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BY HAROLD EF. BECHTO OLYMPI March &—Grantir Burepean Manager of N A 1 ao ous power to buy DPARIS, March §.—The peace con-| ind » and food products, withou and eliminating mid: SEND te busy on the second lap of | Without profit, and elmninsing mit work, as re Wilson | 1 farm arket t has passed ing his second trip to Nurope 1 now in the b « The Second jap is the plain, bard, | for final consideration, side of the peace work The senate cdntest, which waged ng the liquidation of the war| for hours yesterday afternoon, brok “With Germany he organization machir The Hand in hand wit? 4 “busine was 26 to end” of the pe ood the Senators ‘Taylor of King, Coma efforts of the business and financial / of Spol and Smith of } ett luses of the world, und | tried by ¢ of parliamentary wee! . srocedure the bv ' a charged Taylor with tr to row dust in the senate's ¢ S At am was read t practica used t gned by Mayor Fassett of Spc argue that ¢ of nations | purporting to ask the senate to @eVenant ought to be left until Im feat the bill ylor arowe and Pretting that without its prom he had receive simitar tele political, financial and econom nith later te the f ad ty, the world-wide unrest /he had made a mistake, and declared Y By now have broken out of| tho telegram had demanded that the \e and thrown peace far in the | bill be “de on the floor and not killed in the r committee.” Pa d Business Up Now sett was of the \ a) “agp the league covenant was |*r# of the measure, a <1 first, and now the practical | °Y ‘He Spe : 4 ness enders” have their day Doubt City Ability Committees on reparation, on Coman declared the emasure so Sa on labor, on waterways, on | cialistic, and said that if Seattle lal questions, on all the hard essful in mun eratir of the settlement which must|her street car syst wend be Germany to a strict unt-!in favor all business into are progressing rapidly with| the hands of the government work, ity officials are not elected for Rushing Work ir business ability,” he declared. 7 h » | Senator Lon Johnson said th President Wilson, before leavilk:| i wature “must enact relief aga explicit instructions that his Must not slow up the me He pointed out that he Ieaving delegates in whom he full confidence. And the con has been taking him at his He will arrive in Paris to find of the committee with reports for him and others pro- @ rapidly with their subjects. As for reparation, which probably flex better than any other ques the practical side of the peace fm which the conference is em France and Belgium come naturally. Other nations’ can be disposed of in com tively short order. outstanding job of reparation | pay France and Belgium for damage she wrought. The sug has been made that the repair what the Germans de d but what they are unable to ir ap rapidly as these two coun Tequire. It is known that this tion is receiving considera Behind the whole problem of ‘tep- rt stands a financial riddle that far beyond any mere “vanking | ition.” it is @ question of world-wide | “he Daily Mail, perhaps the most on Germany and German mess during the war, says in g connection: peace delegates find that they will need to the associated peoples, if the lat )from the enemy without ruining es.” the allied nations desire to and to offer strict justice, and tes are hopeful that shortly President Wilson's return | Will be a full agreement on the which will most certainly and y gain this end. O. Hart, dealer in malt syrups hops, formerly of 1104 First has moved his store to 109 Uni st.—(Advertiverment.) Every day some man in need of a real tate loan calls at our fice and states he came to us because some of his friends recommended our loan plan. LOWEST RATES NO COMMISSION PROMPT SERVICE WASHINGTON MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK AVENUE Extablishea Years Ansets $9,000,000 Fat Sunday Dinner at the Hotel St. Regis Cafe Dinner—5:30 to 890 o'Clock A neat and dainty dining room. Refined and quiet resort, where ladies long to lingere A la Carte if Desired Seeond and Stewart. must help Belgium and France | of English publications in its! “may prem | te for the enemy as well as/ ‘are ever to secure what is their | the food profiteers.” son insisted prices were soar | Mg a8 a result of relaxation of fed J eral food control | Bishop declared Coman didn’t un | derstand conditions in his own city, where the cnunicipal fish market had | reduced prices from 35 cents to 10 cents a pound. Seeing that the bill had passed Taylor jumped up, changed his v to “aye” and at would move to recon: Now Up to House | Friends of the bill insisted on im | mediate reconsideration and carried | their point The measure was again put on final passage and carried | The fight now goes to the house. te he ve notice th § tO decide how much Germany | Organization leaders will attempt to! % kill the bill | It provides for buying and selling, by municipalities, of butter, emg, nilk, meate, vegetables and fruit. Those who opposed the bill were Coman, Barnes, Cartyan, Cornw Cox, Crawford, Groff, Loomis, R ick, Smith, Taylor, Wray and Young VICE CRUSADE BEING WAGED After #0 inventiga | ton of the un-Amert |e ries in the West Seattle high i, he was diaminsed Fri . by t att ho by a vot (to Judge Winsor alone favored bis retention He will be paid until the end of April, but will be given leave of absenoe until then This action was taken after rimtendent of Schools Frank HB. r reported that the present system of teaching history was t vo far devined and that ~ N rhauser wha not the ut-of-date system f teaching ¥ ah » Intro ' \ ditable things that have t of Mr, Nieder haw ability I ner akon it the more difficult rt against him. 1 fe u t board ha broa respot b | Members of who had! ted In favor of dismissal are to have said after the t they did not believe et dimtoyal, t that th he had brought n wb affair be r Teet in ® rk, and th had been tr to the that h Loss OFU.S. _ ARMY IN WAR | TOTAL 240,197 ami ¢ "ontinued Fr rom Page One! had Army which s and 146 overseas. Gen. Pershing has bee ortaed tments wus sald. As } t for the regular y they A BF. t r the emerg amps ort, designated at have been The regular army camps } Bliss, Fort Oxlesthorpe | BREMERTON, March & ally also to be used an jand civil authorities of sidligerten ted ennee in cooperation with. the attie | Demobilization firutes given by | police, are making a di pined March showed that 419,56 me Grive to ban undesirable women | sied for the United States up to jfrom this city, March 3, and 354,824 had landed in Already some 15 arrests bave been |inis country up to March 7. The made in the vice cleanup campalgn, | number ered demobilized ts and jail sentences and fines have}) cy 999 : been administered by the Bremer ton police court in flagrant case The Bremerton police and the city attorney are working with the naval intelligence officers here, and are | being assisted by the police in Seat tle, in order to keep a double check on their investigation Officials declare that since the armistice was signed a false .report was circulated that restrictions here had been relaxed. They immedi ately launched a vigorous drive to | keep the naval and city precincts here free of undesirables and declare that no dropping of the bars will jever be permitted. “DOWNTOWN U” The “downtown” university, popular cognomen of the University | of Washington extension division, is now attended by almost as many} {pupils as the regular university |boasts, according to E. F. Dahm,| who is in charge of the extension di vision, ‘There are 1,300 students-attending |the 55 different claasea conducted by |the university every afternoon and jevening on the tenth vga Moe the} Henry building, accordin |lic health nursing is taught. | An income tax study class, which |meets every Friday night, is con- ducted by J. M. MeConahey, and con- |tains the names of such prominent | business men as C. Osseward, E. Kt. | Thomas, Otto Grunbaum and W. C. | Bayles Classes in Russian, Japanese and Chinese meet twice a week. | A Clase in business law will be | | formed next Monday night, under | the direction of O. P. Cockerill, for- wity of Washington. All persona with general business experience aro eli- y sible to join thin class. |MAN AND WIFE STOP | QUARREL LONG ENOUGH | TO WHIP PEACEMAKER PITTSBURG, March %.—That he [Was sla: d with a knife and then Ithrown thru a door was the story }John Skollan of the 43rd atre railroad Y. M. C. A. told the police at’ St. Francis hospital last’ night He gaid he interfered in a quar- rel between Nic ikus of 47th st and Clkus’ w Skollan said that he was visiting at a rooming house at 4622 Hatfield st, when Mr, and Mrs, Cikus, , visitors, quarreled and when he tr terfered both turned on him and the next thing he knew he was being taken to the hospital. | Cikus was arrested, If you value your watch, let Haynes repair it, Near Liberty theatre.—-Advertinement. LIBERTY BONDS ANY AMOUNT--ANY ISSUE BOUGHT—S0LD—QUOTED MACFARLANE & HALL Elliott 1324 605 Lowman Bldg. GRAIN COTTON GROWS RAPIDLY the! |and everything from Ginsiee to gree | mer professor of law at the Univer-| ot} NO SUBSTITUTE, HAYS DECLARES ST. PAUL, March §—Addressing a republican meeting here last night Chairman Will Hays, of the repub | lca nautonal committes, declared jthe party “will accept no indefinite jinternationalization as a substitute | for fervent American nationalism.” Hays’ speech followed a day of conferences with party jeaders of Northwest states “Let us not for one moment lose |xight of our own suprecne national ism, altho we seek ernestly and prayerfully for methods leavening fu- ture wars, and will go far, indeed, in in effort to that end.” he said. “The republican party has always followed the flag and has made the | music for the nation. We will not |Join any party that does not follow | the flag and keep step to the music. SSTEFANSSON ~ TO SPEAK HERE Vilhjalmur Stefansson, famous Arctic explorer and scientist, ap. |pears at the Metropolitan theatre |March 20, Stefansson will recount his experien in the Far North, where the expdédition, which safled from Seattle, was lost, and the jtebeent of world speculation ‘Patrick Takes Weapon Away From Highwayman SAN FRANCISCO, March 8 —De tying all traditions regarding etl quet when being held up, Patrick | Reardon is today owner of a thug's revolver, When told to throw up his hands, Pat selzed the weapon held |by the highwayman and pulled the | tela r twice. Both shots were and Leaving Re the don the gun. |AMUSE METROPOLITAN NOW PLAYING—-LAST WEEK WITH MAT. TODAY KOLB AND DILL in “AS VOU Nig 60¢ Ma War T twice MOORE vans “THE YOUR HUSBANDS” With Jack and Kitty Bryan Ye Sidney fue George ‘Townes, ven Orpheum Vaudeville PALACE HIP Continuous Daily, 1 to 11 “TNE SILVER NTAUN” ther I * Acts Ten Mary Miles emary Climbs the | Heights.” 100; t] Weekday Mats ives, & Bun, 200 ao 8 held in the city jail. holdup man fled, | ‘GUE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1919. DWGERMANS SENATE VOTES \NIEDERHAUSER SENATE VOTES ILL PAY NOW FORMARKETING | DISMISSED BY | FORGAPITAL “BEING TALKED BILL FOR CITIES SCHOOL BOARD PUNISHMENT OLYMPTA, March & li, hment will be Capital pun restored in the state |of Washington, if the house concurs in the action of the senate. By a vote of 26 to 12, the senate panned a bill which would permit the jury to oath penalty for first-de » murderers nator French tried to amend the dill so the prison would be kept at the state penitentiary a year before the governor ordered execution, This plan faite Davin then attempted to attach a provision for submitting b two the voters for ratification, The sen ate yoted down the amendment Capital punishment was abolished the legislature in 1913, by the yan Dill nator Kuykendall, chairman of sary committee, led the fyrht toration of the death pen Debate Cut Short “Universal hist tells um that murder waves follow any great war,” he said. “Thieves are more apt to kill their victims te elimin witnessen, ‘The death Ity in nelf defense for society. Burglars prefer to operate In states where the death penalty has been abolished, We should no longer encourage the mur der industry.” Opponents of capital punishment were not heard, following passage of & gag motion to limit debate to the authors of the bill | the measure Those opposed to were Barnes, Davis, Ferryman, | French, Hutchinson, Iverson, Ben Johnson, Lamping, Loomia, Morth land, O'arra and Wray. MORE ARRESTS LOOKED FOR IN MURDER CASE ‘Three more people may be arrested }in connection with the murder of) | Prank Burkhardt, whose body was found swathed in & mattreascover in @ ravine south of Renton June-| tion, February 22, and for whose) killing J. A. Miller, former friend, oe Athen tener tA et RNR NL aOR i te 4 sabe etn pa FOURTH NEAR..PIKE SESSUE HAYAKAWA Captain of Detectives Charies A. Tennant has put Miller thru another questioning In which Miller is re ported to have said he informed two of hin wife's relatives of Burkhardt’s| death. These he is aid to have told) the crime happened while he was laway from the house, and that he feared he might be aasociated with it. The expreseman who hauled the body from Milter’s house to the ra- vine is the third. | Burkhardt and Miller had been friend ‘ing togeth at Miller's) |nome, 3823 26th ave. 8. W. Here,| way detectives, Miller killed Burk: |hardt for a #um of money, using @ |tammer, The date was February 13, [and the body was found February 22, jand jay in the morgue two weeks before being tified. RUSSIAN REDS SAID TO WANT PEACE TREATY | LONDON, March &—A new peace | proposal, granting large concessions, will soon be forthcoming from the} | Bolsheviki, a dispateb from Helsing fors, quoting Moscow advices, re ported today According to this dispatch, Preat dent Larin, of the Russian economic council, declared officially that the soviet government would offer the allies a conc jon for construction of a canal connecting the river Amu daria with the Caspian sea; also the right to exploit the great wealth of the cotton regions Under thia scheme, Russian debts puld be paid to the allies from the eds of export trade with the/ allies, The soviet government would demand that the * shall not in terfere with Russian internal affairs. JAPANESE HAVE | TALLEST HATS | AT PEACE MEET (Special to The Star by N. K. A.) PARIS, March §.—If hate an igi the Japanese are ble fi at this 5 Lioyd George and Lan k their silk ‘ount cut for confreenoe hats are just Japanese wear silk hats, too, but the Japanese’s silk hata are extraordl. nary #ilk hats, They or 100k about a foot taller than the hats of the other a tes and they have an imposing, swagger Next to] the headgear of Prince Feisul, son of ire ar hats but curve t king of the Hedjaz, with its mar. velous gold Uara, the Japanese's hats are easily the most striking at the confe Balfour and Clem em to rrive in enceau don't « care They actually a whoop oft felts Germans Can’ t t Shop | in Paris—Not Yet): | (Special to The Star by AD PARIS, March 8—Strange as it} |may seem, the Paris police arrested ~|three foreigners on the bout ard ME N° T S| the other afternoon in spite of their | state |plea that they had tarried in F |to spend money. You they w Germans from Germany, recently ris e dinary silk hats. The | 1 Supported by the dainty Tsuri Aoki, in “BONDS of HONOR” An exciting story of two Japanese Nobles in love with the same girl, who pursue widely divergent paths— one of the most powerful dramas Hayakawa has ever essayed. COMMISSION IS ise hea |be held every night next week and Now DISSOLVED (»: aay Wednesday at the West Se- of the dissolution of the al-|attie Methodist church. a export commission, which, dur- | — the war and to date, purchased France the war| SENATE VOTE ON | DIVORCE BILL IS RECONSIDERED : foodstuffs for Great Britain, and Italy, i# sent out by board thru the local offices. | More than half the OLYMPIA, March 8&-—Opponents to more rigid divorce laws lost in rt licenses will be issued for all pleasure of any the senate yseterday, when that! commodities contained in the free ve & body, on reconsideration, passed the list for Northern neutrals, it is an Auto Trip is the bill which had been defeated by a nounced. For other commodities, . ¥ ; recollection—later. rrow margin Thursday. The vote the consignee must apply for import | ' yesterday was 29 to 10, permission to allied military author If the house concurs, be ity in the sone in question. The necessary to live two y free export licenses cover the Ger- | | H of one, within the state before ob-|man Rhine provinces under Ameri ‘ P PON ‘ taining ® divorce. Aftet a divorce,| can and allied control only. Make your automobile trips couples must wait a year, instead of —- \| permanently enjoyable—|| Get at the Real Cause—Take aix months, before remarrying ee Gti one j Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Thore who opposed the bill yes | . > BRC terday were: Young, Wray, Thome, | Fak? LAXATIVE BRO | _ That’s what thousands of etomacd with a Kodak Record. ae are doing cogent Instead of fain yan raat air, Rockwell, and Crawford. ett, tried to amend adultery the only Thia amend » 15 vote. Renick, | nature on the box FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure ‘That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Lous of Time. have a New Method that cures and we want you to try it ylor, Smith Smith, of the bill by makin grounds for divor ment was lost by Sin ff Of course, see that your Films are properly devel- oped and printed. House Chessies Vote on Milk Code! w. asthma, EE YOUR AUTO AT tongue coated, appetite OLYMPIA, March 8 —Reconsid-|at our expense. No matter whether a * eration of the new milk pen pill, |Your case is of long standing or re THE AUTO SHOW | 122s, don’t-care feeling, no je 4 cont development, whether It is prea- energy, troubled with after its defeat Thursday, Friday | ent as occasional or chronic asthma, you should take Olive resulted in it being passed without|you should send for @ free trial of substitute for calomel amendmant by & vote of 68 bur method. No matter in what cll- , ae mate you live, no matter what your Dr, Edwards’ Oli The fuel bill, No. 204, was ‘ge or ocenpation, if you are trou- | considered, but no decision reach- | Mea with asthma. our method should | A, the matter bathe dee or | relieve You promp! , the matter being set A fot | *e Oey sneclatiy want to send tt to} They Monday The latter bill, which|«nose apparently hopeless canes eri ing, cramps or pain, Just failed of a constitutional ma- | where al! forma of inhalors Tate one or twoet bedtime fr joulty, makes it mandatory for OP lren’ etc, have ‘hoa relief, pod Ne at what institutions to use Washing-|{, show everyone at our own’ ex- At 106, 25c per box, All * ton fuel pe that this new method ts de- recrisbianchimnssisbinanscuteeaas es ea siened to end all difficnit breathing, | sir wheesing, and all thone terribte a | pigsa in| britiging . locomotive POLITE ONE 18 THTER | paroxyey sand for all time | A D WAY T SAVE Trane. When the police uiiced or| “I beg your pardon—my mistake.”| TMS "n single day. Write now and | their papers, they sald they had) *Pologized a stranger to B. C, Pot-|then begin the method at. once, | stopped to do some shopping while|'*®, Imperial hotel, in the latter's Send no money, | Mimply mail coupo “In times like these when economy waiting on a train back 4 rete ORE 4, - wreny And ag i is so har ogi ee Se hedhag paged ce vs Bs . . | way to save than to have ASIA MINOR ASKING Digging fo Pig ao RPP AMENEASGO? meoua lt family shot with | Neolin Soles hes ager had taken $46.85 with |) RTT" Negara and Mudece writes B. F. Williams, Rochester, N.Y. FOR TRACTOR PLOWS — nis, Buffalo, N In hig letter Mr. Williams tells of (Special to The Star by SMYRNA, March 8 turning from war t N. BE. A) Asia Minor is farm, Plows are greatly need but in keeping with modern methods, tractor plows fre most desired, Only the strongest machines are wanted a T LEAVES $125,000 LPHIA Mareh Story, artist and on his PHILAD Julian b willed widow 8 portrait deathbed, sie to his Elaine Story The will, just probated, is signed with a mark, the| ‘testator being too weak at the ‘umo| it was drawa to sign his name, ter, whil his ¢ of 000 Send free trial of your method to a pair of Nedlin-soled shoes which he? has worn constantly for four months, “The soles still look like new,” he says. You, too, will think there is no better way to save, when once you have tried shoes with these long. Beecham’'s | Pills "y sia Get Horlick’ S. The ORIGINAL :Malte i Safe |b | beh.) comfortable, and wat Malted Milk: Milk ae LR RUNE A They come in many Cot member of the ey. ‘. St. Pal sine Rept. & Plumbing Co. eve! Pa al al & Pandit Co win! rapidly improve your ile spe cay Necks Si & Invali Gieasrat seal complexionbyarousing the | iifcally by ‘The Goodyear Tire peer. | races” water backs | Hver and putting stomach [et Co. Avon, Ohio, who al mae A Nutritious Diet for All Ages tnd connected” "| and blood in good order. | wear all other heels. } Quick Lunch; Home cit oe. 608 PIKE ST. Sot os taeaTiONS vain 873" |uggugunattermiteeneeee, Nedlin Soles =