The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 24, 1919, Page 9

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2ACE HATRED INCREASES SLAV-ITALY FEUD el Ancient Quarrel 1 Flames Up in ~The Great American Hom me! | ‘ALLEN HURT IN KITSAPIS SUNK Dispute Over Dalmatian Region’ a TAXI SMASHUP OFF HAWAIIANS - An a result of a collision between a| SAN FRANCISCO, March 24-9 By HERRERT COREY dollars, No wonder these Slavs love | schoo! For centuries the Slava NoW EAT Your ¢ taxi and private auto ot Broadway | The hooner Kiteap, en route to TUM, Feb, 21 (By Mail)—tHet beg tag: e ae have had the right to hear mass wate | ou! ‘ANON und Denny way, at midnig un- | Vort Townsend, Wash. from Hong Rave roots centuries deep in| the Crost tally wate The mS. |in the Slay tonaue, A long bygone COME ON, He's AND Be AGoop Boy - day, Henry Allen, 28, 317 18th ave. |jaiu, was sunk in @ collision off the ‘ Guntry. Croat and Italian are | which Venice is built came from | /ope Eranted this permnission on the ALL RIGHT - Come ESTER WILL READ N., Wixi passenger, Is in the Provt | Hawaiian islands with the Wailele, jai the worst possiblc terms because | Palmatia, Once the forest screen Ps emsation G the Smv leaders dence hospital suffering from a dit lan island service steamer, Friday Bi hat their people did not know Latin ie n ss Feasons that date from yeste was gone the hills were washed bare |i ake entiie cenkemeoeeden 4 sa You sPoit. To Yoo AND MAMMA located shoulder and cuts and| night, Word to thin effect wae ie Bes. Hoday. But back of these are | Sou think we will willingly subject | Cf Me Slave that they would either ALL Wit. BB Home IN A eLL BE bruises. ‘The auto wax driven by P. \ecived today by the Chamber of Comm Antagonisms. ‘They have bagn | ourselves again to Italian rule boar gp Hany nage Pet " ar LITTLE Wine Be: Vente. Oost Fares i oe ar be poping Pusht up in anger Jugo-Slavs Inherit Hatred a iw bitterly resented. | ame ane ec tt obe ALL RIGHT, MRS. Hanford #t The Kitsap was formerly the bare Dalmatian coast belongs to “ee ntine ¢ er City and was built ” the Italians say History That may seem a bit far-fetched Mind you, it easy enough to und Barnfeat ia fr y an a A ‘ t Bend, Ore, in’ 1889, She to put much | Understand the ngw of the Ital ew driving en if one feels that the it Did not once? The: uagnificent | Volt ice hold the | It ts difficult for m: _ was of 475 gross tons and owned by Lady Khondda, “Britain's leading the Port Blakely Mill company. The is a director in! Wailele was built in 1904 at the . shipyards. © into the hatred of King | !an action, At mpalate and Where are | George V. because King George III, | effect is | deliberately provocative ak Roreant™ or was he George IV.?--had «| One fecls that such actions are pet is all that is needed to send | kaiserish way about him. But over | tish and unwise, If Italy ix given SEE take pone of rege. Ho |' people Inherit such hatreds ax | the Dalmatian coast by the peace Rot worry so much about | “ey do sheepskin coats and ly | confer = has already mi But the black resentment | castles. They are actually proud of | certat must hold this coast the Venetian occupancy | them. I found in an Itallan official by force of arms, in 5 still persists, He points to Publication the other day the story | manner that Austria held it Bare hills of Dalmatia, Not a/ of some Slav outrage upon Italian!) If Dalmatia becomes a part of @f green may be seen, except peasantry, I have forgotten the | Jugo-s some tolling Slav peasant has of the town and even the cen | pates f@ little basin in th y in whieh this atrocity took that her Reeth hes been co! place, But it ts a perfectly good rea | centurle “ ropean eyes for hating the and v Vineyards on Hillsides ts of the original ruffians ytand that it is sweet to are miles of hills which. not wither nor custom to have her old enemies even from below, seem giant stair. stale this Adriatic vindictiveness. for a little time under her thumb of gray rock. When one To the outsider it would seem that Call Slavs Barbarlans the top and looks down one the happenings of today are enough that each step of the staircase to account for a sufficiency of Moy vineyard. 1 doubt if there on either side The Italians are m@ny land in the world where #0 | treatin, Dalmatia preci» ae tho has been expended in/it were an enemy cou They Sreation of gardens. are driving Croatian schoo! teachers ie rate of wage they rer of town y are forbidding the investment of milliony of ‘the use of the Croatian language in business woman, more than 40 great corporation Fairhaven, ( avia, as every one antict has made certain shall add to- her { hate Even e Croats and the Italians have | as border fight for genera: | Austria saw to it that the sy and Latin never met on friendly terms, ‘The Italians have always affected a contempt for the ve called their neigh An Italian officer watching a crowd sof E IS ONE THING THAT | peasants fight their way on board an already overcrowded train. They had been penned up in a filthy sta tion for 24 hours Moet of the IS ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE had traveled for daya without an| TWEATER COST DAD SOME CHOCOLATES tism Has Never Been |the seat of the trouble, and rid the | "Cqitie:” ancoret the teatian, pur, AMO FIETY CENTS To The WTTLE by Liniments or Lo- 9 **t¢™ of the cause of the disease? ting dainty fingers to his GiWt NEXT DooR — nose and Never Will Be *:_®.. 3, '* one blood remedy that/“paugh! To think that such beasts has for more than fifty years been jthink themselves ready for free . : * | nary suffering and hardships of t ever knew of Rheumatism— siving relief to even the most ax-| dom! ‘fT mignt nave to him of a| President Vigits ; Kl E Most painful source of suffer and stubborn cases of! precively similar scene I had wit pee ve chant ‘Ree becel ondyke Prepares gen paarndladgany tiem. It cleanses and purl: hessed at Milan a few nights betes, Devastated Regions “fe ‘i which they have) for New Gold Work panwed a, More Money "can eac” ~WhenyouBuy M.J.B.Coffec IN THE FIVE POUND SIZE The Most Economical Best in Quality “BESIOE THe. Wan Tax THE ms or — external applications. = ae Rho Pg Ar I when hundreds of Itallan peasants PARIS, March 24.—-President Wil: | fe niin | DAWSON, ¥ March 24 ‘will never see anything but ‘™* Of disease. le experience | tikewise oderous and noisy, fought! son and his party spent Sunda: . MUZ DOGS ON TRAIN Pre ations =f 2 extenalve . Felief afforded by such |%f others who have taken S. 8. 8 for place on an already overcrowded | re tuple mage Mg MONTGOMERY, Ala, March 94 abet 2 ase a se Also Packed in 3 lb. and 1 Ib. Cans iting Solssons, the Chemin redging and hydraulic season this if will convince you that it will) ty, But t would have been ‘ : 80) A recent ruling of the railroads en- why be satisfied with tempo. Promptly reach your case. You can /the use? Theso hates are racial,| Dames, Coucy-leChateau, and neigh-|tering Alabama makes it jncumbent|¥ear, which began about May 1 f fellef from the pangs of pain oe ae valuable remedy at any | The Italians declare that of all the | boring regions. upon hunters to mussle their dogs|are fast nearing completion @re sure to return with fn id trian army no soldiers were so On his return to Paris, the preai. before they enter trains when going The Kilondyke amp covering Be@ severity, when there is per- A valuable book on Rheumatism | furious, #o bestial, #0 dangerous aa | dent said upon hunting trips. ft relief within your reach? and its treatment, together with ex Croats, The Croats laugh at) “The day has been very instruct-| This ts understood to be a precau has proven that Rheuma- pert medical advice about your own y my candidly » me « been in many ways | tion against the dog gnawing the | Dawson, ie a disordered condition of the individual case, will be ser they ¢ always fou ; oc ENTAL ait of the | idua * hey © always fought the | exceedingly une what I rope, thereby getting loose, and the gold last year, ¢ ite many handi VENUE “apd ana tan satisfactory |lutely free. Write toda Italians always will, because | saw was ( ng. But it} muzaling and chain both are rded and it is g ted that the 313 CID A expected from any treat- cal Department, Swift 5) they hate. But they « at nabled me to have a fuller con: |a# measures to prevent the spread of nt produced this r will be went that does hot reach the blood, 250 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga ever of the extraordi- | rabies. much greater. i SEATTLE MILLIONS OF NAKED HUNGRY REFUGEES In Northern France, Belgium, Italy, Rumania, Armenia, Serbia, Northern Greece, Montenegro, Palestine, Photographed by American Red Cross. * A Uttle Serbian in need of mont any- Albania, king you can spare. EVERY CAN GUARANTEED M. J. BRANDENSTEIN & COMPANY| a radius of aboyt 50 miles f $2,000,000 in OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE charges produce Photographed by American Red Cross, An indomitable spirit in a patchwork of rags. ee Czecho-Slovakia, and Poland are crying for ce gh pda lg lent food and clothes You have worked and you All you think you can, perchance. i —especially for In the countries wrecked by the Huns are more than 2,000,000 people, men, women and children, in need of clothing—immediately. Three months after the armistice was signed there were in Paris alone ” 0 loved Be ” approximately 200,000 refugees un- aaa gong Ay a jo brave, clothes. Photographed. by American Red Cross able to return to their homes before That our country, strong, courageous HOMEWARD BOUND WITH ALL THEIR WORLDLY POSSESSIO) spring. One of the main reasons why Now ts called upon to save. they could not go back immediately to begin the work of reconstructing All the Old World, torn and shattered, A N e Wi U d d § l Cl hi D e their homes and sonmienes aif Aner Pleads for succor, pleads to live; was because they lacked clothing that Begs for clathes, and bread, and friendahip— ation- | e se an urp us ot ing rive would, even partially, withstand the Begs for things that you can give. rigors of winter. You have worked and you have given, But you're warm, well-fed and strong: Theu are cold and hunger-driven, With no heart for work or song. Once again the hungry, ragged i. ons of the Old World pray: Give; we asl: of your abundance ; Leat we perish, give today. MRS. E. T. CANN Chairman Used Clothes Drive Committee, Elliott 795. i" M4 rl $ remained ens 0 nousands in he By the American Red Cross--March 24-31 Tae senna ins, it tacit 6.9 at srowded quarters; without furniture, Seattle Chapter of American Red Cross is asked to collect and ship 240,000 pounds, or velit athe tha the stall peson Ne 5 corded by the government or six carloads, of clothes, shoes and blankets. neaiiedomete sigh se EAA OE Drive begins Monday morning, March 24, and the Seattle chapter is asked to con- rule tor four yearn et every to four years, need every form of ss assistance, but clothing is 4 FY ‘ WEEK’S TIM the greatest need of all ne Red Cross is tribute its quota in ONE E. che eipaliet Maat Ot ai. the Fad Gove 4 i the complete needs of these stricken people in the matter of shoes and clothing. Funds Every firehouse a collection depot. i pe over of gene ace ceblne. | Seer ing and making of new clothing In the do- nation of old clothes that can be salvaged lies 315 University Street ! Elliott 795 Not Wanted—Silk Hats, Evening Gowns, S atin Slippers, Boudoir Caps, etc. ov Help solve this problem this week by sending every garment you can spare to 315 University st.

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