The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 8, 1919, Page 7

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| Liberty Bonds} Bought and sold at market rates The Seattle ‘National Bank Bond Department Second Ave, and Columbia St. PARIS, Feb, $.—The league of na | tons commission held a special meet ing at 10:30 a m. in an effort to stitution. It was officially announced that agreement was reached on the chief polnts discussed at last night's mee ing, but that the commission has de | cided to the sub Owing to the amount of work in connection with the league that in yet incomplete, President Wilson prob: ably will defer his sailing for home scheduled for next Friday—to Feb ruary 16 of 17 Nation-Wide Rail Strike in England ROOMS At the WALDORF HOTEL Workers and professional men who will want to stay in town during the strike should call now and select their rooms. Rates, $3.50 Per Week and Up Seventh and Pike Main 2567 LONDON, Feb. 8.—A nation-wide railway strike again became a possi bility today when the National Ur fon of Railway Men udiated the settlement effected last night by # way workers ed largely as a sympathetic walkout to assist the subway men, railway men, who constitute the strongest of the rail unions, are un derstood to have decided to go thru with the strike because of their own grievances Kirk’s Military Shop 1209 FIRST AVE. ARMY DOCTOR KETURNS Appointed a major just before the ending of the war, Capt. Hiram M Read, formerly chief surgeon for } the Great Northern railway in Seat tle, has returned to take up the prac tice of medicine. Major Read was ‘with the 19th division as ft was pre paring to go overseas, the signing of the armistice hokiing up the movement RIGHT DRUG Co. sTORRS If you value your watch, let Leck for the Free Wocier sign | Haynes repair it, Near Liberty theatre.— Advertisement, This : Store Will Remain Open as Usual Me=Dougal foie FOR MEN Satarday Speciai. New Madras Shirts | $1.85 A large variety of new patterns in Spring color- ings are shown in these new Shirts. Made coat style, _with soft cuffs. Sizes 14 to 17. Tan Cape Gloves $1.95 Cotton Pajamas ss His These Pajamas are made of fancy s' of materta — brown, helio and black. Sizes 15, 16, Silk Sox—3 Pairs for $2.00 eee te, Temsereed peel toe and sole. In colors jpagne, gray, cordovan, black and white. A iike pele, priced at T5e. Outing Flannel Night Shirts $1.85 “Made with military collar, in extra size body and a. In pink, blue and helio striped fabrics. Sizes to 20. Outing Flannel Pajamas $1.95 Made with military collar and trimmed with silk frog fasteners. Sizes 15 to 18. ‘Cotton Ribbed Shirts and Drawers 80c a Garment The Shirts come in sizes 34 to 46. The Drawers come in sizes 30 to 44. Union Suits $1.85 These Suits come in Norfolk and New Brunswick lakes; natural color. They are made from fine Egyptian yarns. Sizes 34, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Heavy Cotton Sweaters $2.50 These Sweaters are fashioned in the popular coat le, with lapel collars. Shown in all sizes, Bath Robes $4.95 These Robes are made from heavy cotton blanket a, well tailored, and with taped seams. call Seouthwick Men's Shop—Just Inatée the Deer. yur cts on ick ver OUT FOR HOUGEN’S WHILE THE 5 WALKING’S GOOD nin Remember— “ns @ pliable sole puts zest in your chest and “pep” in your step. We are leaders in the sole business, ee speed work on the draft of the con | changes it had made to | *Uaeested the form mmittees for classification, | Which those responsib! Is Now Threatened ‘The threatened strike was intend. | but the| THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, a lal to The Star by ) BERLIN, Feb. 8 wainseves ron opinion of the German people ax to the puniahment of the kainer, the newspapers of Germany and Austria a language not to be miscon strued. No one in Germany seems to have of punishment for the war should receive. Rut there is strong demand for punishment of some kind, Mere and there is a word of ex tenuation for Wilhelm, and an ex | pressed desire for the restoration of the monarehy ‘The Pfalzincher Post of Baden says of Wilhelm Kaiser Is Coward “The imperial crown} ready ia by afraid sof then? ettifomming Lit tle life? If not, he should have the pluck to demand on bh own int uative to be cited b ¢ a cour that the question of nis guilt may be impartially decided, The conse quen of that decision he should be man enough to face. The Dusseldorf Volksteitung says What did he not want to «mash. this sham Caesar? He thought he could challenge and subju whole world, Now he bimself lies rushed and helpless, W now? A man who ts politic 4 curseladen wretch, abandoned by his own, his very own ‘God,’ and whom no machine guns, cannon and bayonets would any longer protect Against the wrath of those he has tortured and robbed were he to among them now Frankfort Gazette, organ of German democratic party Is He Marionette? William IL, for purposes of » marionette of This the man wh before his own people and before t world, indulged in resounding fight about hia divine right, and who now Shot in Head; Walks to Hospital CHICO, Cal, Feb. &—Claude R Jewett, who accidentally shot hit the face « probabl welt in and @ ranch near here © sight of the hosp t walked here and lay conscious on the oper ating table while the surgeons ex tracted the breech block of a rifle which was imbedded three inches in his head. When the operation was completed he commented, . that hurt." Jewett was shooting he when the breech blo ¢ the ‘ailed to engage and was blown f eye, » The Largest Audience in the Northwest Reads Star Want Ads * menace, to should be ‘trecled at veat complications, matiom, govt. indi general stomach trou nial office ation le ~ we 3 ratore ar - S air ites ‘a dealad pM et care taken of chiluren's tooth Pt, ~ g and = eatimates free Troncled, querantes for 18 Ifecount given to ail Uslon men ort oa thelr families, United Painless Dentists mo Phone Eiliett 3683, © OMIT IMAL Malted Milk Mi Fer Infants eae Ne Coakdog | A Nutritious Diet for All Agee | Quick Lunch; Home or Office. OTHERS are IMITATIONS Rev. M. A. Matthews will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled, AN OLD-TIME DANIEL NEEDED FOR MODERN CONDITIONS In the evening he will discuss the subject, No Time Nor Place for Mollycoddling Christians the great SONG SERVICE at 7:15, led by Mr. Walter Jenkins. Fine music. You are hereby invited to our FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Seventh and Spring Come to programs of special cordially wervices. WILSON DELAYS 'GERMAN PAPERS ASK TWO SHOT IN STARTING HOME: KAISER BE PUNISHED HOTEL FRACAS i | fering from deme Safe |: Oncar Sutterlen, 60, and Waldo [forgets the most primitive dictates 39 ir were victims of nervous of honor and dignity No, this dy or y has condemned iteelf before ndite in the Apple hotel, 107 all men Tt ean er come back.” | Marion st, Thuraday night, both be The Arbeiter Zeitung of Vienna i#|ing shot when they attempted to as Ditter as the pape | $0 t with one of two men covering sin Germany i Dera thay dectre’ Gant Abe lthem with revolvers, Both are in or Was on a trip to Norway, and | the city hospital and will recover that therefore Germany was The two -mer 4 Sutterien'a MAUR surpre ax the other POwer® | room on the pretext of having a spe by the action of Austriadiungary, — | ; pelle hee It is an infernal lie, A handtul| Cl! delivery letter for him, whi of scoundrela in Vienna and Berlin, |*Wo Other men, presumably confed with malice aforethought, plunged | rates, waited in the hallway out humanity into thin most awful of | *! Althe suspicious of the men an eitaotrenbal the hotel clerk did not remonstrate Inside, both covere tterlen and Kaiser Gave Signal Brodie with revolvers, and com “p tate lke thin Auatria, | ™&Anded them to “put ‘em up Sut owt MAGinS & state Uke ae USIFIA | orien laughed, and climbed into bed flea aa Ware “ yo " chine, 1 in, requesting that the “Joshing - . wi oeind ras? vee One of the men imm ly | having the impud: ay goog: main we | tired at Sutterlen, the bullet passing world for the sake of ite miserable] titty tne iatters cheat The ame oxistenc Ae tho were not rmany must even eng tha man then turned his gun on Brodie and shot him thru the shoulder, All rough, ¢ on the Vienna conspirators, and Wil. | 90" = helm, the dangerous fool, thinking * that It was his place to provide blood-bath in memory of his ‘dear nand, gave the signal to begin the ful massacre grussome face of thin despic rruption must be ex IS DEVELOPING wed to mankind tn all ite hideous ness, Moreover, all the guilty must! (Special be punished. PARIS, Fet ‘ The Ce ¢ Tugebiatt, while lik-| is profiting by the h de ening the fugitive kaiser to the rat | tated Northern Fr Industria that leaves the sinking ship, appeals | development follown certain lines Factories spring up where 1 and fron and transportation facilities are beat | In France, as in England, and Ger to monarchists to conspire to brin him back “Let ua staunch imperial Germans clench our teeth and work with all! our might for the soonstruction of |many, too, this has been along the the destroyed German empt borders most exposed to attack * the imperative dut of a € Thus, France had a total steam ling to the monarchic principle to| machinery of more than operate with his faithful follow ower when the war broke with him in exile to e half of which was tn th Wilhelm 11, may be in region, and Germany deat return to the land whose ed more than a third of the total ir fortunes as shared | dustrial steam power plant of the yearn before it be reduced com: | countr | r Since the war began, France has) HAS RIFLE OF beon shifting industries to the south, | the coming of peace. tm facilities and docks. Hydro development, wherever ponsible, w ald the power situation And, while MADIS«€ 5 Daniel Northern France will be rebullt | Boone's the genuine oldfash. | str Southern France is ready to take advantage of recon struction demands, and thus the en tire country will come to be a great | manufacturing center. joned f k, carried by Boone on many @ perilous trip in the dark and bloody hunting grounds of Kentucky and on his famous Indian hunting | expeditions Sei BY TRAIN LEAP to whom it had been given by an aged hermit living in the mountains of Tenneanes. The rifle is a formidable affair a real “long rifis.” one of the type 3 that gave the nickname of the “long | ™Uredey night At Cheney Smith. who meveral days ago ac , | rifles” to our Western frontieramen. | vised two deputy sheriffs of conniv Coast strike a close race for first honors in Spokane newspapers late ly, is at large, following a sensation: | al escape from a Milwaukee train a nec ae = ylhon a _ jance in a bootleg deal, was arrested | flintlock with a patchbox of fniaig |! Tacoma Wednesday. A deputy | wd | war detailed from here to bring him | ne silver, and weighs 10 pounds » st | back end of the butt is set with & wild! “rhe deputy trusted Smith, and fet trigger to buy tobacco from the “trainboy On the side of the stock are carved with a jackknife the words, “Boon's True Fren,” on the walnut stock the initials “D. B.” and five most sig nificant and sinister each notch standing for “one good Injun At the lower end of the stock is a long and deeply cut gash said to} have been cut by Indian toma thought nothing of it. That waa the last he saw of him. The train was moving about 20 miles an hour at the Ume. Picture of Dead Brother on Screen notches, hawk thrown at Boone. What hap. SHELBYVILLE, I Feb. 8.—To} pened to the Indian Is not recorded. | vie word that brother had + been killed in action in France | Wife Says Husband |then see his picture, alive and b | I I py. among & number of © | s an Incompetent secre dougndoys on a film in a pic! CHICAGO, Feb. §.—Mre. Georgia | ture playhouse is the rare experi-| W. Schermerhorn petitioned the su e of Lyle Beck and his sister Miss Velma Beck The two went to a theatre in Mat preme court yesterday to have her husband, Lieut. Amos Cotting Scher- merhorn, U. 8. A., declared incom: toon, near here, The memory of a petent. Sho pointed out that his re-| telegram from the war department lease from the army could not be at Washington, announcing th death of their brother, was still fresh in their minds. During the perform: | &nce, a war film picture of scenes in France was shown “Why, there's William,” Mise Vol ma suddenly exclaimed to Lyle Both distinctly recognized the ture. It was unusually obtained until a committer had been appointed to look after his estate, which amounts to $: 169. A board of army medical offic has pronounced Lieut. Schermerhorn of unsound mind, says the petition and he is now at Bloomingdale. Dr KE. W. Lagell, in an attached davit, sal the lieutenan re | na | | delusions is the belief that a con spiracy exista to prove that het» Plant Trees for nother person. He also thinks his . and is poisoned, says the physician, | PARIS, Feb. &—The Rey, Fathe | Lieut. Schermerhorn is 30 and has Lemire, who sits in the chamber of | two children, Georgia, 5. and | deputies from the Department of the Amos, 4 Nord, moved the chamber toflay by Justice Platzek appointed Eugene |® speech proposing that an avenur H. Bushe, Dr. B. Sachs and John M. | of trees be planted along t tire Riehle ax a committee to sit with | battle front, which would serve as a a sheriff's Jury to determine the of- | Place Igrimage for those who do He} government buy the not know where their dead fell asked t the ficer’s mental condition battlefields and make a forest from REGISTERED DENTISTS } tie xorts sea to the Vosges moun- Out of the high rent district, per- | twins sonal service and moderate advertis- Albert Lebrun, minister of the in ing enable me to make you this offer: vaded regions, in replying for the thet, get ble prices, | Yaded regions, in rey o and get government, said that every honor | figure, careful, | would be shown to the dea Ceme- | a methods and personal atten: Pi iiinn tio sald, would be laid out at| » the fighting was heav-| ¢ battlefields would be | into national points wh lest, and ent ormed Dr. J. Brown’s New Office ORPHRUM BUILDING Third and Madison, St.Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. tran ments monu Strike Argument Firebacks, linings and. repairs for #il| Rinas Poe” ntoven, Cause of Death faces, Water backs; SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 8.—The | and coils put bo of an unknown man was found and connected. floating 608 PIKE ST, | Pier 20 : . | It tended to substant the story Main 875 lof Peter J. Delaney, who had told police he had pushed a man off the pier during the night in in the bay yesterday off aney said he and the man, Thoro hness S Recas he tind thew dteba, heal argued over the Seattle strike. i} tried to push me in, and IT} beat him to it.” said Delaney. He} Characterizes our methods every transaction, and our o tomers are accorded every co: tesy consistent with sound busi- Judgment said he and the other man were both telegraphers. WASHINGTON, Feb. Demand that the condition of the American | seaboard companies in Irance be in vestigated was made in the senate Accounts Subject to Check Are SECOND AVE. AND PIKE 87. |) camp were sufficiently bad to war {rant an investigation, | — and there has grown up a manufac: | turing belt which will remain with | War necessity has added transpor: | over this famous cafe, and the word | cloth from cellulose has been per Kaiser" was gone. And so I found / fected. He asks mo to feel of his |} worta’ orld’s Greatest ‘antor Tenor lit all over Berlin. ‘They want to for-| suit of clothes, which is made by | a fe: Ont Cordially Invited. Sen. Lodge, Mass, read a tele} public pl There will not be a/like wool, The celluloid fabric, 1 ; —_— be am from J. J. Bush, of ? York, |) statue of him on exhibidien in any | informs me, was worn a goed deal | Seat Sale at Sherman-Clay * Ba président of the Michigan society, de-|park or gallery, He may have a|by Austrian officers in recent cam Music House Peoples Savings Bank claring conditions at the St, Aignan|niche in @ museum alongside Nero | paigns, but proved @ failure in pro- | PRICES—$1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 FREDERICK & NELSO FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE | With the Help of These Reliable Household Paints and other “brighteners,” the home interior can be quickly and in- expensively freshened by the amateur painter, in prepara- tion for the coming of Spring. Ready-to-Use Paints and Enamels You can put Ironite Floor Paint on For the exterior of doors, boats and the kitchen floor after the dinner other outside uses, Val-Spar and dishes are done and it will be dry Jap-Spar are durable Varnishes, both by breakfast time. giving a polished surface, For quick brightening of dull furni- ture, floors and woodwork there are Jap-a-lac Stain and Varnish which finish One feels like a real conservationist when she cream-enamels a very or- dinary looking ee set. Inte- Enamel comes in various colors fer painting iy seal bathrooms and such furniture as chairs, beds and in one application. rior Where a high gloss finish is desired, Lion Varnish and Pratt and Lam- bert’s No. 61 are good for floors, | dressers, interior woodwork, and furniture. There is Special White Enamel for When you want color there are Rainier bathtubs, refrigerators and other Mixed Paints, for interior and ex- surfaces exposed to extreme heat or terior use, cold. Wall Tints and Paints Putting pumpkin yellow on a faded wall is like painting a picture that | | you will enjoy all season. Muresco | Wall Tints may be had in many colors, and are easily applied. Washable walls are such a satisfaction to the real soap-and-water house- keeper. Lav-e-loid Flat Wall Paint dries with a soft, velvety finish and is often preferred to kalsomine, as its surface is washable. To Keep the Floors Spick-and-Span clean. Frederick and Nelson, Old English and Johnson Floor Waxes are to be applied with Weighted Brushes. For cleaning varnished, shellacked, painted or waxed floors there are Johnson's Kleen Floor, Boyle’ Brightener and Frederick and Nel+ son Floor Cleaner. Reside being more easily mopped, the linoleum given an occasional coat of Lion Linoleum Varnish will last lon- ger and be brighter. They can take the rugs up, after high school, and have a “¢girl dance” when the floor well waxed. Then the floor is ornamental and easily kept | is Other Brighteners and Accessories Shellac. This is used on furniture, woodwork and floors and is espe- cially useful for finishing the inte rior of a chest of old bureau drawers that were never finished. And when it’s all done O-Cedar Mops and Dustless Dusters will keep things bright. While you still feel ambitious to “paint: everything in sight” you might add Aluminum Glaze to the hot water tank and the radiators that have “peeled off.” There are Bronzing Li satide and Gilding Outfits, too, And then the furniture must brighten up to match the woodwork—Freder- ick and Nelson Furniture Polish is especially recommended for its effi- ciency. For mixing and thinning it is conven- ient to have a supply of Boiled Oil, Raw Oil, Turpentine and Paraffin | Oil. | Good Brushes are important partners | for the Paintress. We carry a full | line of Brushes for paint, varnish, | enamel or kalsomine. A glossy surface that dries in two hours is given by Orange or White Stove and Stovepipe Enamels come in Gloss and Dull Black. —Housewares Section, THE BASEMENT STORE. NICHE BESIDE NERO FOR KAISER; GERMANY IS ERASING HIS NAME BY JACOB FRIIS © for Wilhelm. It seems as tho} has . Will be very practical, Archivist, Norwegian Government want to forget him. Mention | During the last year of the war, he nterview With Carl Sandberg) | of him is painful. The atmosphere | said, two large factories had been CHRISTIANIA, Jan, 15 (ay |is like that meant in the proverb: erected for the manufacture of this Mail.)}—When I was in Berlin a week |“Do not mention gallows in the | fabric after the revolution, I passed the fa-|house of one whose father was| That green, cracked celluloid over- mous old Kaiser cafe, on the Fried; hanged.” jcoat, however, was pathetic. The c. For yeara, this has! Officers with their epaulettes torn| Austrian officers used to look so been the leading high-life resort of /off their military coats are o ¢ {smart and g I always thought central Berlin, Here the Junkers of |the new sights. Some are wearing |them the gayest in Europe. And Prussia met each other for a seidel| civilian overcoats on top of the now of beer. Here théy pounded on the | field uniforms, Others are mingling BARE Sete ns tables and drank to “the day" when | hats, coats and other civilian garb : m the German armies and navies would |as evidence that they are no longer Coming in Concert, overwhelm the world and make Ger- | office: February 9 JOSEF ROSENBLATT of com-| I talk with an Austrian officer. | He wears a celluloid cloak. He ex | plains that a new method of making man the world language merce. And NOW I looked up at the big board sign get the last Hohenzollovn emperor, His nan will disappear from all He has on a brown and, to my fingers, Shrine Auditorium Pine and Harvard, at 8:30 | the new proc coat, It is soft and Ghengis Khan. * 1 did not hear many expressions of cracked. That will be all. !tecting them from rain, But the The fabric later fabric, he AIL ORDERS NOW

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