The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1920, Page 16

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ut THE SEATTLE STAR OUR POLICY Grandma Warns Edith May ON SIBERIA Gives Seven Rules of Life IRKS JAPAN Japanese, Demanding Room} to Grow, Feel America ls “Strangling” Them BY PA’ WILSON SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 18. net American antiJapanese agita tion in this country which may cause a breach between the two na tions, but “the interference of the United States with Japanese explo! tation in Siberia and China* } So says Y, Ishikawa, editor of the Yorodeu Choho, Tokyo, Japan's largest newspaper, and semi official | organ, who is now in San Francisco to investigate the “AntiAlien Land Law” and its possible consequences Hoe asserts the feeling is spreading | im Japan that “America is attempt ing to strangle Japan, even as Ku» sia did in the past.” JAPANESE CROWDED; NEED ROOM TO EXPAND “The Japanese, since they are de- nied admission to the rich and com: paratively vacant countries west ward and southward, regard China) and Siberia as the proper and only ®eld for expansion, and strongly re sent America’s refusal to allow them to work out their own destiny in their own quarter of the world. “They hold that measures hither. to taken to safeguard thelr interests in these countrica are indispensable to their national wellbeing, and should they become convinced of its necessity, they will not hesitate to give their all, in order to defend their birthright.” Ishikawa says he speaks not as BY ZOE BECKLEY years young, has as sturdy a mind @ militarist, but as one who has} NEW YORK, Oct. 18.—A remarka-|as sho has a body, which is saying carefully studied the conditions and /bie old lady is the "grandmother of] a lot, who realizes the very thin dividing | Edith May, IT-yearold winner in the} For Grandma Leuenberger, mother line between present misunderstand-| nationwide salesgiris’ beauty con-|of Kdith May's daddy, was among 7]thone hariy Swiss pioneers who trekked overland from the port of New York whither they came by rail and mailing vessel from Perne in the early fortion, She helped build the Jom house that was their first home She farmed and spun and baked and brewed and bore nine sturdy ebil dren, Raith May showed me today a let ter she had just received from her grandmother, containing seven rules for life conduct. QUESTION ONE—"Nover be afraid to tace something new,” ahe advised. “Halt Who Is Your Favorite Movie Star? tia detese te Ws Wate otate bt one. ANSWERS coneful if only they dared leave the M. DAWSON, 122 Madison place | old rut.” halt|N—What? Let me think. Ob, I) TWO—Re modest but net timid | | | Tt ts} should no longer be left to the whim of irresponsible chauvinists and demagogic agitators, but should Le cleared up before it is too Inte. “We are trusting to the sound Judgment and common sense of the American stateamanship. afraid to epeak for themseives at the HOPE GAMBLE, 431 Harvard | right time.” THREB—"Don’t be ashamed of your little home town. At the aime time, learn all you can from the lite of the big city. Keep the advantages of both.” FOUR—"Learn to rely on your eelt, Your own judgment and your . | OWN conscience should be your best , | euldes.” FIVE—‘Hang on to your eelf- respect but don't be squeamish. Try Understand others’ viewpoints.” very mam ts trying to tact ‘with * ing to flirt with wae _swtully fusny '/ you. A nice girt, if she is really stn- cere, can always convince a bad man she wants nothing to do with him.” BSEVEN—"God has given women & special defense—intuition, When |danger threatens, use your wits and always remember that the CAPA. BLE girl rarely bas to win success i 'HAITIEN PROBE 'MERRY XMAS? SOON TO BEGIN) NOT FOR THEM will Investigate “Indiscrim-|P. 0. Employes Get Ready | inate Killings” for Annual Rush WASITINGTON, Oct. 18 The Merry Chri naval board of inquiry appotnted by | Soattie posto Hooretary Daniels to investigate the) Seattle portal is are nirendy |charge of General Barnett of “ir completing arra nts for han killing” of Malt ling the bie du the » marines a Nother |Christmas rush pation of| Heginning about December 1, the y to got un | matis will begin to get he dor way early this we |during the week before Christmas peg A three times the normal volume of / uc o8 SEATTLEITE IN iit, "vrpantancim, HAITI WRITES OF |" December 18 to 24, Inclusive, are | CONDITIONS the bix days, according to award cGrath, superintendent of railway \THERE at seve a “On the 28th." sald. McGrath Malcolm Douglas yenterday re etgtne Guan the showing of pre | colved an interoating letter from An the local mail to the thony C. Stephens, 4 Seattle marine, until criticlams of the Halt! was expected te vious years, cast will begin to tnerease written at Thomaanique, Maiti, July|on the 22nd it will be at flood, On| 1. Stephens, a member of the 53rd /the following day the bie eastern | company of marines, writés | roming to the Wert will hit us “1 received your letter, or, rather, | in te the peak day of the rush | the invitation to the Chateau Thierry | season, when the two tides come celebration ball, and thank you very | together much, ‘The volume will reeede on the ‘An Uncle Sam decided to send afl|eith, and after Christmas day | the four-year oo to Haiti, when |things will be nearly back to nor jermany I Waal mal again.” the unlucky number, and now! In th I'm waiting till they send me back ace may mall eervice extra pe provided, and “rm down with the fevyer—this|;oad force will be doubled. country is awful. It haw few roade Majl clerks from Portland wil be; and & couple of railroads; the rest Is |prought to Seattle to sort and class | fl) trail, ‘The fastest transportation |iry Oregon mail before it in sent they have is burres, and what they | gouth. Seattle clerks in Portland! ean't pack on the burro they tote on | will do the same for North-bound their heads lrmatl, and eimilar exchanges will be “The people are beginning to work | errected between Portiand and Bac in the fi for they couldn't work | ramento. them before on account of the out In, the local postoffice and termi. | awe and bandits, but the trouble "| nis extra help ix being arranged almost over; We killed, captured OF jfor and during the rush season all made it no hard for them that they | departments will work overtime as Fe to surrender, & part of the regular routine, “These outlaws, or bandita, carried the old Freneh rifles, made back in _ piece | 1870, or something tire that, tho they | | had modern weapons, too, Their i rifles shot everything from 30. to/ | A 10-80, 45-70, 45:90, 30-20—they even ' | shot 22 cartridges from their rifes 4 “They aren't good shots, but they | § can make your knees shake hak they lat or etand and fight, Worst! ~ | trouble i, where 1 am now there | Air Postman Outrides Weavy | tan't a doctor within three days of . me, #0, You Hee, If you get hit here Gale on Trip your 8. O. L. I woul? sooner have —e & whirbang hit me than one of those ‘eon chips,’ for they sure mangle you fearfully Skittering thru a heavy gale with | | €00 pounds of Aurtraiansian — aio | “ | the steamer ‘Tahiti, Eddie Hubbard, | ws A, toe eae ae oe | U7. & wir mail pilot, arrived in Seat-| 20 cents in our money a day, and| Ue &t 330 Saturday afternoon from one meal costa them that much, so | Mis second round trip to Victoria. He ™ made the §4 miles in 66 minutes, i you fotka ‘ain't got nothing to way.) "Ay soon an he landed and the mail| nea i ae was transferred, Hubbard rushed to | NO BOMBS NO TGentiot to have & tooth extracted. | “I didn’t mind the storm,” said Hubbard, “but that darned old tooth Skulker in “Mayor's Office Just Gardener ached all the way back,” 5 Cable Snaps; Whips Engineer to Death ‘The mystery has been solved! When a worrted stenographer mw & man skulking about the windows of the mayor's office Saturday, she Funeral services were being ar ranged today for Harry D. Altleon, immediately called the police. Coppers Gashed around the county. 2%, a stationary engineer, instantly killed Friday afternoon at the Inter national Spar Co.'s logging camp, near Renton, when « cable snapped, and, coiling about him, crushed his body. elty but ooking for a bushy whiskered anarchist, ¢arrying & loud Of sputtering bomb. Hours later the myntery was solved. ‘The skulker was nune other than the gardener, tending the potted plants state administrative code, dewigned on the plaza outside the mayor's of-| to do away with duplication of work ° jand to eliminate surplus commis | sions, has been prepared for submis Afier a couple haye been married sion to the next seasion of the legi«- two weeks, the neighbors lose all in-| lature, aceording to Gov, Louis F. 'Legislature to Get New Code for State A complete readjustment of the theif) ils rk Fy 5 8 JAP PARLEYS G0 SMOOTHL U.S. Denies Report Nego- tiations Are Off WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—The state department today officially declared that negotiations between the United States and Japan over Japanese im- migration and antiJapanese legisia-|siay ag war correspondents and tion in California are continuing and have not been termmpofarily discontin- ued, as reported. “The state department desires to make clear that there is no founda. |army in Mexico. tion whatever for a published report that the conversations between the after the war with a commission aa department of state at Washington | soviet ambassador to this country and the Japanese ambassador at ‘Washington have been discontinued,” an official statement said. “There has been no interruption in these conver. sations nor is there any likelihood of such, The negotiations are con- tinuing smoothly and satisfactorily.” The Washington dispatch referred to said the negotiations had been temporarily discontinued pending the result of the vote in California in November. State department officials said there will be further negotia- tions before the California vote. Marine Private Wins Riches and a Title ‘WASHINGTON, Oct, 18.—From a private in the marine corpstocount|men were quarreling im Wagner's | in the Italian nobility, with a large income and estates is the good for- tune that has come to Anthony Zulpo, attached to marine headquar- ters here. Zulpo was born in St Mary, Mo., 26 years ago, He is the son of the Count of Cereti. The count died re. cently and Zulpo is the only heir. Uncle Sam Is an Awful Coffee Toper WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—More coffee was drunk in the United States during the year ending June 30 last than in any previous year on record, according to department | of commerce figures. The total con- | sumption was 1,25%,000,000, a per capita of 508 cups, estimating 40 cups to the pound. ‘This is an in- Grease of 499000.000 pound | DEAD IN RUSSIA | said to have been under the influ |struck the condudtor over the head | cloping daughter of|firing a bullet into his victim's brain, i PORTLAND, Oct. 18—John Reed, well known radical writer and ed | itor, died Sunday In Moscow, Rus-| sia, according to a cablegram which | was received by his brother, Henry | G, Reed, of Portland. Typhus caused | death, stated the message, which) i ant Reed, the widow. | Little is known here of the move ments of Reed since he was errone ously reported recently to have been | executed in Finland, after being dis covered ag & stowaway on a ship bound for Sweden, with a large quantity of soviet propaganda, Reed, who was born in Portland, was graduated from Harvard in 1910. Both Reed and his wife, during the war, spent considerable time in Rus. writers for magazines. Previously, Reed was on the staff of the Amert can Magazine two years. He also} served as correspondent with Villa's | Reed returned to the United States but soviet leaders later repudiated the commission. He was an editor of The Masses and the author of sev- eral books. CHARGED WITH BRUTAL CRIME MISSOULA, Mont. Oct. 18.—Gust Wagner, proprietor of a pool room at Kootenal, Idaho, 1s under arrest at Thompson Falls, following the brutal murder Sunday of Joseph Mable, conductor on the Northern Pacific railroad, According to witnesses, the two place, when the proprietor, who i# ence of liquor, pulled a revolver on | Mabie. He is said then to have! with the butt of the weapon before Mabie was taken to Paradise, where he died Sunday noon. Wag. ner fled, but was captured and placed in the jail at Thompson Falla. | Crashes Into Car | With No Lights On/|| Because a standing car was with-| out lights, Alvin 8. Moore, 149} Woodlawn place, and a girl com- panion were badly bruised Monday, according to Moore's report to po- lice, He ran into the ear at W. 26th st. and Leary ave, Saturday night, dishonorably.” terest In them, | Hart, who wan In Seattle Sunday, THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT] Ba Smart Silvertone Coats $29.50 Fur-Collared, Silk-Lined : Both the regular and the new snowflake silvertone, in shades of | blue, are included in this showing of fashionable Winter Coats. They all have deep collars of black sealine, are full lined with fancy figured silk and have double-tiered pockets. Cuffs and back are trimmed with harness stitching and big but- tons. Shown in all sizes from 38 to 42. A Sale of Factory Seconds MOCCASINS At Very Low Prices For All the Family Real Leather Moccasins, made in true Indian fashion, with stamped or beaded patterns in bright colors. They have soft, warm linings and come in four colors: Rein- deer, elk, bark-tan and smoke. Either buckskin finish or smooth finished leathers. Infants’ Moccasins 89c. Others from 59c to $1.19. Children’s Moccasins 98c. Women’s Moccasins $1.79. Others from 89c to $1.69. Others from $1.39 to $2.89. Men’s Moccasins $2.19. Others from $1.39 to $2.89. Misses’ Moccasins $1.39. Others from 98c to $2.69. ESTAULISHED 1690 The BonMarché — Prices Are Low, Indeed In the October Trade Sales With its trained buyers in the principal markets of the eo the Bon Marche early foresaw the distinct downward slump in prices and quickly arranged to bring you the savings as fast as they developed. As you read these prices can you doubt that we have succeeded —done what we set out to accomplish? October Trade Sale of Fiber Hose at 85c a Pair Twelve hundred pairs of the famous Gordon Fiber Stockings have just arrived. They all have double heels, toes and soles of lisle and deep hem lisle tops. Some are plein; others in dropstitch or clocked effects. Shown in black, white, dark brown and navy. In all sizes from 81% to 10. HOSIERY BECTION—UPPER MAIN FLOOR Silk and Satin Prices Take a SpinDownward| We enumerate here a few of the lines that have been reduced 36-inch Fancy Silks Reduced to $1.25 a Yard ; 36-inch Faille Luster Refuced to $1.50 a Yard a 36-inch Black Chiffon Taffeta Reduced to $1.49 a Yard 46-inch Black Duchess Satin Reduced to $1.75 a Yard 36-inch Black Messaline Satin Reduced to $1.75 a Yard 31-inch Striped Pongee Shirting Reduced to $1.95 Yard | 36-inch Black Chiffon Taffeta Reduced to $1.95 a Yard | 36-inch Brocaded Satin Reduced to $2.50 a Yard 40-inch Charmeuse Satin Reduced to $3.25 a Yard 36-inch Imperial Satin Reduced to $3.50 a Yard FABRIC FLOOR—(THIRD) Butterick Quarterly—Winter Number—J Striking new styles to please the most fastid PATTERN SECTION—THIRD FLOOR at the October Trade Bread Mixers and for $. “Jewel” Bread Mixers, “Universal” style, 1 heavy metal—4-loaf size, complete with clam ten to table. Great labor savers. : 0-Cedar Mops Infants’ Bath Tubs $4.4 85e (Slightly Imperfect) Triangular O- Pure white, dou- Cedar Polish ble coated enamel Mops, treated Bath Tubs for in- with O-Cedar fants. Tubs in large Oil—for use on size with rolied varnished floors, They have linoleums and slight imperfec- woodwork. tions, FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE _ Eat Now for Less See These Specials Pumpkin Pies 40¢ Special Luncheon 40¢c Um, um, but they're good—spe- Lamb Fricassee with vegetables, cially priced for Tuesday. bread and butter. ’ —Bon Marche Bread, baked to a Jelly roll, ice cream, coffee oF | golden brown; a loaf, 10¢ and 15c. milk—all for 40c on Tuesday. BAKERY—UPPER MAIN FLOOR LUNCH COUNTER—UPPER MAIN Unbleached Blanket Prices Down Muslin In the October Trade Sales 19c a Yard Take a glance at the following list—it is com . 4 vineing. : Selvedges are slightly soiled on this Unbleached Our $5.00 Cotton Blankets $4.25: Muslin—but what do you Heavy cotton, gray and tan with pink and care, when you get it for blue borders—60x76 inches. 3 only 19¢ a yard—and when Our $8.50 Plaid Blankets $6.95 : it will wear just as well? i 86 inches wide, full bolts. _ Fancy plaids in gray, tan, pink and blie— size 66x80 inches. Our $12.00 Blankets $9.75 { Percale 29c Cotton and Wool Mixed Blankets —boek Buy Percales Tuesday at plaids in pink, blue, tan and gray—size ‘ 29¢ a yard—a yard wide, inches. in light colors, with neat stripes and figures—good quality. FABRIC FLOOR Our $16.50 All-Wool Blankets $13,50 mre Blankets—large block plaids of tam pink and blue—size 66x80 inches. (THIRD) THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE

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