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THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1919. ch Bolshevists Hunted and Hiding — hdla| Clemenceau politically, There DK BECHTOL have been more who th of Newspaper | stern attitude was a handic ) kind Gf peace that would last, and Bh 1f—Owed, fearful,|a big factor in preventing the Wists and anarch.| wheels of industry and commerce are in hiding—for the | from getting quickly under way, Thone that aren't in jail] But Clemenceau was the embod: | shooting of Premier Clemen-|ment of “vietory And he was} “Game on the crest of a wave |loved by those who pated his ik propaganda which has| policies. And he still | | {flooding France ever since the| From the minute Cottin shot the Tiger, the police have been hunting the |}out — Bolshevists nd anarchinta, | ‘As fews of tho attempt-/ They have raided back rooms where Pgaeassination spread, The these radicals used to gather . wave subsided like | watched but not molested. The fol-| }lowers-of Lenine and ‘Trotsky are in| caim | Jail or in their holes. Up to the time of the attempt on te tracts on the creed of| the Tiger's life, the police watched Trotsky are being cir }and occasionally made an arrest Police have swooped in| Some clo observers with excep. | ¥ ores of them, and| tional sources of information about| - BES cirehatore. | what's going on under the surface meetings, with fiery, de-|say the police were afraid—afraid of “Wilson, the bour-| that too much prosecution might ” and all things that are, no| become to be regurded as persecu hold the boards. Extremist | ton; might send discontented, rest peak in more conservative | less French people flocking to the ve ranks of the Bolsheviks. maw, the Bolahevist “dic | But they were keeping thelr eyes of the proletariat’ is a} epen. ith as few French apokes) COTTIN T, MA World-wide prohibition My @oubts that they will try ‘But ts their chance lost? may os fer And revulsion swept least is surface at AGGED IN SHORT OKDER It didn’t take them long to ident! | ty Cottin, even if he did have all of Cottin—or Rolshevist the markers’ marks cut off his P whichever be was—may | clothing—even if he did have empty that his shot would be | pockets, They knew him. ‘that would ignite flames) They knew so much about him that would give the/ they never have taken any stock in Sw of Lenine and Trotsky | nis boast: he “IT am the liberator. knew anything about it (Nth Cottin had been keeping signifi. [cant company. Bolsheviets. anar those behind Cottin, or as-| chists, extremists hard to tag, were With Cottin, have believed. | nis cronies. The French _ police is crippled; France is rest-) work /quietty., But it is known that is weary; France faces | documents found.in a room: where struggle ny | Cote formerly lived, give the lie et es the ba.| 2 his talk dbout “doing it all lke tinder ie | alone.” M€ was an@ maybe it} He was known to be friendly with many Russians—among them Nihil | ists and Maximilists as well as Bol sbevists. Several of Cottin's friends | have been arrested or detained. And &@ mysterious woman friend is under observation. The Tribune de Geneve said Inst pDecember 14 that’ a plot against Clemenceau was being hatched at Lausanne by Trotsky followers and} that two Bolshevist agents had man. to cross the frontier into nee. The Cottin case isn't over Nobody else e ee “clean up” with struck a man France's loves are have been a jlot of who had’ no: use for F eae stem EMDVE DANDRUFF | a | Pablo Casals Is | maa teln'arDanaxinea:|| Among World’s Gewricciuai ci, Best Celliats | ip with the finger ti most, if not all, of this| Praised by Ysaye, Kreisler and | Hofmann as one of the greatest ar tists of modern times, Pablo Casuis, cellist, appears in recital at the Ma sonic temple, Harvard ave. and Pine at., 8:20 p. m. Wednesday. The seat | sale is in charge of Mrs, John Spar-| sur, at ShermanClay company’s, Third and Pine Casals, a Spaniard, has played in the old courts and select musical cir. | cles of Europe, being befriended in| his early attempts by Queen Maria Christina of Spain. He won recoznt-| tion in France and Gergnany, study.) ing for some time at Paris. A con-| cert tour thru Russia was attended | by @ brilliant succession of triumphs. The Wednesday night program, at | which Casals will be assisted by Geo. Stewart McManus, includes the fa-| mous Bach suite in C major, for cel- to alone Pershing Reviews Soldiers of 42nd} COBLENZ, March 17.—Gen. Persh- ing this afternoon reviewed and de livered a farewell address to the 42nd (Rainbow) division at Remagne, Bel-| sium (30 miles east of Sedan} Gen. Flager led 15,000 cheering | men past their commander. The di- vision, it was announced, will leave for home, by way of Antwerp, the (first week in April. | Pershing awarded the medal of honor to Corporal Sidney Manning, jof Alabama, and the distinguished |wervice medal to Brig. Gen. MacAr.| (thur. Several men received the dis-| tinguished service crons. | WEEK'S PRODUCTION OF | COAL SHOWS DECREASE: | | WASHINGTON, March, 17.-Bitu-| |minus coal production during the! week ending March & aggregated | 8,058,000 tons, a decrease of 3,559,000 |tons from that period last week, the |fuel administration announced today Anthracite production during the same week totaled 989,000 tons. This is a decrease of 1,110,000 tons from, anthracite production during the| [same week in 1918, Rat | and Union. | DR. W. E. OLMSTEAD DIES | Dr. W. BE. Olmstead, 60, died Sun-! — c%y morning at 2 o'clock, at’ his residence in Duwamish. (( aaa) | Only the BEST Will Serve! Men who produce are entitled to the best. Intelli gent men know that the best i# the cheapest and insist upon quality first, gauging the value offered by the price charged for quality. In dentistry, only the best will serve, for cheap dentistry, with inferior materials and unskilled workmanship is always the most expensive in the end—costly in trouble, in pain and inconvenience—in money in the long run. I offer only the best of everything the finest materials that money can buy—the great est care and skill, Dental delays are costly, for the dividing lines between a filling and a crown— between @ crown and a lost tooth—are dangerously thin. See me at once. A careful dental examination will MI HD dibs, HELP. Potice WELP- Tough on the Leather By CONDO A-GOING To STCAL MY CNS CABY BROTHER AWAY SOME NECHT! tL UNDERSTAND You TOLD THAT LITTLE GIRL YOu WERE GOING To STEAL HER BABY NOW, THEN, WE'LL HUNT UP THE LITTLG GIRL AN® You CAN TSELCU HER THAT MTR BABY BROTHER 1$ SAPE So CONCERNED Yea. 1% Was AUST TRYING To SCARE HER A a | FALLEN FOR FREEDOM Total to | Washington State F \ tal American Army Casualties to in (including 381 at sen) . Date « Bar Casualties to Date Casualty Mats issued by the United States war department include the following Washington men (none from Seattle) WOUNDED—DEGREE UNOKTERMINED Pansy mutilates the police force Yo' Mew Yo’ wope | | hes Gone - | wisn DEY HAD Dowe MADE WHY, JUST LOOK, AT THE SAVING OF MATERIAL W THIS wRT . WHY, THAT ISNT @CONOMY' % BOY A SKIRT LIKE THAT, ANNIE | Additional MITCHELL TO BOX “HARP” IN PORTLAND #id Mitchell, the Australian wel- terweight, will meet Johnny MeCar- thy again in Portland tomorrow night. McCarthy was scheduled to fight Chief Abernathy, the Indian from California, but the chief injur ed his hand in training and will not be able to show, according to reports from Oregon, Dan Salt, Mitchell's | manager, accepted MeCarthy’s man agers terms and will ship the re | doubtable Sid to the Rose City, | Sid fought MeCarthy over in Ta coma last Thursday,«ind, altho Me Carthy was given the verdict, ring wide fans said that Mitehell at least earned a draw if not the decision. Mitchell has come to the front rapidly since his return to the game again, holding his own in two bat tles with “Kid” Herman, the Mex jean, in his other starts. SOLONS FALL BEFORE “YIPS” IN FAST TILT SACRAMENTO, Cal, March 17 In an erroriess game, Swede Ris berg’s All Stars nosed out the Sacra- mento Coasters, 3 to 2 yesterday afternoon, For six innings Benham twirled hitless all, but opened up In the seventh, allowing the “yips” two runs, tying the score. Three hits in the eighth enabled the Ris. berg squad to top the score again by one run, TWO FAMOL UGS IN “CHI" CHICAGO, Mareh 17.-A honey: moon and a stage engagement were reasons for the presence in Chicago today of two former lightweight champions Willie Ritchie was the newly wed. He and his bride stopped over on | thelr way to New York | Britt was here for a stunt vaudeville BEAVERS WORK OUT “ROCKETT, Cal, Mareh 17.—The | Portland regulars, with Heine Lay pitching and Dorman catching, de feated the Yannigans, 6 to 4 here | yesterday. It was the Beavers’ first workout Mitchell, Northwestern | youngster, hurled for the Yannigans, with Del Bak hind the bat. OAKS DOUBLE BILL OAKLAND, Cal, March 17,—The Oakland ball club spent its first | Playing Sunday here winning two games, The Commuters beat the Halton-Diddiers, 1 to 0, and won from St. Mary's college, 10 to 0. Gives Wife Adler-i-ka “My wife was pronounced treur: able by physicians unless operated began giving her Adler--ka and she is improving, and I mean to con- “| A new doubles leader was pro- Jimmie | upon (complicated bowel trowple). I | Sport News | (M’CARTHY MAY | TAKE UP FIGHT GAME IN EAST PORTLAND, Ore, March 17.— Johnny McCarthy and his manager, Sol Levinson, are seriously contem- plating an offer which, if accepted, | would take the San Franciaco welter- | weight to Minneapolis, to appear in | | five ring battles, McCarthy fights Sid Mitchell here Tuesday Jimmy Darcy will mix with “Spud” Murphy in the other main event. Other scraps will be between Alex Trambitas and Mike Pete, Joe Gor- man and Johnny Arrousey, Ted Hoke and Battling Contrado, Walter Knowlton and Freddie Anderson. “POTTER SHOES” TAKE LEAD IN ALLEY MEET) TOLEDO, Ohio, March 17.—The “Potter Shoes,” Cincinnati, held top place in the five-man event of the | American Bowling Congress tourney |here today. Its score in 2,922. |duced yesterday. The team of | Daiker and Wetterman, of Cincin- nati shot 1,248 and took the lead. H. Yockey, of Chicago, went into a te with Reilly, the Chicago roller, jin the individual event —Yockey shot 672. SEALS WIN PRACTICE SAN JOSE, Cal., March 17.—In} the first real game since their train- | ing season opened, Charley Gra- | ham's Seals beat the San Jose Bears, |1 to 0, on the Santa Clara diamond. | Baum and Kantlebner hurled fine | ball for the Seals, with Brooks be-/ | hind the bat. | BREAKS RECORD CHICAGO, March 17 Swimming | | the 400-backstroke event in 6:02 3-5, | Perry McGillivray, of the Great | | Lakes naval training station, shat tered the world’s record Saturday in that event in the A. A. U. meet be- | ing held here. Secretary of War Baker cs Secretary of War Newton D. Baker is now a regularly enrolled member of the American Legions of Liberty, statewide returned men's organiza tion with Seattle headquarters. Sec- retary Baker and Gen. Peyton G, March, chief of staff of the United States army, were made members in Tacoma Sunday by State Adjutant Russ Simonton and Fraternal Secre tary Arthur Anderson, representing the legions. The veterans were pre- sented to the war department heads by Maj. Gen. Joseph L. Leitch, com- Mmanding officer of Camp Lewis, who i» a charter member of the legions. “IT am pleased to accept member. ship,” said Mr. Baker, “In Washing- ton we heard of the work of the le. gions in assisting to preserve law and order in Seattle at a time when it seemed that Russian conditions might be forced on the city. in favor of the organization of re- turned men and I believe the legions have made a right start.” Because he was not in uniform during the war, the secretary was made an honorary member, while Gen, March accepted active member- ship. The meeting between the legion of- ficials and the war department heads occurred in the Tacoma hotel, follow- ing a breakfast given in of the secretary and the chief of staff by Tacoma, citizens. Immediately after — indorsing the state veterans’ organ- jization the secretary and his party left for Camp Lewis, where Mr, Baker made a close inspection of the machinery of demobilization. FRANK BAKER IS BURIED The funeral services of Frank .W. Baker, prominent Seattle business: man, who died "Thursday morning at his home, 1212 Highland pl, were — held Sunday afternoon, at the Soot- tish Rite cathedral; ~ Mr. Baker was treasurer of the 8 attle Hardware Co. for 25 years, signing that post several years ago — on account of iil health, é ISSUE STORM WARNING Southeast storm warnings were ordered displayed at 7 a. m. Monday. — The storm is moving rapidly south) east from the North Pacific and will cause a fresh to whole southeasterly shifting to southwesterly gales. Best Treatment for Catarrh S. S. S. Removes the Cause By Purifying the Blood. | Once you get. your blood free from impurities—cleansed of the ca- tarrhal poisons, which it is now a prey to because of its unhealthy | state—then you will be relieved of} Catarrh—the dripping in the throat, | hawking and spitting, raw sores in| the nostrils, and the disagreeable) bad breath, It was caused, in the/ first place, because your impover- ished blood was easily infected. Pos-| sibly a slight cold or contact with | someone who had a cold. But the} point is—don’t suffer with Catarrh— it is not necessary. The remedy 8. 8. 8. discovered over fifty years ago, tested true and tried, is ob- tainable-at any drug store, It has proven its value in thousands of cases. It will do so in your case, — Get 5S. 8. S. at once and begin treat. ment. If yours is a long standing case, be sure to write for free ex- pert medical advice. We will tell. you how this purely vegetablé blood tonic cleanses the impurities from the blood by literally washing it clean. thousands of sufferers from Catarrh, after consistent treatment with S. S. S., have been freed from the trouble nd ali its disagreeable features and restored to perfect health and vigor. Don't delay the treatment. Address Medical Director, 429 Swift Labora. tory, Atlanta, Ga. | PITTSBURG, Cal, March 17.— | Eddie Herr’s Salt Lake club tasted defeat at the hands of Bill Steen’s ittsburg nine yesterday, Bill Prough pitched for Pittsburg. The score was 7 to 3. en 325 PIKE ST. NEXT TO LIFE, OUR EYES COUNT MOST Your eyes deserve every con sideration—when a tooth starts aching, you rush to a dentist, yet many times the irritating symptoms of eye trouble go un: | Hockey Series The Eastern Champions Against The Western Champions LES CANADIENS of Montreal vs. SEATTLE Wednesday, March 19, 8:30 p. m. Sharp rp me Saturday, Mi ays on sale at the Areha and Tuesday for entire three gam: 9 a. m. Wednesday morning. jareh 24, larch 22, 5:28 p.m. 8130 pm, re office, 1218 Fifth ave. on Monday es only, Single gamea sale opens REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the and etrongest plate known, covers very littie of the roof of the you can bite corn off the cob; mouth; teed 15 years, We will prove to you thats Ughtest heeded, Headaches and tired eyes are | sure indications of weakening vision—permanent affliction is, often the penalty of neglecting these early indications, | The Perfect Professional Serv: | fee you get here cannot be ex- celled tinue until she i# cured.” (Signed) ext of Kin, J. H, Underwood, Marion, Ala. jarah Kinskie | Adier-i-ka expels ALL gay and sourness, stopping stomach distress STANTLY. Empties BOTH up: pe d lower bowel, flushing EN TIRE alimentary canal. Removes ALL foul matter which potsons sys tem, Often CURES constipation. Address «Clinton DED SEVERELY Odessa . ¢G inform you as to the exact state of your mouth. I shall be pleased to make this for you. ¢ Name. z. | Private Clarence W. Kinskie .. wot Corp. Frank A, Groh .... | Mr Mrs. Mollie Deitrieh Corp. Rugsell Merpain Jaqu Mrs, Louise, Arinstrong | Private Ben Adama $ bit George Callaway Lieut. Stert B, Courts’: C. Courts RETURNED TO KILLED — Painless Proctor Bruce | Prevents append We have sold TERLING DENTISTS O42 Fh j-"ie? em" Se | ena, al Phone For Appointment lain 4965 BINGE || | revert rene canter en emvzowsa? gam | Amerie rake. vetan, 3 tbe - DIED OF DISpASH a ine and nine other simple drugs. 55 Lieut. Clarence J, Hemphill .....+++Auburns...++dseee0e.W. N¢ Hemphill os ift Drug Co. and lading, drug: = wists, All work guaranteed for 18 yeare. morning and gt teeth same day, EF: Call and Samples of Our Pt Tent of Time. Most of our presen early ‘tient wh work in Pourers Tevtse* right lnea'” Hing ere ea ete @re in tho ri place fy be Vrom © to 123 fer Ws T- Open sundays OHIO CUT-RATE,D “Broken Lenses WMplicated Quickly” 325 Pine STREET. Se ee eee eee EE