The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 20, 1917, Page 10

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U.S. MAY GIVE peace moves Deen s0 persistent as to crea tation in allied countries Dewspapers, who been ascertained, Window and rescued tained injuries or not newspaper here, fan Quentin tode hit life term, pend P Bis case to the United States T GERMAN SOLDIERS DRIVE UNCLAD RUMANIAN WOMEN THRU STREETS Here are some of war atrocities in Roumania P oy Burton, EACH SOLDIER manager of the London Dally Mall, saye ought to be told to America What sort of an enemy, in fact, we are fighting?! asked ' {] Burton Why not expose the fiendish deviitry which caused thousands BY L. HARPER LEECH of poisoned candies to be dropped from German aeroplanes for WASHINGTON, D. C., June Rumanian children to pick up and eat 20.—Insurance and protection Why not the tragic story of how the queen's little boy, her —or more pensions and poll youngest, picked up one of these poisoned sweets In her garden thes? This is one of the live ate it, sickened almost at once, hovered between life and death war questions now being for weeks and finally died In her arms worked out by experts of the Why not the shocking story of how brutal German soldiers department of commerce, who forced gentie Rumanian women to disrobe in public and then are laying plans for the insur ance of every soldier sent to drove them in groups thru the streets gehen ie GRISIS. SENATE SHIFTS PARIS, June 20.—French news. papers today hailed the tion of M. Hoffmann from th 5 mage "swe Su'nce's LOOMS BIG AS WAR TAX FROM @nd of the long continued Swis i some of which ‘| Hoffmann's retirement was German separate peac bait to! LONDON, June 20.— The BY BASIL M. MANLY id and was forced by the| youthful emperor of Austria WASHINGTON, D. C., June @emand of «a number of Swiss} Hungary was confronted today 20.—President Wilson will have saw in such 4) with his most difficult task as Reove a breach of neutrality likely a ruler since assuming the | to intervene to straighten out ' to give affront to allied nations. throne. the ruction created between Dispatches from Berne today ts The entire Austrian cabinet,| the house and senate by the @icated that the Swiss foreign de-| headed by Count Clam-Mart senate finance committee's paral would hereafter probably at amendments to the revenue under direct contro! of the! bill, according to many well Swiss president. M. Schulthess | informed senators and repre enough sup senate a us factions but in | bu er ng al and conservative by the lof e senate, which pro: ” | to deal | t fough Martinic’s ministry was tle th Risking his life 1 ly responsible for th signa t When the house of raha M iden, of those advisers The “ sheriff, » 18th parties have bee ‘ clo ave. S., was burning Tuesday night, he « nsive an @ stranger whose identity hes not for the bill rawled thru a assa, | majorit from me ween from the cat except ous com Giate death Madden's baby daugh- ment of the 8 on the | Influence | ferer, Elizabeth, aged 2. The little stry’s fall, the Germans regard The president has another . Birl died Wednesday morning in| the situation as grave | reason for interfering in the |) Providence hospital from the ef | fact that the senate committee fects of the burns. The man car | has departed utterly from the Fied her thre a curtain of fire, but NORTH ISLAND IS | fundamental principles which it is not known whether he sus | he laid down and has utterly ignored the administration's recommendations presented by Secretary McAdoo. WANTED BY ARMY WASHINGTON quisition of Nort Mrs. Madden and John Madden are suffering from se June 20. is on his way to to begin serving f i the appeal of 1 summer's campaign against planned M t fires nday 1 go as far was a meetin tate THE BON MARCHE Ba RGAIN BASEMEN A Special Lot of A Women’s and Misses’ “ Coats for $4.45 | Sizes 16 to 40, and a Few Larger Sizes Up to 46 ribs | Unusual—a sale of Top Coats at $4.45. Models for all- / round wear, for beach or sport Made, and well made, of! plaid chinchillas, serge triped gabardines and plaid mixture Ti in full lengths. Good styles with large collars and cuffs v Summer Coats of ' WoolJersey, Velour andWhipcord$6.95 Just as Illustrated Summer Waists of Women’s ile & Mercerized ole ercerize Trimmed Hats ‘Materials at 69¢ —55c— All Sizes 36 to 46 5 large assortment Smart looking er Waist Coat ot rema \t an 1 d ¢ 1 at $6.95: splend HT 1 to have an « t high collar in belted 1 vcation tri ms ¢ t ¢ sty with t 1 c coll | th trir “ itrasting = riot ipe a: embroide trit } 1 colored stitch izes 16 sand, black and combina- blue, black and candy pe y 44, tion colors, simply trimmed. _ patterr : | Many different lots @ Envelope n ermus ins | ( Chart es at 49¢ to $1.39—made with re quare and V yokes with lace rh bon trimming. Also Skirts 80¢ 39. Gowns 59¢ to $1.85, and nt S. Why not, in another category, those stories of thrilling hero Frarice isn persistently concealed?” Insuring every soldier wit \ $4,000 free ‘ te out for the benefit of his endents or next of kin, will a Tt will make Uncle Sam ¢ f the biggest insurance axe e world. He will b t » the eee one assume the So Britisher Tells Rotarians at Meet there is no one else the world Who would do it ATLANTA, Ga, June 20 on ante aad But it is not a Pr ie America must awaken and or trange lethargy in. the eee not come anyw! ne mous scale or face a long per BBs amount the eople od of ghastly fighting and < close ey every r for insurance world-wide suffering. This was censo keer Which is close to a bilion dollars. | the message brought before ng the and Best of all, it would settle the International Rotary con A reAne the at the outset the pension nul- | Vention here today by Pome thy pee pe , Bea fance which has trailed all rey eeten, inaneuer and 8 | the Gur former ware with unend director of the London Daily Se the att le w r Ing scandals, machine politics Mail and other British papers wii “p nee and graft on pe | A rig Ae : Uncle Sam t every By a k ea ‘ sa teat : Fd Year about en. | five to years, or mo Nae arrtiaal® sions, and 8 resi ? R much higher a wa ted tha America ed t cate a e r has paid = $5,054.65 r up and ’ ard indift to the " < sions, and $131 n r own will be | the Fee ay see to the pension department sige ereeres make t nsur-| “Why does the average Amert For remedy Burton urged that nce plan seem very attractive - ba vital fact that] the British censorship @ Phys ould destro the horror f Germa t or overthrow t whe and n trot the result would be eff r pre Ame at work in onal death this, the every city, town and age in the »| GABINET QUITS RICH TO POOR Fectly due to his transmission o' The conflagration followed an Diego harbor as in @ttempt on the part of the boy to ing station to s Start a fire in the range with day by a sut-committ the finance committee of attem kerosene. h military committee The{to make this “A RICH MA : nendation will be submitted| ‘WAR AND A POOR MAN SCHMIDT To PEN to the full commit at a later|FIGHT AND A POOR MAN'S cate PAY | LOS ANGELES June 20— If the most selfish committe Matthew A. Sch t, convicted for 96 ~ . plutocrats t could be colle leomplicity in the dynamiting ot a. Fight Forest Fires | eaahute eoutit Har KAISER DOESN'T STAND A CHANCE, DECLARE VETERANS 1 Continued From Page 14 . . started, they'll lean the blazes out of the Germans,” he declares Guptil!, fought with the Fourth Mas yusetts battery He lives at Port Angeles Germans Licked Now ‘ ( Hoynington, 1th Wi n The Germar are ed now he hold As soon as our boys get there, t will be all off with the 1 hey Used Tall Guns Talk about enlisting Weward Peters Third eo that gun—it's taller than | erman thin oung Up to Young Men If we don’t win we will go to the dogs.” saya H. A. Smith Co, B, 41st Wisconsin lives ‘here. “The young lows have got to get out and push, The ones did the hard work Now they'll have to stand on the side lines old before and help the young ones.” Would Go to France T var Beattle was i they'd let i Fran ‘ We Live Fast Councilman Maas, who did hie bit in ‘6: Says there won't be as many old veterans of the present war It won't be the bullets,” he declares. “We live too fast in times of peace. We used to eat corn meal mush and salt pork, but now we turn up our noses at it. | don't think they'll live so long to tell about the battles of the pres ent war Loses Silver Fife Has anybody found a beau tifuly engraved German-silver fife it is the property of C F. Whighton, Co. C, 26th Ili nois, whose residence now is in Spokane “Col. John A. Loomis gave me the fife in '62." says Whighton. “I blew it at every reunion, for | don't know how many years. | lost it coming over on the train.” The instrument has his ini tials on it Meets Old — 1. Hart, Second Ohio volur he Shoes Were Costly Shoes aren't as high now as they were during the civil war, but meat costs more and flour is cheaper, according to J. T. Kingsbury, Battalion A, First New York, who has lived in West Seattle for 37 years. “There was a sawmill where the Frye hotel is mow,” he says He built the Northern Pa cific over the mountains Boosts Red Cross “We can't do anything with: out the Red Cross,” believes James Holloway, Co. D, 101st Ohio, who lives at Everett “You know how quickly a sick person in the house wears the family out “It's the same way with an army. You have to keep the men well to keep them fight ing.” . Lost Arm Fighting irthday ebrated Sith 4 3% Everybody Knitting A G Hopkin hadn't een n Seatt fe ; ear He let me get a boo Abe Co, I since t in for ted Cross, F oc down then Ab ery me, we are hare of the mone Ho's “Agin’’ Drilling drill says J. S Illinois cavalry “We just went out, loaded our guns, and started in,” he says, “and when we got thru the thing wae over.’ . May Be hialia Fight That it wil be a the opinion .of J. H A, Mth Wisconsin at Port Orel 1am with the We'll Let ‘Intensive sary,” isn't Fisher, neces Co. A, who urd pres have has home ident," sa to win o beating a nation carry on I think was just about it man, Ritzville that Red Cross says J, W “That's the parade Pull stuff!" ir going his | HE SEATTLE STAR F For Styl Al That Produce Comfort, Ease and Grace Smart Set Corsets are called “Th nonym of le I} i-styfe f ish material, combined with Parisian daintine 1 of the $ orrect model, for we have experienced Corset t { f Mart P Set Corset Style No. 142, Price $4.00 Style No. 154, Price $5.00 Jeal Smart Set Corsets for slender mart ( mfortable, sate figure irdle top with semi-elasti 1 bs i 1 ( itil, for inserts, long flexible skirt, made of hay jae : pike our ft having Gime et pe wee aren oan 30 44 38 graduated on istikops white or pink batiste; size extension back: sz ona Style No. 151, Price $5.00 Style No. 170, Price $7.50 Smart Set Corsets, a well designed Heh Gat Corabie fOr aie ! model for slender and medium fig madeé of fine Te batist hy | ures; medium bust, long skirt style, {le top model \K made of fine broche, in white onl ] ming 7 4 0 THIRD FLOOR E HON MARCHE Cotton Wash Laces lor Summer Sewing : Pretty Laces to add a touch of daintiness to sum- mer blouses, lingerie, neckwear and vestee The new high collars and jabots are simple to make and ver mart. All these are in attractive designs that Si will wash splendidly. We list a few of the more popular piece LAC 1 én 4 c Le 1 con t eve af Hhle t ds with 6c to 4 7, c 11 Ikadot nd f ratine, sport LACT inche aie e high colors. ra I Kiddies’ Trimmed il $1. 95, y 95 “pe $3.95 UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCH} Printed Lawns —S¢c Yd.- — O00 yards of Printed an For Thursday—Apron Day Lanert O var ola ( 1 luc ‘ ed. Coverall ¢ € k and black ) pla r gingham, in pink lue or tan, with , , tr nd aa ur ediu color ths n white 0 y many styles to hed; ea tte hort Jengt t 20 ard ; < { wht imperfect ece wn, also ade other lig lors her a LOWER MAIN FLOOR THE BON 5 MARCHE ASTMAN Kodaks and Kodak Suplies We have RED CROSS UNIFORMS Eastman Kodaks, _ priced y ad 1e Red Cross Society $2.95, $3.50 and $4.50. A RED CROSS NURSES trom $6.00 to $66.00. 50 a ; UR SS NURSES UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON W ORKERS ! APR ‘ ON S—regulation madel—priced 75« MARCHE. THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Wirthmor Waists $1.00 Always Worth More Practical Coverall Aprons 75c Bathing Suits and Accesories val Z Pe ea LA Banded Passat 95, $2.95, $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 _ For Women and Young Girls —Second Floor, Exton ies Aprons at 89c ns in the en- iastening style, im dark \ le of me and light nicely made r figured percale, in extra 1 ge sizes, 46, 48 and 50. Crepe gyn Aprons $1.89 ti ever yday morning rse crepe, with ves= white, ort others in white stripes THIRD FLOOR, THE BON MARCHE For Women, Misses and Children Women's Bathing Suits at | —$1.98— Medium-weight Cotton Jer- U one-piece ng style ; black, ulder fasten navy and gray, with colored ¢ trimming; good, roomy s s in all sizes. Light-Weight Beach Bathing and Tennis esp rae ictal Slippers 25c a Pair ee ea ; te and black canvas, in F-1—Wirthmor Blouse of shee F3—Novelty Wirthmor to 7: eact : all - a special voile with pin tu novelt Blouse plain voile with large is in a handy lit : CUMS ae collar, ¢ ined with merce emstitched collar and embroid- — tle price con je, eee ee pat ed striped rice marquise ered revers fro edged with 50, aoc at fs to match nished w Val lace ace trin rn Women's Bathing spheclh Annette Kellermann Slips of o large pearl buttor ack « 1 and wool J ble mu sizes; priced ed $2.95 to $6.95 > —Dainty Wirthmor Blouse F-4—Wirthmor Blouse in Children's Bathing Sui of of fine Organd eats and tailored effect of voile, combined ‘ Jersey; priced 30¢ case pRoaiece RAL. a eee with large sailor- with fancy striped voile; extra SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE. shaped and t t n large hematitched collar and ffs edged 1 pretty Val. lace. wide pleat down each front L ib B d iberty Drea Linen Motor Coats $3.95 A 10c Loaf for 5c Thursday with ; CA RATS RCEE MPO ER tabs tar: iota bl ri a 20c Purchase of — Goods ss # of nutritious ir ent corn meal, belt Il size BCOND FLOOR THE BON MARCHE FOURTH FLOOR THE BON MARCHE, ee Thursday in the 5c, —| {Linoe— : ; | 10c and 15c Store Do your open doors and windows welcome this household @ ‘ 4 ; A Water Tumblers of thin pest? If they do, keep them open; fresh air is a comfort and Bigwink o cach 5@; per a necessity. Instead of shutting them, put screens on doors jozen See ee and window We have screen doors of best black mesh, on \ Toilet Soap; good qual- walnut stained frames, suitable for the back of the house— White Soap; 3 bars for | Se. $1.15 to $1.50 Children’s Rompers, nicely We have complete stocks of better doors, adjustable win- e of lawn; pecial 10¢. dow screens and wire screening by the yard. Women's binge ya ¢ - only; conds a sizes; a . iV Keep Out the Flies pair Le. FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE. ENS Bathing vs THE BON Main Floor, MARCHE | LOWER MAIN FLOOR BON MARCHE. sell clean col- I W lars and shirts. Upper Main Floor. THE

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