The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 9, 1919, Page 10

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COoPYRIGNT BY BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR . 1406 SECOND AVENUE AVTHOR OF “NORTH OF FIF TY-THREE SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE 4 This morning at 9 o’clock started our FOURTEENTH SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. Twice a year we “clean house,” which means that all short lines in Shoes, Oxfords and Pumps must be cleared out REGARDLESS OF ‘OST. This sale gives everybody an opportunity which they should seize to supply themselves with enough footwear for all FUTURE as well as PRESENT NEEDS. WOMEN’S GROUP 2—$2.85, WERE $5 White Canvas Sport Shoes and Oxfords reduced below cost for quick clearance. mae aa = * | were times when that solace seemed |and for the time being too much at SYNOPSIS || scarcely to weigh against her grow:| peace to permit thought that would, | ling detest for the endless routine of |in the very nature of things, dis ie the lumber camp of her brother Chartie, in the her task, the exasperating physical | turbing Rritish Columbia, comes Stella Benton | riness and irritations it brought] Abbey maintained for his that has supported her in luxury | upon her | pleasure a fast motorboat. He Mts ie his nelenbor, Jack Fyte. “Therefore. For to prepare three now into the bay unheard, ted up side © flow ed to the « Uses everyone to further his one seif-eultured ambit | food for a dozen hungry men ia no|*ide the float, walked to the kit Bf all. She becomes camp cook and general drudge, rtaking. One can not have | Slanced in, then around the corn ein . in a logging camp the conveniences | nd smilingly took a seat on the g CHAPTER VI Nef, Benton left the job to her 48) of q hotel kitchen. The water must r her. ‘The Dignity (?) of Toil & matter of course. |be carried in buckets from the creek| “It's too perfect such imperceptible degrees that ‘ou can handle that kitchen with | near by, and wood brought in arm. |the shade,” he observed, after a brief Was scarce aware of it, Stella! katy as well as a man,” he said to|fuls from the pile of sawn blocks |¢xchange of commonplaces. “Won't her place as a cox in ber\ner at last. “And it will give you|outside. The low-roofed kitehen| You come out for a little spin on the "s logging machine, a unit in| something to occupy your time. I’d| shanty was always like an oven, As | lak A ride in the Wolf will put Mechanism which he oper-/have to pay a cook seventy dollars | the men sweated with axe and saw in| Some color in your cheeks.” and relentlessly at top|, -nonth, Katy draws twenty-five.|the woods, so she sweated in the| “If I had time,” she said, “I would t0 achieve his desired end—one | you can credit yourself with the bal-| kitchen, And her work began tw o| But loggegs must eat tho the heavens feet of timber in boomsticks | ance, and I'l! pay off when the con-|hours before their day's labor, and | fall, In about 20 minutes I'll have to her the first. tract money comes in. We might as| continued two hours after they were | tart supper, I'll have color enough, the evening that she stepped | well keep the coin in the family. I'll|done. She slept like one exhausted | foodness knows, once I get over that breach created by a drunken | feel easier, because you won't get|and rose full of sleep-heaviness, full | stove the kitchen burden settled|qrunk and jump the job in a pinch. {of bodily soreness and’ spiritual pro-| Abbey picked nervously at a blade upon her shoulders. For ®) What do you say?” test when the alarm clock raised its | Of glass for a minute. : : Benton daily expected and| sho said the only possible thing to |din In the cool morning This ix a regular dog's life for of the arrival of a new cook jeay under the circumstances. But! “You don't like thees work, do you, | YU! he broke out sudden! had wired a Vancouver employ: | she did not say it with pleasure, nor | Mees Renton?” Katy John said to her Pg Coho ony she protested, @gency to’ send one, the day he | with any feeling of gratitude. It was|one day, in | . soft, slurring accent| 1t® ® _ mars On pr ecg Renfrew down. But cither| hard work, and she and hard work|that colored her English. “You | DAVen't been used to it, that's all ‘were scarce, or the order went | were utter strangers. Her feet ached | wasn't cut out for a cook.” It's Chinaman’s work, he said, for no rough and ready|from continual standing on them.| “This isn't work,” Stella retorted, |"tly. “Charlie oughtn’t to let you Mechanic arrived. Renton, |The heat and the smell of stewing irritably. “It's simply drudgery, 1) *tew in that kitchen Meantime, ceased to look for|meat and vegetables sickened her.| don't wonder that men cooks take to; Stella on machine a was inet “He worked like a horse, un-|Her hands were growing rough and |moved to the defense of her other of himself, unsparing of|red from dabbling in water, punch- lb ed hoes ngs beat ee! bar a > He rose at half-past four, |ing bread dough, handling the var- jue 4 both ahr at aoucae the kitchen fire, roused Stella, jed articles of food that go to make ise ule deter im agains ertt elm her prepare breakfast.!up a meal. Upon hands and fore Date Nek @ sonmonetee biuret ues to his day in the woods. |arms there stung continually certain peighed eo gels bo gge ae vinahearlsy the impressed Katy John into small cuts and burns that lack of ex-| nice to have lots of money like that | ep agi Spi — ~~ to wait on the table and | perience over a hot range inevitably | man’s got, and never have to work!” bo rig Benin Png am be Game He labored patiently to inflicted upon her.’ Whereas time! “You'll get those potatoes Peeled vated into + abboen aciaved:haiaell certain simple tricks of/had promised to hang heavy on her|sooner if you don't talk quite #o|/" "Nu le ene es re that she did not know. hands, now an hour of idieness in the| much, Katy,” Miss Benton made re-/Y, Olt RETORSIE | BUFDOReS. Sk of perception, as thoro as|day became a precious boon. Feypecstlic tgs J Regrertipr cbagge t: in whatsoever she set} Yet, in her own way, she was as| ‘There was that way out, as the Si Sdefaite. ped oae diy peace prone ph to do, Stella was soon equal full of determination as her brother. | wash girl broadly indicated, Paul Ab-| eC tr culmea bee wae a i Job. And as the days passed | She saw plainly enough she must | bey had grown into the habit of com: |) )° Tiiailt \) Bele ee ee ne $00 eamip cook came to their re-jieave the drone stage behind. She|ing there rather more often th®N) oP oo he hoa coolly appropri perceived that to be fed and clothed | mere neighborliness called for, and it/ 7) 4°F Manes Se fie, Ba ly AN pOPNe 3 LOBSTERS and housed and to have her wishes | was palpable that he did not come) (ot work one might at least 4 readily gratified, was not an inher-| to hold converse with Benton or Bens) Jt 0 littie to one's taste. She d all fish dishes are = [ent right—that some one must foot |ton’s gang, altho he was “hail fol | i re wi eissed Abbey's comment oved one hundred the bill—that now for all she received | low” with all woodsmen. At first his) oor, cent in flavor and she must return equitable value. At tibility by the use of jcoming might have been laid to any “Some one has to do it!" bome she had never thought of it in v2. . AS btvhaken A —— whi. Latterly Stella herself was un: | A fal 5 Bisieparrte aint flush crept slowly up into ot oo in rap ns Bg + ale Aid lds Aplin serortn his round, boyish face. He looked at ught of it at all. No at she. sauce ts that delicate be own slid suddenty yet nu times daily until J - ry a day to loaf in | | x GROUP 1—$10.65, WERE $15 All our white washable and pearl gray kid Shues are in this group. $6.50 Patent Oxfords and Pumps, CU tO Lecce cece ee eee ss B45 $7 Brown Kid Pumps and Oxfords, cut to .. $5.45 $5 white reignskin Oxfords, military and French he cut to...$3.95 $4 Canvas Pumps and Oxfords, mili- tary and French heels, cut to... . GROUP 3—$7.65, WERE $11 Consists of light and me- dium shades of gray kid Shoes and two tones of gray with cloth and leather tops. | drink.” Katy laughed. “Why don’t you be nice to Mr. Ab: bey?” she suggested, archly. “He'd \Iike to give you a better job than | thees—for life. My, but it must be $7 black and chocolate Oxfords, mili- tary heels, cut to. -.. $5.45 $11 white and gray kid Oxfords, cut GROUP 4—$3.45, WERE $7 Broken lines of Sport Oxfords and Pumps, black and tan; Neolin soles. $7 gray and chocolate kid Shoes, cloth tops, cut to ............0006.- 89.80 $8 chocolate kid Oxfords, covered French heels, cut to ..... - $6.85 MEN’S L. Douglas $9 Tan Shoes reduced to $7.85 L. Douglas $7.50 Shoes reduced to $6.45 W. L. Douglas $5 Shoes ‘cut to .... -$3.95 $4 Canvas Shoes and Ox- fords cut to....$2.95 $6.50 Tan Calf Blucher Shoes cut to . $4.95 $6 calf lace and button Shoes cut to....$3.95 ip $10 Emerson’s Oxfords, black and tan, cut to.. $9 aed $10 Emerson's Shoes, black'and brown, cut to ......... $7.45 $9 Tan Shoes, leather and Neolin soles, cut to... ++. $7.45 W. L. Douglas $7 Shoes, button and lace, cut to CHILDREN’S $2 Shoes, white, champagne, gray $4 Patent Mary Janes, sizes and black tops; sizes 2 to 5, to 2, cut to.... cut to +» $1.45 $2 Skuffers, cloth tops, black and $1.75 Shoes, fancy tops, sizes 2 to tan, cut to............$1.45 5, cut to Beerccccee COE . . = $3 white buck Mary Janes, sizes re cor srs: 32.75 5 to 8, cut to... +. $1.95 A . $2.50 Skuffers, black and tan, cut $1.50 Canvas Mary Janes, sizes tet . $1.85 81 to 2, cut to..........98¢ s : $2 Canvas Mary Janes, sizes 814 | $2 Tan Outing Oxfords, sizes 814 to 11, cut to............ $1.25 to 2, cut to. -. 81.45 2 $2 Barefoot Sandals, sizes 12 to $3.50 English last Shoes, sizes 9 2, cut to.............- $1.45 to 1314, cut to.... $2.85 $2 Canvas Shoes, sizes 81% to 2, CUE EO ncccccs cesses. ae We strongly advise you to buy your Footwear NOW as Fall prices are going to be much higher. NO REFUNDS—EXCHANGES IN MORNING ONLY 1406 _ PLYMOUTH SHOE CO. «ix eh tee. | : President Was “Most Homesick tae Rane * Soanid 8 M 9 in U. S. Forces Over There _ Schedule of boat service to East an yg | Sound hgs been announced as fol- ™ lows: City Tuesd: at at Ww. $5 Tan Scout Shoes cut to .....ee ee eee $3.95 $4 Scout Shoes cut to... $6.50 Work Shoes reduced to. 3.0% $5.45 $8.50 Hi-top Boots re- duced to ......$6.95 $6 Work Shoes on Army last, cut to -$4.85 $3.50 Wooden Soled Smel- ter Shoes cut to $2.45 BOYS’ $2.75 “Tan Scouts,” sizes 10 to 5%, cut to............ $1.95 $3.50 “Horsehide Scouts,” sizes 9 to 1314, cut to.........$2.85 $3.50 “Tan Scouts,” sizes 9 to 1314, cut to............$2.75° $4.50 tan and horsehide Scouts $2.75 Blucher Calf Shoes cut to.. $ |brought his sister once, a fair-haired was beginning to get a glimmering’ gir! about Stella's age. She proved ai erhstd psec ie a axeaisl of her true economic relation to the | exceedingly self-contained young per-) - 1) ay Mitel IME in is nt on world at large, she had no wish to|son, whose speech during the hour | (S') [Ur Lit oy oe ae ao liar emulate the clinging vine, even if|of her stay amounted to a dozen or| "Tuy Nave | been that | peculiar thereby she could have secured a con-|so drawling sentences. With no hint) Joo oS) fone tees Mn ul tinuance of that silklined existence | of condescension or superciliousness, | 17 ar Ie Ais Dishes tO en aaed which had been her fortunate lot.| she still managed to arouse in Stella) "hie it Un Tal Oe ul have Her pride revolted against parisitism.|a mild degree of resentment. She) a ee eae en revent It was therefore a certain personal| wore an impeccable ponges silk, st ee a ee eet ade, satisfaction to have achieved self-| ple and costly, and her hands had ev-| ©", 77 Rue lt Thc ne rent ean support at a stroke, insofar as that|idently never known the roughening ja st cing. me to death to see you Ba the rset of bee. bee all top Ht | ef work In one way and angtbei|alaving away in this camp, feeding |Miss Benton straightway conceived | 1°)? Pi gee ughnecks. Won't you compensation besides. But there|an active dislike for Linda Abbey.|1 0) 0) Tumilucln | eon thing : was As her reception of Paul's sister Gut? We'd be ue ond goat chum not conducive to chumminess, Paul She gently disengaged her hands, ip, Pogue Tints agein. her chief sensation one of amuse. ut he came oftener than Stella de- »"Char-|Ment, Abbey was in such an agony | sired to be bothered with him. Char of blushing diMdence, all flustered ag ge in some cea Poe ings oe ‘whieh offended | bi8 own temerity. Also, she thought, and irritated her, She was not in|® trifle precipitate. That was not the the least attracted to Paul Abbey. |*°Ft of wooing to carry her off her \feet. For that matter she was quite n; He was a nice enough young ma pis nothing: Pasd.Abbuar eiuld 46 ht be a }f0e Sil ehe knew, Ne mig! say would ever stir her pul sh } nly. vir- pulses. She concentration of all the manly INGA to pot au ouie ih the eituation’ y er her imagination ot her emotions. He|Rowever. She took refuge in a fii: was tao =nuch like a certain type of PANT manner. young fellow she had known in other| “Thanks for the compliment, Mr. embodiments, Her instinct warned ‘" she smiled. “But really I her that stripped of his worldly goods |CUldn't think of inflicting repent he would be wholly commonplace, |#"¢@ 4t leisure on you in that offhand She could be friends with the Paul |*&¥. You wouldn't want me to marry Abbey kind of men, but when she|¥U just so I could resign the Job tried to consider him as a possible |f chef, would your” lover, she found herself unrespon Don’t you like me? sive, even amused. She was forced | Plaintively. ff to consider it, because Abbey was unue that way,” she answered, pos- fast approaching that stage. It was |'tvely. if heralded in the look of dumb appeal You might try,” he suggested that she frequently surprised in his|°Pefully. “Honest, I'm crazy about gaze, by various signs and tokens, |¥°U- I've liked you ever since I saw that Stella Benton was too sophisti-| YU first. I wouldn't want any cated to mistake. One of these days |Stéater privilege than to marry you he would lay his heart and hand at|“"d take you away from this sort of her feet. thing. You're too good for it. May. Sometimes she considered what her |%¢ I’m kind of sudden, but I know life might be if she should magsy|™Y own mind. Can't you take a him. Abbey was wealthy in his own | Chance with me? right and heir to more wealth) But—|_ “I'm sorry,” she said gently, seeing she could not forbear a wry grimace |"im so sadly in earnest. “It isn’t a | at the idea. Some fateful hour, love | Westion of taking a chance. I don't would flash across her horizon, a liv-|°4T¢ for you. I haven't got any feel- ling flame, She could visualize the |!& but the mildest sort of friendli tragedy if it should be too late, if|"ess. If I married you, it would only it found her already bound—sold for |e for 4 home, as the saying is. And a mess of pottage at her ease, She|¥#m not made that way. Can't you did not =nince words to herself when | 5°¢ how impossible it would be?" she reflected on this matter. She|,,“You'd get to like me.” he declared new herself as a creature of pas-|"1'™ just as good as the next man!” sionate impulses, consciously resent-| His smooth pink-and-white skin ling all restraint. She knew that men |Teddened again | Ww. | Jo ) 11% he asked, me just as well as the next fellow. | % I'd be awfully good to you.” “1 daresay you would,” she sald, quietly. “Buf I couldn't be good to you. I don’t want to marry you, Mr Abbey. That's final. All:the feeling | 96 I have for you isn’t enough for any | woman to marry on.” “Maybe not,” he said, dolefully, “I suppose that's the way it goes H it, I guess I was a little too NEW YORK, July 9.—Following the right thing. hie “Auntie from the| “It is a privilege, therefore, beyond sing Hoboken, |! computation, for a man, whether ? Mil |in a great capacity or a small capac- was given a tre-/ity, to take part in the counsels and) of Angeles leaves y, Thursday and 30 a m. to 6 p. m. Seattle Saturday Arrives East Sound yesterday Washington Wilson at President Garment Clearance Continues Ladies’ Dresses, Gowns Suits, Capes, Dolmans and Cloth Coats at O % FF . Ladies’ Apparel and Furs | 1510 Second Ave., Just Above Pike and women did mad things under the | spur of emotion. She wanted no shackles, she wanted to be free to face the great adventure when it|!® came. Yet there were times weeks that flitted past during the when it |be meaner, more repugnant, than jthat daily slavery in her brother's | |kitchen; that transcengent concep-| | tions of love and marridge were vain |details by comparison with aching |feet and sleep-heavy eyes, with the sting of burns, the smart of sweat lon her face, all the never-ending | |trifles that so irritated her. She had | | been spoiled in the making for so sor did an existence. Sometimes she would sit amid the array of dishes |and pans and cooking food and won. | der if she really were the same being whose life had been made up of books |and music, ‘of teas and dinners and | plays, of light, inconsequential chat {ter with genial, well dressed folk. | no one to talk to her and | to talk. There was nothing xcept a batch of newspapers into camp once a week or | 10 days. There was not much in this| monster stretch of giant thmber but | heat and dirt and flies and hungry | men who must be fed | If Paul Abbey had chanced te her to marry him during a peric such bodily and spiritual rebellion, |she would probably have committed |herself to that means of escape in sheer desperation. For she did not harden to the work; it steadily | sapped both her strength and pa- tience. But he chose an ill time for | his declaration, Stella had overtaken her work and snared a fleeting hour of idleness in mid-afternoon of a hot | jay in early August. Under a chy alder at the cookhouse end she piled the pillows she could commandeer in their quarters and curled herself upon them at grateful ease. Like a tired animal, she gave | herself up to the pleasure of physical | relaxation, staring at a perfect tur- quoise sky thru the whispering leaves above. She was not even thinking. She was too tired to think, filtering Jown horn mighty strong,” |“But I'm in dead earnest. AMUSE | seemed to her that no bondage could | — “That sounds a lot like tooting my said he. If there n't anybody else yet, you could like M ENTS METROPOLITAN Thurs. Friday, Sa With Matinee Charles Frohman Prese o7 SKINNER | in | DNOR OF THE FAMILY" ats Now Prices Selling Hoe to $2 ORPHEUM THEATRE White tn U Loo Nights (Bunday), 350; Mata. (except +. 250; Ladien’ Mata, Mats, 2:30; Nig with Mats, AUR ¢ i Big Dramatic Offe “YES Today RIC) ing OR No Plus War Tax PANTAGES] SINGER’S MIDGETS imrose Minstrein—Revue Ded Luxe—Leroy and Dresdner—M. rle Booth—Booth and Leander— Voto Film, General Admission, 25 Cents Bert Lytell in “One-Thing-at-a-Time O'Day |stowing | suitor couraging slap sudden! But I'm a stayer! rb you'll change your mind some time. He was standing very near her, and they » both so intent upon the momentous business that occu: | pied them that neither noticed Char lie Benton until his hail startled them to attention. Hello, folks!" passed on into the cook shanty, be upon ‘Stella, over Abbey's shoulder, a comprehensive grin| which nettled her exceedingly. Her | peaceful hour had been disturbed to | no purpose. She did not want to love or be loved. For the moment she felt | old beyond her years, mature beyond the comprehension of any man, If had voiced her real attitude to-| Paul Abbey she would have d him to run and play, “like we! he greeted, and she ward counse x good little boy Instead she remarked: “I must get to work,” and left her downcast without further ceremony. As she went about her work in the kitchen, she saw Abbey seat him self upon a log in the yard, his coun tenance wreathed in gloom, He w presently joined by her broth Glancing out, now and then, she guess at the meat of their talk, and her lip curled slightly. saw them walk down to Abt launch, and Charlie delivered an en on Paul's shoulder s he embarked en the speedy raft tore out of the bay at a head long gait, her motor roaring in un muffled exhaust, wide wings of white spray arching off her flaring bows | “The desperate recklessness of | thwarted affection — fiddlesticks!”’ Miss Benton observed in sardonic mood, Her hands were deep in pie ough. She thumped it viciously, he kitchen and the flies and all the | rest of it 8 again. | Charlie es kitchen and| hunted a cookie out of the tin box where such things were kept, and| sat swinging one leg over a corner of the table, eyeing her critically while he munched, | “So you turned Paul down, eh?" | ‘8 Weekday Mats. 100; Bves, & Sun., he said at last. “You're the prize| ‘chump. You've missed the best | mendous welcome by cheering thou- sdnds along the line of march to Car negie hall. At the hall Mayor Hylap and Goy. Smith made brief speeches. The president in his speech said: “You have made me deeply happy by the generous welcome you have extended to me, but I do not believe that the welcome you extend to me is half as great as that which I extend) to you “I have really, tho T have tried on the other side of the water to conceal it, been the most homesick man in the American expeditionary forces, nd it is with feelings that it would be vain for me to try to express that I find myself in this beloved eduntry gain, “There have been many things that softened “ny homesickness. One of the chief things that softened it was the ve extended to me as your representa- tive on the other side of the water. And it was still more softened by the pride America had at least convinced the world of her true character “I was welcomed because they had en with their own eyes what Amer- ica had done for the world, They had deemed her selfish. They had deemed her devoted to material inter ests. And they have seen her boys come across the water with a vision even more beautiful than that which they conceived when they had enter tained dreams of liberty and peace, “We have had our eyes very close upon our tasks at times, but when. ever we lifted them, as we were ac customed to lift them to a distant horizon, we were aware that all the peoples of the earth had turned their faces toward us, as those who were the friends of freedom and of right, and whenever we thought of national policy and of its relation upon the af fairs of the world, we knew we were under bonds to do the large thing and chance you'll ever have to put your- self on Hasy street.” (To be continued tomorrow) Copyright, 1916, by Little, Brown & Co, All rights reserved. that IT had in disoovering that | in the resolutions of a people like |this. I am afraid sqme people, some | persons, do not understand that vis- ion, They do not see it. They have looked too much upon the ground {They have thought too mnuch of the interests that were near them, and they have not listened to the voices ef their neighbors. “I have never had a moment's |doubt as to where the heart and pur- | pose of this people lay. When any |one on the other side of the water has raised the question: ‘Will Amer ica come in and help?’ I have said ‘Of course, America will come in and help.’ She can not do anything else. |She will not disappoint any high |hope that has been formed of her, Least of all will she this day of new born liberty all over the world, fail to extend her hand of support and y generous welcome that they | assistance to those who have been made free. “The governor has spoken of a |great task ended. Yes, the formula: tion of the peace is ended, but it cre- ates only a new task just begun, I believe that if you will study the peace you will see that it is a just peace and a peace which, if it can be preserved, will save the world from unnecessary bloodshed. “And now the great task is to pre- serve it. I have come back with my heart full of enthusiasm for throwing everything that I can, by way of in- fluence or action, in with you to see that the peace is preserved, that when the long reckoning comes, men |may look upon this generation of | Am and say. “They were true to |the vision which they saw at their birth.” \Seattle Schools Get $1,145,856 Seattle will receive $1,145,856 as its | portion of the county and state school fand, according to Reuben W. Jones, secretary of the school boa It is hard to get what you want when you don’t know what it is, |. City of Angeles leaves Belling- |ham Monday, Wednesday and Fri- |day at 7 a. m.. Arrives East Sound and leaves for Seattle about 9 a, m. Yankee Doodle leaves Belling- ham same days as City of Angeles at 8:30 a.m. Connects with Kul- |shan from Seattle, which leaves at 10 p. m. Georgia leaves |day, Wednes¢ necting with Kulshan from to Anacortes. Georgia leaves Bellingham Tues day, Thursday and Saturday. Same run as Yankee Doodle on opposite days. | No service whatever on Sundays Jexcept an occasional excursion. Mail boat leaves East Sound for Bellingham every morning about 11:45, Connects with trains for Se- attle or Steamer Whatcom leaving Bellingham for Seattle at 10 p. m. Anacortes Mon- Wiring Is Cause of Blaze in Hat Shop Defective wiring in a drying room is believed to have been the cause of the fire that broke out in the Bowler hat shop, 517 Union st, at 8:40 a, m. Wednesday. The loss is believed to be about $100. ‘The fire started in a rear room of the hat shop, where Panama hats were be- ing dried by electricity. A five eal- lon can of benzine stood within a few feet of the blames, but did not ex- plode. The shop is owned by EB. A. Brattrud and R. Ehlers. PRINCE HENRY PLEADS FOR EX-KAISER BILL BERLIN, July 8.—Prince Henry, brother of the former a telegraphed King Georg learned today, begging “in the name of justice,” that Britain desist in her preparations for the extradition of the ex-emperor, Prince Henry de clared he knows Wilhelm endeav: ored to avert war and referred him |to the conversation he (Prince Henry) had with Kin, i July 7, 1914, vMBsne scare.’ aiser, has it was

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