The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 5, 1918, Page 2

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PAGE 2 MIE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBEF ‘ ‘ — | ww PLL LLP LL LL LL PLS PAPPLL LLL LL LLLP LLL PLL, E For YOUR ountry THREE CIRC Star Sideligh Vanes i} Star Sidelights on Various | - rr 1 ? ; ; , ie i‘ $ ‘a < MOVES GAINING } j : ) TOWNS TAKEN | Angles of WarNews Today | | Bs ON WEST FRONT { Wilson’s 14 Peace Terms { ieidigendinnes inten 4) wa dispatches today decla . a BY FRANK J. TAYLOR swept forward * Dispatch From Webb | { matement of their view of Prenident gre ch (United Press Correspondent) American heavy guna, meanwhile Miller ‘ ETE ROIS { WITH THE AMERICAN FIRST) began the pounding of the German | By Direct Wwe to The star ||) dik: Sone sages Aa } ARMY, Oct. 5.—The French-Amert:| batteries with high explosives and H Sra dashe Pont } nr cel Led ; 5 @an advance in the Champagne and One small area jone re ” * ¥ saieecciin en tate Brad a { the Argonne region is at present a more than two tons of sw | PARIS, Oct. 5.—The great bat | he { case of men against machinery ® The German batteries, hid fle along the western front to 6t ahh eehatial claims baaed on & stotet { The allied infantry are pushing den in the woods acr the Meuse. day is resolved into a series of tar Lietitiee iain th j furiously on over the well-organized | were saturated with mustard gas great alternating movements SP ata eutleea eceunas Bre rconen f defenses of the Germans, who retire) T mi t moat centraled around three main | {f prt 3 atten rnd ave ac ' ) only when they are shoved ou powerful resistance against our right theatres. ? 2 eee © un Soversiment whee ttle ' ; ‘ { The Americans have profited © wing, where the Meuse bends east a. bein frees ie cabdne. tho tory aie Bvacuntion by the central empires of all Ruasian t ; ly thru the past week's experie ward They used beth artillery and shape of three gigantic half-circles pd AB, " Mb ja i ndence 4 and gave the boches no more fine machine guna, aw « the rolling within two northerly ares in the : te cas it Neithaa i Portunities»with their machine guns hills and woods. The doughboys hearvot Northern Franee’s industrial eee eation nfs ietusr } thru charging recklessly at them, pushed into this steady fire, gaining regions. At the bottom of each half. a the sere 4 eng 5 pth ape ; wath ch territory, and “righting 5 Yesterday's operation was an at: | their first objectives against the stub: circle Marshal Foch is hammering in ph Pronte.i , ‘ance by uweia in 187 matter of Al { tack of veterans against experienced born resistance of the enemy, in the Gn effort to increase the encircte- |} Ninth—Readjustment of Italy's front \ , { defenders, The Germans admit the well-fortified lines south of Romagne. ment and pinch the Germans!) tionattt nt OF al tiers along the lines of na ) ’ suddenness of the assault surprised) The left wing advanced rapidly within ) T ve them. There was no artillery prepar-| across the hills bordering the Ar Enecireting Lille Geeite ee deere ee : aot tob Jed oppor ation to give them warning gonne forest. which are chopped with The northern arc encircles Lille, / Eleventi i ea tid r Daft “ ; At 5:30 a. m. the entire sector was | small ravines, forming a sheltering one of the most populous center pendoher muarnatecd, Bacar aun states and their separate iaie t suddenly curtained bY the American | surface and is 30 miles in diameter eit Twelfth ee ci ish a nak 2 88 ow let to the ne ‘ The veteran Americans here ad German retreat is flattening this arc etalie CH ee fr © be molested, except as to | The German front lines, in a quan. vanced behind the Nght artillery hourty. Every yard gained around! oosortunity for autonomous Gevelonmen tee mut be att@ied { @ary, waited in absolute inaction for curtain fire, the infantry jumping Roulers and Cambral increases the Thi 4 Poliat, dr getat Se 2 ‘} five minutes. Then the doughboys boche machine gunners quickly and probaljlity of greater success for the ee ay a tnceponman : { | dumped off. “Leaning” agninst the taking prisoners as tiey advanced at allies OANA posi: ie peradtlincare r po ‘ciation of nat . st be formed creeping line of explosions, they‘ the rate of a kilometer an Around Laon there in another arc, || intean nt politica: ra cette: " purpoe of affor this one 30 miles acrons, where the ) ang gmail states alike " ri 6 rim is gradually drawing inward. ? { The Germans are hurling the flow , CE oe : ‘orn YANKS James Pershing { or of thelr reserves against the topa Humor of War } nd bottoms of these two arcs in a ve jut been on a sick leave afte 1 f { Reaches Seattle | and bottoms of thene two ares dn) )} vg Just been on a alck leave after swallowing some of Frit Gen. John J. Pershing, command The other main arcs in the firet blooming words that the der Ertan saute die ao ‘Vil you haf gas | Champagne district where American | troops are going forward across the | Most difficult country, pulling thelr ) One of thone naturalized Huns, I bet. So I | ring tighter and tighter. The Ameri 5 p and all ‘opped it, tootha er of America’s armies, arrived in Seattle Saturday snorning to aid in the Fourth Liberty Loan drive James Pershing registered at LONDON, Oct. 5—{1:02 p.m) ({ the Savoy hotel, and then proceed American forces have ed to Liberty loan headquarters. Franco. @efinitely broken thru the whole |{ where he held a conference as to { ? ‘The pantry maid of a British hospita’ a y andered can capture of Montblanc and the mine Sig ea age Ms dy the wards in spite of regulations, and came to be adored 6 me French success at Cormicy aceentu 7 cee ie ee One presented her with a fragment of shrapnel. “Taken out of my ate the encircling, owing the 7b'n side, th t was,” he declared with pardonable prid Th front of the enemy's defensive |{ the part he should take in the to enfilade the enemy positions along |) turned it over thoughtfully. “T inh ft hon tee p pantry maid line behind the Suippe river weet) |) campaign. the chain of hills at Moronviliers pgp — ehtfu I wish it had been a German helm: of the Argonne, according to dis- |} The brother of America’s army “Village for Village” pc. chief is a salesman for a big Chi South of the Aisne the German re | cago clothing store. The upper are places the Britix j within sight of Lill’, but efforts ar being made to outflank this city in- steady of carrying it by @ frontal as | mault, hoping thereby to avoid mil lions of dollars damage to the city by bombardment The French press is adopting a slogan of “Village for village; church for church; town for town,” in re prinal for the German assault on French towns, The papers ar ing the government to iasue @ matum to Germany declaring that a German town will be destroyed for Hospital visitors ask em where were you wounded the and then breaks ir it, Tomm And the grate arransing qu as, “And © nurse with Tommy sig Gen. Berthelot’s armies &ppears to! * oes Germans hen re re behind | |Landlord Is Fined the Kretmhelde-Stellung line och: by Justice Brinker William «Snell, landlord, was reported. resist ” J rates encer bherneen encouseeres | 504 $20 and costs by Judge Otis | | Brinker Thursday on the charge of Beretofore is | forcibly removing Blanch Hurley, a | tenant, on the grounds that sh . day. Miss Hurley testified that . . in Wedding Cake, | Snell attempted to keep a sultcane wasn't sent ; ) ; , A whiz-bang sent a bunch of Yanks scurrying to a dugout "Did you hear that one, Elmer?” said one. “Did I hear it! said Another. “I heard it twice—once when it skidded, and once when I i i ; passed it on my road down here.” © ure ul months and are turning on th Oct. re slightly near Peronne enemy on the Riga front. { { ® mging to her in ment o! every wrecked French town destroy. |§ sacs raat! ABOARD TRAI [She Bl Jasin rnker raed tat Says Food Ruler The Price They Pay ee eee eae Germany’s Iron Ore Supply Oct. 5, 1917—Britieh announce capture of 4.446 prisoners y) Oct, 5, 1916—Russians renew offensive in Turkish Armenia Oct Rem jans annow the ave abandoned their five ureat i junder the law, landlords of houses| ‘The following statement waa is } bes ALARA { ' a The drive of the American army into Alsace-Lorraine will de wre yikes —. Standard | whe tenants pay rent by the | sued by the food administration < ee _ it prive Germany of its greatest source of tron praes Snty. ADE hotel, Saturday told the police tice that | month have no right to hold per~| asrurday | Liberty is no cheap thing. It costs dearly, and is 9) out ore abe could not make big guns and ammunition and vehicles she was robbed of a purse con-|sonal effects for payment of bills | ™** ae 2 ; . ; ‘ || He Conserves Oil ba plies taining $150 en route from Mt Snell Is an attorney tn the Leary| “The food administration 's doing Ht worth all its price. Without liberty, life is mere ex- Ix ———- ey ) Germany's entire iron ore output in 1913—the latest figures at ‘Vernon, ~ Ay ae? oe ae she building. ite best - secure pe ceed = istence, civilization crumbles, humanity is blinded and | ( hand—was 28,607,903 tons, Austria produced 2,039,324 tons. Ger. met on train. Martin tribution of sugar o #uR pate ‘ " : bey Te | } many now has access to the rich ore fields of Luxemburg, produc- has three small chiltren with her.| Serbiangs Repulse juation is serious, and there are se injustice is rife. ' Human beings love libe rty. Some } ing 6.595.460 tons annually on last reports—bringing the total avail- and was traveling from at Vernon ‘haa Ge | vere penalties for violation ot the | Of them die for liberty. Some of them fight for lib- Ij) able supply to 28,242,087. It is presumed that the ore fields of to Duluth, Minn. railroad tro-' rmans| Pi Russia are supplying Germany with but little iron tickets being stolen also. Mrs) roNnON, Cet. 5.—Repulse of | MEAT Meuiations ert: Some of them endure untold hardships for fj) } Approximately 18,000,000 tons will be cut from this supply, or Martin tg stranded in Seattle with- nforemmente war “Die ta misundegetanding.&. 9 liberty, Some of them now are in the trenches in | nearly half, when the Lorraine fields have been wrested from Ger. out wi a poli ~ ed by thé Merbian war office to. wedding cake was baked this week France, Macedonia, Palestine and Italy for liberty. many by the allies. And the loss of the Luxemburg fields, which niet. = T! co! m1 Jooking the he Youn | aa containing 14 pounds of sugar must come, will make another tremendous cut ; ‘woman descrited 20 years Yesterda: ” ¥ j old, plump and well dressed.” | geen 4. Ae Ai do wl pursued | bousht ena canning permit. ini More are going. ‘ ? | H. Mitier, Raden ‘hotel, First! them toward the oli SerbocTurkion | in onde, It was deemed proper! Many of them paid the highest price asked of man ave and Pine st, reported his frontier” (probably in the vicinity of Pot to bp atl ate —LIFE. VES GO BDO vi pocke ntain- | y, é The t ollowing punishment was de “ ing Reise, nae fia the Mg es Ana Oe. ee ee | vee The "jade household con Some of them fell into the clutches of the enemy | midst of a crowd in front of Lib- Sop tains five persons, entitling it tM of liberty, the Hun, and they paid a price almost un- erty Loan headquarters, at 2:30 p. }10 pounds of sugar per month for | fm. Friday. |McBride to Serve [kitchen and table use. They used f believably hard. | TH. Makiose, (1636 18 ave.) as Draft Adviser fie sala wasn glen Pose were The Germans took this soldier, Private Hickman, ff) Re: waynouce, chtahene #150 | Henry McBride, former governor and ha reed to reduce th prisoner of war. When he fell in their 9} Additional names of firms where, $450; Chas. H. Mueller, $750; Na- cash, and a number of valuable | 0% Washington, has received offi home © rf consumption by hi papers, including a check for $90. | “lal notification of his appointment or to one pound per person per se: eae as an industrial adviser to the dis month, for three mon to make | trict draft board by the depart. up for the sugar used in thé wed Deserter Escapes ment of labor Friday Jing cake It is the work of the industrial ad. The food administration cor From Fort Lawton! .1. to protest the man power : siders the publication of this mat John B. Warrington, alias|of necessary war work plants and | ter the final warning to the public 100 per cent of the employers have tional City Bank, $2,950; Nordby subscribed to the Fourth Liberty| Fisheries Co., "$1,750; | Northern Loan, were furnished by the pay-/Bond & Mortgage Co., $450; North- hands he weighed 146 pounds. Today, five months later, he weighs 98. That is how the Huns starved their pris- oner of war. The Huns amputated one of Hero Hickman’s legs without Coe ote wc, rl ae ttee Saturday morn-|¢n Life Ins. Co., $5,100; North- ROBINSON = roll. bond committee Saturday pr ag a = epi Lumber Mfx. Co, $550; Oceldent Lumber & Timber © ing as follows Aabling Be W. Champlin Robinson of Mary e Seed Co, land has been made director of Joquine West, deserter from the to help weed unessential workers that canning sugar must not be giving him an anaesthetic. The only al conservaion for the U. 8 fuel| Arnstein Simon Pe bs 1 Butter United States army, captured in| for the draft — used for any other purpose, and food they gave him was a daily ration Jf) ®¢™istration Bowen, Walter & Co. Hag Beattle recently and turned over to ate Se that if sugar bought on canning f Hawi of thin. £ d or emrrmecatinces & Farrar, Inc., $1,250 ee evened Tem tm fort| WANTS BLOODHOUNDS bent ee 22 thing henide ; : ¢, a ee oe a eee ae . 01 canning of preserving of fruit, that wo slices o' lac reac guardhouse early Saturday morning TO GET HOSE THIEF prompt ana serious will be tr i ad foc Uberty! by tag ipa wnt Loree the | C. G. Duke, $41 N. 67th at, Sat-|taken im every case Hickman paid for rty! roof, leved to be en ro ped =» : 4 i" ‘ for Eritish Columbia in an auto| "ray reported 50 yards of rubber | Private Swann, here pictured, has just nome stoi widence he is A : eee by 8 friend building at 66th and Dayton’ Union Men Present been returned from a German prison When Warrington was captured " mn 7 ve. He preferred a special re . é: neveral days ago, he assaulted the “V., He preferred a special re E¥anson Membership § camp. While a prisoner he was oper juent " 2 patrolman who somal the “atrest | S04 tram the office of Sherif} Mayor Hanson received a large ated on without an anaesthetic and with a hammer, inflicting a severe cut on mad head Stringer to track down the thief. silver shield Saturda with nothing to ease the pain. When Bch’ cident Lumber & Timber Co..| Richmond Paper. © $2,600; Pacific Lamp and Supply |erts Burkhardt Co. $55 2 Co., $800; Record Publishing Co., |) Dock We & her arehouse, ating table. him to be an s M i | $1,150; Reliable Transfer & Btor-| ccuttie Cabinet Works, $43 i ES MINUTE MEN TO MEET ot the Boiler the pain caused him to flinch and cry i Will be abl age Co. $1,400; Ripley Fish Co.| tie toe Co, $1,050: Seattle Oyster PARENT-TEACHERS’ SING | The Minute Men of North Park! makers, Iron Shipbuilders and Helr out, a German nurse slapped him | ul you able $1,450; Safety Ladder Mfg. Co.|s16use, $1,080: Simmons Ca, $800; The Webster Parent-Teachers’ as-| will meet at North Park hall Mon- | ers’ union, No. 104 id é ‘ | $700; Wainwright & McLeod, $300}! snaror Bros, $2,300; Standard Con- Bociation will hold a community|day at & p. m "You've given the union a square across the face as he lay on the oper- | to say Yashington Title Insurance Co.!rectionery Co., $2,000: Stavig Bro Ging at the Webster school, W 67th) The Minute Men of Precinct 81/| deal.” said President James Martin | 0; Washington Elec. & Mfg. | g4oo Gteart:. Wand | nd 32nd ave. N. W., Tuesday| will meet in the Queen Anne high |in presenting it ‘The boys want ‘ |Co., $1,300; National City Bank, Swift's Drug Co. $2,200; * Pho at 8 p. m. Ischool Monday at 8 p. m. |to show ir appreciation Swann paid for liberty! $2,950; Mars Smelting Co. $1,100; | conte Cafe, e s 4 4 ; Pacific Coast Barber Shop, $1,0( Bank, This is Private Hawley, wounded in . ; : za. | $3950; 8 is ti y, Goodrich Rubber Co, $600; Na ‘ 4 ~ oe . * m4 $1,65 Varsity Garage, $1580; 1 both legs before the Huns took him. 5 SOM AK ARTEL. “Ds: 05.900 soso; | Washington Cedar & Fir, Produce 1 r : i " i Aabling Boy Seed Co, $650; | Go. $1,050; Washington Title Trust GEN. SCO" LOADS A MULE Gross neglect of his wounds in the Howd ! Acme Cartage Co. $1,600; American |) $150; West & Wheeler, $2,300; a ah iaslllsieansleneten REE a x prison camp rendered both legs ab- s Bank Bldg., $700; American Meat), ‘vy Westerman, $1,850; Westing- Co., $1,000; American Oyster House, Service Dept.), $1,300; Western Dry Goods | 0; Ballard) Go $9,000; White I & Yukon Hardware Co., Inc., $200; Battersby | Route, $3,000; Wilcox Co. $400. 4 back from Over JM) & smith, $2,550; “Baxter Transter| Co. $1,800; Blanc’s Cafe, $1,450; 50; Bowden, house & Mfg. Co. ( solutely useless. Both could have been saved if the Huns had given him but slight attention. Now both are shrivelled up to the size of a child’s ab arm, Hawley paid for liberty! Now, good people, we who stay at home and do not risk the dangers of the trenches “over there,” are never within the range gf German guns, never called upon to go over the top and thrust our bodies against the gleaming steel of the German bayonet, are we going to let soldiers like Hickman and Swann and Hawley do all the paying for liberty—ours as well as theirs? Our government asks us to help pay. It takes money to send the Hickmans, Swanns, Hawleys, to fight the Huns. It takes money to clothe, feed, and arm them, It takes money to bring them back from German prison camps and nurse them back to health. You are not asked to give your life. You are not even asked to GIVE money. You are merely LOAN- $800; Arnstein, Simon & Co., $1,8 when he comes #@ '*°’: *: California, $ | Roston Dentists, $1 'Gagzam & Arnold, $3¢ Rroderick & Bascom Rope Co. 60; Burke Building, $1,050; Canadian Pacific $1,250 $1,000; There? amt Railway Freight D J. A. Campbell Cheasty'’s Haberdashery, t | Chicago Machinery & Equipment | Co, $400; Chris Sign & Wall Paper $1 World’s Greatest French Tenor Cline & Carpenter, (ee Clossen & Kelley's Drug “Takes Caruso's crown in one | Store, $500; Colgroves, $1,850; Con-|I single effort."—Herman Devries, |tinental Pipe Co., : Wm. |] Chicago Critic. | Cruse, $300; Dwyer & Co., $550; R. ————— &J Comedy $450; Dodwell & aie aby nsfer | Co., ngineering anettl Cafe A. DEBRUILLE, ; arich Rubb Co, French Violinist $1,600; Goodrich Rubber Co. a eat Western Publishing — Co. TRUC, French Pianist 00; Hatfields, $650; Hibbard wi tase Stewart Co. $5,800; Hirsch Cycle . $500 Hoge Building Cafe, $650; Hollywood Gardens, $800; £ z $600; J. & M. Cafe, Hotel Rit $1,050 rag Co., $550 Co,, $800; Dreamland Cafe, $2 Se ceat tater’ tien ae Comereee's, St:080; Great "rD | Pacific Outf g Co. $1,500; Pa- Publishing Co., $300; Hemenway &] ei. state , Co, 0: Moser Co., Inc... $1,150; Hollywood | poarce “ $450; $ Lunch, $1,160; Hopper Kelly Co. peters, fA te ee s 00; Hub Cafe, $850;,M. V. Kel-| $1 999: Caf. Pettibone Co, $% logs. $800 Ma tia Milling Co. J Purser 200: Radford & Co. $1,760; Moran I Co., $1,050; Oc-| s509: Record Publishing Co. $1,150; | | 1 ona Contributed to $1,350; Johnson's Cafe, $1,150; Fifth and University ING it. LL Jones Tire Co., $900; Kimball Har- M E ‘ ; rm y wi " ith i th L. L. by on Catering Co. $500; John! jonda: venin, 7 The money will be returned to you with interest. ? Tanah Oa, 48h) Dlood Cranafer Ockcher sth Co,, $2,450; J. W. Lothrop, $1,250 Es ee a = | THE Hu ic tape rage pi Mas- |] PRICES (Including War Tax): nolla| Milling Co. $1,750 irs ; "3 is $2.75, $2.20, $1.65, $1.10 four mustard bottles into a case 0 Smelting Cq, $1,100; Metropolitan . Takes Vengeance on HIPPODROME J iris Si Soo. tps G E jcontaining six dozen eggs in a com tan Taxicab Co., $900; J. J. Mont Mail Orders Now j | roceryman’ 8 TFS) piaint tied wy 1. Ita, Japaneso | Iifth at University omery, $ Mutual Life Ins. Co., a Used { Maj.-Gen, Hug | $2,600 Monte Carter (Oak | Mason & Hamlin Piano Used ) the benefit of the 5. Scott, former chief of staff of the army, visited the Bryn Mawr horse show, held for | Lena Doe, colored, 1025 Washing: storekeeper at 825 Yesler way, Sat tish-American wag relief fund, and gave an exhibition of how to load a pack-m ton st. was charged with hurling | urday. Theatre), $5,060; H, A. Morrisey,

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