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INTO CAUCASUS Hope to Keep Reds Out of Armenia, Turkey, Persia BY HENRY WooD Press Staff Correspondent) PARIS, Jan, 21.—Greet Britain plans to send troops into the Caucasus to prevent the spread @f Bolshevism into Armenia, Tur key, Persia and Mesopotamia, it Was reported here today Phe Britiah request to the supreme Pouncil yesterday, to have } © Bhd Italian troops take the place o S) Ghe British units in the allied forces will preserve order in the regions where plebiacites ordered by the peace treat WAS necessitated by their plan to ‘Bend troops into the Near Hast, it ‘was said. | Departure of French hospital from Teulon for the Black sea at the same time a British T departed from Malta for mame destination, strengthened belief the French navy will co. with the British ir im action against 4, French warships a ave ordered to hold themvelves in i to depart for Constan * | The supreme council held its final p the Bolshevist line in the region of Lubahn Lake. The Lettish drive is the only sue-| cessful opposition now under way against the Reds, 2. General Denikin's troops are retreating in the direction of Kherson, eastward from Odessa, under pressure by the Ukrainian in- surgents. 3. Denikin’s army has been cut in two by the Bolshevist push to the Sea of Azov at} Taganrog. 4. The capture Krasnovodak on the Caspian sea, opens the way for the Bolshe- viki to overrun Northern Persia and occupy Teheran. Baku, on the west coast of the Cas- pian, is likely to fall into Bolshevist hands, and the Bolsheviki would then be in the rear | was decided to create immediate eounci! of ambassadors to suc the supreme council new organization will meet ntly in Paris, Premier Lioyd George returned to _ Lendon today The Adriatic situation has taken Most serious turn in montha, fol Towing the Jugo-Slav reply, well-in @ observers here believed to. The JugoSiay note, it was! has postponed settlement of the | W-Italian dispute indefinitely. fhe possibility of a break of rein ins between Jugo-Slavia and Italy injected into the situation by Jugo-Siay and Italian delega wt of THE BON MARCHE Ba RGAIN BASEMENT Back to Old Time Prices! ! New York’s Latest in Novelty Coats Of Silk-Finished Velour at $10.95 To say these Coats are beauties is to tell but half the truth. They’re remark- able values as well, and the style is—well, it simply IS style, that’s all. The rich material is absolutely new —a two-toned silk-finished / velour which has the appearance of a narrow cord. And the colors are very handsome—Taupe, Blue, Mole, Copper Brown, Tan and Black. The Black is plain, being neither two-toned nor corded. All the coats are lined with a durable, mercerized material in fancy figured patterns. The size range is from 14 to 40. Silk-Mixed Poplin Dresses $9.95 There are over two dozen of the newest styles for immediate and Spring wear. The colors are Copenhagen, Taupe, Pekin, Burgundy, Navy, Silver Gray, Chocolate, Golden Brown, Rose, Green and Sand. All sizes from 16 to 40. Navy Serge Skirts $4.95 Navy Blue Serge Dress Skirts ina good style have one pocket and button all the way down one side with novelty pearl buttons. The belt i 3 with two buttons of the same material. Sizes from 24 to 30 Ing today. Clemenceau presided E first, but was » eded by 1. Where the Lettish army is striking at} of Denekin's Millerand th The way to India and Afghanistan is open to} the Bolsheviki. from the Afghanistan frontier, has been en- tered by the Bolsheviki. Reports from Paris declare that the Brit- ish have determined to send in troops into| Tt and Mesopotamia stationed along the Black sea down along the Afghan boundary 5. The Bolshevist push thru Siberia has \* reached Irkutsk, on the Lake Baikal. guarded by the Japanese. are scattered. | | | | | ] | | ] |than her husband? Hy | ‘ WORLDINVASION Terrific Smash Against Po- land Expected in Spring WASHINGTON, Jan, %1— United Prowsd—A terrific spring offensive by the Bolshevik against the Polos is expected by milllary experts here today This drive, they belleve, will be calculated to annihilate Poland as the “buffer state” between red Kusste and the nonsoviet mations of Kurepe, permitting Trotsky’s hordes to advance into them militar fh expec 4 major ¢ which ¥ ert thelr ent them 1 tage India, ND NOW URGED Churehill, British war on the peril, in the ry men here, and he persuade Premier take steps now to ing the aggressive Winston already hard-pressed force nm. Biles, recently returned from S, aleo fen the danger of a renew of large-scale warfare if the Rolsheviwi break thru Poland. ating allied aid to the Bokhara, less than 200 miles and is advoc Polen big push” of the soviet forces the Caucasus region to thwart the Bolshevist| ould, according | to | information jattempt to enter Armenia, Turkey, Persia| Wttijtate revolutions, pebind the These troops would be line shown from the lines of the nations resisting the reds. Advices have been received ling of the expulsion of Hol ita from Italy, where they went to prepare for this uprising Many of the radicals caught in the ernment’s rece undupa in this here, te western shore of railroad tunnels of the eo The trans-Siberian line at Lake Baikal are now|cvstry are su ed of being Kolchak's forces| ‘thine agents, sm exled Into the fers and riots that th pe riveted on eve 422 the reds were ‘DANCE OF DEATH ' 1 «© department of fustic it i § wn, has a number of these sus ted agents under clone wurvell |lance and more raids are imminent | Meanwhile, Secretary Lansing realizing the necessity of keeping the ‘Jungle Law’ Plea in Honey- moon Murder borders of the United States closed | to the allen revolutioniats, has asked jcongreas for an appropriation of ‘ ‘ Rist | $450,000 ta be used in perfecting an ROCHESTER, N. Y., Jan. 21—~! organization to keep out the undestr In modern woman, with all her re-| abies finements, nearer the puro savage| 4 ‘ording to information received | by military authorities here today | Both the defense and the prose|the Polish army which could be eution tn the trial of Mr ire. | thrown against the Bolsheviki totals James 1. O'Dell for the murder of | 545,000 men, but mort of them are Edward J. Kneip, Mrs. O'Dell's for-| without proper equipment mer eotheart will = attem: to TROO prove that “the female of the ton | pong sek Art is more deadly than the ma | es sesequ ri At present there are 127,000 anti Kipling’s famous dictum will be). > . . | Rolshevik troops, including Poles and linked with Shakespeare's assertion! pain faces, on the front in West! that of all the furies inhabiting the| poses Uniean alded by the [nether world. none equal in ferocity | tne Poles would not be able to & mortal woman whose love has been | any more men and its unarmed reel peemediagngs merta would be worse than useless SWEPT BACK BY in a campaign. | ANCESTRAL SAVAGERY The army intelligence service es } Tho defense, it is believed, wilt] {imated toahy that the ed tree on hold that Pearl O'Dell’s terrible as! out 395.000, Rut this js recarded sault on her former sweetheart was) \VOUl (on oid or covertne force & symptom of insanity, sweeping her |... main army of 900 is in the jback from the restraints of civiliaa-| 10° J" 0 woviet Ruasta in training The Bolsheviki are belleved to have |tion to the ruthless impulses of her large supplies of munitions left over |faroff savage ancestors. The prosecution will inatet that) trom the vast stores held by the this 18-year-old bride carried in her} czar's regime. The small arms fac heart, alive and deadly, the Jungle! tories in Soviet Russia are reported jlaw; that she regarded Kneip am her/to be turning out several million mate, and announced that she was! rounda of ammunition daily his wife, altho the dead boy insisted | to the Inst that there had been » | Sad Musi - Mates; talk of marri between them When she Knelp, the district | the Will Is Lost! attorney will endeavor to prove, | Mra, O'Dell reverted to savagery which few men are capable She married O'Dell, in the eriff's opinion, with the idea 1 punishing Kneip band during alm tragic honeymoon unt haped him to HER DANCE OF DEATH NO PRETTY THING her purpose CAPETOWN, Jan. Z1—It ie a cul Then, when Kneip had been hand-|tom here of surviving relatives tc cuffed to a tree in a dark and lonely eir gr paper adver spot, O'Dell told her to do as she| tis and poetry is a frequent re in a his back the affileted. Appears death executed by | these lines, inserted by the sorrowing pretty thing. | wife the late Henry Whittaker of the tree | “W not see him die, t high-heeled | We know 1, 1 time after} We'd like to f his latest will e | That while he lived he hid ey, screaming New Credit Plan Being Developed ams, the were music in | woman who had loved him | WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.—Inter D i Plans for ‘Denounce Removal f an international . . « he by which of N. Y. Socialists patel all Heiaxhoriet en INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 21 ion term credits, Mark C, Pren Tho Americanism commission of t vice president of the National An can Legion today was on rec compar of New York, ar ord denouncing the action of the| nounced today New rk assembly in suspending A foreign merchant, by using } five socialist members credit with the clearing house, can The resolution read buy freely of any factory in the “Since the American Legion stands | United Stites without going thru for the maintenance of American in titutions of government, look with disfavor on every effort to over throw the right of representation or | the eparate |Millionaire Bandit usual process of opening up a ons eredit account in eact Jeny to the properly elected repre ; sestaiives aC ane Secchn tea viaht to | Is Now $55 Richer the bodies to which they have} geattle’s “millionaire bandit" step been elects pt when they have] ped from his auto in«front of the been shown sally disqualified,” of Frank Calvert, 4015 | h ave . just as Italy Takes Steps Sot em, and aceiaeee | to Oust d’Annunzio| point of a revolver and sped away in the machine | LONDON. are that the preparing to t against d’Annu Spalato correspor | ‘Times, infantry Jan, 21.—1ndicatio: talian government is © decisive me ne ccording to the Canadian Editor Is Dead in South of theLondon| SAN DIEGO, Cal,, Jan. 21,—Blias Three regiments of Itallan|T, Saunders, owner and edit | have arrived clos® to the|string of four papers in outskirts of Flume, according to the|Ganada, ix dead here after dispateh, ness of two weeks, | | | . a of a New S am You'll want the sun to shine and the flowers to bloom as soon as possible when you see these mod- | | | | | | | | | THE SEATTLE STAR BRITISH WILL FIGHT BOLSHEVIK tepoamascke Established 1890 Odd Lots of Suits Reduced to $35.00 Recent Arrivals in Straw and Satin Hats at $7.50 7 estly priced new hats. Made so smart for street use. of satin and combined with rough straw or Batavia cloth and fashioned in the small shapes An Opportunity to Save on Your Suit During Thrift Week An odd lot of Suits that remain from our winter stocks. Suits with style, line and in attrac- tive materials and useful colors. Some in ripple mode, others in straightline, semi-tailored and belted effects. Each suit has a fancy silk lining. Silvertones and velours are shown in navy and French blues, Burgundy and tan. Reduced to $35.00, a modest price for such smart suits. SUIT SECTION—SECOND FLOOR —— Trimmed with flowers, with raffia ornaments or embroidery, with wooden beads or with simple line embroidery in silk braid. Millinery modes that make ideal “between season” hats, and are real “finds” at this price so early in the year. MILLINERY SECTION—THIRD FLOOR Thrift Week Jan. 17th to 24th Learn economy and you start on the road to success — National Thrift Week is a good time to begin saving. Women’s Handkerchiefs and for Only 19c A new line of Lawn Handkerchiefs—in two dif- ferent styles. With colored embroidered corners, col- ored striped borders—in a large assortment of de- signs. UPPER MAIN FLOOR Dress Ginghams at 20c a Yard Buy Ginghams in mill lengths and save the dif- ference; 2,000 yards, in stripes and checks—mostly blue mixtures—in lengths to 20 yards—2614 inches wide—not over 10 yards to each, THIRD FLOOR Housecleaning Special 85c This set of home needs —that any woman needs scrubbing days — con- sisting of one 12-quart galvanized pail, 5 bars of Lenox soap, 1 scrub brush, 1 combination mop sti for brush or cloth, all for 85c, on No phone orders can be taken at this price. FOURTH FLOOR Oh, Girls! Leap Year Aprons $3.95 Where hideth the maiden who yearns for strength to meet the duties of the new year? Here is an Apron that wiil help her in many ways. For it’s practical enough to scrub the floor in and _ pretty enough to “pop the question” in. Made of unbleached sheeting in slip-on style, with full belt and short sleeves. Trimmed with rick- rack braid at the neck, sleeve and novelty pocket. The pocket and front of waist are hand worked in pastel designs. APRON SECTION—SECOND FLOOR Sensible Percale Aprons $1.95 Percale Slipover Aprons or button-in-front style. Some are plain colors, others plaid and striped. The rick-rack trimming and plain binding make them more attractive. Full belted, and priced $1.95. APRON SECTION—SECOND FLOOR Tie-Back Aprons for Girls $1.95 SLEEVELESS COVERALL STYLE Every daughter will be happy to wear this at- tractive new Apron, for it slips on so easily over school dress and has no bothersome buttons. _ Made of plain gingham in two shades of blue, pink and lavender. _ Trimmed with rick-rack braid, The two pockets are large and square. The waist is trimmed with three tucks: Priced at $1.95. 2R SHOP—SECOND FLOOR white