours, re samear héuie ‘up, Mine daneibeait eee |hings. When the down-town streets | stood waiting at the formation point) The British also continue to ad-| MfADRID, Spain, Sept. 2—All OON Y 1 Aa foxy el al kere, riggers and of the city were filled with Its labor for orders to mark time vance along the Bapaume-Cambrai German steamships in Spanish E ne bollermakers, re c seo chet Ad a +4 0 road y " | Little sons arid daughters of union | helpers were represented in the pro.) "TT", | Shipyard workers alone took over| In taking Peronne Sunday, the a eiiall wk ‘coord With be 4 | workers marched by dozens. Many | cession by 18,000 marchers, which } an hour to pass. The men whistled, | Australians are reported to have tak-|Sent note to Berlin, | were in white. Hundreds of women,| was thé Yargest representation of i aes sang and jazzed as they passed up|en between 3,000 and 4,000 prisoners, iS che " ms or Ataz-Mendi, with alla too, dressed in white, were in line. | any Individual union, This organiza == === {| the streeta answering the calle of|The British are approaching Deugny |. > cca) trom ana ig tee | eee [tion In the largest individual union women folks and relatives who were but this place has not yet been defl- | tres teak veesel” sith aan | 7 ed | in the world , 7, banked on the sidewalks. nitely ed © | Sate War savings stamps and Red see |} HAVE YOU A WANT ne n Recaheen eahacteaetel |German submarine, according. te Repulse of a series of desperate “f var, thi le © boo! Dy ¢ | Next to the war, this is today | Cross were boosted by the workers. | Foreign Minister Dato, who ad» o . » s ere—-WATCH OUR |} UNFULFILLED? Then Tho representatives of the Fire-|counter attacks by Ai li ‘ the biggest issue for millions of big head of Kaiser Bill pro ‘Our Steel Is Here- I UFILLED? ; atraitens, | ‘cag ral Ri: 2 a vhy x ed fre e MC i he sign carried by . : men's union made an impressive | which gave tl ot dressed the cabinet on the sinkings — MN AS tornend' on Thoras comes DVS): te tae Duthie shipyard workers. thru The Star tell it to} mrt ume rate gervice flag | MONCSC. Quanetn an osession of Oe spanish vessels Bis , Suooney's fate? | ‘The Red Cross float was followed | ¢ Mt the largest audience in }| and the crack Firemon's band, | height overlooking Peronne, sett}pd | tay an ee by loyal workers, It showed a sol-| Marching about 20 abreast, Seat the Northwest that city’s fate. The Australidhe | ‘The Stevedores and Longshoremen | quickly carried Peronne's eastern | Report Brusiloff ae Bee wi Why bal | Pretiaent | Wileen dier being cared for by nurses and | tle's labor men gave folks a good pic- ed a new trial for this man? ick it in full force, with one of | suburbs and. fi | Why have protests against hang- oe Lah alge ad il ae ad bape of, qotidl nase, Fie etiay 4 Ph Main 600 the argent sections i’ the fenaee. (sila the'ative town; teh bona Is Under Arrest - ers har ppewrsiy =7 sk see France, Shoulder to shoulder, the | one Main ‘The large number of the dock work-| prisoners fell to. the Antipodedh| AMSTERDAM, Sept. 2 Why does labor regard acne c " 7 h | emphasized the fact that Seattle's | troops during the: ions. Brusiloff, former commander. By sie to Ma tomes Lae ucite shun aod the ad | ae reo Dae aaowath. * | Or leave your copy at Speatapros is growing. |" eitultaneadaie “he. British cong} of the Russian armies, has been he | i 7 @ Bartell’s, 610 Second ie Std | pleted the capture of Bullecourt and {Tested on suspicion of being The Star will tell in an un- bianed series of articles all phases of this important case growing out of the bomb murders, The first article appears on page 9. Cross received big ovations trom the spectators lining the sidewalks. “We Put Spattle on the Map!|{ ave lh A We Believe Mooney Should Have An- ° Just what the union men think of | other Trial These were declara-| the rent hogs was voiced in banners | tions of the Bollermakers’, Shipbuild- carried by the marchers, One stated | ers’ and Helpers’ union, on a stream that “Uncle Sam Praises Seattle La-|er they carried in the parade, The bor, but Hates Rent Hogs.” Another | banner was three blocks long. : hy ude | ‘The kaiser, held prisoner mel brnagachesrp x despite deaperdte en-| ed with counter revolutionary a Uncle Sam, backed up by powerful|emy resistance and exerted tnereas-|tes in Russia, according to war industries, represented by one | ingly strong pressure in the Lys sec: }patch from Moscow today, of Seuttle’s strongest shipbuilders,| tor. Hindenburg is withdrawing/ A Berlin dispatch 4d formed the central figure for one | steadily in this section and last re-| Guards have murdered the float. ports indicated that British are |op leading (Continued on page again threatening Lens, tt ht Spe he OR Sig Sa ea y See