The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 14

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THE SEATTLE | GHINESE OXEH SENATE LEAVES “aan wanacer’G,0,P,MAKING BABY REPUBLIC. : be - PROGRAM FOR OF BOHEMIA IS LEAGUE, BUT U.S.RAILWAYS - “a ACCUSE JAPAN IN BAD SHAPE \, | GBTHCONGRESS U.S, BOOSTER WASHINGTON, Ma Japa:| WASHINGTON, Mareh nese and Chinese rep nes today ts fe the * ues @ statement to tly tro confronting the railroad ad Agrecing that ¢ tie Will settle O: $750,000,000 taking contrary v ¥ ge © ; individual as; Precious. Weilion tive coun days and the The Ch the future Claims to Kiachow and denouncing Japan's 21 demands on China, open ly charge that Japan prevented China from joining the war in 1914 and 1915 After China had notified the allies she desired to dec! war in 1914, |) it is charged she rece! intima tions a “certain power” that such a Move would be likely to “create com Plications.” Again in 1915 she was Prepared to ent but Japan Fefused to assent Indorsing the league of nations as the biggest achievement o the Chinese statement co “We have known lit Maybe much that w Tegained under the | @er in which we will be free to Oug life untrammeled and unthreat | ened by the type of state whose ma terial greatness is based on war r Japan's Statement The Japanese »' WASHINGTON, N Repub: (United Direc: | ating plar met today to organize) PRAGUE, Cx Slovakia, March of the ' Hoan te ns financial mont the house for the bu johemia probably tn of the 66th ¢ ally country in the world nowa At le neresn pro tion as a result nen t time in elght years days, t you have that impre but ate 1 problems, com rvake nt to four years An committee on commit-) don when you arrive in Prague ws regarding the nelu The Czech Howed to give : teow met in the majority caucus room from Bertin ations of their respec of the house office building u within a few jert will det fas ir footings during the ative | of the when they and emine were they « easserting tt war by Austria kup for it this of $915,000, ap up need is in rantals: » take and many bh immediate due proximately $200 ( © renew maturing bond ” « of allied flags, in every possible corner along | od streets and in niches of nt buildings. American and wcho-Blovak republic flags roratic of the commit due tidust n supplies made up of 36 provided, the aly $31,000,000 o wirses, which mill administration | a rnel been sug dif. a lrewedt h republican a floor littee, of eerares Austrian empire finally thousands of Mags sudden © brought from hiding, many printed on paper, since waible to find gested as a means « flew Two Ways Out Turn the railroads back to the ment to pend. nt ex eo aawlen various | of Geo, TS. White he war them cloth pric After 14 years of service ant mar f the Seattle alifor n appointed manager je Institution. re eds KE. C. Wagner The whe joined a New York banking 607° | weak Mann and th enough was im Wilson's Every ate ™ picture of F |him Presid ntinue for &) republic the they are the greate and both almost to the Lieut Gallagher Toe Cebchomornice Dav Held in Portland |‘ committees era, Some of th drawing nmitte feta program which rep tart before th ext ox management , a form of nip ne Flank © nia, George T White bh of the Whit whe has two ident Wil mar t will b ernational extent of we began bis ¢ «a bank rk in the British Linen He came to th naturalized fieulty ment was issued UCU" try ; ‘i IRTLAND. university pe s mig P in 1909, He » Francs P or fo und by Marquis SaionJi in resp al? ye I pilletia pores bye baal a titude to-| cade attempting to Money | to Seattle = eoevcint | Rothing they will not « | _| they may experience difficutty a White has a hobby f ; eeeentne. | Visitors from allied ¢ edema the government Cag wad erty Dra cata eS a . Everyone in Czecho-8! with the hor such loans it would nat! yacht, China and C from precy ens looking forward to the arriv peace on and firm n where « oe owe first official mimdtons other dasis. bonds would be competing with Hb: jer ¢ in Canada for pass |countries, The Italians were the first “We view ‘he question as much) .. ican bonds and notes on the Poveg igen ¢ the |t2 crows Auntet break the tsola- | rom the general world viewpoint 88) open market ‘ 2 «ag ellggalign Jtion of this str member of the | from that of the F East, wh Whether one of thease or some Can overseas army « ate, An Ad can miasion under | ve have been compelled three times | ther solution is reached in handling a ec ean ek leadership of Capt. Manual} YOUNG GIRL IS Be re ee cmnintain peace. We are| the problem, it is certain, railroad of ed len ge he te a, bringing a train of truck arms to pea c , ficlals said that improvements and fe : od with medical supplies and food | happy that humanity finally will be extensions must be erred and op Libert an campaign. Italy, is en rout French and | Bble to get a glimpse, altho feeble. | ting costs must be trimmed wher | British missdons» expected. WAR CHAUFFEUR Sf the new era in which right will) | . . The Czecho-Slovaks manifest their ever possible he Cec | Jefinitely triumph over force ; 7 bay a ln Oregon Regiment loyalty to the entante in every way! “E am firmly convinced that China WISE HUN LACKEYS «a The Star by seer|ponsible. They have undertaken pro- | will appreciate our just and legith Waited! Preae a. gfe ag Fe appt Passes Thi City |romn of all allied subjects within mate aspirations and will come toa) ol starch 5. Lack RS pe _ i see.ng cried ae The old ‘Third Oregon national lng former Hapsburg empire, and derstanding with Japan ays <p lentes rcp vad id Seo! 9 esinrpll s ine infantry, nad ot ve nc t o1 yi BP cistatevance of a general cea the cabinet building and the foreign and the Serbian relief fund, | 5, a) je Tuesday morning re a Nation p= ene a me of civilization tn | office did not view the early revolu bh has just arrived her * Bie wut ap Lewis for demobil a vee he “ ee proerens of clvilientio tionary proceedings with great Joy.|chauffeur who deserves a . O lecamnute etcp was| ue nove © Venom Burapee Ane ey were inst the new govern h the . geo ot gas] They. Were geinat the saw gover: . r which the Red) ire spirit of the Czecho-Slovaks f ly to, ment for a while She « short of to give the eae ae roctterrvel tea of, ‘The story goes, the head lackey|high + She ¢ ty a ots tndeme tx ton Ga ook ko MME’ regarding their real interestn jonties the other lackeys together injo¢ tho « sat May, in charge of the| oa as hae hy a jubtiant This emancipation of human thought! # Janitor’s room of the cabinet bulld: | Woran's hospital | whict of the company, 60] 20° =trestom after 466 searn” as thal ing, where they digeuased recognition |i} victorious Serbian army in it 6 men went Into action | hoy a ogi af | Will be eminently salutatory not on orn independence in called. The or e hon y offic * oe extren« th b «at Chateau Thierr the world in general, but also for) fin eet orcs pg 00 REE a! en = AR sggcuanygho’ the | t Chat Tae Y | pe of the land have as many pri- €ach nation particularly i ~ wnlee gage oan and saw vous wervice until the) vations as other inhabitants of the! “Future union of the Oriental|*#ked. “We don't know them. Will/ Danube into what was Austria: | signing of armistice defeated coubtrien, but joy at being! meee. hoon, the Seuantion! 16/1 "WSS iaally decided to recogniae| ‘Tiny started. with 16. Ford a1 : ete liberated More than half that of humanity. nally decided to recogr hey started with 16 Ford am 4 f with the Occidental in sentiments, |them, not because the lackeys were | pulances, ed the army over Chinese to Start German Tabooed 0 er to the new government.|tne rc which It German is & language tabooed Perfect harmony and lasting good WOP over to & the rn * Swill, is a high and sublime vision.” |>ut in view of the geenral scarcity | traversed of these 16 Aerial Transport among the Cxecho-#lovaka, not by iS spe = of jobs in Berlin and the high cost cars he or PEKING, March 6—Aertal trans | decree, but by public feeling. Some- LANDS IN JAIL AGAIN jot food. end of Serbia, having transp vice between Kalgan, a cara-|times it works difficulties for for- th and sick Serbian soldiers to meanwhile wands of w ter, and Siberia, and also alelgners who know no Slav tongue. in| Go into @ restaurant and order your | ‘Thomas F. G. Dougherty, arresged | February 15, on the charge of| NEW SHIPPING AGENT omning the Gobo denert 1 anarchy, and released on| Connected for years with offices | pitals. the Chinese government.|mea! in German, and the waiters| bail on February 25, was re-|of the Nippon Yusen Kisen steam. director of the Peking: | Probably will not understand you at arrested Tuesday evening on charge ship company in Japan, Tohra 06 Suiyuan railway, has been appointed | /ll. You may not be served unless | director of the new aerial service.) You explain you are an American, | An order for airplanes has been /4nd don’t know Bohemian, and there- ne factories. |fore must speak German, Then they : =, | will talk German and understand it, and will bring you anything they can get. The same is true of shops. Prague is a very old city, with | quaint, somewhat Oriental passage- ways, the least modern of the large cities in the former central empires, | due, according to the Czecho-Slovaka, | to the deliberate plan of the Aus- trians to keep the city undeveloped | It is @ city of nearly a million, in- |fjcluding the inhabitants of the! suburbs. | | The people are lively and intelll-| | gent, mostly dark complexioned and black-eyed, They are independent in | | epirit and ambitious to make their | isolated little country a strong mem- | | ber of the allies, They keenly appre ciate recognition by President Wil- son, whom they credit with having | | put Czecho-Slovakia on the map. MAY START SILK | " INDUSTRY HERE Silk milla should be opened in Se attle, to prevent the overland trans portation of raw silk from the Ori |Blent to the t, according to in No Matter How Strong a Statement We Made—It reap Coen ge ad an Rao Would Not Be Strong a that approximately” $600,000,000| Enough to Tell You | worth of finished silk products are| ‘‘What Good Values’”’ now turned out by Eastern mills j annually They Are at This Price $4.75 for Blouses attle in raw shape from the Ort . is shipped across the continent, made into a manufactured article, jand shipped back again or else where. With the development of a foreign trade in silk commodities, —Of heavy Georgette Crepe —Heavy Silk Crepe de Chine —Georgette and satin combined —and soft Taffeta Silk —shown in more than a dozen new styles irgest Audience in the Northwest Reads Star Want Ads _ Of wife desertion. He was released |Kasama has assumed charge of the Again on $500 bond provided by | local passenger offices, in the Col Richard Olsen. [man building | THE BON MARCHE ARGAIN BASEMENT t loc enterprise should, it is inti-) mated, investigate the possibilities silk manufacture here and the ntion of the raw product that |comes to this port | \Services Held for | Seattle Pioneer Funeral services for Mra. E. C. Ketcheson, Seattle pioneer resident, | who died Tuesday at the age of 84, | were held Wednesday noon from the | |Bonney-Watson chapel, cremation | following | Mrs, Ketcheson, who died at the home of her daughter, Mra. Laura K. Yott, 903 Boylston ave, N., came |to Seattle in 1889. She is survived by seven children and ten grand children and great-grandehildren, among the grandchildren being Carl M. Anderson, managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle. |Mining Men Will | Hold Convention | nd the North ntion at Van 7, 18 and 19 consulting John Hunt, of the | company, and W. on and J, ations are and from Idaho and Canada, Altho rthwest" convention, dele- New York, San Francisco states, will attend. —We have had eight styles sketched—and they’re all very good looking, you'll have to admit. Blouses with large collars—high col- lars—tailored collars and collarless. —Some have beautiful embroidered fronts, combined with beading—buttons—hemstitch- ing—lace inserts and fine tucks are some of the other trimmings. It includ | mining en, Western Flesh, White, Salmon, Canary, Black, Sand, Rose, Nile Green, Brown, Gray, Sand, Light Blue, Pekin Blue and some Plaids—Sizes 36 to 46. rt — -- —_———} | The Largest Audience in the | Northwest Reads Star Want Ads | -———_—__—_—- AR “a yard? Yes, the soft draping kind— THE BON MARCHE DAY HOME DRESSMAKING Silk For the Making of l Ss; Your Easter Dress If your Spring dress is to be silk—you will find it profitable to buy the material during Home Dressmaking Days at the Bon Marche. You will find it helpful to let Personal Service advise you as to the colors and fabrics best suited to your purpose. ‘ a You will find it economical to take advantage of these special pric in the Silk Section. Z - As a suggestion—we show some of the latest Dress Patterns issue by McCalls and the Ladies’ Home Journal—at the top of this adverti ment. 36-inch Silk Mixed Poplin $1.00 A fortunate purchase is responsible for this offering of good quality Silk: mixed | Poplin at $1.00. For dresses this is particularly suitable, and there’s a large assortment of colors. Cut Lengths of Silk $1.25.Yd. Heavy Silk Crepe de Chine and Silk Chiffon in lengths from one to ten Plain colors and many handsome patterns for dresses and blouses. Faille Silks $1.25 Dress Satins $2.25 Soft draping Faille Silks only $1.25 Especially suited for dresses these lustrous Satins at $2.25 a All colors, including navy, taupe, Pekin, rose, duck, tan, lavend and other colors—a yard wide. Blue Taffetas $2.25 Right out of the clear skies come such a variety of blues—in 36-inch Chiffon Taffetas—Pekin, Goblin, Pe sian, China, Overseas, Japanese, Mate-' lot, Liberty and many others. Foulards $1.79 Yard “ Amazon Crepe $2.50 , Beauties are these Foulards at a Amazon, one of the newer weaves special price. They're so lovely for of crepe—heavier than crepe de Chine spring and summer. Soft draping silks | —40 inches wide. How well it wears— with navy, black or taupe grounds with and how beautiful are the street and contrasting figures. evening colors. UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE 82 inches wide, in wistaria, navy, light beav taupe, tan and white, with broad or narrow self stripes. Dress Silks $1.45 Beautiful fancy Silks at a fetching price—$1.45 a yard. Louisines, Satins and Taffetas, mostly plaids, some stripes, and all 85 inches wide. If Your Spring Dress Is to Be Cotton— White Voiles New Ginghams 40c to $1.25 Yard 25c to 75c Yard The brighter days brings desire for A Spring awakening of color combi- white voile dresses—either plain or nations in striped and plaid ginghams, fancy. This lot has figures or stripes, 27 and 82 inches wide. and evenly woven. D P ] ‘ ress rercales Colored Voiles 25c, 35c, 40c 85c to $1.50 For inexpensive dresses for home As lovely as the flowers of spring wear—percale is important—36 inches are these fancy colored Voiles for new wide—in figures and stripes of many dresses—36 to 40 inches wide, in all kinds. sorts of patterns and colors. LOWER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE A NEW APRON DESIGN JUST REACHED US FOR APRON DAY The Josephine at $1.95 A handy Slipover Apron as sketched, in pink, blue or lavender percale. IT CAN BE IRONED IN A “JIFFY” It is prettily trimmed with plaid in a harmonizing color and finished with white rick-rack braid. The Emily Apron $1.50 This model is simplicity itself—made.of percale in stripes or figures. Slipover style, cut amply jul—a very interesting number at $1.50. Waist Aprons at 50c Useful little Aprons—always easily laundered, and for only 50c. Dark blue, also light figured or striped percale with one pocket—white rick-rack braid trimmed. THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Corded Marquisette for Curtains—60c Yd. Curtaining that makes one feel that summer is almost here—in rose, blue or cream tints with conventional designs, soft shades or birds flitting here and there —1l yard wide. 27x27-Inch Carpet Samples $1.10 and $1.45 Useful and serviceable for Spring rugs are these heavy Wilton Velvet Carpet Samples—many patterns in good colors, with well, sewed ends. THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Dressing the Little Folks for Play Days Play Dresses 75c Any little girl would be ready for a frolic in one of these Gingham Play Dresses—blue, pink or lavender checks with plain trimmings—3 to 6 years. Play Suits 95c Little brother will feel ever so big , in a new Wash Suit—these are made { of plain gingham with trimmings of striped gingham—2 and 3 years. SECOND FLOOR Cunning Creepers 85c Creepers for tiny folks from 1 to 3 years of age—blue gingham with col- lar, sleeves and belt finished with white taping. Pinafore Aprons 50c Little sister can play with freedom in a Pinafore of striped or checked gingham—little garments that are easy to launder—2 to 6 years. BABY SHOP.

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