The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 9, 1919, Page 8

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THE U. S. WATCH ON THE RHINE American sentries of the Army of Occupation are here seen on guard on a bridge in Treves, Germany femall boy and the German workman show no displeasure at getting into the picture ELS LEAVE ARMISTICE ENDING CIVIL WAR IN CHINA DECLARED BY NEW HEAD | mi TROOPS ~ FOR THE U, , N, Jan. 9.—Depart ot fieveral Veasels with troops = ihe United States was an by the war department to- as follows: ip Montana, Brest for York, due January 17 with and Fourth trench mortar tt complete. 3a p South Dakota, + New York. due January } Fegiment Coast artillery fy Fo and 47th arco squadron. ship Comfort, Ptymouth for New York, due Janu 28 with 38 sick and wounded and officers and balance of used by navy. Suffolk, St “Brooklyn, due January officer. ort President Grant. Rrest York, due January 16 with detachment Eighth brigade, Second. Stat artillery, Company H infantry, 113th trench mortar ry. 69 casual officers and more 200 sick and wound sick and wounded. . with Nazaire. 20, with PEKING, China, Jan. § China, long torn by ctv ween the north and the newly Shih Chang. inausu isu rated president issued a peace mandate d: armistice between the els and the North Chi troops. ‘The armistice the government mand of the northern ge don their lines of defense » prov * order is out patches announce there has a government proclamation orders roops under com nd to nese being carried from the front been no resumption of hostilities. The issuance of President Hew Sh® Chang's peace mandate is regarded in Peking as the most important occurrence in China since the split between north and south dashed the world's hopes for the new Chinese repub- lie, established by the overthrow of the Manchus. The signing of the Europe left the civil war tr the most dangerous world ruction, keeping a popula of 400,000,000 people in a turmoll and maintaining divorganized China armistice in Peace is! & peace conference, which Presi: dent Hsu, following his armistice mandate, promised southern leaders in long telegrams, urging them to withdraw their troops without delay | The president has received many |) telegrams from t eaders . proposal eking government has sent orders withdrawing the Hengchow, removing the Kiangsi troops to Kanchow ar and estab treat similarly with soktiers will provinces once disbanded. he southern leaders rawn, return New recruits will has telegraphed President Hsu, approving the de- tailed plans for the disarmament and the peace conference. « Bars Lowered for Export Trade Now The following articles may now be | 50¢ Linen Paper 30c . URD'S Linen Paper in full one-pound pack French Nainsook Correspondence ages, containing 90 sheet tie Kraft Lawn Linen, white, pink buff 24 sheets and envelopes to the box. bor Stationery, 20¢ in or shade sale $3.00 to no. Glove OMEN’S Gloves, French kid, cape able cape. 5.50 of and wash- $3.50 French Women's to Gloves, $2.00, Cape, kid and Mocha Gloves. Women's $1.75 to Gloves, $1.50, French and Cape Glove Children's $1. to $2. Gloves, 95¢. Cape and wool, Children’s 75e to $1.00 Gloves, 50c. Kid leather, lined with wool, and Gauntlet Gloves. Broken lines, slightly soiled, spotted skins and inaccur- ately sized Gloves. —MaeDeoog: athwiek, Glove Annes, First Mieer, $2.25 kid or or 25 $1.65 Spools Ribbonette $1.00 ILK Knitting Ribbon in 22 shades. For knitting sweaters, caps, bags, ete.— 100 yards to the spool. —MacDeougall-Southwick, First Floor. Women’s $29.75 to $39.75 Coats $25.00 OOL Ke Cloths in and semi-loose self, plush or fur collars. Colors—brown, green, black and navy. Full lined, and those lined to the waist. —MarDougall-Southwiek, Second Fleer. Velour, Pompom, ey and Novelty full-length, belted models with 95¢ Chemises and Gowns 65c¢ JOUR hundred garments of sheer attractive their tops and edging of fine lace, muslin, lace and em bined, and Among the broidered in pastel colorings. —MarDougall-Southwiek, ‘Third Very broidery embroidered Chemise insertion with Patterns com- fronts. are those em- with Floor $5.85 Blankets At $4.85 EDIUM weight Cotton Blan kets with soft wool finish. include plaids of gray and blue or pink and white with gray overplaid, or gray and white blue overplaid. 66x80 inches. MacDougall-Southwiek, Large size, Gray Linen Show MacDougall - Southwick’s Semi-Annual Clearance Sale stor former selling price for complete clearance. Now in Progress WENTY -SIX of the interesting values of this sale are briefly summarized in this ad— typical of those awaiting you in all sections of the ¢. Short lines are priced quite regardless of In some instances there are limited amounts, hence early selection is suggested. SECOND AVENUE AND PIKE 2 STREET 15¢ Cotton Dish al . ‘ Toweling 124c EDIUM WEIGHT, full bleached. Remain soft and absorbent after launder- ing; 161% inches wide. 85e Huck linen weft heavy and absorbent, imperfect in weave. inches. MacDougall Gray Linen Towels 25c, Pure with cotton warp, Slightly Size 18x 85 nthwiek, Linoleum Specials $1.15 Print Linoleums 95e¢ square yard. In blue and white, and gray, blue and white patterns. $1.85 to $2.25 oleum $1.55 Inlaid Lin- Square Yard. Patterns—green with white, gray with green, tan with blue, and blue with gray. $2.50 and $2.75 Inlaid Lin- oleums $1.95 Square Yard. Tile patterns. —MarDougall-Southwiek, Fourth Vieor. Women’s Shoe Clearance 95. Discontinued lines of $8.50 to $11.00 Shoes, in lace and button models, of patent leather and tan or black calfskin. Mili- tary and Louis XV. heels. At $2.95. Discontinued lines of $6.00 to $10.00 lines. —MaeDougall-Southwick, Fitth Vleer, At $16.50 to $25, 00 Children’s Coats $13.50 OATS of zibeline, heavy coating, crushed plush and khaki. Colors — dark green, purple, taupe, navy and khaki. Semi-belted, belt- ed and military styles. Sizes 8 to 14. Other Coats reduced also, ranging in price from $3.95 to $35.00; formerly $4.95 to $60.00. —MacDougall-Southwick, Third Fleer. jas @ hotbed for another world war. » More Seattle Pn Listed Killed/ Be Hew bey bred spirit of two more Seattle men/ of peace in Europe as the Inmpira Bdded to the roll of honor in| tion for his mandate. He consider casualty lists released for | ed this the psychological moment to n Thursday lend the civil str Jefferson Lee, of Seattle, He is eager to have a united ‘as killed in action. His next China represented at the peace ds Mrs. Grace M. Donald, R. F- table at Versailles in of. 5, Georgetown substation. der that such vexing questions dead of disease in France. His, as the Japanese retention of ed dead of distase in France. His “Wsingtao may be strongly ar- kin is Mike Koruseos, 21% sued by China and settled to the ton st., Seattle. republic's best interests 7 | “It is hereby ordered,” President _ AM EREMY OF WOMANHOOD |imported and exported, the federal | war trade board announces, follow ling removal from the restricted lst Imports: All coal tar distillates, | eges of poultry, explosives, matches, | fresh meats, glassware, woods, caf- | fetne or beans alfaita $2.50 Hair Brushes $1.85 ATERPROOF Hair Brushes with quad- ruple imported bristles set in rubber cushion. 15¢ Peroride of Hydrogen, 3 for 25e. Full 8-ounce bot- tle. Standard quality. —MaeDougall-Southwick, First Floor. Women’s $55 to $75 Suits $35.00 ILVERTONE, Duotone, Broadcloth, Velour de Laine, Serge, Tricotine, Gab- erdine and Velveteen Suits in semi-fitted, severely tail- ored and fancy models, Coats lined with silk or satin. Men’s $6.50 Bathrobes $4.50 50 Wool Shirts and $8.95 and $10.00 silk, silk and linen Drawers $2.25. Of nat- Silk Shirts $6.7 In- mixed or mercerized, ural wool, in medium cluding a wide variety reduced to heavy weight. of striped patterns. Cashmere Sox, Oxford, natural and black, in medium weight; 80c a pair. um, oplum and its products, | . morphine ond deriva A tives, olive ofl, news print and p paper, heroin and morphine salts, chestnut tanning extract, corn sugar | feeds and fodders, arsenic and com-| pounds thereof, arve of lead, ar senate of soda, sodjum compounds $3.75. $5.00 Flannel Shirts $3.75. Navy blue and gray flannel. —MarDougall-Southwick, Men's Section, Just Insti $5.00, $6.00 and 50 Ps |}teu’s mandate reads, “that all| $6.50 Pajamas of Seco troops operating on the different fronts shall hereby suspend hostili ties at once and withdraw them selves therefrom. The local chief civil and military officiais are here by ordered to take measures to main tain peace and order in the terri tories evacuated by the troopa. Local bandits, or troops defying discipline, ahall be liable to immediate exUrpa tion. “The war in Europe has taught u a lesson that it is right and n might that one can rely on for final victory. T country urgently ds better civil administraticn Our tu ture foreign policy must be such as to win the cordial friendship of the Powegs. The will of heaven t peace on earth has been reveal the termination of the European war. Renowned for Wealth “Szechwan and Kuang-tung are provinces renowned for their wealth since days of yore. But the present internecine strife in th provinces has left nothing its wake but ruins of farms and homesteads an expense writes Mey: Jj.| President Hsu was elected on a Allen, of Amity, Arkansas. | platform calling for an end of the | tar m His mother, Mra, D since I started to buy Nedlin- | civil war, which has dragged on con-| Johanson, two brothers, Frederick @8 shoes for him I have found that | siderably more than a year at a pos C. Nelson and Edward L. Nelson, | § only about a third as much to | juve ck, but steps toward Sylvia Marie Johan m in shoes.” peice were not expected is because Neolin Soles are so | romptly. Band durable that they wear a| ‘Plans are now under time. Shoe bills are kept you don’t need so many can oh Nedlin-soled shoes at nal ie shoe store. They fivles complexion, digestion and al} the complete personality of are dependent upon health. ‘s ills are her great enemy, Y cause bad complexion, dark under the eyes, headache Nervousness, sleeplesaness, down pains and the. blues, | f Often totally unfit her for a n. The great American for such conditions is Lydia ikham's Vegetable Compound has been restoring three gen of ailing women to health, y be relied upon with perfect RENTS, 8, READ THIS a Father Has I Has Learned Save Shoe Bills. to ly son is very hard on shoes, so him properly shod has been | ander Vyacheslavov, of the Orthodox — SEDRO-WOOLEY SOLDIER ?. - . i ai aes : ; we Russian church, a short service with — IS CITED BY PERSHING * BEATS WIFE WITH |RUSSIAN CONSUL’S ursian church, a hort service with FALLEN FOR FREEDOM ee BEDRO WOOLLEY an. % Cen. oh mean dy Mana cy os STOVE POKER AND DAUGHTER BURIED raver was conducted by Rev. FV. NOW HE’S IN JAIL IN BRIDAL DRESS) pa! cnu: Total American Army Casualties to Date Killed tn action Gate ‘ TPE at een) 8007 Cooper, a Sedro-Woolley boy, for heroism in action under ehell and machine gun fire pal church. Private Cooper is 25 years old. He} More indignant than ever before, In keeping with a traditional cus ———E enlisted with the mari when the Municipal Judge J tom, the shroud of Miss Xenia Wednesday sentenced A. L. Rogolaviensky, daughter of Nich PAINLESS son, of 312 EB. Pine at, t o Rogoiaviensky Russian con in the city jail and to general in Seattle, who died |, TEARS ° United en entered the war | He is said to have displayed ex 8 ne ceptional courage in carrying mes sul sages for three days under fire. He} fine, the limit sentence allo of pneumonia Sunday, was a bridal was wounded at Chat der the city ordinance. He dress, After an impressive Orthodox une 19, was found guilty of striking his| Russian church ritual at the Bon- wife on the head with a poker, with ney-Watson company chapel, the such force that the iron was bent body was buried at Lake View cem- }and an ugly gash five inches long etery Wednesday. The priest wore torn in the w n's scalp & white robe in respect to the un: - - a married woman, whom the Russians call “a bride of Jesus Christ.” Friends of the young woman were permitted to pay last to her with a kiss Chiader Nelson Is Dead of Pneumonia Chester Munro Nelson, son of the late N. B. Frederick & Nelsor Cor officials who captured a draft evader in the forest near , Olympia thin week der it a re rn in| { arkable coincidence that the youth should h ed on skunk DENTISTRY Look into your month are od {f your gums are sloug! or bleeding wit so, you have Ri RIGGS DISEASE, 8O-CALLED— PYORRHEA THIS disease is treacherous, @ menace. to good health and should be treated at once to pres vent complications, such as rheu- | Mother! Look at his Tongue! Give Him a Cascaret—Quick |! matiaen oUt, indigest i. i ‘The only dental office tn Se- attle that specializes in tho treat- ment and cure of the above dis- In our offi you will find an “Tieensed operators and mas- ters of the dental profes: Ehecial care taken of chilerene teeth. Examinations and estimates free. Ironclad guarantee for 15 years on all work. A reasonable Mecount given to all union men and their families, United Painless Dentists oo. ‘Third Av. sal Eliiete ses3. Houre—s KEEP LOOKING YOUNG: It’s Easy—If You Know Dr. | Edwards’ Olive Tablets ‘The secret of keeping young is to feel -—to do this you must watch ing « sallow completion — dark rings jing a jexion — under your eyes — pimples — a bilious look in Raed face—dull with no |sparkle, Your doctorwill tell you ninety | percent of all sickness comes from in- jepre bowels and liver. - Dr, Edwards, a well-known physician lin Ohio, perfected a vegetable com- |pound mixed with olive oil to act on |the liver and bowels, which he gave to \his patients LS ray ars, Dr, Edwards’ cigs Tablets, the sub- | stitute for calomel, are gentle in their | action yet always eftective. They bring | about that exuberance of spirit, that ‘natural buoyancy which should be en-. | joyed byeveryone, by: upthe liver lend clearing the system of impurities, You will know Dr. " Olive Yablets by their olive color, 10c and Sc per box, All cruggista, con respects was t y a studen: Later he Resides a mass by the Rev. Alex. high schoc from the New York mili gradu } Wounded in { Mixaing Im ne ¢ Total to date . ued by the ames of five . f-aister United Staten for Seattle mer Mra liste department ntain the Alfre Canualty | Thuteday ret so basal Wer for Don't scold! stomach sour, Won't eat? breath feverish, See if tongue is white, . is among thos we hoe store. ‘They jalties, including the above, are aa foll “a > are also Dhacew re for re-soling. produced by a scientific pro- cet pe GA to be: com- ‘00! long-wearing. made by The G ear Tire Company, Akron, Ohio, who ape ra. guaranteed eal: lin. Soles DIED OF WOUNDS Address DISEASE Riverside Mount Ve Nemttle Ridgefield... Mrs. SEVERELY Bpokane Seattle MISSING IN ACTION Private Harold FM. Goody Spokane DOIN ACTION—PREVIOUSLY ttle Name— Private Artie G Next of Kin “Mra, Lottie Crum or Jers Bolin Dacie, M Fader Mike Kory William B ader rnon..Mre am I Wulf conscience to the nol Mrs Mrs. Mary Wilmer Mary BE. King Private Philip & reaponslbility Private Roy J diers Mother Believes” | Her Boy Is Alive|" Altho mentioned in Thursday’s| Private Victor B. Duane ts ns dead from accident, Corporal, WOUNDED, DEGREE Alfred son of Mrs : Louis Peterach, of 2408 Lane ot Private Robert M. Carter Bremerton RETURNED TO DUTY—PREVIOUSLY ReEronrEeD 1 by his mothe Peterson recetved |Ptivate Arlough E. + Olympia Mrs. | ferson | ALL | REPORTED Harbor Mra. Pa D—VREVIOUSLY Gives Recipe For Gray Hair Mr. A. E. O'Brien, who has been in New York City for many made the following statement ; wtreaked or face be immediately made black of light brown, whichever st desire, by the use of the fo Femedy that you can make “Merely get a #0 box of Orlex powder at any dru very little and no & @olve it in water through the hair for mixing and use ntee come in each box will last you for months “It ia perfectly safe, it does not Tub off, is not wticky or gummy « Teaves the hair fluffy, It» (@ gray haired person look ae younger.” ine Duane | UNDE SPORTED 3 Peterson ea Ino. Carter MISSING Llizabeth Brown ead, Mra. \ t from a chaplain attending | SCTION NO. 2 her won, dated Decenber 20, which ined the information that he KILLED IN ACTION ng well and hopeful of recov barons ernment announcement orgetown Peterson's death was 19th of December. Pacific Cable May | Have Terminal Here| Seattle may be the terminal of a new cable across the Pacific, which will be of benefit to t ntire coun try, according to Gordon C. Corb executive secretary of the # Chamber of Commerce and Commer cial Club, Co. Cole brown ide you wing at home Next of Kin Jefferson LOO. .scesseceeeee ( Grace MeDonald pInD oF ery Private Mre. of dated the Cor Alfred Hf, Peterson WOUN McPhermon mc, WN D SHVERELY—Pnevi Bubbins... | Corp. +.Mrs, Louise Peterson comb it \corp. J Mra [Private Wi WOUNE , : | WOUNDED SOLDIERS | ' | 21% Washington canism” and leave nothing undone | ji Mrs Mary E. King ° gain This was the plea of Mrs. Edgar | Ames, who has obtained lists of so much relief with any medicine. | councils of tic mervice Wednes- | Private Lloyd C. Duckett I would not take $25.00 for the ré-| day. T 4 will work out a|Private William LI Np (Signed) H. L, Hicks, Ashley, Il awaken the public WOUNDED Adler--ka expels ALL gas and toward returning 4 lower bowel, flushing EN alimentary canal Removes Prevents appendicitis. We have , sold Adier-i-ka many years, It in a Drug C Swift Drug leading druggists. CORPORATION BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD son, survive him. to provide ha for every re Washington state “Adlerika is the only medicine | Seattle wounded men, when she ap- Crumb .. Hef one b of Adler4-ka gave me.| program of service to help wot Private Stillians A. Korussos ng stomach distress foul matter which polsons sys mixture of buckthorn, cascara, glyc LIBERTY BONDS JOHN E. PRICE & C0. turning wounded soldier for gas on the stomach. I never had| peared before the Seattle board of | pep - Private Wil Wulf done recommending it.”| men, it was decided, and attempt to Empties BOTH up Often CURES constipation erine and nine other simple drugs. MUNICIPAL AND Ninth Floor Hoge Building McPherson dott TO MOTHERS! Nothing else ‘‘works’’ the nasty bile, the | ’ | sour fermentations and constipation poison so gently but so thor- Corp. Walter . Bubbins ‘ vug ( 2 | WOUNDED, F —PREVIOUSLY REPORTED oughly from the | A Cascarets. Private David Ro Carr ssés Kamileho ..... Francis Carr nden % Riddle allup - sacle SLY ¥ Bremerton. Full and a gold bond One directions little stomach, liver and bowels like harmless While children usually fight agains’ laxatives and cathartics, they gladly eat a candy the bowels, Cascaret. Cascarets never gripe Each ten cent box of Cascarets contains ekroat | directions for dose for children aged one year old and upwards. never sicken,

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