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the allies, and will remain brutes,” “The alleged change in thelr con-| hearts.” Work Harder Than ff i _ “Haig. Bi PAGE THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1918. ISS MINISTER GETS KAISER’S ANSWER IN BERLIN _—, TOTAL OF 1,921 DRAFT BOARDS Ss | TERMS ARE MET, _IS ONE REPORT _ Oy United Press Leased Wi tre, | ® Direct to The Stor) BASLE, Oct. 12.—The National Zeitung « announces that Germany's reply to President Wilson was presented to the Swiss minister at Berlin this morning. AMSTERDAM, Oct. assert the to President 12. —Some German papers Wilson ACCEDES FULLY to i Aah Others declare that only far-| reaching advances are made. reply to President Wilson's armistice note Germany's red to the Swiss minister in is reported to have been del Berlin. this morning. Some German newspapers declare the reply accedes to Wilson’s demands—which included complete evacuation of occupied territory and a statement as to which German faction was represented in the proposal before an armistic could be considered. Others said that only far-reaching conces tained in the reply sions are con- | The most definite lcerning the German answer received in unofficial dispatches the United Press yesterday Naming Conditions These stated that Germany w agree to evacuate France and I gium provided suations begin in a neutral country befor the withdrawal was completed, but that AustroGerman troops would remain in occupied portions of Rus }sia and Rumania until is signed The reply drawn up AUSTRIANS AND TURKS WILLING TO SIGN PEACE By United Press Leased Wiel Direct to The Star 1 «sx Metal a * reports con were to peace been of is said to have under supery Prince Max, the German chan: but to have required at a conference his military and civil chiefs and rulers of the various German atates. At the same time, Auptria-H gary and Turkey reported have notified Germany that they will accept Wilson's terms for an armistice An Amsterdam dispateh said that official announcement of this was expected at once. Turkey is reported undertaken separate for an immediate peace son. jon Hungary and Turkey are expect- ed immediately to announce ac ceptance of President Wilson's armistice terms, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispateh from Bertin, received by way of Amsterdam. A Central News dispatch from Am _ Sterdam says that Austria and Hun | &ary have informed Germany that | they will accept Wilson's terms. The Express deciares the allies have agreed on a common policy in fegard to peace negotiations. Reports are in circulation here that Turkey has already approached United States government with the intention of obtaining peace with confirmation are also to have thru Wil Battle Situation In the meantime, the allies con tinue their advance on wide fronts The British, striking along a 22 milk front between Lens and Cam | brat yesterday evening. Imes to within a mile of Douai on the west, That important city ts now practically surrounded There was no major fighting ap parently on the remainder of the front north of the St sif. The German retirement in the Champagne region has carried them northward in the bend of the Alane/ Huns Are Brutes and Will Remain So, Says Balfour LONDON, Oct. 12—"Do not for- that while asking for peace, | Germany is perpetrating the most cowardly crimes,” declared Foreign | Minister Balfour, in addressing American editors here. Balfour @haracterized the sinking of the/to the general line of the Retourne ship Leinster as “barbarism.” |river and the PauvresVouziers| “They were brutes before the war | highway. The latter town has been he said.| occupied by the French Evacuation of the Chemin des Dames region by the enemy is also Proceeding rapidly and Italians are Craonne. In the Balkans the Serbians are | within 12 miles of their former capital Nish. The French and stitution bas not changed their almost upon Ever, Is Haig’s Word to Troops| LONDON, Oct. 12.—Officers and eectonea ‘not ite be diverted from | Ward. Italian troops continue to \ their t task by rumors that|*?0ve the Austrian Une northward ge |in Albania. peace is at hand,” in a xpecial Fat 3 to Albania, where they ore in contact Bois Meuse and “It is more than ever indispensa- | Ble that you, concentrate your ener-| on a decisive result,” sald the hag i Stop Americans’ BY FRANK J. TAYLOR ee a (United Press Correapondent) Mention Prince as WITH THE AMERICAN FIRST ARMY, Oct. 12.—(Noon.}—The most Wilhelm Successor sturdorn tighting is under way along WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.—Prince the Aire river Eitel is prominently mentioned in| Juvin, where the Germans are at Germany as successor to the throne | tacking in great force. fm case the kaiser abdicates, diplo-| To the eastward the American con atic. cables declare. |ter is progressing better. The Ger: mans are putting up a strong ma o . chine gun resistance from the Austrian Premiers ie Vore: (went ot the north of Brieulles) File Resigaations "ry. (ocr i hin desperate strur COPENHAGEN, Oct. 12.—Both| gie to hold back the Americans, has | Baron von Hursarek, the Austrian thrown divisions into the fighting | Premier, and Doctor Wekerle, the without any regard to order, and few Hungarian premier, have resigned, | of them can be identi fied according to a Vienna dispatch re ceived by the Politiken today. | Sadat mmerdic (Unknown Hero of Walter Hines Page Russia Dies of F Iu Russian “workman,” who ¢ Taken to Hos; pital |in the Providence hospital from ~ fluenza, has proven to have been the on Arrival in ru. Sige: commander of a Russian | AN ATLANTIC PORT, Oct. 12.—| submarine who waged a heroic fight Walter Hines Page, former American against Germany while Russia re ambassador to Great Britain, arrived mained in the war, according > here today, Hix physical condition | papers found in the dead man's ef. was such that he was carried down fects the gangplank and immediately Lieut. Kirill B. Logidze was the taken to a4 hospital. name of the man who fled to Ameri- Page has been suffering from! ea from Russia and worked in a lo. hheart disease for several months. | eal shipyard while waiting an ap He went to Scotland in an effort to pointment in the American navy. He Tecover his health but was not) was the recipient of two honor benefited. He then decided to re-| crosses presented by the duma turn to the United States and go to refused to submit to the Bolaheviki iis home in North Carolina when the czar was overthrown i ame os [Pres ‘Wilson Buys t A 4 a0 | * Bonds in Theatre); President | NEW YORK, Oct Wilson, at the performs ing musical comedy last evening autographed bonds to the value of $750,000 in an hour's whirlwind w fhe president, himself, took $2 worth, and James W. Gerard, form: ambassador to Germany, subscribed | for $15,000 Chorus girls were ning | the 12. anything for sale say, real estate, a business of any kind or an automobile— and you wish to place same in the hands of a dealer for quick dispo: you should turn to the Classified Columns of The Star and select one of the dealers ad. vertiving therein These dealers awake to the advan tages of telling the merits of your listing to the largest audi ence the west, © of a lead. kept busy from customers in the president's box, run. ITALY HONORS DAVISON ROME, Oct, 12—H. P. Da head of the American Red Cross, been ma grand offi of the € der of the Crown, of Italy, and with the Order of the Red Cross of Merit lao, has i in GE ALEXIEFF DEAD COPENHAGEN, Oct It is re ported here that Alexieff, for mer commander-in-chief of the Rus sian armies, is dead or. | of the kaiser with | negotiations | carried ‘their | Gobain mas | and the French | Serbians are pushing westward into! with the Austrians retreating north Grand Pre and St. | and | 000 | uinlen to | | the KAISER CAUGHT IN PEACE TRAP OF OWN MAKING r Dispatch From Robert | J. Bender United Press Leased Direct to The Star | ty Wire | * WAS! Preside movement at Germany's rear bs accentuating the difficulty of the kalver now struggling to save himself from the p trap he tried to spring on the allion Reported by Austria dent's 14 leaves G ate po to her them unqualified and Turkey prinetples y in sition acceptaance of the prest for p extremely either an She vansaln’ demands in the opinion of ox ts here, | xy Prince Max 6 bet the ine Germany wi man the Went and the must or is expected to reichata and reply to appe: re dis " Preat With the steadily of F Germany s for ons inquiries. nies retreating constant blows with * Rast ery! Mix of the } chancellors that have passed phantoms over the reichstag }rum since war broke out The state department has no offt-| cial information thy German way, Department # cautioned the favorable nat ributed to the reply in wom: ie most likely part jerman prop: No cred should acterization» peac mt in ne of ke romt ny ng ti note is on the fe one preas por ts of the be given to un the ar © Conditions Bad sndition# are worse than in the history of Ger many. According to reports to this ‘overnment, the indications increase that “Germany ty a crumbling edi: | fice On | “S ictualed tions Jand the Well the Interior at any time of these says In part are no longer di ndages lackin th not te standa 1 the itals The alimentary amentab are at phyaicians iw lost and back to ite years.” known Prof | re © tely wt lke known race | brought » old for ma | The we | that “the German | for mercy before six allied bomba: nt tinues and the day when thin ar rives no government will be to |atop the pressure of the people for at price. The p suffered too much | succumb to thin ceaseless ange | Austria in hard proned even me In addition to the {constant upri sof the oppressed nationalition in her borders, the people of Hungary are now demand ing & separate governm | ficials here look to by Emperor } ate efforts to minion and save his throne. TURKS HASTEN r, reports will months if of towns people ery the con any ne deaper hin do “PLANS TO QUIT. SINKING SHIP BY RAYMOND CLAPP E WASHINGTON, Det | With the allied armies driving | ahead in the Near East to rees | tablish their front on the Danube | river, Turkey is accelerating her efforts to withdraw from the | war. tentative negotiations ted for the last Hlowing with the allies, re | tow days, Turkey in now said to be | sending an appeal to President Wil son, probably stmilar to that of Bal garia, urging his aid in obtaining for | Turkey an armi nd her retire ment Teut Her po | coming more Jand her surrender is expec to prevent comp an a n erent in be more ar dang oy disan mo | menta ter Gen armien | tablished « key will be aid from Germany When the allies get thin waterway under fire of their guns, barge ing munitions Turkey via Black sea must cc their tions, and the Ottoman en wiped out of the war Austria's Plight This accomplished, the Dardanelles 1 be thrown open to the allied | fleet, Odessa opened as a base for re |construction of an I front Russia—and the plight of Austria will become increasingly It is possible, therefore many is exerting every pressure to hold her ally in line or engineer Tur key's exit in such fashion as to get what salvage she can out of the ruins, For that reasonoffi | withholding comm |reported Turk maneuver | ctat are at hand. rna Seeks Peace Pasha of Smyr Ath i“ with allied repr Tho he is a Young rman A ws wrecked Turk: » the allies are re-os front, Tur all hope of by th ut anube f from bear the opera ire to jbe rious stern in xerious that Ger fala here are latent offi nt on the until advices Sm tahmy na, is now in arate governor 8, seek a Hep peace tives there | he is anti y refused to yield to the Enver and his vas nople. He in ambitious pendent of Turkey p | dickering on that basis | leaders at Athens, Greek P ted » Greece, cabled | legation he The reduced from | los reported ‘The condition in which he city is «palling words ean deseribe the atrocities committed b | ians,” the official statement from the Greek legation declared. | “The remaining like ghosts th German and has ste: of als at Constanti to be inde and is ullied with ndvices say Venizelos of emier entering Macedonian the Greek etions det to today population of Seres » 000 to 2,000 las been Venize found that horrors and the Bulgar inhabitanta look | more an human beingy The atrocities in Belgium | could be considered child's play com pared to what the miserable | populations of Bast Macedonia have perverts need.” Gre [ing the following letter to all busi nem houses | that our full duty will | ¢ | by other merchants, THE PEACE | BEGGAR DF Sarxeay MURDER MOTIVE IS PROBLEM TO INVESTIGATORS New evidenes came to light in the murder of Jon Murray, master baggage checker at the Canadian Pacific dock, which Sheriff Stringer says draws the net tighter around William Gott stein, in the county jail, charged with killing Murray in « lonely wood near Des Moines, We have now found a witness says Stringer, “who will confirm the story of Chauffeur Clarence Good. who says be brought Gottstein from the scene of the murder by auto Oc tober 4, the day the crime was com mitted. This ‘nan is R. N, Wilson, whom Good picked up as a passen ger. Wilson says Gottstein was «it ting by the roadside until he entered jood's auto, and that he was brush ing off his clothes and acting nery ously.” A hat also has been found by sher- iff's deputies near the murder scene, age of $1,500,000 a day to be rai — = 7 ysl a 04 phe paca which is believed to have belonged to ‘ Muray jday, Approximately $8,896,100 must yet rubecribed County Chairman Wills the “doubleup” campaign at the Dexter Horton bank, the Seattle National bank and the Standard O11 | company Friday afternoon. Workers in 45 firms have already doubled their quotas under the new plan. George MoGillivray, industrial secretary, has announced that this division will probably subscribe $3,500,000, a sum slightly in excess of that wubseribed toyghe third loan. Sailors Buy Bonds Subscriptions have be at Bremerton ‘The $50,000 mark has been reach ed in subscriptions taken over the counter at Liberty Loan head quarters Shipyard addresses were made Friday by James Duncan, secretary of the Central Labor council: A. P. Mulligan, organizer of the boiler makers’ union; William Short, presi dent of the state federation of labor. nd = Major Robinson, nadian army veteran | State Chairman y again come Chairman C. 8 Wills of the King | ment that unty committee said this step | seattle are lagging behind in their 1d not interfere with the Fourth | joan efforts, while the rural dis perty Loan campaign as the bank | tricts are crossing the line almost staffs have b working almort| without, exception night day since the drive) ‘The Fifth regiment Canadian gar started rison artillery band will return to it is imperative that they get ©) Victoria, B. C., Sunday, after t rest,” he sald. “We want them to| ing taken an active part in the loan have a holiday until Monday, when | campaign. they will back on the job with) faving crowds will fre to visit the war tri hibit at King st. Register Monday or Tuesday for Nov. 5 Election | remain, Mon “EMPLOYES OF | 100 FIRMS TO DOUBLE QUOTA With employes of more than 100 Seattle business houses out to double their Liberty Loan quotas, increased impetus was given to the pay roll bond com mittee’s “doubleyour - subserip tlon” drive Saturday | Saturday morning the names of the Beattle General and Minor hoapt tale and the Seward hotel were added the lat workers ha ‘Thia is in addition to the list of 45 200 per cent firms Friday Country Chairman C. 8 Wills, thru the payroll "bond club ts send Only two days day and Tuesday. for voters to get their names on the registra- tion list for the general election. Chief Regiatration Clerk Wi Ham A. Gaines will keep a statt on hand until ¢ p. m. during those two days Only 200 regis- trations have been recelved to date. All theme who failed at the spring election. Mayor Hanson wan elected, register again in order to November Registration offices are in the city comptrolier’s office, first floor, county-city building. vote when must vote to | | | | te hotels, women sellers on Second ave, and a rejuvenated head quarters force got under way to put Seattle over the $20,000,000 mark by night Subscriptions to the reached $18.103,900, with Sends Letter the possibility of not meeting the obligation which has been placed upon her by our government. You will be in accord desire to Joave no stone un in our tx to “Beat “ loan have an aver with our turned quota “The response of the employes of Seattle innt ns thru the pay roll bond club has been of ha nature that we are reluctant to} ank another canvaas for additional subscriptions, We believe, however would be undone to you the additional — wub-| raise our Lining Torn Out Uning torn out,” | Btringer TT wae probably to prevent identification.” New theories are being investigat ed, Stringer which may clear up the puzzling motive Stringer Believes that Murray may have ponsenned damaging knowledge of gigantic smuggling ations of fold, liquor, and possibly contraband drugs It in known that he often returned |to his room at the Cedarburg hotel | with rolls of bilis during the middie of the morning It in known that Gottsetin repeat edly went int ray in the room. Where did the ~ “The aid done was ntarted if we did not convey suggestion that scriptions might be obtainable from some of your emp Sacrifices are being demanded of our citizens which will cut deep into our habits) of living We have established an honor list of the institutions employes double their quota Additional obtain will the totaling $165,000 received from the sailors navy training station and whore subscriptions the give us patriotivm earners which further of the of thin you evidence and f money come from? wage salary city.” Employe Sherman Gottstein and Murray? Sheriff Stringer is trying to trace wh the answers. Gottstein is said to have destroyed a number of papers while riding to Seattle in an automobile from the spot where Murray was found dead, u ling to Stringer A wearch of Murray's be has failed to furnish any valua idence The first degree murder charge hts already been filed against Gottstein. He requested the services of Walter Ful- ton, also, as defense attorneys. Evidence has been brought to light indicatigg that cated inthe operations of a big boot legeing ring. According to Sheriff Stringer, |aum of $750 was paid to Gottstein by Pete Dereiko, soft drink merchant of Tolt, on the promise that he would double his money liquor to be smug from Chicago. Dereiko, according of the Ford Motor Co. Clay Dexter Horton National of Commerce the Seattle National bank, re ported Saturday that 200 per cent drives were xweeping toward the louble . Banks Closed banks were, closed Co. Rank bank and « ongings ne ev pattie Satur Swalwell has forward with a state kane, Tacoma and on and be permitted »hies train on ex nd Occidental ave. from 11 4. m. to 5 p.m. No conges tion of people will be permitted, and no muste will be employed to attract | crowds. There will be no night exhi- bitions. The train has returned from a tour of the state In ald of the Lib: an, There will be no h en No on banks ey can the exous give closing for We of not have the buying street up and down Second ave, our headquarters at Second and Cherry ix open for subseriptions and bond men located in all the prinetpal hotels.” Scouts assigned to eve in the city started th Liberty Loan Columbus day ttle Saturday morning. lesmen in the leading onda sellers wn today led into Seattle to Stringer, make the profit’ for him, |nounced the investment lost, because Chicago police fiseated the liquor. Stringer believes will attempt to prove an alibi "He has attempted to outline activities on the day of the murd says the sheriff, “and says he came |downtown late, stopped in a drug | and went to Pantages theatre afternoon ‘ We also know kept at his home im nger from t home to a law |yer's office Friday, This, we under- stand, is a gun that has been in the house for a long time, and not the but an ws are had con block Fo! drive while that Gottstein th in bond # Thieves rifled the pockets of four in the Granite hotel, 1905 Fifth ave., his during the night ° Suggests All Merchants Tere Friday Receipts Into Bonds; Titus Starts the Ball Rolling ‘sc’ £'ine'o sion Se Every merchant in Seattle to ‘We have decided that a good way | body of the dead man.” turn his ire pis of to help put the Liberty loan over big Dereiko, according to the sheriff, next Friday, October 18, into Lib. | Would » have a Liberty Bond to Attorney Willian Wray, ’ rs’ day,” his statement reads. vator from the 33d district, erty bonds! he gross receipts of our business and engaged him to try and get the This is th will be turned into Liberty bonds, |money back from Gottstein, zen J. Titus, president of the Chaun-| “If a merchant thinks he has done | was not accomplished, however. Wright aurants Co., which all he ean for the Liberty bond cam-| Dereiko's story is alleged to in ates four stores here High, and that he cannot do this, let | volve a policeman and itus will start the him stop and think of the theatres of attstein is alleged to have himself. His announce the past week, and then do it, and do to them to demon pledges receipts of the it willingly. the ramifications of the liquor regardless of how Will Seattle merchants follow suit? | syndicate and prove that the inve ‘Titus is first. Who will be second? | ment would be safe and profitable, store in th that a revolver, was taken by a to went suge om made by Ha oey a ball ent today four stores, his idea Ww taken rolling This This | | | detention f the crime. | conference with Mur- | on a shipment of | says that Gottstein failed not only to! had been | warehouse | | are being reported on the | day | with | of failure to report the Spanish in | m |regards fo sanitation and | fluenza, distribution of | 1,000, with over score of deaths What were the relations between | | has retained Walter Allen and) ottstein was impli: | | profiteering the | | Oct. FLU GASES IN PREPARE ORDER SEATTLE NOW NUMBER LISTS b day morning 79 new Seattle draft officia Spanish Influenza cases had been | Suturday, determin reported to the central health | numbers of iocul mer department from the different clty districts, while 100 patients were detained in the old 1 house emergency hospital, under the city health commissioner, Dr. Meliride, No deaths had been reported up to noon Saturday, save those that occurred on Fri. be done plete Kach board must make new lints of its complete registration. Then liste of registration namen. phahetical order, must be prepared, and when all thin work iw done, the bulletins will be ported at the local boards, where regintered men may find out their or der numbers * were K the who r busy, order tered service plember 12, Nets have arrived from », but it will be some time e the order numbers of & rattle are determined draft offs bee of enormous of clerical that must the lists will be com The mas hingte mer nay amount work before total of influenza canes report ng the civil population of Se wince lant Saturday, when the epidemic started, in 1,921, while canes average of A comparatively small of fatalities has occurred jon in the shipyards re unchanged Satur ws being reported from all Against the disease shipyard of the Skinner & Eddy corporation 12,000 employes, is the heav sufferer, with 100 1 two hoxpitals, More ner & Eddy employes have cinated against 350 daily perdentage The witua rm 106 New Cases of Flu in San Francisco BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12.—To » out & campaign against the influenza ©, Califor. a health officers will meet at River. | wide Tuesda Dr. W. H. Kellogg. nec retary of the state board wf health, announced te One hundred and reported in § last 24 hours, brin sing the total umber of cases up to 371 ne practically prow n contained ir 4.000 Skin- | m been vac- | Spanish influenz ni One Sailor Dies One death, but no ne reported at the Eremerte Saturday, excellent reported in checking the epidemic casen were navy yard progress being the spread of ||), Bremerton eivilians, || as well ax sailors, are restrained from visiting Seattle until the ban is lifted in both localities. Seventy merchant marine recruits are under medical care at the W Seattle station, while the authorities at the naval training camp have re fused to make public the number of cases or deaths there “Seattle doctors are both government and city mix were day to maintain the supply, request- meanwhile that all private phy. siclans notify them in advance whould they desire any Still Experimental Information released concerning the vaccine by the Bremerton naval wuthorities, thru the naval labora tories, where {t originated, reveals that the vaccine is still entirely ex Perimental, altho believed to be ef. fective. The vaccine is obtained from the tissues of a diseased indi vidual, obtaining a maximum of resistance to exterior influences when administered with a hypoder- mic needle into the arm of a healthy person. It is harm and only in rare cases produces an after- effect of sickness Advices from Pittsburg, Pa, ip dicate that Dr. George F. Baer, of the Homeopathic hospital staff, has discovered a cure and preventive for Spanish Influenza, announcing his discovery to be a preparation of iodine and creosote. Government officials connected with the public health service will investigate his alleged discovery with a view of national application in event it is | what Dr. Baer claims. dobnson Is Sick Washington dispatches contain news of the illness of Capt. Albert Johnson, former congressman, now in service in the chemical warfare division at Camp Humphreys, Va. Capt. Johnson contracted influenza Wednesday, it is believed, and is now seriously ill at a camp hospital. Eight thousand cases of Spanish influenza are reported from Wash- lington, D. C., several’ congressmen being stricken mildly R. Ballen, Seattle, West Coast Lumbermen’s association, is seri- ously i! with influenza at the Con- | gress hotel, Chicago The following two Seattle men died Friday, in addition to 11 deaths reported in Friday's Star. August Webber, 33, 419 Washing ton st., stricken Thursday, died Fri- day in the city hospital Alex Bibeoff, Port Angeles, strick. en Thursday while on a public street, died Friday in the city hospital ing wronging because fluenza cases that fall under their attention to the elty health depart ment,” said Health Commissioner McBride Saturday “It in imponsible to Accurate check, or even when the ban may they do. I have knowledge that prominent jocal physicians with Jarge practices, which must at the present time include influenza . have failed to report a single keep an determine be lifted, unless were 602 new cases and 13 deaths of Spanish influenza dur ing the 24 hours ending Friday night Both McBride and Dr. T. D. Tittle, state health comminsioner, urge extra precautions on the part of every individual in the city in prevent ive measures. Churches Closed | Openair church services in Seat le are still forbidden for Sunday, | 1 Scores of clergymen from different city districts have laid seige to the offices of the city health physicians with requests to be allowed to address their congre gations under the dome of heaven, and been refused, Dr. McBride say- ing, “Religion that won't keep for two weeks to save people's lives isn't worth having.” Late developments Friday were reports of 45 new cases of in $,000 addi-| tional injections of antitoxin vac cine, the report of the gradual pread of the epidemic over the en state of Washington, and the of 78 “flu” cases in the old court house emergency hospital More than 41,000 doses of vaccine have been distributed in Seattle within the week, and the city laboratories are working night and | th Cut out this review of the week's news and mail it to soldiers, sailors or other Seattleites away from home cUT HERE The Seattle Star __ Weekly News Letter for Men in Service SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, OCT. 12, 1918 No. 1 Soldier singers for loan campaign result of “flu.” more than] | return to camp, “Flu” epidemic erips Crecho-Slovaks to for hootleggers raised minimum. Rail 4019 | 51.000 Five local army $1,000 diamond Negro porter with found it on held for theft. Says he platform. hospitals, public the pols tres, and all clones ne 1 churches, meetings - City combed for engineers to enter navy ‘omminsioners fire many county! ones syes and raise salaries of bal- ance Chamber of Commetce arranging to send 12 care of apples to Wash- Sidewalk spitters ordered arrested! ington boys in Fr ih cag ~~ | Masked Counctiman Erickson says $15,-/ Supplies for 600,000 too much for city to pay for traction lines. Red Cross workers make “tin” victimes. Frank Shaffer, Northwestern head of International Bible Students, gets from| new trial on sedition charge. | Baseball fans hear Hugh Jen ger Detroit Federal rent commission handles | Sings. manger Detrolt pottus dias canes of shipyard workers against | frond wahe. andio of police “na” niet recovers panish | Candy men_would limit purchases Cops grab five trunks from Mon-/to two pounds p customer, filled with booze © ee ty-nine “U" recruits ordered * training camp. Twe brother of Gen. to offic attle to wear old can have surplus hing, is army Jim Pr Pershing, clothes #0 wool Call issued for 200 Seattle women to do canteen work in France—none under 2 ars. holds up James} —— with gun, and gets $1 call N eRro, Moore, 420 31st units for volun George Woolan, 69, retired gineer, suicides with rovolver a ith ave mma Ponel nded as bon M, Pratt and Seattleites, br ‘Thousands of ship: and other citizens get “tla” serum rd “shot” workers of anti- Ring with 12 diamonds stolen from | J. W. Douglas, 1903 Jefferson st. Cheese advane Five hundred join Seattle branch | of Unconditional Surrender for Ger- | many club. | s 1 cent a pound, » Williams, first man to enlist nton, dead in Panama from ona Re from R Jearn Unele Sam will) pneun Is on women's shoes. Shoe men ban high hi Saieideoe “Point entrance exams to be of W. |. West held at U in| Canadian killed Donald MeQu r fe attleite, — friends rn. ttstein, re of William G held for murder baggage checker 1 estate man, John Murray, action, School board again refuses to give women high school teachers equal i pay with men State health commissioner reports flu” spreading thruout Washingtoa rural districts. Durglar rifles clothes of Henry Myer, Empire Apartments, gets $17 from one pocket and overlooks $400 in another Prosecution started of May Mills, who seized drafted man’s motorcycle use installment payments wn- to work mpleted loafers. "Go ord: Mayor Hanson contin sit Mayor probes police > use city 5 per cent finame promotions. laude Hunt t letic director at w # ath- 10,000 nade. ppeal fo kers is more shipyard - brakeman, killed im Coyner, 16 hours after hii smash wedding id Community labor able-bodied workers industries boards into ess drive instilled with fresh on Columbus day, urday, Sau Fieh famine threatened,