The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 4, 1920, Page 2

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t a little out of the ordinary! | —a few months ago we were offered by an eastern manufacturer @ proposition that would put into his hands considerable muchly needed cash, in return for which he made us an exceptional offer. here’s what he had to say: —"I have over 39 complete 4-plece bedroom suites that only a very large concern such as yours could take off my hands tntact—t could sell them easily, one or two sulies at « time (0 small retaih ers. However, I desire and must dispose of them at once, quickly. Will you make me an offer?” —we made bim an offer, little dreaming that it would be accepted This was moriths ago—we have been patiently waiting their arrival, Sunday we advertised these sultes for the first time, but owing to lack of space, we could not go into detail as to just what a really fine offer it was, if you overlooked the advertisoment in the Sunday papers, we desire to call your attention to ‘the suite here shown, and to the price, the unmatchable pricé— —an exquisite Louls the VI. period bedroom suite In beautiful figured American walnut; notice the artistic carved pattern, the dainty drawer pulls, the large French mirrors; the dressing table is particularty dis finctive and beautiful; the chifforette is large and roomy; we also call your attention to the bow-end bed so much in vogue nowadays; large dresser; artistic shaped heavy mirror; regular price of four picces -$360—; EXTRA SPECIAL, $297.75. LE Standard Credit) ing J Gor: y/ FOUNDED 1364 EXTRA SPECIAL $297.75 Complete SEATT' ture(Co, tacoma L. Schoenfeld & Sons {They Must Have Been Xmas Special TACOMA, May 4.—Thieves stole a bos of cigars from Wesley b “But I don't Brown, “my wife gave Christmas, 1911." Viust (Prisoners Must Be Gentlemen PORTLAND, May 4 gave Charles J.T. Adams SBUBUQUE, Iowa, May 4.—Organ- | Jabor at Dubuque, the home of John T. Adams, republ n committeeman from lowa vice chairman of the republican inal committee, went on record Right opposing the re-election of ee to his place on the national) is now and has been for many years ground that Adams 'a powerful eaemy of organized labor. The police Finley siding because Finley Brown | judge here ore. care,” says! very was Sauce, to the cop that pinched him for diyorderty conduct. “Prix oners must be gentlemen,” explained the jurlat, He didn’t add—"No ore will be arrested,” nevere fe ‘em to me oth Do-you suffer with eczema of the scalp? Are you losing your hair? Are you troubled with dandruff? Beriault’s HAIR-Bitters—a remedy; not a tonic—is relieving scores of cases right here in town at the present moment. To date we have no record of a single case—no matter how severe nor how old—that HAIR-Bitters has not tréated successfully. We except only blood-seated ailments. In all other cases we say without equivocation: “Beriault’s HAIR-Bitters will relieve your trouble or you get your money back.” _ HAIR-Bitters ig a natural remedy, It contains no alcohol nor injufious drugs. Its basic composition was known many years ago. Today it is perfected for general use. It is harmless to the tenderest skin, a delight to use—and, it produces results in most cases with from three to four applications. No matter what other treatment you have had, if your scalp ailment is still with you, use HAIR-Bitters without delay. Ask your barber or hair-dresser to apply it. Or buy it from your druggist, $2 and $3 the bottle, and follow the simple directions at home. If you cannot obtain it at once write to Beriault Mfg. Co., 1104-14 Broadway, Seattle, U, 8. A. dust Read This CHAS. A. Di YOUNG dandruff u > 4 itched constantly. A short Mechanical and Electrical Engineer friend recommended your “Hit- decided to try A fow appli ypned the Itching and now t as entirely disappeared: and daughter have both used tt efual succes T am sorry that 1 could not have had tt yours ago ax I believe it wowd have saved my bair entirely. Yours very truly, Ck Henttle, Wash, Gentiemen T want to tell you what “Hair-Ritters” for ma. in lowing my halr some 16 ¥ e tried all t benefit, My scalp was covered with D. YOUNG. | | | presidential THE SEATTLE: STAR—-TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1920. “] MARYLAND VOTE GOES TO WOOD bina Runs “Second in Primary Balloting May 4.—MaJ. the Maryland wy vote over Benator the BALTIMORE, Md, Wood carried preference primary nearly a 3 to} Hiram’ Johnson, according returns tabulated today. Wood carried Baltimore, af’ but two of the 33 counties, and will have complete control of the state convention which wil! select 16 dol: the republican national Gen. to erates to convention The delegates wil vote for as lorg chance be Instructed to president he has a nomination. Thore were no democratic can an of obtaining they Wellove the ‘didates for president and the dele | dential R ont, FALUN to the be pent by Maryland convention will gation San Francisco uninatructed. ‘complete returns from the entire) state show Wood, 15,900; seongen, $059. eee Utah’s Delegates Are Uninstructed PRICE, Utah, May 4-Kight un Instructed delegates to the republi em national convention were et by the state convention met here yesterday ed Sinoot was unant n head the delega lw of four dele + large and four district det omen which egaten. Altbo untnwtructed, observers here! Utah's votes will tor Hiram Johnson Californian show atren the first roli call at Chicag ee Indiana Is Voting for Favorite Today INDIANAPOLIS, May 4 A 4 voting first hour of the state ¢ na preference primary. Altho Aitions were ideal, poli cht halloting. Mir Johnson, Leonard Wood, Frank O, Lowden and Se ren Harding day for the be should belleve cant for Ser the Pa diana tb ne little n the weather cor or Mas Governor tor War m were ¢ ate'n ¢ a nvention were entered in the ASS VALLEY, Cal, May 4 rt decision, the Mine Work rotective league, Bumbering 1,000 members, Inst night ta utton Fencinding a for mer ree tion indorsing Senator Ht ram Johnwem for | tia candidate nearly } jhe Ml Ul ANOTHER’S ron DY CHAIR, SCALP DISEASES ful ful Dressi ng PRICE ¢ + Wood for nominee for) In republican prosiden: | | re Revolt Armies Prepare to has eloated the and »| earded the people's will. |SAYS THIS LAST ACAN KEVOLT demand that suffrage be nd that the nha the ‘lt in By M. D. TRACY AGUA PRIETA, Sonora, May 4 |The revolutionary armies of Mex! will soon have started their march on Mexico City, ¢ P. Bilas | Mi Callen, fielg commander of the ,revo-| lutionists, Declared tofay Agua Prieta with in three or four days at the head of jan army bound for the state of Chi huahun. There Calles will join forces with the revolting army in Chibua hua ang plans to start south thru the interior of Mexido for the capital elty. | | Simultaneously, the army under | Mexico Honora) Flores, now marching down| “The revolution the went coast near Mazatlan, will | Obree |have Mexico City an its objective. A|P* third army, Calles declared, ix gath ering in the Interjor wear Mexico! City. officials harged voter erywhere disre lant “ h eratic nment In whieh the peo General Ob: part of a pr volt, ‘True t but he ts doing respected | This Mexico. Calles will leave rule will be rey demo supreme gon plays only the eltiven in this re is defiling army it for the good of ate in not to make president but to assure the ded there if kon wishes to run f ‘That was the plan of campaign | °&2 do #0.” Callies outlined when he waa inter Only six handred troops in the viewed in his headquarters in the/*tate of Chihuahua remain loyal to outskirts of Agua Prieta today Carranza, Calle claimed ‘These three armies are to unite,| “Has Carranza any under Calles’ plan, in @ converging | f° Between Chihuahua movernent on the capital. Maxico City?” he was asked CALLES’ ASSISTANTS * |know, but we'll find out,” he EDUCATED MEN angwered. Headquarters building ts « aman Agua Prieta Will adobe hut, bristling with sentries, jolerks and membeFa ef Calles’ staff. | Present Beer Fete) AGUA PRIBTA ora, May 4 ‘That there is some truth that the} Callen forces are well supplied with ammunition was evidenced "by some! — (atety supreme in Agua 200,000 raunds in the room in which tod the general was found. Guns were stacked everywhere. General Calles is @ powerfully t a bristiin: in e's voloe When «linte election wo win will be an mn president he conniderable City and 1 don't grimly reigns Com mt mustache, He Spanish, but with His declaration that on te to der: ping with 1 during the ther rolled ppearir man wit ake only great emp) sais. the present revolut fxs Mexico is in k appeagar He ste terview ing hia ven up rherely in working He waa surrounded b; ho t aptirely men ted ta rat on & | his here in nor he tri * ne Har was | comtume. ristants Ww young m hin revolution ts wa forcing bis wil recardions of the general de “GERMANS AGAIN CALIFORNIANS START TROUBLE MAKING CHOICE |New Disorders Break Out) ‘casting Vote to Decide Be-| in Ruhr District | | tween Johnson and Hoover addition, Arua Prieta ls cele and uez has reports ye wz had fc report that Ge 1 Carras almow were the it 1 Die These the result of upon Mex te will ihe} He er ar 1 “a prediclons of a voters,” the gen revalution.” | New disorders the Rubr dis » troops | Sen wuulttto be LONDON, 3 have broken trict of Germa: 4—Fx in citien where y4 out in x Hiram Johnnc is supposed from Amsterdam tox More serious i trial dimtrict were feared T0 u dere in rimary Oakland, Sacra where Johnson st, there was 1 Btockton a edly ip st heavy early vot that records for primary voting Id be broken, especially in Sacra j mento, Johnson's birthplace, and San | Francisco, Johnson's present home The voting In Los Angeles was de nee 1:30-— Forestry L unyrersity campn-| waukes will be discussed by c. | feribed et in years.” At ¥, Beuwkes, chief electrical en Cesent ‘4 oth with the women turning out In force. students and others 00 ea Ree Pemple—Darning | More women registered than men in Will be watched by members | Only 60 per cent of the registertd The woman vote, it was Indicated ery strong, This vote haw claimed for Hoover by his us—Electrification of the Mil Long Boach the voting was hears, gineer of the company, before of the mortgage on the temple| Long Beach. son 1 oft S sndene ten been forces. Parson's 1 ¥ 6:00" it vere path, wrivch-Amer.| Sacramento Hums jean Association to hold business | followed by dance 1 workers’ 1 Ree ot-war 1 be dis feinmiller May of y in expected ord# ip number of the présigential pr Senator SACRAMENTO, Cal, Sacramento, birthpla Hiram J break votes cast 1 Cross headquarters. on|‘° between Third and aver Special meeting ervies Women's club, to mportant matters BIRTHS f marin Herbert Hoo: out with auto ters to the poll been par arges and th ‘ Johnson supporters sto carry ¥ her wit and are vote on campaign exchanged t lay YOUTH SAYS HE. WAS KIDNAPED Tells Mother Trio Held Him Prisoner y girt ave oF. ¥ 3 Trang C. 662 King MARRIAGE et cdiens | Name and Residence M Pearson, son, William, Seattle lintkainen, Ida, Seattle Dave, Seattle ia, Seattle Edward Fy Edmonds Joann H., Mamonds Marner A. North Ralph Murane, a 19-year-old Broadway night school boy liv ing with his mother at 313 17th told the police early was kidnaped by an afito Monday night and ed to a bo vard off- Madison st, where he was tied to a tree and abandoned, After nearly seven elf, he said, be got loose it home. The first entered when the morgue was called by tele. phone by who said he was schoolboy friend of young aid Ralph had drowned in | Lake Washington, that his body had | been recovered and would"be found at his home | Motor Policeman Frank Glad. Rwy Less : win was dispatched to the Murane : *,| home, The boy was not there. Hi . Legal Legal| Legal Niavin, i, land, Garfield, Lulu F. Renton ¥ A., Seattle Laura A., Seattle Lee, Tacoma Ethel, Seattle .. James R., Seattle Lacy B., Seattle n, | Phillips, R | Wilson, Ros | Kieid, sidgeane some one and who s | Klein, Oscar Sundquist Sund, Carl A. § Howell, Mari Wyman, Leslie 0. Isham, Rollie Fay, Seattle Moc "Bilverdale . mother said he had gone to night school and was exp 1 back short tly She enaid he had been building at a boat at the Case Canoe club house near Madgson spare hour At the club house Gladwin was In formed that young Murane had not [been there for several 2\) returned to the Murane | reported the fact to the tS HOME A.M, TODAY About 5 m, the boy home. He told Gladwin he had left the Broadway high school about 8:45 and gone to call on @ girl friend at Bist ave. and KB, Cherry"st Leaving | there about 945, he aid, on his bi cycle, he was turnihg into an alley on Thomas st. between 16th and 17th aves., when three men jumped out of an auto and sized him He was taken out on the boule. vard, he said, and lashed to where his struggles took plac jad | win took the boy to the spot where |ho said hie bad been tied j map pointed out the tree, | said there were no marks of a rope on*the tree nor were there any foot Plints near it to indicate a struggle. | Forbes, Bradley Kar | Jomes! Iva BK Mitchell, Chy« | Anderson Fish, Kenneth Morris, Luciite Wright, | Babayovich Legal 21} park during Franel Seattle weeks. Lueretia, Urban .... DEATHS Harrington, W. H,, 80, 9 mith, Leonard K. 9 Greenwood ave nwon, Clara, B8, olpera, Mary Miy home and mother 1916 Fourth W. \w Columbus sant- y howpitat (haan ML, «pital King coun ty h Joho’ Maury, 18, } 28rd Nv. |Arctanger John W., 70, 10 W. Gar-| field. | Smith, Alta, 25, 2044 W. 60th st. According to Dr. I the United States bureau of mines, gold mining today is practically failure, Operators are turning from thy gathering of gold to many of the bager ores. A. Lyons, of eneral Obre- | With Electioneers| the case! Murane | arrived | 'GARRANZISTAS MEXICO REBELS * {Report Defeat of Rebels in Battle HW, TURNER May 4 forces battle in ruz killing under and 60 of announced offi BY RA MEXICO ayed.) routed Iethmnur ‘ of (De have on the the re cl ernment in a chuantepec, fon a ¢ his was ally also forced the to ev Cuautla, in the of Morelos, 46 miles south. of Mexico City, phe statement troops rebels uate state | enst Other engagements of minor tm portance in various parts of the re | public were reported Government officials also claimed defeat of a rébel attempt to@ocupy | Morelia, capital of Michoacan, 126 | miles northwest of Mexico City. The rebel troo a strong Carranza force. Gen. Murkuia has Tampico to assume charge of de 2" nse of the capital. The ministry of war denied the government was pre | paring to ¢vact xieo City . Ojinaga Garrison Joins Revolution May 4 ‘The opposite Presi i t, form arrived from PASO, Texas, fa garrison a re the junta here announced to day Free intercourse between El P 1 Jugrez was resumed today fol @ night of rejoicing in Jua ‘ient to the liberaliat revolt against Carranza Carranzista Benator Abel has been namec T. an consul at lowing Form Rodriguez cpor of Chihuahua. formerly Mex Antonio, Texas, is the new co ia) t of the revolution headquarters in El Paso His office heseiged by hun treds of Americans to. ng with wan Mexicans dications were | Dr. Le Read What an vote was predicted for San Diego.) the! 4 retreated on approach of | March Against Mexico City (LAIM VICTORY HOLDING JUAREZ | Nearly All of Chihuahua Is” Now With Rebellion ‘Texan, May 4.—Juarem all of the state of anU-Carranza soil EL PASO, and virtually Chihuahua were | | important border town across » Grande from El Paso re yesterday afternoon as word) 4 thet Parral and Cusihuiria- two leading mining campy in the Mexican state, also bad joined the Sonora rebellion. With bands playing and a holiday spirit over the jobe town of Juarez, the C ma officials ensily doffgd the ‘mantle of the federal government and declared them- followers of the rebelliou® | congtitutionalist party beaded by Gen, Alvaro Obregon. | VICTORY FOR OBREGON 1S BLOODLESS ONK The agreement they signed with Arturo M. Ellas, brother of Gen, Plutarco Elias Calles, chief military leader in the Sonora-Obregon revolt, was dispatched to the latter for hia approval. Not a shot was fired. Gen. 1.& former Carranza comman- 4, will retain bis leader. ship of the garrison. The same city, state <tiipials in Ju en under th of forces huila, eenter of district, the rebel Americans in Juare mua city were safe, ports shdwed today. passports, sta consul from Mexieo arrive | ehte bor | elven and federal rez will hold their J volution. t of the rebel maasin, Torreon in Cor exico’s rich cotton stated, be the again) for revision of thelr Sandoval, Carra awaited day Ruiz here, City orders To a person, five feet tall standing on the beach at seaside, the hort: about two and three-quarters mil away, BR. Qark Authority | Says About the X-Ray As Applied to Teeth f Mprintea trom November, 1919, issue of “Dental Facts.”) Investigations Show How X-Rays of | Teeth Prevent Disease and Insanity { BY DR. HENRY A. COTTON Medical Director of New Jersey State Hospital stigations in the last few by both dentists and phy have shown conclusively that to the health today ars, ians greatest menace human trace bad is to be condition .of the large majority of the The instinct of the ind+ al is directed toward saving the teeth, and, unfc nately, a large pr »portion of the dentists foster thir instinct, and in consequence, teeth are capped and otherwise repaired by expensive bridgework in order to save the teeth, when from the stand point of the patient's, subsequent ill health, these teeth should be extract ed. Happily, the best dentists have | realized for some years that serious results frequently foyow such pro- cedures and have warned the pro fession against this danger. This | subject has received special attention jby Dr. Henry A. Cotton, medical dl- rector of the New Jersey State Hos pital, who in a recent statement in the August ctrical Experiment er” on the importance of X-raying {the dooth, bas the following ta say | “Unfortunately for the patient, in fected teeth may not and often do not any symptoms which would lead one to believe that any thing is wrong, with his teeth. This type of infection is what ls known as chrenic in contradistinction to an acute infection, and does not ¢ pain, pus or swelling, and frequently no rise in temperature,” Hence, there no symptoms which direct the attention to this condition and often they are arm do wh they re told that th have in fected teeth andl that they must have @ certain number extracted if they wish to recover from their particular The questian is often asked, the a found in teeth of cause wre pationt’s INOTIC Each DR. L. R. © 1405 Third Avenue use | er will X-ray FREE Come early in the morning, if possible, please, Regal Dental Office ‘How are we to know that teeth | which give no evidence to the patient of serious and often dangerous in- fection, are infected?” ‘The answer to this is 7 . and a more general use of this very simple and harmless procedure will reveal to the dentist as well as to the patient the | existence of infected roats, when to jon the teeth may ealthy and worthy of Naturally, these should im- y be extracted. h individual should know ether or not he is harboring dangerous infection, which may not only undermine his general health, but may endanger his life if it be not eradicated, With this knowledge Jof the danger of infected teeth, all persons should insist upan a thorough examination of their teeth by means of the X-ray and not take the word of a dentist who merely inspegts the teeth and pronounces them all right. The failure of the dentist to recognize the existence of root infection and the practice of put. ting in pivots, gold crowns and bridge work, without first taking radiographs of these teeth to be sure that there are no infectedgroots, has sounded the death knell of many eop®, for when the infection has | invadedyother organs it is often too late for extraction of the teeth to be | of any benefit. No matter if the eth give no trouble or if one feels fectly healthy at the present. time, if he has had any dental work done at any time, he should insist upon his dentist radiographing his teeth so that he will not be the victim of a false security and finally mb to a fatal disease, whieh) t have been prevented if he ha taken the precaution mentioned. (Continued Tomorrow) saving! | ‘ morning, between 9 and 10:30, your teeth, LARK, Manager N. W. Corner Third and Union In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists Diagonally Across the Street from the Postoffice, Be Sure to Get” to the Right Place LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES

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