The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 19, 1921, Page 14

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| BRITAINS | . iT i IRISH RULE ae THE SEATTLE STAR THE ANDREWS TRIANGLE Ay) ‘MORE BEER MAY | BE PERMITTED >” | Unlimited “Medicine” Considered ST. KOLBERT Is | AFAILURE? Murder of Women and Chil- dren, Torture of Prisoners | Charged by De Valera BY MILTON BRONNER LONDON, April 19 Ireland Passes from one your of terror into @nother. ‘The new martial law instituted by Phe British government instead of * guppressing revolution adds fuel to the Names Sinn Fein's spirit ts undaunted. ACCUSES SOLDIERS OF MANY CRIMES The government nas locked up Arthur Griffith, the vice president @f the Irish republic. It has put Desmond Fitagerald, a Sinn Fein Bmember of parliament, in solitary eonfinement But the only result Bras been to bring back to Ireland Bamon de Valera, president of the Irish repub who issues a letter to @ll the members of the British par Bament in which he accuses the Grown soldiers of these crimes: Torturing prisoners. Asmassinating men and boys tn Their homes, on the streets and in Murdering women and children. Outraging Irish women and chil Flogging civilians Humilfating Irish citizens, for tn @tance, by compelling them to craw! | Forcing men to do military duty. Burning and tocting. De Valera in his denunciation 7S prisoners were tortured, @harged 220 defenseless men and boys were @arassinated, seven women, @ren a9 18 chit and two clergymen murdered. ind boys flogged, and 28 47 creameries, 1.008 shops 995 homes either wholly or part destroyed. The high spots of the last 12 Months of terror may be summar. Weed as follows: First—Passage of the restoration Order act under which any dis im Ireland can be put under Here are shown Herbert Thornton Andrews and _ his two wives: Above, Mrs. Esther Marie Tatnall Andrews, whom he married 10 weeks ago, and, below, |Mrs. Maud Augusta Haynes Andrews, who is the mother of his two children. Wife No. |2 is now reported to have | fled, and wife No, 1 is recon- |sidering her plans for dt- vorce. JAPS MAY LOSE WASHINGTON, April 19 may lose outright her Japan the drastic stand she has taken in | the negotiations with the United States, it developed here today. | given out by the state department, shows that the proposals that the be applied to Yap was ‘open shop” first made in @ note from this gov ernment on December 6 agreed to thin, the Wilson adminis tration might reluctantly agreed to the Japanese mandate. Japan, however, summarily reject ed tt YAP MANDATE mandate over the Island of Yap because of | | ‘The correspondence over Yap, as) Had Japan have April 19 =A change in the new beer regulations | which, if put into effect, would per | mit physicians to prescribe medicinal beer without limit, is under consid leration by the internal revenue bu | reau, it was Inarned today. | Asm they stand at present, the rem | ulations restrict the amount of beer | that may be preseribed for one pa tient to 4% gallons a month, The proposed change would remove this restriction. Decision a» to what, shall be done with the quantity claum haa not been reached as yet, it was made plain However, !t haa been polnted out to the prohibition enforcement de partment that the Volstead law does |not attempt to specify the amount of |beer that may be preseribed but speaks only of the une of liquors for non-beverage purposes, This has brought up the question of whether the quantity clause i» legal. There te also the consideration that more effective enforcement may be had by placing physicians on thelr honor in the matter of beer preneriptio Prohibition Commis sioner Kramer has made no attempt to restrict physicians in the amounts of wine that may be prescribed. Whether the four and seven eighth» gallon clause is to go or stay the next few days eee Milwaukee to Brew; Ontario Votes Dry MILWAUKED, April 19.-—-The Mil waukes office of the internal reve: nue department bas received orders from Washington to supervise man. ufacture of real beer allowed for medicinal purposes by Wisconsin brewers. ee TORONTY, Aprtl 19.-—-Ontarto vot 4 yeuterday to go “bone dry” by a majority estimated today, on tncom plete returns, at 100,000. The vote | was to prohibit importation of intox |icating liquors. Ottawa, Toronto, | Kingston and Hamilton went wet, but the rural vote overcame their majorition. 'Bergdoll’s Mother Loses in Appeal PITLADELPHIA, April 19.—Mrw. Emma J. Bergdoll, mother of the draft dodging Nergdoll brothers, Mor jwin and Grover, yesterday lost her lappeal in the state supreme court | againat the verdict for $10,000 obtain. ed by Henry J. Scott for counsel probably will be made known within | made on police barracks. Mail| stopped and robbed. /POunced that he will fight the Ingal burned. Attempts were ‘ty of the extradiction warrant. rescue Sat eae forces accused men who didn’t halt when terrorism week of March 11-17 will | of the Royal Irish con-|**!f from bank funds, aggregating Lindeberg to Fight >. Extradition Process SACRAMENTO, Cal, April 19-— Gov. Willlam D. Stephens will tesue & warrant for the extradition of Jafet Lindeberg, former director of the defunct Scandinavian-American bank tn Tacoma. Lindberg ts under indictment for making loans to him. ore shot. Six attacks |!" amount $120,000, Irish The Alaskan mining man has an- prisoners. ’ Industrial Exhibit Is Opened Under the direction of Mra. Henry et} Women Now Secretary of State Hughes bas taken the position that Yap ts one of the territories taken from Ger many; that the United States as one of the victors must have @ choice in disposal of such territories and that she has had no voice in the Yap mat ter, Hughes will not recede from this stand, which disposes of all compromise proposals. Humhes, it is known, has been as- | teen. Boott represented Mra. Berg | doll in her defense in connection with | charges of aiding her sons to evade the draft. Mra. Bergdol! contended that the counsel fees asked were ex conatve. EVERETT-—Woman ‘gtving name of Pearl Hogan tajured when auto upsets on Pacific highway, EX-KAISERIN LAID T0 REST | Thousands “Honor Memory | of Former Empress BY CARL D. GROAT POTSDAM, Germany, Aprfl 19 | The exiled Wmpress Augusta Victoria was buried here today amid honors dented ber while nving. Never « popular figure with the! German masses, the former katserin | | was buried as a heroine with thou | mands of persons massing back of po | lige lines to doff thelr hata and bow Jan the casket passed toward the | mausoleum in which it was to be laid ‘The funeral train from Maarn ar | rived at the royal station, Wild Park, | before dawn today, | Five epecial trains from Merlin brought hundreds of mourners into | Royal Preserve. Mingling in the crowds were bri! Hantly uniformed officers of the old regime. Spectators brought tundreds of wreaths, the fragrance of their cut | lowers mingling with that of bloom: | | ing trees in the royal park. | Gen. Von Hindenburg, in fun ant: | | form, was @ prominent figure in the) | services, Ie was accompanied by | Ludendorff and Mackenzen. Gen. | Von FPulkenhayn led a regiment of Hussars, the only complete military | organization In the procession, The reneral carried the crown of the ex: | emprens, ‘The chapel at San Souct was chon | on for the last rites, the former em: | press having no directed. The casket finally was to be laid in the mauso Journ beside the! remains of Fred erick the Great and those of her son, | Joachim, who committed muicide last surnmer, Wilhelm Suffers | From Melancholy DOORN, April 19-—-Former Em peror Wilhelm suffered a severe nervous attack last night Mem, | bers of the household were up most of the night caring for Wilhelm ancholy since the death of the em press. Denies One Murder; Admits Another VANCOUVER, B. Fred Cunningham, arrested here an/| & sumpect in the recent murder of William Salsbury, strenuously de nies the charge, but admits that a year or two ago he killed « sheriff jin Tombstone, Aris. essa Mercer Island Folk Protest Road Taxes’ Residents of Lakeview precinct, | Mercer inland, Geclaring that they | have received [ttle benefit from the heavy taxes they have been paying for road purponea, have organized a club for the purpose of remedying | this condition. Capt. Oliver A. Hall wan elected president. leured of the senate’s support in “i } | stand. \ | ‘The American postition ts strength: | ened by the fact that the qilies want America to participate in some of the features of the treaty of Ver sailles, the German reparations ques tion being one. This government | will not participate, however, until the contentions of the Hughes’ man- | date note are met BON MARCHE Many Basement Savings on Smart Spring Modes were prohibited. ‘To climax it all six young Irish- Were executed in Dublin, two - | Landes, president of the Sdattle Fed eration of Women's clubs, and Mrs. Clare Ketchum Tripp, director of the educational bureau of the Washing ton Chamber of Commerce, the first ‘CHINA TO CLAIM Bargain Basement offerings are always season- able because the small lots which we buy sell rap- idly, insuring always fresh stocks of up-to-the- high @harged =with murder, treason. ‘The most accurate estimate of to property during the Sinn | struggle is more than $49,000,- | open . ‘The war tn Ireland {s costing the British taxpayers heavily, too. They ‘ Qe supporting 100,000 men in the forees in Ireland, with the most @omplete military equipment. A con- @ervative estimate of the cost is'and 700 feet long, on a branch line $150,000,000 a year. four with | Women’s Educational Exhibit for Washington Manufacturers was scheduled to open at the Arena at 4 D. m. today. The exhibit will remain all week from 10:30 a. m. until 11 p, m. daily. A musical program will be given each evening. AURORA, Iil.—Lost for a day and a half, a Burlington train has been located in a snow drift six feet deep Bear here, clothes clean With the new soap product, Rinso; there is no more hard rubbing—no boiling. Just soak overnight, rinse in themorning, and the clothesare clean. You will find Rinso as remarkable WORLD RIGHTS VANCOUVER, B.C, April 19. | China ts out to assert her interna [tional rights. Dr. Wang Chung Hul, chief jus tlee of the supreme court of China and one of 10 peace conference dele- Fates selected to revise the covenant lof the league of nations, arrived tn Vancouver yesterday as a super.| propagandist to spend several wecks | in America, on his way to London. He frankly states that China in- tends to fight publicly for what she considers her rights, and while Ottawa and Washington he will try to test out opinion on tnternational iawues. He wil urge that Canada oppose the renewal of the AngtoJapanese | treaty which he thinks would in evitably lead to war, tn which China would necessarily participate in aid of the United States, an He says that China's anxiety re garding the quejons surrounding |) the Pacific ocean have been deepen. ||! ed by the discovery recently that Japanese arsenals have been manu facturing large quantities of marine | mines, using American and British | steel, and that the Japanese coast | has been marked into blockade zones | from which warships could control the shipment of essential raw ma terials. . Chinese Inaugurate New President Soon A ceremony as elaborate as that attending the inauguration of an/|}| American president will mark the| inauguration of Dr. Sun Yat Sen, new. | ly elected president of the Chinese |]! republic, This word came today tn a enble- gram to Loy Hing, secretary of the Chinese nationalist party here, The big ceremony will be at the present capital of the republic, Can. | ton, “There will be firecrackers and— er—everything™ said Loy Hing to- day. | Dr, Sen was elected April 7, Beat tle Chinese believe that his election ||| marks the dawn of a great era of |! progress for China, minute styles. And the themselves! As handy as a sweater belt and may be worn wit! if desired. Sizes to 44. Made of good quality w soles and come in all sizes size 9. You'll Be Interested in a New Lot of Jersey Sport Jackets $6.59 — ‘round wear are these Jersey Sport Jackets in snappy styles and attractive colorings. They come in two models, both of which are in Tuxedo style, and have patch pockets, but one is belted all around while the other has a three-piece Shown in scarlet, black, tangerine, navy and brown. Men’s and Boys’ Rubber-Soled Canvas Shoes $2.29 rubber soles and trimmings. They have leather inner ‘Women’s White Canvas Pumps and Oxfords for the regular weekly washing as Lux is for silks, woolens, and all fine fabrics. Lever Bros, Co., Cambridge, | Mass, / Made tn U.8.AS D’Annunzio Weds GENEVA, April 19.—Gabriele a Annunzio, soldier and poet, married in a civil ceremony Satur: an Italian pianist, a honeymoon in the Italian lake coun try. Boldt's,—Advertisement, Italian Pianist ||| was day to Signorina Luisella Baccara, sording to re-| Bent foodstuffs for the least at at $2.49 white can are in single-strap style. I ports received here. Sho was in Fiume for several months with the | distinguished lberateur and refused 3 9 they are to leave even when attack became {| AT ° and all Imminent. They are spending their|{| and covered high or low hi J $2.49 and $3.98 the Pumps and Oxfords are of good or medium white enameled heels and soles. Pumps The Pumps have cross straps or double beaded straps. All sizes from 3 to 8 are included. bargain prices speak for and more practical for all h the belt across the back hite canvas with good red from boys’ size 9 to men’s vas with low rubber heels n all sizes from 8 to 8. made of fine white canvas have turned leather soles eels, ALLIES DEMAND GERMAN COIN Transfer of Metal Reserves Is Ordered PATUS, April 19 Tho allied repar WOMAN ROUTS HUSKY THUGS Chases Thieves in Her} House for Three Blocks | Mrs, Fred Elander, 2408 10th ave. and Cologne branc ‘The former kaiser has been mel |[) Wl C, Aprtl 19—|9) ations commission # werved a three-day ultimatum on Germany de manding transfer of all the reichs bank metal reserves to ita Cologne! and Coblenz branches, it was nounced today. In event Germany rejects the ultt an matum, the allies will demand com plete surrender of the metal re serves. } ‘The ultimatium demands that the reserves be placed in the Coblens before May 1 They would be considered as unnets of the reichsbank but that institu: | tion would not be permitted to une| them except on permianto fre t od h of he to | floes until a decision has been reach ed on German reparations Removal of the gold and rftver to the two cfties named would put tt in territory under control of allied and Atnerican troops, jand fled. W., who welghs only 100 pounds, | routed two husky burglars Monday afternoon, drove them on the run for | three blocks and only desisted from the pursult when the prowlers dis- appeared In a clump of woods. Two suitcases of silverware and clothing were carried away by the burglars. These were later recovered when ©. W, Milliken, 8307 Third ave W., mw the two men in the brush | near the Blander home and called to them. They dropped the valises Library Charges Up to Committee Today The judiciary and department of efficiency committee of the city council will conwider Tuesday after noon charges filed by the committee for civic betterment that the public brary is being mismanaged | loaves for 12 cents HOUSECLEANINGY Annual Spotless Drive {gi Under Way } Beatties annual spring clea well under way today, the day of Spotless Week. The ctvic bureau of the of Commerce extimated that nearly 75 per cent of the city’s b yards have been given their anni raking, and suggested: ~ ' cond “Plant a garden, Paint the h ‘Cleantiness is next to godlin Get next.” Portland Bakery Cuts Bread Price PORTLAND, April 19—War declared here today among bak with the opening skirmishes r ing in a victory for the consumers, One of the largest bakeries the price of wrapped bread fro cents to 9 for pound loaves, another firm offered two - TheBo _ Women’s New Capes and — | Wraps—Low Priced at $35. THIS IS AN EXCELLENT PRICE ON COATS OF SUCH group. For the nMarché |; MEMBER SEATTLE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU If you are looking for a becoming summer wrap or cape, with style and good tailoring and want to pay ~ $35.00—you will find and materials is worth more than the price we are asking. Long tassels trim the novel points on the capes and embroidery and stitching elaborate the wraps. if { i QUALITY it in this quality of workmanship | te 1 | INCLUDED ARE A FEW New Yarns at Lower Prices The pleasure of making a sweater depends on the choice of beautiful colored yarns, We have a complete stock of yarns Made of MODELS IN COVERT You may select from shades of blue, brown, tan, gray and green. COAT SECTION—SECOND FLOOR Girls’ Wash |} Middies $1.35 11 Now’s the time of year for } to wear middies—suitable for | —for play—for outings. CLOTH 00! white twill with laced and dozens of new sweater models, as well as children’s garments, to show you. Classes daily in sweater making front and set-on pockets—collars and cuffs of Copen, scarlet, navy or coun trimmed with three rows of rai i) Silkinwool, balls 55¢ || GINGHAM 121-2c and no charge for instructions. re Knitting Yarn, hanks 75¢ Girls Knitting Yarn, hanks 59c Knitting Yarn, balls 42c Zephyre, balls 30c | Shetland Floss, balls 22¢ | Heather Mixed, balls 47¢ | ART NEEDLEWORK SECTION different col on a waist. THIRD FLOOR | | Books as | Commencement Gifts RADUATION days are approach- ing—so make your selection of | graduation gifts in advance and with | care, | | OTHERS has acquired School Record Books—$1.25 to $6.50. S@ne® Classics in uniform leather binding for the young book collector, include Dickens, Scott, Stevenson, Thackeray, | at $1.75 each. , | BOOK SHOP—LOWER MAIN FLOOR sortment of For both motoring and boating these Scarfs are ideal. blue and gold with contrasting checked borders—nicely two pockets and buckled belt. i SWEATER SECTION—SECOND FLOOR CHAMBRAY 1,500 yards of serviceable Cham- bray Gingham—25 inches wide— lengths to 20 yards—blue, pink, tan, green and heliotrope, Dress Ginghams 19c Boots at $6.50 Navy Blue Serge Plaited Skirts— with stitching around the bottom in| | DAUGHTER SHOP—SECOND FLOOR Cards fer Mothers’ Day be remembered by cards or letters on Sunday, May 8, for Mothers’ Day You will find a comprehensive as- designs suitable for Mothers’ Day re- membrances in the Stationery Section. STATIONERY SECTION UPPER MAIN FLOOR Belted Wool Scarfs for the Motorist—$4.95 Women’s Hiking | The outing season is here in full force —so have the proper footwear for com- fort and durability. Middy Skirts lors—every skirt made May 8 all the world over will an international signifi- Cards in many artistic i—in gray, brown, navy fringed, finished with at $11.00 | Nice quality of Dress Ginghams— in lengths to 20 yards—to go at 19¢ a yard—27 inches wide, in good col- ors and pretty patterns, plaids, checks and stripes. Dress Ginghams 25c A splendid assortment of Dress Ginghams—27 inches .wide, good- looking plaids—all wanted checks and plain styles in pink, blue, red, green, heliotrope and tan, FABRIC FLOOR—THIRD Nap-a-tan Hiking Boots, made in moc- casin style in dark brown, or plain blucher cut in tan—both styles with half bellows tongue—solid oak welt soles—12- inch tops. Sizes 314 to 8, widths A to D. Women’s Shoes at $8.50 For the women who like high shoes the year around—here’s a splendid style Black kid with medium pointed toes— welt soles, military or Cuban heels—sizes 81% to 8 UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE

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