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THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, AUC BALLARD BEACH Young Seattle Hero Awarded. War HOLD CHINESE | CARS RE-ROUTED, Cross for Bravery Under Hot Fire) IN DRUG CASE Change Will Cut Down Big Ah Fook Bound Over to the!| Federal Grand Jury — | Duplication ST 2, 1919 Saturday morning Fook was bound over to the grand jury and his ball fixed at $1,000. Traction, Light & Power Co, the ¢ity council and the street car gompany were unable. to ag to} ry equitable partition of the gets of running the line over the Pallant bridge so the old round te F Beginning Monday the Rallard Charges against Aly Fook, 2, Chi % Ep peach municipal line, running nese walter in a restaurant at 717 y Western ave, will cross the! King « arrested rida fternoon by Ballard bridge instead of operating by pollee and teder Al offictals w OvEP F over the 0 rree-quartern of a pound of cox Deer emere’ te "4 “age and « large quantity of optum were hem Phis improvement is the result ooo anya : —_ a a e. city’s taking over of the ‘ound beneath a cigar counter ne Be srcar system in Seattle, Dur- | butlding, were heard before United a tig the regime of the Puget Sound | States Comminsioner McClelland o ea, you n HUNS PROFIT BY Nn OBB gout method of reaching Ballard mbes | peach was the result, FD The city will take up the tracks ‘this. @ the old municipal line into the Pallard-Fremont district and con- goilidate the traction under the Sli, compass. totes. Xue ca>> Refusal of Reparation Brings ee pe marked “28! Up Interesting Question | WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 ‘The rep 67,133 Teeth of | || Sot eer eetaae et Act Nernard M. Baruch, economic advise er of the American peace delegation, today told the senate foreign rela tons committee Committee members tried to learn whether, if the Unit States de clines to accept a ton, th re that wou 2,000,000 Yanks Aug. 2.—Approxt- 000 army dentists in a attack on the Jaws of 2,000,000 doughboys suc- ceeded tm capturing 67.133 teeth @uring one month alone. Alt fecords for tooth extractions in the A. EF. were broken in that month when this enorm- gus number of teeth was re- moved from the aching jaws of BSCR PREASSAASESS |to thin ¢ vernment 1 be cut off Germany's bill, or ed and divide Hed nations nong the oth er ‘S | | America’s “Over Here™ heroes, @sterminatiog.’ The An mem rth: Polling teeth was not the bere of the cOmmittes, he said, ought ~ enly occupation of the heartless © learn which course the govern ~ gemy dentists, for during the ment favors joining in any decision eG game month 376.655 fillings were by the commission pet fn. “This government can't cancel be, The chief dental surgeon of the much a debt except by act of con AUE. P. reports that during the course of hostilities seven army @entiste were killed by shell fire and that over 40 were injured. out. “So Mf congress should pass a nw remitting — this ernment's fund the share of the reparat | commission can only collect the re con. ve _easteennianenrcentamee mainder.” ° one Senator Knox declared that the sae Lose Cress Dale Photo. “United States commissioner ought : nee that th . ved Croix de G Pioneer from Col. 0. W. B. Farr Sat) to nee that the sum fixed for rep: ~~. in South Russia} 22 A Bord, who rece! are te seekers wate aration ts on the tmsia of ac =a LONDON. Aug. 2.—General Deni-| As street cars clanged past and au-| after congratulations had been be- wound. Once I was knocked down, | of our share of the indemnity nen King, @ntiBolshevik leader in South.|tomobile sirens warned pedestrians | stowed by Col. Farr, Col. J. T, Wat-! but I don’t count that as anything.” | we can. if we wivh, the generous em Russia, reports the capture of | at o'clock Saturday morning,|son and Capt. L. J. Kirkhoff. “We Boyd, who ia 25 years old, was ed-! thine by Germany and remit our Poltava, the war office announced | Col, Otto B. Farr, commanding the . The victory is an important | army recruiting district of Seattle, were on the Soheldt river, in Hel ucated in Seattle, He enlinted short-| share. Rut what I'm afraid of is sium. As @ corporal I had 10 run-| ly after the United States declared| that the impresudon has got abroad gal the war office statement. | pinned the coveted Croix de Guerre, | ners under me, and we kept up com war on Germany. Since hie dis |that we won't accept any. and the with bronze star, upon the breast of | munication with the French for ¢09|/charge from the army, Boyd has! other powers, not Germany. will get John A. Boyd, 1255 John st., former | hours, We were under direct fire all| been employed at the Amen Ship-| the benefit of our generosity.” corporal in Company C, 26st infan- that time, but I escaped without a building plant - ae try, 91st division, little 7 ‘ a g af « little group of | —~ wna | = Alo RN MONDAY | ray ‘cencnrs ana civilane ted %- 145 1N 100 YANKEES AMERICAN MEMORIAL {Spanish Senate WOUNDED IN BATTLE) HOSPITAL PROPOSED Indorses League 46 men, re-| Meath the shade of the totem pole, in Fifteen out of every 100 service) PARIS, Aug, 2-—The American] MADRID, Aug. 2—Without dis- wit! | Pioneer square. men who have applied for Victory! society for French Wounded has|CUstion the Spanieh senate voted at 9 Boyd's citation, signed by Mar- Northern. | shal Petaim, of the French army, buttons in the Northwest were! decided to bulld at Rheims, at 4 gp mre aie > peg the league i r the Red| was read to the young hero by Col. she ‘War pod b onset Farr, preliminary to the presentation | wounded in the world war, accord-| cost of $100,000, an American war Servi, and wis ¥ | of the decoration. ing to Capt. In J. Kirkhoff, who! memorial hospit Camp Lewis, where they! Tho citation reads as follows: 7 iz " | g § | hai ¢ ee easel BERNE Oe Sees ery ond salar cea | eek, eee eee whe, | Tem eure lod Cant. KIWDOt| oe army ot cama men cnre| Oe MORE OBJECTORS 5 er fe i here = @ntertain the men Monday vested 9 en ng te yt sn men of the Northwest’ bore, nal were 230,074 reported wounded ARRIVE AT ALCATRAZ ing liaison with adjacent elements Of | heaviest casualties of any portion ome ies WS IAPR SAN FRANCIB60, Aug. 2—The the front line, in spite of violent of the United States, population| Ovenstonally seme young man at-|!s*t contingent of a shipment of seldom | bombardment.” considered. The records of the! tempts to make the mare go by in-| $8 conscientious objectors transfer. “It wasn't much,” Boyd remarked |war department show that out of| vesting a lot of money {n wild oats. |fed from Fort Leavenworth prison «mee {to the Alcatraz dinciplinary barracks haa been placed on the island. To date nearly 109 conscientionn object ore from Leavenworth have been sent to Alcatraz, an it has been found they are more easily handled here than at Fort Leavenworth, According to Cot. Joseph Gerrard. commandant at Alcatraz, six of the Men transferred from Fort Leaven worth last month are being kept in solitary confinement because of their refusal to work, 1 “ELECTRICITY THIEF” QUOTES THE BIBLE shalt not steal” was the concluding sentence in a letter received by the Wheeling Electric Company in which was enclosed a check for $7.25 from + |& man who sald he tapped the wire of the company and had been using 4 current without the company's q knowledge. He believed the check 4 would cover the amount used. USE AIRPLANES FOR oO Fe PICKING UP WOUNDED PARIS, Aug. 2.--Airplanes were regularly and successfully used for conveying the wounded from the battlefields of the Sahara des- ert to hospitals in Oran, Algiers and Tunis, covering the 300 kilo- meters in two hours or less. LOCK OF DICKENS’ HAIR SELLS HIGH LONDON, Aug. 2—A lock of Dickens’ hair, with an autograph signature of the novelist, realized $185 at an auction BY | JACK LONDON : Never before has this great adventure story, dealing with search for love and treasure in primitive Central America, been published in book or magazine. Watch for it in TEE SEATTLE STAR Beginning Monday, August llth EXPERIENCED BUSINESS | EXECUTIVE WANTED —WITH— $25,000 FOR GILT-EDGE INVESTMENT In growing business with splendid record and rat- ing. Good salary and bonus. ADDRESS C-11, SEATTLE STAR . Phone or mail us your subscription now ui By carrier or mail 50c per month U.S ATTITUDE? Raruch said this “in a matter of | T a.” Senator McCumber pointed ils BELLAIRE, Ohio, Aug. %.—“Thou] — CLEMMER * SEATTLES BEST PHOTO’ PLay HOUSE: She has broken out again! And funnier than ever! MABEL torment of all who know her— in | 1 PEST Original, filled with surprises, typical of Mabel Normand. Pranks, thrills, stunts, love and romance, too. GUTERSON’S ORCHESTRA CONCERT NUMBERS “Dance of the Hours,” from Gioconda. . parses’ eri hanvae’s +see+++ Punchielli * CHRISTIE COMEDY “Stop, Look and Listen!” PRIZMA Color Pictures Supreme “HAWAII” Here’s Real Hero! Not Only Won War Cross, but Married Two Girls PARIS, Aug. 2.—Advice to pros- her until August, 1914, when he pective bigamists. Before becom-|was called to the colors. ing a bigamist, it will be advisable| wounded three times and was to win honors on the field of bat~| twice cited for the Croix de Guerre. tle If you would escape the penal-/1n 1917, while on convalescence ties of the law. leave he met Mile. Detruit, and The French military court has! soon afterwards, married her. He just pardoned a soldier-bigamist.| had passed himself as , unmarried, Jean Abeie’s home is in Com-|and until the end of the war all mines. In 1910 he married Mile.| went well. Then came the armis- Meurchtet and lived happily withitice, and soon thereafter came He was | She Rules in Abyssinia | % ADIS ABEBA, ABYSSINIA—Enthroned In the land where ruled the Queen of Sheba, Queen Zaouditou of Abyssinia, daughter of King Menelik, | rules one of the queeres corners of the earth, Customs of ancient days NORMAND | as “Puckers,” the lovable little tomboy, the delight and survive and the design of the royal robes and crown are handed down from tho days whon the Queen ef Sheba Solomon, Mme. Abele seeking her long-lost soldier-husband. She found him. She also found wife number two. Wife number two agreed that her claims on Abele were indeed rather questionable. Wife number one was only too happy to re-establish her home. The court martial of- ficers couldn't bring themselves to the conviction of the brave soldier. ORDINARY POILU FOR “IMMORTALS” IS PLAN PARIS, Aug. 2.-France has found still another means of Mving up to the national motto, “liberty, equality, fraternity.” A simple “poilu,” a - vate soldier of the second grade, with nothing to his particular credit other than that he represents the great mass of the “poilus” of France, has been named as a candidate for the French academy. The “Forty Im mortals” have added two great so} diers, Joffre and Foch, to their num- bers, but it remained for the League of Poilus, an organization of French veterans, to really undertake the democratizing of the military branch of the most famous of France's in- tellectual organizations. The league has nominated Louis Arnould Grem ily, one of its members, as candi date for the seat now vacant in the academy, | CANNED “GOLD-FISH” IS SENT TO ITALIANS PARIS, Aug. 2.—Large shipments of salmon, better known to the American doughboys as “goldfish,” which were destined to be consumed by the A. E. F., are now being sent to the Italian army of occupation in the Tyrol. Great quantities of the sustaining but unpopular food were on hand at the American ware- houses in Marseilles when the war ended. With the rapidly diminishing demand of the A. B. F,, much of the canned salmon has been reshipped to Genoa and thence overland to the It- alian front. The Italians like the scorned American “goldfish,” a food which long since lost its attractive- ness where doughboys are con- cerned. HUN TOBACCO TAX TO RAISE REVENUE BERLIN, Aug. 1.—Germany plans to materially increase its income thru increased cigarette and tobacco taxes, Smokers sce prospects of fur- ther hardships this. ‘The cigar- ette tax ylelded 620,000,000 marks in the first four months of 1919. Sim ultaneously cigtrettes steadily @ete- riorated in quality until they were both expensive and wretchedly poor,