The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 20, 1920, Page 16

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— CHORUS —“GOSH, AIN’T SHE SMART!” CAMPAIGN PLANS for the drive of the Interchurch World movement, which starts Sunday, were outlined WASHINGTON, April 20—An in crease tm population of 38.543, or 229.4 per cent over 1910, is shown by the 1920 census returns for Gary, Ind. The steel center now has 55,344. | ing. at @ meeting of 100 pastors in Boldt's | Second ave. restaurant Monday night. TH BON MARCH RGAIN BASEMENT Bargains That Are Almost Sensational 75 Splendid All-Wool Jersey Dresses at $15.00 Brand New—Many Styles and Colors The offering of these wonderful Jerseys at such a very low price is but another tribute to the success of the Bargain Base- ment system of paying cash for bargains and then selling those bargains for cash. You save at both ends of the transaction. There are at least 25 styles in the assortment—the very smartest styles in Jerseys that we have seen this year. They're beautifully finished, and most of them have China silk slips. Colors are Dark Brown, Copenhagen, Royal Blue, Gray, Sand, Gol- den Brown, Taupe, Tan, Navy and Burgundy. Sizes from 16 to 44. Women’s Pumps and Oxfords $6.89 The Pumps are in chocolate brown vici kid, made up in a smart three- button model or finished with a tailored kid bow. They have plain toes, Louis heels and are kid lined. , The Oxfords come in black vici kid and have plain toes, or are fin- ished with stitching in half-brogue style. These have Louis heels) A Cuban heel model, with stitched toe, is shown in chocolate brown. All three styles are lined with kid. Sizes from 21% to 7. A Wednesda» Luncheon Special | at the Bzzement Fountain 35c Jilg’s Home-made Weiners with Spinach... ........ ‘ot French Roll with Butter,....... .-..2.c...ecesve | Chocolate Roll a la Mode—Coffee or Milk. .....2-...... J MRS. SARAH JONES, charged! with complicity in the activities of the so-called gang of freight car loot ers, pleaded not guitty tn the United States district court Monday moro-| , very favorable registration had| today would mean that he eannot “THE SEATTL “Nations Shou ™ ld Abolish Party Politics” —Lodge America and England have one great big job to do together— qbolish war and prevent uncivil teed nations from ever again plunging the world into chaos ‘This is the mensage dearer to the heart than even a belief in an after-wortd which Sir Oliver Lodge, the venerable Briton, brings to this country "To been wholly evi.” said Sir Oliver before leaving for Tacoma. “There are few benefits apparent tomy from It sprang up in @ world that did t it, and It did no good to the nation that started it. NTERNATIONAL MATION “But the powers of goed may setre some good out of it and build toward {a better world. The spirit of coop | eration between the nations was ene thing that can now “be turned to | good. The responsibility of working lout this cooperation among the na | tions rests largely with the ngliah- | epeaking peoples. | “Reduction of armaments should |be made by agreement. We need a police foree to keep mischievous na | tions within the law. But men do not need to war on each other, as shown |by the absence of fortifications be. | tween your country and Canada.” Sir Oliver says that as in this coun try there are certain pernicious” tn |terests in England trying to stir up bad blood between America and Great Brita. This, however, in far ‘trom the general trend of footing. “As I have traveled acrom your |tand I have found scarcely any ants English feeling,” he said, “Certainly Nebraska Voters Casting Ballots in LINCOLN, Neb, April 20.-Ne braska voters-—both men and worm- ijen—are today cunting their ballots to exprens their choice of candidates for president in both major parties in the statewide presidential pref erential primary election. Clear kien greeted the voters tn most sections of the state, but tm- passable roads in some districts will interfere with the rural vote. Deen reported from all parts of the | mtate. ‘The pols opened at $ a. m and will close at & p. m. Gen, John J, Pershing, Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood and Senator Hiram Johnaon are candidates for the re | publican presidential indorsement. Senator G. M. Hitchcock is con. testing for the democratic presi dential vote with Robert ons of | Lexington, Neb. Hitchcock's back- ers claim he stand a good chance }to win. The possitlity of “written || in” names on the democratic ticket is men by politicians Each party will today elect 16 delegates to the national conven me the war seems to have) tn Iongland there is no anti-American feeling. | “Our two countries have sev ral big problems in common. And they must be worked out together. Besides the prevention of war, there is the labor prob lem. 1 do not fear revolutions in our countries, but the workers must have more share in indus try. They must have access to | higher education. I'd lke to sor the weekly wage abolished and | the monthly or quarterty wage substituted, I believe this would encourage thrift, “We are also very mach Interested in your experiment tn ptohibition. If | it te @ucememful we may imitate you by abolishing the saloon and drink: | ing house, BACK TO SOm, | MOVEMENT ON “1 think beth nations should rt about te discourage party pol | tien. In Kngtand it subsided | during the war, but since then it | has broken out afresh. Licyd | George has dene much to weld the warring factions, and ho is growing all the time.” | Sir Oliver does not see that the! |war bas even brought about a re }Ugious revival ‘The interest in spir \tuallam is Ukely to develop supersti- tion or credulity, and is not a par ticularly wholesome sign, he thinks | “1 am an enemy of sapersti don,” he sald. “I want the facta, | and until sensible people insist on having the facts the subject wil be made ridtentous by cranks, fanatics or even charlie towne.” State Primary tions, pledged to wupport the presi dential candidate reoetving the high- ent vole at the primary. Democratic voters are showing an |interest in William Jennings Dryan's ap to be elected Ne!| branka’s delegate at large to the na |uonal convention, rivaling that of the presidential contest. While| Bryan has declared he will be pres ent at the San Franciaco conven tion in some! capacity, his defeat take an active part on the conven. | Gon floor. | Bryan has thruout the primary) campaign urged the defent of Hitch | Jeock, charging that the Nebraska | senator in backed by Wall st. in-| | terests and that he favers a “wet™ plank in the demoerathe platform ‘The voters today are also select | ing the party nominees for con-| gress from all districts and choos ing nominees for state offices The republican gubernatorial eon. tent has contrituted much Interest! to today's election. Governor &. TX McKelvie, asking reelection, ts opposed by five other candidates secking the nomination. FIRE MARSHAL CHECKS HOTELS | Arrest Jap “Rooming House Landlord | First arrest in the city’s roundup | of fire ordinance violators was made | Monday afternoon when M. Womo- to, proprietor of a rooming house at Firat ave, was taken Into custaty by R. Ie Laing, fire inmpector. The Jap was charged with permitting waste and other rubbish to accumu. late in large quantities in the lodg. ing hous. On the recommendation of Mayor | Caldwell the city fire marshal has tela, The mayor stated that the re. vision of fire laws, which was urged by the Lincoln hotel inquest jury, would be laid before the council, if recommendations for such revision were made by the fire marshal and bufiding superintendent after their inspection of city structures. OREGON |. W. W. | 1S SENTENCED |Joseph Laundy Given Two Years in Prison | @ORTLAND, April 20.— Joseph Laundy, who wan recently convicted |here on a charge of criminal syndi | callam, was sentenced yesterday by | Cireuit Judge Beit to two years tm the state penitentiary. At the request of the defendant's | attorney, George F. Vanderveer, a stay of execution for one week was entered. |]| Laundy was formerly an 1. W. W. |] | orgunized for the state of Oregon. Amines Nurses Back From North VANCOUVER, B. C, April 20. American Red Croan ‘rom the | Orient. They were under charge of |] Dr. A. K. Higgs of Manila and Mrn. |G. C. Brandon of Manila and are returning after over a year's service }at Vladivostok, Harbin, Omsk and other Siberian points. ‘They state that conditions at Viad | they left, the Bolsheviki were in con. | tral and everything was topsy turvyy Since then the Japanese have taken command of affairs. Senator Advices Patched Clothes WASHINGTON, April 20.—De claring he had no love for “dudes,” \[| Senator Dial, South Carolina, yes. |]| terday in a speech to the senate, | applauded the overall and calico re | volt agninst the high cost of cloth ing. “Lat an wear old clothes and re frain from purchasing anything we can do without and the country will soon be in joint again,” said Dial. “Let us take the advice of a former secretary of the treasury by getting our old shoes half. soled and putting patches on our trousers,” | started a city-wide inspection of ho- ivostok were in great turmoil when| NEGRO LYNCHED. Killed for Brutal Attatk on 15-Year-Old Girl PITTSHURG, Kan, April 20-—An unidentified negro tramp paid with (bis life for an assum on Sylvia Brown, 15, in the country, two miles | northwest of Mulberry. | Ho was hanged to a telephone pole last night, after a mob had literally torn apart the small town jail. For an hour Sheriff Milt Gould held the mob off, persuading angry men to let the law take its cours. Suddenly, rome one brought the badly injured girl to the door of the jail. The crazed negro threw up his! hands, screamed tn despatr and thus identified his victim before she had) | a chance to identify him. The crowd went wild and stormed the jall. Sheriff Goud and two other | | officers were overpowered. The mob |tore out the barred windows and the |negro waa dragged thru the hole tn the wall, a rope about his neck. He |was holnted on the nearest pole, ‘A white boy, who maid he wan Ben jamin Franklin Caldwell, a workman 16, Springfield, LIL, who was with the negro at the time of the assault, was | |anved from hanging by officers who |took him away while the negro was being strung up. ee ne |“\X7INDOW OF HER CHICAGO, April’ 20.—Felix Mat itera thought his wife's eyes were) beautiful. “Windows of the soul,” |he called them. | He came home one day to find his wife minus her left eye. “I laid it down some place and can’t find it,” maid his wife, Sadie Sadie told the court that Felix left her when he learned that one of her sou} windows was real glass. | Ao. a oe Meier’s Decision Taps ’Em on Wrist Scoring the civil service commis |sion in a 2,000-word decision, Corpor jation Counsel Walter F. Meier held | Monday that the charter amendment | recently adopted, giving the ex#erv. |1ce men preference in city positions lis not in contravention of the equal | privilege claus of the state conati | tution, “The departments of the city gov ernment usually are willing, to fol | low the expressed will of the people without asking this department to determine the conetitutionality of | thelr action,” Meier declared. Three Hoboes Kill Montana Deputy | _ DEER LODGE, Mont., April 20.— Three hoboes caught in the act of | robbing a ranch house near Elleston |shot and killed Deputy Sheriff | George Warberton and, pursued by |a@ posse from this city, gave battle lin which one of the hoboes was | killed, one captured and one escaped early today. Heé is reported sur rounded in the foothills, SEATTLE-ASTORIA Iron Works was permanently restrained from the manufacture or use of a canning machine patented by Augustine Smith, in an injunction granted the eral Judge Edward E. Cushman, Mondas, Smith Canning Machine Co, by Fed.) @ E STAR _ SOUL” WAS GLASS} |} [The Bon‘Marche } Home Furnishing Days Whatever you may need in-Rugs or Draperies to make your home more home- like and “livable” will be found at the Bon Marche — and during Home Furn- ishing Days you are quite likely to find it priced even lower than usual. 9x12 Tapestry Brussels Rugs Discontinued Patterns, $35 These Rags Are Offered at This Low Price for Home Furnishing Days Many people are buying Tapestry Brussels nowadays because they are durable and inexpensive and at the same time look well. These are in attractive designs and colorings and priced at $35.00. Tapestry Brussels Rugs $32.50 Very nice Rugs, these, in Tapestry. Brussels, size 8-3x10-6 feet, with fetching allover designs and good colorings, and especially durable— for only $32.50. 6x9 Tapestry Brussels Rugs $25.00 Heavy Tapestry Brussels Rugs in the designs and colorings quite Springlike and most appropriate for small rooms and halls. During Home Furnishing Days they are but $25.00. 36-inch Curtain Scrims 25c Yard Your rooms will look much more homey with new curtains—and they'll be very inexpensive if you make them from these Curtain Serims at 25¢ a yard. Allover andborder designs—-many colors on white and cream grounds. Marquisette Sash Curtains $1.00 a Pair Marquisette Sash Curtains — good quality, yet inexpensive—hem- stitched all around, neatly finished with hem and beading, $1.00 pair. Springlike Draperies 65c a Yard - Singing birds and Spring flowersadorn these dark colored Over- # drapes of net—very effective for window drapes—all colors. | FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE —s wt ae Lawn Mowers, Garden Hose, Garden Tool Await You During Home-Furnishing Days Henley’s Lawn Mowers for Only $5.95 WA “Henley’s” plain bearing Lawn Mowers, made with three high-grade tool steel revolv- ing knives—12- and 14-inch size. Garden Tools Come Wednesday for Garden Tools—prices are very moderate—here you will find Spades, Rakes, Hoes, Shovels, Grass Shears, Grass Hooks and Spray Pumps. Canvas Covered Hose Garden Hose with pure rubber tubing, and around this is woven a heavy canvas jacket—complete with couplings—25-foot length, $3.65; 50- foot length, $6.95. Corrugated Moulded Rubber Hose —will give long, satisfactory service if taken care of properly—% inch in diameter—with couplings—25 feet, $5.00; 50 feet, $10. FOURTH FLOOR 150 Wash Dresses Reduced to $1.50 THE SALE PRICE IS ABOUT HALF, AND LESS THAN HALF THE ORIGINAL FIGURES Think of getting good house dresses for only $1.50—tkat’s just what we offer you on Wash Dress Day. They’re excellent for the money—but no wonder, they have been reduced from much higher prices, - All Sizes in the Lot—But Not Every Size in Each Style Dresses made of percale, chambray or gingham, in straightline or waist- line styles—effectively trimmed—values you can’t afford to pass up at $1.50. SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHB 200 Pairs of Play Shoes—Remarkable Values at $3.45 TAN, PEARL AND BLACK LEATHERS Economy knocks at your door—when these Play Shoes are offered at $3.45 a pair. E. C. Scuffers, made with sturdy chrome soles and soft’ elk uppers —in button and lace styles—sizes 8 to 12, at $3.45 oe ire watin DEPARTMENT—LOWER MAIN FLOOR ; Barefoot Sandals —For summer wear—for play or general use—and they sure do wear. The following leathers are in che lot—elk in light tan, dark tan and pearl elk. ey EY 8 AT $2.35 , IN’S 8% TO 11 AT $2.65 MISSES’ 1114 TO 2 AT sas SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Colorful Dress Voiles Dress Voiles—bright and new, and colors and desi. k wish summer were, here always—floral patterns, pists and Wipe eal rs FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD)

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