The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 8, 1922, Page 14

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American Fight on Russian Famine Is Victorious lherms of our conta,” food # month in 100,000 packets. Te |the people of the village, and » ittance orders are bought at $10|tenced to be beaten to death, And! iH says Cal, ly refugees from the « the Polish BY EDWARD M. THIERRY That ts the mensage brought by] 6,600,000 adults,” he says. “They Ukraine—r NEW YORK, Aug. § The peak | Col, William N. Haskell, director of | work, covering an area of 4,000,000) Volga regi By that time crops will have) Harracks have been built at many|keep one person alive for a month * * * P. S . ] y matured, for there waa much more! relief stations for the inoculation of | to six weelm ich eae. She Herself Got No. 8,000 cron tytn win govern | oration eamamign, the arestn | ot fond furnohed Oy Ameren ‘has | ‘ jof American relief has been reached | the n relief administration, [square miles, is betn, ne by 200! border, wh 4,000 to 6,000 re-|ench—76 per cent coming from|the ‘people's court’ carried out the f j!a starving Russia and the specter ing 10,000,000 p Americans, Close te ne of! riated 1 sur daily thru the| America—and the food, #ht 4 in ence.” —— 7 of famine fast tx oaring.” Inc 00 children | supplies have | n of Minsk alone. bulk, is put up at Me ware 00 Amertoans in charge of re ae - ——-- -| “Child feeding was begun last They swarmed into raflway sta | houses ‘ 120, ru A T. fssee calcein Genus ane "tun eB ag eg rf EE 1 1 ny fears on % I ® 4 By the coming September adult re-| momber Gol, Haskell’s etaft, |pounds of f sper protann ati! P 1 by tne relief a 9 4 iy . le cane, and the feedin 7 a st te mmfik, § ae 10 , ‘ . ; ssues ATVLAZG!E) LUCEMSE]S W100 coo wna wagons tha T P , Bill Unanimously children will be cut down gradually | deered to awa sugar, 10 pounds of lard | “a ap: repare 4 Hi ze * * * * * to 1,000,000. Babies were born there daily.” pounds of ten. Thin tn enough to| like shriek, a «lip of the ment of $10,000,000 worth of seed | ever to Shed Them oncelved, in against ty Trains of food mera ales a then emem ere aim, ae é t r . U. 8. CHECKS At lenat 600,000 have been fed by | « ter. ty into the darknens, od 4 ‘ mai. HUNGER food remittance packets t to ape | It ie fear of the people rather When the Russians see Amert en eum shone down ‘ mi . e p individ o end C ‘ela nan 6 ' co t a e hey get dow on their knees T tit ob ject With the toll of tite exacted dy | Gihssshan ined Win tales tn cif Ppt eg by o nde and rela. | the . the: governm _ vest an sane thoy ee 4 ra on tt ne 7 gud bs - “ ‘ tnt sin other countries od banditry ya Col, Hanke ry to kiss our hands » broke: the last Fourth of July celebration duced wate Par bong to a mint 7 by prpeted be aggortn ot RP RE | manga ype ss oh } . red and—dead. id tided iT people over, espe L te amt be - seed 2 y UU fresh in thelr memory, the city | oe Oe ee oe eee # ’ tion distributes $1,000,000 worth oflfood station were caught, tried by | ° it men, passing by. stopped } cially in the Volga region, When Al d Cc ouncil voted unanimously Monday |the, harvest comes our food drive | - on rasaient | exander Coming to gw and wept. They were u fi oO over 4 we shall| 4 i hy other pedestrians Afternoon to ban all firaworks in will be practically over and we shall| . . ° ° | to the Pantages iaie, ots Wace devote our chief attention to medical | Mid > icorwtas Beattie, | yu “ and sanitation work.’ ; | Alexander, The Man Who fn sorrow 4 at the ‘The ordinance ts sweeping fn tts ; POSER ln dled be cousing 46 the seat: || Spans - 4 tog Out af the $20,00u, subscribed | com o the Pa had cements, placing an absolute fro by the American people two years! bd tages the week of August 14, to mys. || nor of yout Ribition on the sale or use of fire dee for _Geatral pean rellet | tify, please and perturb, is ¥ n t wha w 4 Srackers, fireworks or other explosive $4,000,000 has gone to feed Mussian| | phatic upon one subject, a in A . , | t he has any affiliats “ My ¢ salutes. | children, according to Haskell | Le on . | | Dally 2,600,000 children visit the) WASHINGTON, Aug. § France; 000, only 4,000 persons were get- | supernatural I do no atm such he doffe . “nomebs Despite ow eo lic certain rotall 118,000 American kitchens, Each has! needs press agents, according to pee ting unemployment allowances | states Alexander, “and have always || should eal) t Or at len leg ed tha’ aa jplate and apoon and receives & Well: |tensador Myron T. Herrick, home| © July L endeavored to #0 express in a clari- || remove ° ainn. We ¢ a week, the ¢ eooked meal consisting of bread, s | “Fre has spent 93,000,000,000 of | fied manner in ail my statements to | leave them lying in the atree Were not disposed to delay ac eoooa and milk and either rice, beans |*f°™ Parte for a two months’ vaca |trancw already on the restoration of| the press and from the stage. What Bustiin hru the crowd ca |tion on his farm near Cleveland her devastated areas, despite failure|1 do I do thru mind alone. I have || the b 0,000,000 a propriated | There bas been entirely too much /to collect the too-long delayed repa | merety trained my mind to concen. wer .000 tons of corn have| "gloom" printed about France, he a payments. The same un-| trate, to grasp and to hold ali that|| edy of ted Mion on tho measure. } Councliman Robert B. Hesketh and | Mr Henry Landes sponsored the police. They, toms the pltifal traj had transpired dup or corn grits. by congress 2 ordinance. been shipped into the Volga region, |aym, and not enough “joy.” All of spirit of the people which |it receives, And what I have done|| ing the night. They wiped sul ; 20 RS TI a | Needy adits numbering 6,000,000 re. |this has caused a widespread errone:|carried them thru the war tx now] any one can do if one applies @ life || picious drops of molsture from "y celve 30 pounds of corn a month, |ous impression in the United States, | patiently restoring the soll and thelr | time to it ex I have. My k edge || the es, and stooping to tiv! ION OF {Thin they grind, usually by primitive | he nays. shattered homer.” is @ comforting philosophy and the || sodden ground, picked up tim } methods, and make tnto corn bread. | “There ts practically no unem- Ambaenndor Herrick expressed the | most optimistic. I belteve in post-|| broken form of-~a quart bottle | Ani additional 1,600,000 adults are ployment in France,” he reports. (opinion that Europe is not going to/ tive thought and that nothing can} Haig & Hale. j bein fed at woup kitchens in the! “Out of a population of 10,000. | the “damnation bow-wown.” triumph against it,” TheBonMarché | PIKE STREET--SECOND AVENUE-—UNION STREET $7.50 Wash Dresses Reduced] ) RED DEFENDED ‘Colorado Adjutant General : Explains Position ‘DENVER, Aug. %.—*There’ Jaw in Colorado to keep Fos. fer out of the state now and at any ‘This was the statement today by i General Pat Hamrock, in pting on the expulsion from tt state Sunday night of Willlkm Z. , alleged radical. Foster, who was to have addressed B Meeting here, was arrested at his Dy state rangers and ordered to and his Bertilion measure. recorded despite his protests. . Foster, it was understood here, ts ‘found in Foster's possession he was arrested, according to a w conti: ted. Fears hove, ctarcntoiond Foster as Mrs, Charles Duffy Undesirable and one of the most] SAN DIEGO, Cal. Aug. §.—Mary Duffy as a court clerk fn another ® men in the country to! Meaw! four years ago, became|@*partment of the echoing old Hamrock stated. “We decided}... county's, official cupid. | Courthouse, to have him keep right on going | Says Mary again: “Marry? I've In this lot of dresses, which have any stop in Denver, for he} At that time she secured employ: | never thought about tt." been marked down for clearance, are ‘would have been sure to start trou-jment in the clerk's offies, and on| Another two years. Another fowr| 7 Ff ed Gi and law.breaking. her first day at work issued her| thousand marriage licenses isaued by found very high-grade Imported Ging- | ham Dresses, also ratines and organ- first marriage teense. | Mary~ ‘that ts, to be exact, 3,999. . * . . The couple tittered thetr way out,) Then Duffy whispered something dies, made on modish lines, qualization Board [4:4 sir youre sctormnctiy was. | Among the trimmings are hand- } id t __|into Mary's ear. Mary was recep j to Meet Wednesday| {Not for m1 never marry | tive. hemstitched collars, cuffs and vestees, An E ° E The next meeting of the county | rourthovsandth marriage license|Mary issued to herecif. Now she's loose self panels on the skirt, bound n xceptional Purchase of / Pass two years, Mary issues the) And tho elght-thoweandth Hoense | Pegeelization board will be held oni trom her desk. Enters Charies|Mrs. Ctaries Duffy with Indian head or bias bindings, all- od | Earige Soygg yigepince vad over embroidery, organdy novelty Georgette and Tricolette — Frank Hull. At a meeting fears agg braiding and cross-stitch embroidery. re ree nne Property. were Te: Some of the dresses are in straight- - line effects, others are bloused, and all Overblouses $2.45 are belted. Here are the inexpensive blouses that you have been Ba THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT County Commissioner Lou C. Smith was elected chairman of the board ee meas are Comtty Comm | wae Pa aclgeat nsinze go poercing waiting for. They come in white and fiesh Georgette, stone: 7 Hull, County | e plain and checked patterns, in yellow, trimmed with insertions and edging of imitation i lace. Baas Teese wishass’ Gaines and CY Bargain Basement Stocks Are Always blue, red, green and helio. Sizes 16 to They have V necks and ruffled Frome. Some ren agar Councilmen Lou Cohen, Oliver T Seasonable, Because We Buy Odd 42, SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE banding of the lace down the front, giving a yery nice ‘Erickson and Kathryn A. Miracle. os Lots for Cash and Sell Them Five Sentenced on Rapidly the Same Way! Booze, Dope Charges Upon receiving their ag = guilty, Federal Judge B. E. gr C ] P d fin Sicntay crninestvse ™ees| 1,000 Cool Percale an ice aenting in @ Louls Piper M li » Louls ‘ i icpeten 40 peor and aor usilin Aprons in Leavenworth federal prison, Blaz Fernandez to two years in the same oy effect. The Tricolette Blouses come in many colors. Some have the sleeves and bottom of the blouse finished with a self fringe, in others the neck, sleeves and pockets are bound with silk braids in high colors; another style has the bot- tom finished with bandings of elastic, giving a shirred effect—the collar and cuffs of this style are crepe de Chine. Sizes 36 to 42. . SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE bas | Start School Sewing NOW!! I|| Cottons for School Clothes at the Right Prices 1,500 Yards Devonshire Black Sateen place, and Chin Loy to four months | 1 rf Tr irtbar nechéer won fined $300 and 98c | iia Cloth 25¢ sae 19c Yard ; cH — Purchase of i eras Gee & Yee Toe ane 0 days $2 inches wide. In plain, una- 30 and 36 inches wide, of good, G F ll D ij eee ee In 18 pretty, comfort- dorned style, and also in good-look- heavy quality, for making durable irls a resses ably cut styles Partales | ing checks and stripes, in blue, pink, aprons and satisfactory school Pi is +e is | tan and brown, bloomers, AMBITIOUS in checks, yellow, pink, ‘ F $ ] 6.50 blue, red, black and Dress Ginghams 15c Dress Ginghams 25c white; checks figured Everett Classic Ginghams, 27 Amoskeag Dress Ginghams, 82 Matde of newest fall ma- or flowers, trimmed inches wide, in stripes, checks and inches wide and good-looking plaids, terials—Canton crepe, crepe with rick-rack and braid. plaids; lengths to 20 yards, checks and plain styles, in blue, yel- de Chine, Aberdeen knit Unbleached muslins, too, beautifully trimmed with cretonne. All with belts and sashes of self, and potkets. Sizes 18 to 42. low, pink, helio and tan, American Ginghams 35c Fine quality Dress Ginghams in good-looking checks and plaids, 52 inches wide, all the wanted shades. wool-crepe combined with Canton crepe. Side drape effects are held in place with jeweled ornaments, There are side pleatings, Dress Ginghams 20c Dress Ginghams, 82 inches wide, in good-looking checks in pinks, blues, tan and helio. Summery Georgette _Dress Ginghams, 25c Scotch Ginghams 50c straight-line models, with Toile du Nord Dress Ginghams, in Just a fresh shipment of these for fancy metal belts, and oth- DRESSES stripes, checks and plaids, 27 inches school dresses. Beautiful, in neat ers with cut braid designs— wide—all wanted shades. assorted checks and plaids, in yellow, all distinctive styles for the ai brown, blue, pink, helio, black—32 avcsetives aint he Imported Dress Ginghams jes wide growing girl. Sizes 13 to 17, Ved GROWING GIRLS’ SECTION— é 35c Yar ; Tissue Gingham 20c SECOND FLOOR This is a very fine quality lot of New Tissue Gingham, 27 inches Ginghams, stripes and’ checks, 32 wide, in handsome patterns and col- inches wide, good ‘color ors—the material is fine and sheer. FA FLOOR—THIRD—THE BON MARCHE New Curtainings Be Sure You Use Hemstitching and Picoting ‘ ote Butterick Patterns 10c Yard Ruffled Voile Curtainings 35c Yard The Bon Marche is now equipped to do _ 36 inches wide-—-something new in voile for curtains, your picoting and hemstitching. Leave | Some with durable mercerized stripes. Dainty curtains, materials in the Drapery Section, Fourth | these, and easily washed and ironed, for they are of good Floor, quality, y Personal Service Aids School Sewing Mill Ends Curtainings 35 Yard - ° 2 to 10 yards in a piece, Whi opens : Dresses will be cut, free of charge, during School Sewing Week, like the pretty fiurak postal ria — ae ecru figured madras; models shown in the department. Bring the following measurements of the f - yellow, pink and blue, A $14.89 A splendid group of light-colored Georgette Dresses in greens with |filet insertion; Mohawk with iridescent beads; Mrs, Jennie MacMillan light, sheer pinks and jlavenders with flower- | trimmed flounces; white @hade, And if I am succe in my | waists and checked wash er Ge iecket po” | silk skirt combinations. Mrs. Jennie MacMillan, Glen Park, | Sizes 16 to 42, N. ¥., only woman justice in the state, who {# running for state sen: | ator, nays that. |For the Ultra-Particular Summer Girl! “I do belleve that no woman with (With the Deltor) THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE “There is no reason why a wor should not sit in the E @ home and family should estrange . . ‘ . dash of cool color at the windows lends comfor . herself from these influences merely Middies for children. 4 s house these days! rt to the al J to enter politics,” she explains td 1. Bust measure, just as loose as you wish the dress to be worn, 7 : “But my family is back of me and ( yu oors e II. The length of dress from shoulder to the bottom of the skirt. .. { encouraging me. I love the political i st Ill. From the back of the neck, along the arm to the bottom of the sleeve. Attractive Cretonnes 20c Yard | game an far as I have played it, and Breezily styled, strongly made Middies in all-white 1 . : $4 inches wid " A t to go further and others with blue or red cuffs and collars. The (The same measurements as one takes for a man’s shirt.) _ 34 inches wide, nearly all full pieces, Balanced designs “My platform wilt feature legisla lt... with attractive sleeve chevrons and bands. : Materials will be tested, if you ask, for shrinkage and fading in laundering, | in Many colors to harmonize with interior trims; also five: reforms in the interests of 16 to 42 " 7 od PERSONAL SERVICE STUDIO—THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE adaptable for chest coverings and cozy corner pillows 6 and worker 2, ) ‘ FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE The apricot is provably a native of

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