The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 21, 1919, Page 7

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REDUCTION OF J PRICES TALKED Depends on Agreement for Steel Rates (United mpliance Presi dent Wilson bled nr confer ences between the industrial board ‘oad adm 1 price reductions will be WASHINGTON ‘ Press) In April 21 with uest stration over coal and resumed soon on Was to ference today pert S Lovett and Henry Yank Losses Light men and 12 offic ere wounded. The heaviest loaves have been suf. fered by The British forces and the newly formed Russian troops, who have Borne the brunt of the flehting Reports Surrender of Bolshevik Army THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1919. ar death with advanced anaemia, | Starkey’s life was saved Sat urday by the transfusién of a pint of blood from the veins of Paul M Roynton, of 1509 Bighth ave, W Starkey, who lives at 416 20th ave is reported to be improving rapidly Monday, altho prior to the operation two weeks. reduction program dragged out ov gonference by the board in New York and Chicago, | administration of these indus | shoes show large the board of their war prices. Both textiles sabGbaprdeckiees ange and nereases over pre FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE—PINE.STREET—SIXTH AVENUE . RUSS PRINCE WEDS city solemnized, | the bureau was chapel of the turday marriage license formal agreem: have been reach /formal agreements on the lower “ @d with some of the largest dealers | pflces expected have been reach: NEW_ YORK, April 21—The mar} and manufacturers in food, textiles| Members stated that lower prices |tinge of Prince Dimitri Golltsine ‘and shoes, vital factors in the cost of | could be put into effect within a/ of the Russian navy, and son of the} living. These are the results of a | week, providing agreemant on steel | fo ¢ Russian premier Mins | various members of | prices can be made with the railroad | Frances Simpson Ste bare This is Uncle Sam's director of * * * ntinued From Page Nine ns * PRICes WIth pown ALSO: oun, Aim HOW 1S ro RUSTORE- THE RAILROADS Walters, but Lovett was taken il LONDON, April 21—-A_ dispatch | Saturday not much hope waa held for And it was necessary to postpone the| from the Ukrainian press bureau, } nis recovery, Boynton is recovering xo THEV PRE -WAF. meeting forwarded here from Vienna, states strvice The cost of living will take a sub. /that Ukrainian troops operating at she AEBQUACY OF c> guatie) drop in the near future, |#omel, along the Bripet river, have| Dr. J. W. Crooks, in charge of <O THE PUBLIC. Members of the industrial board | Accepted the aurrender of the First | Starkdy, appealed thru The Star for ' stated today, providing agreements Bolshevik my With the surr volunteers to submit to the transfu railroad administration uired 35 bi ne, 90,000 jen bo. high “gf mac learned at the board that /&Ad 200 machine guns - who applied because of th xt during the dispute betw Director quality of hia blood Hines and Chairman fF which | willingness to cooperate in the price " ca | | | Government Eager to Gear Up Nation’s Rail Service :: | orts are being made to make all have been increased and observation cars have been restored to many , trains We have attem d also to — . e e ministration was occupied solely with 3 | mupplies, and public travel wan die = $29.50 Bier Not only are we trying te q i " 2 | which existed prior to but a S good-looking as can be are these Suits of wool To aneite ta Sane eeen thas 4c gitiaeee aan : " ‘ THE WATCHWORD OF THE! j jersey, smartly styled and so well tailored that [[/ PMT ncad \pausisrnation. ts : 1 i Iror DER AN ADEQUATE AND 4 they answer for every occasion. a ¢ VENIENT PUBLIC SER- vick.” J Green and Wistaria. Smocks, $1.95 Rose Blue White R house, gar- den and outing wear, the colorful } Smock is a wel- come change from the middy. These are well-made from ‘linenette and cot- ton crash, in belted styles, with long | sleeves, large square | collars and clusters | of smocking. : | Sizes 36 to 44. Green a | Heat | | ig Price $1.95. —THE BASEMENT STORE. Sateen and Heatherbloom Petticoats, $1.95 LAIN colors, flowered and striped designs to choose from in these serviceable Petticoats, designed with tucked flounces and adjustable at waistline. In light- and dark-gray, white, navy, rose, pur- ple, light- and dark-green, Copenhagen. Lengths, 26, 38 and 40. Price $1.95. —THE BASEMENT STORE. Garden Hose Of the Favored Sorts COMPLETE NEW STOCKS OF GARDEN HOSE in a wide choice of qualities in either rubber-lined or moulded rubber: COTTON, RUBBER-LINED GARDEN HOSE in various grades, is priced as follows: 25-foot lengths, $3.75, $4.50 and $6.00; 50-foot lengths, $7.00, $7.50, $8.50 and $11.50. ” MOULDED RUBBER HOSE is priced at $4.25, $5.25 and $6.00 for 25-foot lengths; and $8.00, $10.00 and $11950 for 50-foot lengths. Housewares Section. —THE BASEMENT STORE. With novelty pockets and belts they introduce variety in their designing, and some have their col- lars buttoned up close to the throat if desired. The color-range fneludes Pekin-blue, Tan, Gray, Sizes for women and misses. Priced at $22.50, $24.50 and $29.50. —THE BASEMENT STORE rans Dainty Dress Blouses | “I do not nce any Immediate pond | bility of a widespread reduction in rates,” he mid. “The railroads are suffering from the same slackening of business that other industries are suffering. Freight rates generally will not come down unless there some assurance that prices will come | down, “There has been a feeling that ad Tells Domestic Woes “He beagged about breaking up my home; said he had been living with my wife in Butte; so I bought « gun and shot him.” vances in rates bear too heavily on| BY WA road-building materials, This matter! FOR THE FUTUI SAYSHE SHOT (SYMPHONY TO HOME BREAKER PLAY THURSDAY John McDonald ‘Surrenders; Dora de Phillippe Will Be the, Assisting Artist | Fife on Archangel Front AROMANGIET April 21.¢The ew ° s ® wouiarervance sve amceen— CIFT OF BLOOD | Rail Chief, in Seattle Today | jarmy alnce their arrival last Sep m- 7 . * ber on the Archangel front ts S29 - p 6S wie men and officer of these 196/Paul M. Boynton Volunteers «Fate DOWN UNLESS proved fatal, 87 men and nine of- i = ficers having either died vt disaw vr, tO Aid Charles Starkey THERE Ce THAT been killeg in action, athers, 820 ae come- | » railroads. tle today, as sketched by a Star ar tist Walker D. Hines, in Seat * * * having consideration of the 1 administration of rate on building spect natter 14 materials not we any pre fa rat Directo eneral Hines declared there h ce in the at titude of the adminigration that the pe nt control sh 1 of governe tended to fy Regarding the the railronde ax the r Kress’ failure to pass appropriation asked director gen realsa general said FAVORS BORKOWING TO MEET NEEDS “We might cut down expenditures sin every direc expenditures je. Or we might! arn nancial plight ult of $750,000,000 | Hines, the! woeth of ry by Anthju director as rapidly as pons? tion. tho th were highly desiral resert to every poanible expedien prevail on the railre and other busin to borrow the ne ary enable these expenditures to go for ward. 1 am emphatically in favor of the latter plan "lL AM ABSOLUTELY SYMPATHY WITH ANY WHICH CONTEMPLATES ovr or] aLACY SLOW ING DOWN ¢ THE PURPOSE MEN OUT WITH TH BY EDWARD Foss The Seattle Symphony orchestra Conductor John Spargur, was greet: | ed by a large crowd of musielovers | in the Mas temple auditortum | With this declaration, John Raster Sunday, in presentation of $6 50 McDonald, accompanied by his | the first. popular concert of the 7 wife, gave himself up at the po- | *Pring season lice station at 9:0 a, m, Sunday, ‘The spirit in which the afternoon's HEER Georgette and for the shooting of Joseph Mer- | offering way req sugers. weil f ‘oom at the Mer. |for the continued popularity of this 3 lus yee we ee nae ret alee eadae-wree | nature of concert, which, while not| Shine ashi ys Saturday night. |a symphony recital, embraced the | 4 = » hospital, | best of music. Selections especially | Blouses, with, beaded de- wescn yy Alpen itrd be Dein me ce | pleasing to the crowd, were the| * 7 where he was taken after the shoot “4 . rf | signs, embroidery and ing, suffering from serious bullet | fourth movement of | “Peer Gynt."| itchi - ounds about the legs and hips. Mer-| “In the Hall of the Mountain King hemstitching for adorn wor, according to the police, declared |4n¢ the Saint-Saens “Dance of ment. that McDonald shot him because of | Death They feature colorings and combinations to har- monize with most suits, among them Flesh-color, White, Tan, Navy, Gray, Blue and Peach. Sizes 36 to 44. Price $6.50. —THE BASEMENT STORE, Coverall Aprens 75c HALDREN’S Coverall Aprons, ~as_ pictured, of pink or blue percale, belted at waistline and finished with two patch pockets. Rick-rack braid attractively trims them. * Sizes 2 to 6 years, 75¢. —THE VASEMENT STORE, * a larity dat Aianlandscn sie the beli¢f that he (Mercer) had alien ated Mrs. McDonald's affections, Left Friend at Home lice by MeDonald, the first sign of trouble appeared in November, 1918 McDonald was offered a job in the ‘Todd shipyard, at Tacoma, at $9 @ day, and asked Mercer, a friend of 10 y to remain with Mra, McDonald and the babies during his absence, “T thought he was a true friend,” said MeDonald But McDonald wrote Mercer, say ing that he could get work in the Ta coma shipyards, and also sent Mra. McDonald money to join him in Ta coma, Hearing nothing from either, he retutned to Butte in January, dur ing the shipyard strike, and there found discord instead of harmony. Bought Himself Gun McDonald declared he met several i that Mercer was telling * about him, Angered at their statements, he asked the po- lice authorities for a permit to carry a gun. This was refused, and he bought a gun at a pawnshop “{ found Mercer talking to some IL. W. W.'s, He ia an I. W. W. him self. I suggested that we go to his room. “When we got up there I drew my gun and told him [ was tred of his dirty work, He begged for his life and jumped thru the window, but was caught in the sash. Then I shot him about the legs. T didn't try to kill him, T wanted to seare him good.” Mrs. McDonald, at the pollee sta tion, expressed a desire to make amends for the past, to help her hus band out of his present difficulty and to start life anew, She substantiated his statements in regard to Mercer, domestic A man's cup of joy resembles an after-dinner coffee cup, but his eup of sorrow holds several gallons. | | | | According to the story told the po | Circumstance | | berg ap ‘The seat sale is in charge of the Sherman-Clay Music house, Third and Pine. retain its hold. | Mendelssohn's “Fingal’s Cave,” a symphonic fragment of wonderful coloring and imagination, and El gar’s sonorous march, “Pomp und were two numbers expecially well liked. Goldmark’'s “In Spring” was a trifle noiay and ornate, in comparison with certain other numbers. George Kirchner and Thomas Sol ared as soloists In Masse. net's “Sous les Tilleuls,” which was repeated. “In the Hall of the Moun tain King” was also played twice ‘The next evening symphony con cert will be Thursday, with Ludwig Van Beethoven's Fifth symphony as the principal number, Dora de Phillippe, grand opera star, will ap pear a# assisting artist, A full sym phony program has been anged. A ship may part its cable, and stitt| th ilisiicandlblibo ete... | THEATRE | PLAYERS Elliott 2525 Fifth and Pine NOW PLAYING With Matinees Wednesday-Saturday “Eyes of Youth” Starring GRAGE HUFF AND AN BXCHPTION- ALLY LARGE WILKES PLAYE Nights—30-500 Mats,—20-31¢ Plus War Tax yuld I to} t ‘o'clock by the extension division of duy afternoon MORE SEATTLE SOLDIERS ARRIVE| SAVES LIFE BY Here's Sketch of Uncle Sam’s BASE HOSPITAL UNIT IS INN. Y. | Wild Westerners Included in} | Detachments Arriving | ¢ In New back to Six transports, Landi York Sunday, by America the last unite of the Wild West division There were, also, among the 14,000 fighters and war workers who landed In Hoboken, the Se attle Wenpital unit No. 50, LAeut, u Cot was in ugene Allen athe unit officers and 168 4 the hospttal forces Grag American Americ who | me | former | ow n navy. The board the Paula ided d and Sixty-se Fattalion — Private 926 Bhelby at; Pr Meinnix, 1014 Minor Waldernec liner Hamburg manned b: the Wild Went troops were Virginian and Santa | nd 216th Ammunition elaon T. Hartson, Le € tachment detachment sergt. Dan niversity Il. Rutledge Allen, 2001 Auren t; Private | Dwyer, 1200 ect: Private Charles 2 Hamlin #treet eidier Private H. & Thackeray pla ter, 1131 Twentieth Private W. B. Gaffne Exehange building Hackett, 30 onovan Impey, 2417/ Private H. T. Jacobi, avenu John: avenue: Privat 219 Twenty-ninth A. Kenyon, 1716 Private k. M. King, 667 h Ie -fifth avenue; Private J. ¥ n, 7310 Mary avenue northwest; Private J. D. Lay- man, 305 Hinckley, block y. T. Madigan, 224 ler, Wagoner G. Bt son avenue Parker, theast Twelfth ave EK. Rash ert Shapiro, 1128 Seventeenth ave- R. Smith, street: California avenue: |Il* Stohiton, 4611 Maple | ik Wallace ‘Thoreson, | north; Private F. nd avenue west Tremper, 818 Second ¢ Aubrey Wilton, 1011 National Guard to Enter Rifle Shoot A National Guard rifie team from | Washington wil! be sent to the na- tional shoot at Caldwell, N. J.. Aug for the first time in six years, ording to Brig. Gen, Harvey J adjutant general ARREST TWO MENXIC. NS Jose Lopez and M. ‘Sanchez, Mexi cans, are held in the city jail pend- in, an investigation of their activi of the last week. They are sus pected of having knowledge of var fous burglaries committed in and about the elty. They were arrested Sunday noon at the U and I hotel, Sixth a and King st., by Sergt. P. F. Keefe and Patrolmen Asiund and George Wilson, ] VETERAN LIKES SEATTLE | Ending his services in the army, | after entering the quartermaster corps more than @ year ago as cap tain, Maj. H. H, Armstead, whose mining activities prior to his war rvice extended over territory in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, British Columbia and Mexico, will become a permanent resident of Seattle. OLD RESIDENT DIES George W. Seattle for home, Carrol, 65, resident of 30 ars, died at his Whitman Sunday of cancer, Fu services held from the Masonic tem- Fremont, Tuesday afternoon. 311 PAGE 7 FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET A Large New Shipment of Hoover Electric Suction Sweepers VERY owner of a Hoover is enthusiastic } about its performance, and careful tests j have proved that this confidence is well jf founded. Here is an Electric Vacuum Sweeper that s 4 Beats and Sweeps , as It Cleans —picking up lint, thread and hairs on a whirling | brush and shaking the carpet more than a thow times a minute upon a cushion of air—then remov- jf ing the imbedded dust with a powerful suction. ‘ The most deeply-lodged grit cannot withstand such | a searching operation, and with the thorough clean-~ ing, the carpet nap is raised and straightened, and : dust-hidden colors restored to their original bright- | ie ness, ae How the Hoover Sweeps, Beats and 'Vacuum-cleans is demonstrated daily in the Housewares Se Basement Store, and if desired you may arrange for ‘ a demonstration in your own home and on your 0 rugs, without obligation. —THE BASEMENT STO oA Silver-plated Knives — and Forks ff Set of Six, $3.75 | —introducing a new pattern—the “Chatham” —from the Rogers Cutlery Company. The knives are plated on forged steel, while the forks are silver-plated on a,solid nickel- silver base. Other pieces, priced correspond- ingly low, include Teaspoons Berry Spoons Dessert Spoons Salad Forks Table Spoons Oyster Forks After-dinner Coffee Bouillon Spoons poons Cold Meat Forks Pie Knives Cups and Saucers Special 95c Set of Six S pictured, extra-heavy vitrifi Cups and Saucers, desirable kitchen and camp use or for restaur- ants and hotels. Set of six, special 95¢. 4 Mahogany-finish Serving Trays, $1.50 N attractive price for A these well - finished Trays, with their mahog- any-finish frames, metal ) handles and removable inset under glass. Size 17x11 inches. Price $1.50. —THE BASEMENT STORE. | Call Americanization Meet A preliminary conference to ar- range an Americanization program will be held in room 1044 Henry building, - Friday afternoon at 4 the University of Washington, Twenty organizations will send rep- resentatives. GARDEN CLUB TO MEET ‘The Rainier Beach Garden club will hold a meeting to perfect or. ganization, In the Emerson school, at § p.m. Tuesday. Phe purpose of the club is to promote gardening in- terests, SIMON HOFFMAN DIES Simon F, Hoffman, 46, died Sun. day afternoon at his home, 24 Galer st, as the result of a sickness las ing eight months. Funeral services at the Bonney-Watson chapel Thurs. ott REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the ‘mornin yeu are in the right pl. | = In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which ts thy you can bite corn off the cob; teed 15 years. EXAMINATION FREE $15.00 Set of Teeth. ...........$ $10.00 Set Whalebone Teeth. $8. $8.00 Bridgework . $2.00 Amalgam Filling. Painless Extracting 15 years, Have impression taken in the day. Xamination and advice free, ite and liridge Werk. We Stand the of Time. Patronage is Fecommended by our” patients, whose work is u Riyins good satisfaction. Ask our our work. ‘hen coming to our office, be sure ¢, Bring thie ad with you, Open Sundays From ® te 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS UNIVERSITY 67, Opprsite Krases-Patcsven Cm ~ All work guaranteed for and get teeth same aad See Samples ef Ou 4 Th Most of our p: jents who have tested 4

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