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‘ 4 UNION OF RACES IS NIPPON'S SCHEME j Junkers Become Egatistical _ Over Successes in Siberia, Manchuria, Korea BY FRANK V. MARTINEK (Former lieutenant in the American navy; for three years intelligence of- ficer for the U.S. Asiatic feet.) (Copyright, 1921. Chicago Daily News) b Because of its manifest successes © im Manchuria, Korea, Eastern St D Beria, Mongolia, and because of the Taction of the peace confere in S ceding Shantung province, the mill- tary party of Japan has become ex- dingly egotistic in its aspirations F for Fur and Near Eastern power. It i seeking for Japan now not only p territory in its immediate vicinity Sor colonization purposes, accom | panied by the cry of over-population, » but it is reaching far afield; into the + Y a i | } Section Two we SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1921. CAN’T SULK IF YOU WHISTLE! KAISER STORY I$ SENSATION Reporter’s Interview Cause of Comment BY CARL D, GROAT BERLIN, Feb, 18.—T mous interview with the kaiser, ob oe now fa tained by Heinrich Petermeyer and published exclusively in America by the United Press, has been a week long sensation in Germany. General Von Gontard, court mar shal to the kaiser, telegraphed from Doorn, confirming the fact that Petermeyer talked with the kalner in the garden in Amerongen castle, exactly as Petermeyer reported When the kaiser took up hin rest dence tn Holland, ansurances were given the Dutch and German gov. ernments that he would not issu any public statement or submit te any interviews by newspaper men. General Von Gontard points out that his promise had been kept inas much as it tutor to the Bentinck children that Petermeyer saw and talked with the kaiser At that time he was not a news paper man, but took careful notes of his interview and later in his new capacity as journalist, carefully transcribed his report of his talk with the former emperor. The Vorwnerts, the most impor There's not a soul on earth who can keep a grouch five! tart paper in Berlin, which te recom minutes if he whistles, says Miss Sybil Sanderson, shown here eae as the semtofticial organ of whistling on her fingers. On the left is Rev. John Harrison * ie Serer bee a be not caly Thompson of the First Baptist church, at Portland, Me. Every} journalist, but « journalistic genius Far East, India, Ceylon, Exypt P Englishmen say that there is an} _tmaginary line in the Far East/ P which Japan does not dare to cross. } 1 But some day the J spanese is Hable | fo step over that line and upon the} fail of the British lion. | ‘That Japan has been reaching for) the lion's tail has been quite appar-| nt. She wishes a renewal of the} | AngloJapanese alliance, and this} } Alliance, to the militarists of Japan, | “means only one thing: That Japan| “shall be recognized by the power of | E the Western seas, ureat Hritain, as) [the protector of the East; that} Japan's armies shall be called upon | by Britain to quell troubles arising in those countries. DREAM OF UNITED RACES Men prominent in British thought} Asia have told me that Great Britain might renew the alliance on Da permanent basis if certain clauses, | now as unfavorable to the United States, shall not be insisted | | upon by the Japanese. Japan does | mot want the United States or Amer-/ fean interests considered In the sign-} Ping of this treaty, if such is signed | " or renewed. If her militarists fail in| securing this renewal they have| @reams of uniting the colored races of the Far East under the bursting gun banner of Nippon, to bring about 1 @ balance of power of the colored} © races against the white races. Next) "to the Irish question, this Angio-| “Japanese alliance is of utmost tm- portance to Britain's. statesmen, in- gsmuch as vigorous protests against this renewal have been registered by Canada, New Zealand and Australia, hose leaders believe their best in | terests lie with the best interests of the United States in the Pacific ocean | and in the East. } Japan is using every means tn her | power to bring about this renewal. | Ghe is propitiating British trade | S| agents wherever she finds them. In "India, with certain sections desiring S their independence: with independ- Fence demonstrations against the itish in Cairo—I witnessed one of these, and have a copy of the pro- gram printed in Arabic—and threats of uprisings in Ceylon, Great Brit- ain’s position is none too happy con cerning her possessions. Japan real fzes this just as acutely as England does. Japanese militarists realize that the time may not be far distant when she may become master of the situation in these Far Eastern colo- nies of Britain, for Engiand’s hands, in a military sense, are tied pretty | effectually at home. AS PROTECTOR OF CHINA rumors | | : that Japan has cir ia concerning the unnettied fontition in China and re fm the Near Kast have been for the © purpose of indicating that the Chi fese are wholly incapable of govern- ) ing themselves, and that Japan, with racial and literary similarities, should | be the one to help China straighten out her government. Japan's pur- pose there is stated by her to be a | benevolent one. The indications point really to a contrary motive. The Japanese protectorate in Ko-| tea has called out numerous reports ‘of brutalities and outrages commit- fed not only against Koreans but Falso against, European missionaries there. The younger element among the | Koreans, Chinese, the Formosans and ) the true Russians of Siberia, resent Japanese interference; they fone of it, prefer open door policies as far as foreign trade is concerned, and wish their independence from any foreign power so far as govern- ment is concerned. CONCERNING FOREIGN ALLIANCES The subject of foreign has been brought up repeatedly by Japanese agents, as bas that of American interference, for the pur Done of influencing Siberians and others against the United States. For instance, in July, 1919, the Far Kastern Review of Viadivostok qicted Zumoto, a prominent member of the Japanese diet, as stating in an interview given at Omsk that the subject of a Russo-Germah-Japanese iance has been dropped. There had been rumors floating all over the East to the effect that the old royal families of Germany, Russia and dapan would unite in a common al lance and for the common cause of | Far Bastern control. ‘The subject in| Why no means dead, as I discovered | im Eurave, but 1 do not believe it elsewh, want i alliances | being carried on by Roland 8. Mor Sunday night he has his congregation whistle the hymns. if he could have fabricated a talk #0 at vt nabeng z completely bearing the imprint of the kaiser’s psychology. We do not regard him as such @ genius, but rather as a reporter who gives his experiences and who hears quite cor- rectly dangerousty alive as yet, According to dispatches to the Far Eastern Review from Omek, under date of August 19, the Dsi-Dsi, an Osaki Japanese newspaper, stated that information had been received from Tokyo to the effect that en | = m4 - of fishing rights ‘That, however, Graven the American military com-| or ut rinhin. That, however, | Registr mander in castern Siberia, had beeD| pewes the United States ix not nat instructed to make all efforts dur-|istied with the Aleutian islands ing his stay at Omsk to get spe- " / Again, to secure Petropaviovek bay | ets ome ni cia). concessions. for merica at|on the ¥ | clase in home nursing that will meet ~ s southern const of Kamechat the Jumble Shop, Fourt ; os perm bo 4 youre ol mae | Ke which is highly suitable for a one Virginia wt ee Hing ‘oa the develo: oben 2 mame for} naval base, ix undoubtedly the In-| day mornings, it is announoed by the be foe 9 = . ‘hee c the | tention of the United States. This! jocal Red Cross. Informdtion about as & ge ‘urther, the! the coercion of Japan by the United | this and other classes in nursing may ight to erect @ new railway line to/ states, For a number of years the | be obtained at Red Croan headquar. Kamchatka, uniting this line with| United States has labored to carry | ters, 215 University at. Habarovek. The Japanese newspa-| ont a Plan calling for the use of |} ~~~ oe eae these efforts will) Alaska ax a connecting point be-| When she wishes to do something pgtoesest ian cred tween Americn and Asia. © © °"| which might be regarded as repre A “FAKE” ABOUT Apparently the American efforts) hensibie by other nations, she ac AMBASSADOR MORRIS failed, for the Americans knew|cuses some nation of doing that A week later a transiation from/ nothing of them, althd they were|very thing. Thus i* paved the way the Tokyo Komumin Shimbun| much interested in the efforts by|for her own actions in that direc: stated, “a lease on the coast of| Japan to leaxcholds upon| tion. In other words, she has a negotiations fo@ leascholkis in Kam-|this peninsula, which she did se-| habit of giving advance information chatka had been “investigated and|cure, and where she is now oper. found to be tru: The article | ating. stated that the negotiations were This phase ris, American ambassador to Japan, for @ lease upon certain Kamchat ka properties to run 36 years. the Tokyo on the for the acquinition | | | paper Karmel waka oo ae ation Open for Home Nursing necure intends to do. incident of iMustrates another Japanese propaganda. be published tomorrow The Important Thing to Remember Saturda Your Choice of the Finest Suits and Overcoats inThis House Which Formerly Sold at $75, $80 and $85 Hirsch-Wickwires Included Long Stouts, and Extra Large Sizes 1 5 Alterations Free Formerly Sold at $40 to $45 Your $ Your $ Choice 35 Choice 25 Separate Trousers To Match Your Old Coat and Vest Reduced to $6.00 and $8.50 Tailored Ready Co. Greatest Store for Men and Boys Regulars, Stouts, Longs, Shorts, Formerly Sold at $60 to $70 Seattle’ 401 to 407 Pike Street was in hin capacity as | Registration is #till open for a new | (CHOOSE WIFE BY HER WALK! That’s System Aavocated by Biological Expert “Choose your wie by the way she walks!” Thin is the advice given free to} | those contemplating matrimony by K, C, Burling, mous biological ex pert and student of animal life, who is visiting Seattle this week | “I've made an intensely selentific study of the matter,” explains Bur | ling, “Worty-thres per cent of women tread on the inside of one foot and the outside of the other. ‘That | means they are emotional, according | to African trackers.” | Rurling recently spent several months at the Jack London ranch in| California making extensive blo | logical investigations there j “Outward forma of all typen of life | invariably reflect their inner mans fextations or instincts,” Burling de on | “For instance, walk, How clearly ‘true pelf! | “Take the Salome type. She moves with the ease of a rolling ball of mer: cury. You can spot her, by her walk, a block away. | “Or the girl who pat-pats. full of pep and restlessness, originated the shimmy and racing cars popular “The woman who moves slowly | and leans heavily first on one foot, | then on the other, loves comfort. If xhe's not careful, she'll get fat. Her dixposition is smouldering. She'd much prefer coiling? u cushions before a comfortable fire. “Women with the shopping habit get out of plumb from constantly leaning over to the right to look at argain counters and shop windows. Any woman, tho, wili look more quickly to the ri ler is is a biological fact. “The woman who wearn low heels and is surefooted in generally level headed—knows what she tsabout. | “High heels? Short women invent. | led high heels to make them look tall | *o that they could walk with an important air. The shorter they are, jthe more important they feel! on take it a woman's reveals her Sheng She made | | { | thru her newspapers of what ic (Another article in this series will Wom UAPANESE MILITARISTS FIGHTING FOR DOMIN | t than to the left. | | The Seattle Star ATION FIRST AVENUE "TO BE REPAVED ‘Double Shifts Planned to Rush the Work At « cost of $463,899.45, First ave, First &., from Pine st. to Atlantic st. will be repaved at onee, according to decision Thursday aftert noon by the council streets and sews ers committee, following a publie hearing at which owners of abutting © property expressed their views, Si uble shifts will be employed am of statement from the nd sewer departments that — aving is imminently nec@ie ~ he cost, with the exception of 5,200, which will be appropriated, ~ will be assexsed aguinst the property ~ Action on tide land imp the filling and paving of |S. and Sixth ave. 8, and the tary fill in Walker's subdivision postponed 26 weeks, Protests of jerty owners were to the effect the projects should wait at least | months. T ity engineer had mated the o at $1,000,000. ‘Bissett, Caldwell = |, to Speak Tuesday WATCH YOUR STEP, LADIES! |and ave OUT oO PLonB FROM LEANING TO TNE > ; Riot OME ‘The principal speakers at — | Washington's birthday banquet — be given at the Rainier club |day will be Prof. Clark P. lof the University of Wash | Mayor Hugh M, Caldwell and | cis. A. Garrecht, United States |ney at Spokane. The quets lgiven by Gen, James Shields @ sembly, Fourth degree, Columbus. Prominent Ogden Physician Is D > " poe OGDEN, Utah, Feb, 18—Dr, ’Tis Safer Than | note Keanveter, aged 28 yeare, . 1 t physician, surgeon and Making Home Brew |<: « lof Ogden, died” yesterday mo CHICAGO, Feb. 18.—Carl Peowaty, | the Dee hospital from blood nion king” of Chicago, says Ameri | ing caused by an ulcerated toothy” ns deprived of liquor are eating had been ill several weeks as a onions because they “have a kick.” | Everett Man Freed of Narcotic Charge On trial before Federal Judge FB. FE. Cushman, Lyle J. Agnew, of Everett, was freed of narcotic charges by Jury verdict returned Thursday sult of the ulceration. An Unusual Opportunity to Stock Up on Your Spring Footwear 3,000 Pairs of en’s Low Shoe All up-to-date styles, worth $5.00 to $9.00 per pair, includ- ving Pumps, Oxfords, Ties and _ Strapped Slippers. All sizes— all widths. : This lot represents another remarkable ready cash buy ar- ranged thru the head- quarters of