The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 5, 1920, Page 9

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Se J bs scash in the safe. | 2410 39th ave. S. W., _ Curei on her triumphant concert de- but in New York city, she took her _ Man by his fellow AMATEURS ROB FUEL CO. SAFE Use Overdose of of Witropiyoe-| rin; Get $45 Amateur cracksmen are at large in Seattle, after clumsily shattering the safe in the office of the McFarlane Bros. Fuel Co., Gu? EK. Green Lake way, at 1:12 blown completely off, An overcharge of nitroglycerin Was used to wreck the safe, Be Suse of this, the contents of the tafe were so jumbled up, the years sveriooked $250 In Liberty bonds and The cracks about the safe door were first soaped, ‘cording to prescribed safecracking rules. ‘That the job was done early was shown by an alarm clock, which was Stopped at 1:12 by the explosion, The Glock had been left running on top the safe by employes of the fuel company, who worked until 10 o'clock Saturday night. Detective Harry Barton was de tailed. He reported entrance had been made by forcing a window, DAYLIGHT THUG GETS $8 LOOT * Robs Pedestrian in Alley Off Pike St. While hundreds of persons were | Passing on Pike st, but a few feet) @way, a daylight robber, said by the | Police to be the boldest in ie, was leveling a revolver at William Cartwright, son of M. BE, Cartwright, and threaten. ing to send him to eternity If he did mot hand over his money immediate Jy, Altho it was 2:30 o'clock Sunday aftérnoon, Cartwright was unable to ali for help and the robber escaped after obtaining $$ in currency from ) the young man. ‘The robber was evidently following Cartwright, for when he turned down an alley between Seventh and Bighth aves., he was startled by the gruff command: “Put up those hands!" Cartwright turned and found that he was covered by an automatic Pisto! in the hands of a roughap-/ pearing man. At the point of the gun he was compelial to hand over everything that he had in his pockets. Cartwright reported the robbery to Patrolman N. P. Moore, but search for the fobber was unsuccessful. » Prima Donna to Sing Two Males ‘Mme. Carolina Lazmri, brilliant “gontralte of the Chicago Opera com: Will be heard in the “Amour B Alder” aria, from Saint Saens’ and Delilah,” at the Metro- a Monday night. It wae with Number that Lazzari scored one ahe most profound triumphs of ita addition to the pro of t world fs well fixed. From the t she shared honors with Gatll- ce‘among the great contraltos of present day. Not long after her appearance, she is scheduled to make her debut aa prima donna | contralto of the Metropoliton opera house. W. H. Clay Named Mayor of Everett EVERETT, Jan. 5.—W. H. Clay, One of the recently elected city com- Missioners, ‘The position carfles with it the title of mayor. Clay was mayor of Everett during Dis term four years ago. The com missioners reelected Louis Lesh clerk, and W. L. Ford was named treasurer. Mayor A. B. Cutter was chosen city engineer, and Car! Klapp ‘was named superintendent of municipal water system to succeed himself. French army surgeons found that a mixture of freshly giaked lime and phosphorous will remove tattooing so that it cannot be detected. Styrgeons draw in their food by suction and are toothless, Six hundred automobiles were built fn 1900. The estimate for 1919 is 6,000,000. WAME “BAYER” ON E ASPIRIN For Pain, Colds, Neural- gia, Toothache, Headache | You want relief—quickly and safe ly! Then insist on “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” stamped with the “Bayer Cross.” ‘ The name getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years, and proved safe by millions of people, For a few cents you can get alordered a man skulking io handy tin box of genuine “Bayer Tab-| shadows in the Sunset district to jets of. Aspirin,” containing twelve|halt. The fugitive aacaped in the tablets. Druggists also sell larger| underbrush along the Great High: } “Bayer” packages, Aspirin ge the| way, tho closely pursued by the of trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of of Balicylicacid. at Recital Here) -jeamp for “reds” held for possible de the| have) “Bayer” means you are) aw | i Ill My f ( nn M dy, il Q] _ WINTER SPORTS IN WASHINGTON IN ‘WAR CAM ! Arrests of Communists Just Begun, Officials Say DETROIT, Mich, Jan. 5.—Federal operatives and police yesterday broke Up Meetings of radicals at the House of Masses and arrested 2560 more al leged reds. This raised the number of red arrests here to 800. Seventy} five have been released | NEW YORK, Jan. §.-—The com munist roundup has resulted In the arrest of more than 3,000 radicals thruout the United States since Fri day night, but has only begun, ac-| cording to William J. Flynn, chief of the department of Justice's bureau of investigation. | The crowded condition of the po | Mee station, where @T-rndicals al ready are held, has led to 4 move) ment to retain either Carmp Upton or | Camp Merritt as a concentration | portation. It in understood a strong force of government agents has been rushed to the Canadian and Mexican borders | to check a rush of aliens seeking evasion of deportation orders. Other agents have been hurried to Atlantic | and Pacific ports of entry to wateh | for radicals attempting to ship on| outgoing vessels as sailors. HAYWOOD SAYS HE'LL GIVE UP CHICAGO, Jan. 5.— William D. Haywood, L. W. W. leader, sought in connection with the round-up of reds, sent word to police today that he would give himself up before the day was over, Haywood denied there was| any connection between the alleged} plots of the communists to overthrow the government and the I W. W. “The communist '# a political or-| | ganization, while the L W. W. Is an industrial body,” he said, in an inter- view. | One hundred suspected reds arrest-| ed in the raid conducted by State’s| Attorney Maclay Hoyne. were to be arraigned today, Hearings on deportation proceed. ings again 4 arrested in the fed-| eral government's campaign were started today., INFANT KILLED | OAKLAND, Cal, Jan. 6.—Tree- month-old Kenyo Adachi ts dead, and Mrs, Kinoye Adachi, the y's | mother, is in a critical condition at «| hospital here today as the result of) the collision of thr@e automobiles last) night. Three other persons were in- jured. |" Yokn “Mizo, a Japanese, attempted to drive between two machines driven by H. L. Head and A. according to the police. In the melee Mizo'a mfachine was overturned, pin ning the occ ents underneath, Th baby was killed, instantly, Mrs Adachi received severe injuries, and Head, Kennedy and Mizo all sus- tained minor cuts and bruises, All three machines were wrecked. FRISCO OFFICER SAN FRANCISCO, Jan, 5-—With a hat as the only clue, police are |searching today for the man who |fired several shots at Mounted Po: iceman James Warrington last night. One of the shots passed thru the officer's coat, another hit ting his hors Harrington was fired on when he In his scramble to escape the left bis hat behind, ficer. map | department } ton, points were cut before | munitions in IN AUTO WRECK Kennedy, may die. | FIRES SHOT AT |: p WASHINGTON Jan, 5.—(United Press.)—Deportation action against of the revolutionists rounded acore up by the government during the last few days was instituted to- day by A. J. Caminett!, commin- sioner of immigration. Arrange- ments for hearings were ordered speeded up so the deportable rede" may be hustled back to Russia and the way cleared for| more nation-wide raids which the of Justice probably will undertake at irregular inter- vais Investigation of menace by the Ruasian affairs division of the state department! showed that the avowed purpose of Lefilne and Trotsky was to! overthrow. existing governments | and standards of society thruout | the world and substitute the soviet | form of governmen and dally life, according to an official announce- the Bolshevist ment made today by Secretary Lansing. Failed in Russia This Holshevist program had fatled in Russia already, where its} results to date are “demoraliiza- civil war and economic col- lapse,” the announcement said. The report containing these con- clusions has been handed by the state department to the congres- sional foreign affairs committee. ‘The report embraces the following | suBjects Building Is Dynamited in Cork, LONDON, Jan. 6.—(United che prynd | —The serious situation in Ireland to- day has been complicated by a series of outbreaks, Dispatches from Cork reported a| group of 200 men late Saturday night | attacked the police barracks at Car rigio Full, and after a four-hour bat | tle with the six defenders, dynamited the building. Hundreds of shots were exchanged, but there were no casualties. | All telephone and telegraphic wires connecting the village with outside the attack began. After confiscating arms and am-| the barracks, the at-| tackers—presumably Sinn Feiners— handeuffed the policemen together, lectured them severely and then freed therm. “You did your duty well,” the} leader of the attacking party told the | police A building near the police barracks | © was wrecked by the attackers. | Families living in it escaped, but| their belongings were lost rx also attacked the barracks at Carrig Navar but were repulsed. | Firing at long range continued some time At South Kilmurray and Inchigee: lagh, barracks were raided, but the defenders repulsed all attacks. One| Apples and Oranges Vegetables andNuts A friend of mine told me the other day that he paid $4.50 for a box of apples about a month ago, and last week t box of better apple at my stall, No. § downstairs, in th: tlake | Market, for $2.75 I am nelling Jon- athons as low as $1 x, and it is afe that you ean from 60 cents $1 per box at my tall, No. 60, down- stairs, at.the Weat- lake Market You should see our Spitzenberg and Delicious Apples, especially the cook- ers, re buying. We now have @ nice line of vegetables, nuts and other fruits on sale De sure and go downstairs to Stall No. 60, in the Westlake Mar- ket, and have a look at won al choice appl DR, EDWIN J. BROWN | nual | cheaper -e Ct > HERD SUSPECTS fea Deportation Action Against Anarchist Horde “L—Character of Bolshevist —theoretical ‘dictatorship of the Proletariat,” acknowledged to be the rule of a minority, with a det- inite policy of preliminary destruc tion in found tn fact to have rule generated into a close monopoly of power by @ very smail group, who une the mont opportunistic and tyrannteal. methods—inctuding ‘mans terror 2 snomical remults of Bol- sheviat control—while existing on the accumulated wealth of the country, the Bolahevist regime has brought about a complete economic collap with uent famine and epidemic. The claim of the Balsheviki that the economic solu- tion Is wholly rexponsibie for the economic chaos in soviet Russia cannot be sustained. The Bolgho- Vist program has not worked and Bolaheviam has to ite credit no constructive accomplishinents World Revolution “1.—Bolsheviet program of world Trevolution—one of the main aims ot the Bolshevist leaders from the very beginning has been to make their movernent a world-wide so- ¢lal revolution in all other coun tries. Bolshevist policies and tac tice are subordinated to the tea of the international proletarian. Apparent compromise with bour-1 keoln governments or edunttien have proved temporary and tacti- ca Ireland, Fight policeman was reported to have beon| wounded at Inchigeelagh. Cork @ispatches today reported an additional raid at Bally Longford, in which one policeman was maid tol have been iiited ARCHITECTS To MEET SATURDAY} With large delegations from Ta- coma, Spokane, Bellingham, Everett, Yakima and other cities, the 26th an- meeting of the Washington State Chapter of the Amertean In stitute of Architects will be held next Saturday at the New Washington hotel Charles H. Whitaker, editor of the Journal, the American institute pub. Heation, and known as a national authority on housing conditions, will leliver the princiy President Jacoberger, of the Ore- gon chapter, Ellis F. Lawrence, | Northwest representative of the na tional board of directors, and other Portland members of the institute, will be the uests of Seattle chapter. ddrens, Paul D. Richardson, chairman of the program committee, will have charge of the entertainment. Elec- tion of officers will conclude the ses- sion, Better Than Renting “Own @ home, | and you will be a better eitizen.”| You can own the above home and one-half acre of ground in West Se- attle for only $100 cash and $ month, That surely is better t renting. And it's the one way make good 1 yur own garden | and chickens, and living will be much; I have man atisfied peo: | ple on my Little City rms in West Seattle, and my unit house and easy terms make it possible for you to be one of them. Better let m tell you, or see me at my office. H. C. PETERS 716 Third Ave. Uncle Sam says, | atte, i —— STAR—MONDAY JANUARY 5, 1920. 6.0,P,POW-WOW STARTING TODAY Two Leading Candidates to! Meet at Dinner Tonight CHICAGO, Jan. 6.—Two of the leading candidates for the republican nomination for president will face h other here tonight. Gov, Frank O, Lowden and Maj. Gen, Leonard Wood will both attend the republican dinner here tonight, #iven in honor of Notional Chairman wi national party leaders from 14 Mid Western states, The presence of Gen, Wood at the affair, political experts here believed today, will mark the start by the weneral of an active campaign for the nomination, and set at reat re ports that he wolud remain a passive contender, The republican powwow was to get under way early today, About 200 men and women will participate in the general conference. ‘The first seasion of the committee on arrangements for the convention will be held this afternoon, Alvin T. Hert, of Kentucky, is chairman of this body, Gen, Pershing spent Sunday in Chicago, but was not in touch with any other republican | loaders as far ax known, He spent | ® quiet day at the home of Brig, Gen. Charles Dawes. Chairman Haya and other early ar- rivals dined Sunday night at the me af Frew W. Upham, national treagurer, Considerable discussion was caused among those attending the meeting by announcement that James B. Rey. | nolds retired as secretary of the na-/ tlonal committes, Reynolds will steer the campaign of Gov. Coolidge of Massachusetts for the phase serene nomination, Reynolds will have charge of the | Washington Coolidge headquarters. Clarence B, Miller, of Minnesota, former congressman, will take Reyn- olds’ place, It waa reported today. BABY HEROINE IN SEA GALE Use Overdose of Nitroglyc- erin; Get $45 BAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 6.—Cathel- | la Molmes, 38-year-old daughter of Capt arrived here yesterday on the Brittsh bark Manurewa, Is the heroine today of the crew of the veasel, which bat- tled a 26-day gale on its way to thin port from the Good Hope Islands, In the South Seas With a food supply consisting of a seant quantity of rice and a few sea- fowl, and with heavy seas sweeping the ship's decks, the Manurewa man- aged to weather the storm, and war brought into this port py Capt Holmes and his crew of 14 men. left the Good Hope islands October 15, bringing @ cargo of 816 tons of copra for the Burna- Philip Company. REGISTRATION BEGINS TODAY, All Voters Must Bé on Books Before March Election Registration of voters who will elect a yor, corporation counsel and fivé of the city counell next March, begnn at 9 o'clock Monday morning in the county-city building. ‘The registration books in the office of City Comptroller Harry W. Carroll will remain open for 12 hours each day until January 14. On that date the registration office will be closed, so that the books may be taken to the precincts, where registration will be recorded on January 15, 16 and 17. Registration at the county-city bullding will be reeumed on January 18, and will continue until January 27 for the city primaries. Registration this month will hold good for two years, Foreign born registrants must produce written proof of thetr naturalization. Under the law a person must have teen a citizen of the state one year, of the county 90 days, and of the precinct 90 days before he ts eligible to vote. Early American playing cards, according to an article tn the American Printer, showed the na- tional antipathy to kings and queens by presenting, Instead of the conventional figures with which playing cards are now adorned, the following pictures: “President” of hearts, George Washington; of dia- monds, John Adams; of clubs, Ben- jamin Franklin; of spades, Lafay- The “queens” were Venus, Fortune, Ceres and Minerva. The knaves were represented, appro- priately reflecting the general feel- whites, ing among the by pictures of Indian chiefs. Irving 8. ‘Cobb, Thomas Nelson Page, Booth Tarkington and Zane Grey are pitying the cost of having their own works prepared in raised type for reading by blind American soldiers. MISERIES OF THE STOMACH RELIEVED IN TWO MINUTES When your stomach isn’t strong enough to digest he food you put Jinto it, and the thing you eat sour |and form poisonous gases, the same thing holds true when it leaves your stomach, for it has not furnished proper nourishment to the blood, and has left the stomach in a filthy condition Like carbon that clogs and chokes @ motor, so the excess bile in liver, and the constipated waste in the 4, produce headaches, foggy brains, sour, acid stomachs with se: vere cramping pains, which are due to the polsonous gases the stomach, You need something) that will get at the Real Cause of| all this trouble AT ONCE. To get immediate relief from these troubles take JO-TO, and in TWO fering and miseries have disap. peared. distending | | | and Mra. R. C. Holmes, who) mers —Five Navy Serge cellent value. With Drastic Redu Winter Garments Special Price BASEMENT Clearance Sales ction Coats, Suits and Dresses - On the Cl earance Racl clk ‘at $9.50 Each : SS —Kight Zibeline Coats, with fur ¢ collars. - —Six Serge Suits, in navy only. Dresses. —Thirty Melton and Kersey Coats, some in extra sizes. —Anyone who can find her size on this rack can secute an ex- Offering in the January Clearance Sales 100 Women’s = Misses’ Dresses ette sleeves. uary Clearance. AS IT SEEMS TO ME DANA SLEETH surges of emotion weep over her when her feet falter on the shores: of death, and she fecla the throb of & new life hammering, hammer- ing against her very soul, Emotion, bless us, we all can feel, and do feel deeply. Very well, then; all of us can feel a symphony as readily and as truly as the greatest artist who ever juggled double counterpoint. eee F I CAN translate the underlying thought of musical symphony to the average Seattle citi zen, I will not have lived in vain, And if I can find delight in a symphony, #0 can any normal adult in the city. For I am neither learned in mu- sical technique, nor adept in jug- ging critical phrases, saying much, meaning mostly nothing. I wil elaborate on this theme later. In closing, let's take that second movement in the Beethoven Third Symphony, called the funeral march; they had to call !t some- thing, but it is no more a@ funeral march than your feelings over the grave of your mother were a fw neral march. Beethoven felt moving within him the typical heart throbs, the soul's yearnings of a warrior fac- ing death, and, in spirit, conquer- ing it. A touch of grief, the solemn chant of the choir, the far-off funeral bells; but, dominating these, and surging triumphant, the spirit rushing out of a racked body and facing eternity, serene, exalted. Then the master translated into rhythm these emotions, and left them for the world to experience again. Don't look for a melody; don’t even look for unvarying harmony when you attend a symphony con- cert. Get the key-note, whether it is grief, rage, languid romance, or the eple strains of a conquering hero, and then go right along with the master, feeling with him the emotions he felt. Opera, drama, most writing, all GIRL SCREAMS; ROBBER FLEES, Police are searching for an un-} who was frightened | kempt tramp, away by the outcries of Miss A. R. Smith, chambermaid, 2304 way, whom he attacked while she was on her way to work early Mon- day morning, Miss Smith ‘reported she was ac-| costed by the thug at 20th ave, and |i Madixon st. at 7:20 a. m, “T want some money, and I want it quick!” the thug said, Then he grabbed her by the arm and she screamed, she told the po- eireular| MINUTES you will find your suf-|}ice, The man ran, ‘Miss Smith described the thug as Jo-To is sold in Seattle by]a heavily bearded, middle-aged man. Bartell Drug Co, and Swift & Co.,| He carried a small roll of blankets druggists, _ and an umbrello, a Denny | —Satins in navy, brown, taupe a4 lack. Taffetas in navy, gray, tan and brown. All-wool serges in navy. Some have lace collars, some are trimmed with ruffles, and some have georg- A wide variety of styles, all on sale in the Jan- | painting; these arta are descrip- tive, and at their best merely DE- SCRIBE love, pain, hate, death, resurrection, But the symphony 18 grief, or awe, or death's cold hand; and the throb of it, and the titmult of it, is as basic and as rea) as the soul of a man fn battle living his experi- | ence. | And, once this essential of the symphony is understood, and the audience approaches the symphony in this spirit, all great symphonies are easily understood, enjoyed, made a part of our life for the PRICES yi" Plus War Tax -PATISRSON SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET is on All Remeining | METROPOLITAN aoe FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE WEEK Nights, 25¢ to $2. Sat. 25¢ to $1.50 | hour. There is no more mystery the highest symphony than is about your youngest |her baby heart over a 4 | aon. And !f people understood, ¢ ES wouldn't, as several dressed and under developed sons did Friday night, smile at { seeming discord of the horn the Scherzo, That “discord”. « key-note of, say, the spirit ¢ chase, that was fundamental entire movement, Symphonies are as easy 4s $2-a-pound chocolate 00 be ris Boy wE 4 MUSICAL Seattle Sym SEATTLE SHOWS APPRECIATION OF ITS phony Orchestra. JOHN SPARGUR, Conductor. 2000 People Heard Last Symphony Concert ag MEANY HALL SIXTH POPULAR CONCER SATURDAY, JANUARY 1 Brilliant Request Program, including “THE BEAUTIFUL BLUE DANUBE” —Also— French Horn Solo by MR. CHARLES TRYNER Peer Gynt Suite No. 1 24 “FINLANDIA” | “THE BARTERED BRIDE” SEVENTY ARTISTS TICKETS ON SALE AT SHERMAN, CLAY'S PIANO HOUSE. PRICES 25¢, 50¢, 75¢. ' ASSET—THE

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