The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1920, Page 2

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75 of these $9.75 fireside stools, each $6.75--- Axactly as here pictured: ‘ts an attractive and practical article for the home, bed ‘room or living A a firealde Amer! this room; stool, in can walnut or finished mahog any, cane panel Colontal rest end covered with or ular pri for the EXTRA SPECIAL, $6.75. French¥ory accessories table: tapestry velour ° $9 weok, rem regular 1 Aaetek $1.49. “regular price TSc; Pek, 49¢. french very pletare tran Gesigns; regular price $1.5 ror the week, $1.15, Suet Rrench very tray; regular \X 2... 50; special for the week, e .. B~Jewel box; French tvory; ree ee $2.50; special for the week, a gsi box; French tvory; ree Price The; special for the week, —No. t—shaving mirror, adjustable “barger: regular price $2—; the week, $1.39. vee Le 18080 TME HIND LADY WHO FEEDS TH HORSE LUMP SUGAR — should know that “the insured title is the standard title.” When you buy a mort- gage or buy real estate demand Title Insurance and secure the full meas- ure of Title Prote¢tion which is your right. Washington Title Insorance Co. ASSETS MORE THAN $600,000.00 COMING SOON! Watch for the Date 1920’s ONE REAL MOTION PICTURE SENSATION rowing anxiety i the soviety oup | | | NATTY BANDITS IN GUN BATTLE ‘Escape After Robbing Vic- tim of $380 | Two natty “bandits, black site masks and ercoats, are sought by police. a gun duel and @ rob-| which the pair took $380 Clark, of Mortimer apartments, : who wear form-fitting | following bery, in manager Dist ave, from “Joseph 1 night J. Dolphin, auto driver, Washington st, had just nm turned home, when he aaw two men skulking in the shadows, Entering |his own home, he obtained a revol ver, and returned to bis front door. | Dolphin ran into the arms of a man, who ovidentally was on the point of rapping. «The bandit was masked and held a revolver, Dolphin quick | ly grabbed the gun hand and threw it up in the alr and shot twice with | hie own revolver, which be held in his left hand. ‘The bandit then fired twloe over Dolphin’s head Dolphin released his hold on the} bandit's wrist, and the latter jumped from the porch and ran. He was joined by his companion, who ap-| peared from behind the hy ‘Ten minutes after the Dolphin tn. called to the front his apartment by the door had nd sooner @pened the! was pushed back into womday Hyren He loor, when he \the hall | | “Steck ap your hands," wae the| terwe reaponse offered In answer to| his question, "Who bs it?" One bandit covered Clark with a re | volver while the other searched him. His pocketbook, containing $350 was soon found. “If you stick your bean out of this Joor, we'll bust it with a bullet,” } wit gold | Wheereupon both bandits left. \¥ RUSSINAREDS ARE WORRIED Success of Polish ae Alarms Bolshies LONDON, May 5 Polish offensive around mained somewhat of a mystery here | today, ‘The war officn had not fecelved officta! confirmation of re| ports the city had fallen to the Poles, while Moscow wireless com: | tabbe muniquea claimed the soviet forces | [were putting up a desperate and | | Them | Mores, | succenstul defense of the city Moscow wirelesses today Indicated ital at the success of offensive. Communiques quoted long appeals by Leon Troteky, war minister, In an effort to fan Rue man batred against the Poles. Propaganda meetings were urged thruout Funsia, AIM ORDINANCE AT HEATING CO, Would Stop Discrimination Against City Power Prov'iing for the etringent regu. lation of steam heat plants in Se attie, an ordinance, prepared by Thomas J. L. Kennedy, assistant cor poration counsel, was presented to the public utilities committes of the | city council Wednesday ‘The ordinance is directed against the Puget Sound Light and Power company, charged with using a mo-| nopoly of steam heat to coerce! |downtown business firma { exclus ively electric power futhished by them. | | Companies furnishing steam heat | must make public all contracts en tered into, according to the pro-| posed ordinance. | ‘The ordinance provides against re- | bates, unreasonably preferences and | Unjust discrimination. It gives the! council authority to determine rate. and regulations Penalties for the violation of the provisions of the ordinance are placed at $100 fine and 30 days in | Jaa |Convicted Booze Thief Gets Recess Fd “Hagen, former policeman, oon | victed Tagt Fall of having robbed the government customs warehouse of | over 1,700 bottles of bonded Canadian whisky, was granted a 20 days’ leave from the federal district Wednesday Hagen is under heavy bond, while awaiting the result of his appeal to the cireuit court, WE keep in intimate touch with the style tendencies of po rt raiture and can al- ways tell you just what is | 8100. Progress of the | Fisid. ny Kieff re) M Finhaus, Gualtqye Derg, Bather, 5 Pte | Vtech, Georgina, Seattle - the Potiah | Kaha. Nikolal, Seattle . La Fontaine lone SB, Seattle. . jaccording to a [haa SAGAN NS A A LACE SOE I a I RR BS = SEATTLE STAR WED NEO MAY 5, 1920. T0 6:30—Fraternal Fremont Men's assoc Charles B. Clay 0 Tire otherhood halt. mp Univernity Arts NallIrition- Amer. tion te held business will be dip pean con Aitione Heinmiller, cussed by Mehop G of Cleveland, Red Crom University, between Fourth avéa--Special of ex-Servies Women's club, vole on important matters ao. talk for under .ausp' follows Dr. W. stration headquarters, on Third and meeting | to ‘are of the Baby Schwabland: demon- care of babies by ret Durkin Mra BD. t prenidi 7180 NN h—Alema Detta Chi fraternity helds meeting. All alumn) weleome M Hald sehool-—Tranaporta- tien $ back yard problema will Be Under discussion. at the meeting of Meridian Distriot Improvement club 8100 North Park Improvem: 108th at and FT w tn End will be explained Bird, prea= rooma, meeting: te Areade form Armetrong, G. Tk, Columbus mnt Ye Washington st. 1814 Whipple st. ) Washington ote 6015 Orchard at . 199 Thomas at 1411 Harbor ave. irl. | boy boy girl 8. “ Shinbe Rehun Anderson erson, © boy | Hotfman. be Seattle General hos ~ Seattle General hoe 6 11th W. 6728 Rabins trl ari je | | 5 Sunset ave boy 4 Sattert : 13 ath N ARRIAGE LICENSES tame and Meaiden Age Herbert G, Seattle. Legal Lena M. Seattle Lowa! | on Hh, & ne, 5 léegon. — Vr Jor th Apes Aochieage | wi Alison. ireen Late Aust, Paul BR, Seattle. anila, Maria &. Seattle Pewee Robert E DIVORCES GRANTED from Doyle George trom Tenner, Julia from Howard, Thgmoeon. Betty from b Miller, Anba from Conra: DEATHS > Sas MeRqgnan, Mary BE. 7% 6544 18th) Grove Joh Merickeon, 14a. $4, T15 Pourth © Malmer, Carl August, 61, #14 Minor * edt, Anna. 16 S117 fiet A erty, William, €9,1 mer HR, 70, 918 Matha F, 17, Mad ih Takagi, Sumiko, 2,110 1 Bunnell, Geo ment way ee 4 S16 heir sad Okire, 3 months 611 King |Fewer Deaths in Portland Streets Seattio had five more persons killed and 248 more Injured tn traffic accidents than did Portiand in 1919 letter received from traffic se by Lieut CC authorith arr Wednesday, Seattle had 49 persons killed by aw tomobling and four by motorcycles during the last year, while Portland 44 peaths by automobiles and four by motorcycles, Seattle records show injuries, as compared to Four Hard Cider Sellers “Marked” Following the discovery, Tusday, of 1,000 gallons of superlative cider in Kent, warrants for the arrest of the proprietors of four soft drink on tablishments in that town will be t- nue4, federal prohibition officers said Wednesday morning. Mat. Sat. THEATRE SEATTLE pemm: May 13 82.505 Gi BALTES Original cast and production Intact on transchntinental including massive dow Volving stag mechanical ¢ trical equipm three cara to senting of hum ort. Pre ent bubble ni HOW To ORDER TIOKETS WY MAIL fend check or postotfice money order to the. manager of the theatre for the amount of ticket purchase, PLUS war x 10 per cent, Inclose a dreswed stamped — en velope, to inaure safe return and avoid error in name or ad dreas. Mail ager WAITING 13 TICKET WINDOW, No Phone Orders Acce No nonin Tald Aeldee " have at as had been expected by the 161 precinots the vote was JOHNSON WINS IN CALIFORNIA Has Lead of 136,945 Over Herbert Hoover RY DON L. BKENER SAN FRANCISOO, May Hiram Johnson's lead over bert Hoover at 11 a. m, was 146,338 as the count proceeded of ballots east in yesterday's pri mary election, The from 3,88) precincts complete out of ‘ in the state were Johnson, 11; Ho The featu of the morning's ¢ velopments wan the gain Jobnson obtained over Hoover in Los Angel county, where he led by 6 in 635 precineta. Voters did not take-the trouble te serateh allots, and xo Johnson wil the Chieago complete set of 26 Califo eaten Johneon carried the northern by overwhelming leads, piling + jorities of 2, 3 and 4 to 1 seem to have carried Los Kings and Ventura counties b majorities, but his vote in Sout California wae by no means as | Hoo 318 vo ation dele cittos p ma He Angele ern ree “GREATEST = urn,” } SAY MAN, A statement from Johnson head quarters declares that Johr son's victory “ie the greatest triumph slifornia fe has ¢ by over 100,000 ve ever defeated any othe posed him in @ primar “Hoover's opponition the one usefal pur atrating to the country bh Hiram Johnson's achievements are appreciated by bis own pe indorsement comes from every eat. Business man, working men. farmers, in lke prog with the men, have gt to t on “California offers the nation the greatest executive any state has had, a progressive legislator, who is sane and not radical,” The complete unofficial count San Francisco gave Johnson a ma jority of 44.550. The vote was: John n 69,637, Hoover 25,087 Sacramento, John gave him @ big lead. Herbert Me more than he rman wh in thin © has of women rt en express N's In 152 out of 7 Hoover 4,253. INSON CARRIES OOVER'S COUNTY Jobneon invaded Hoovers county, Santa Clara, and carried it, according to incomplete returns. In 174 out of 192 Santa Clara coun ty precinets the vote was: Jobneon 10.896, Hoover 5.211 Johnson gwept Alameda county, in cluding the cities of Oakland, A da and Berkeley. In 417 out of Alameda precincts the vote Johnson 60,067, Hoover 23.875. In Loe Angeles county Hoover tot me ae was A; | Im $60 out of 1,275 precincts the vote was; Johnson mg res Hoover 39,709 Johnson’s Father \Pleased With Vote} ™, am maid nson, this morning. After yesterday's excitement, remained in bed this 78 years old. shown by her corrected totala at that time | tes | er » Op ved) inter | tn Johnaon | Says He Made Showing’ Than Expected YORK, May 5.—f made NEW t he irprined as a whowing & ‘primaries a wtate was expresved here today in Yhent from Herbert Hoover. “Il am eurprised that under ance atement the read vo large ant a in Calif favoring m friends, in ent inter & protest on's extreme oppo to prevent war nent 1uoe th a gre month haga par anton up of 1d apped in mateur clubs only a they were of t regular Iza tion, | California have to the » from vicious rrow n recenwitien. that th al The tances mare protest sho republi act in these elreum. nh one-third of the this lattor the support rity in purty Inet f the enate DEMANDS PROBE OF WOOD MONEY Senator Borah Renews Re- quest for Inquiry WASIMINETON an mj jenate on Benater of by gation Gen coipt of Odio formation Indiana ted in be and ms condu od, Bo! renewe birthplace. my today ir vent im If they they do not get the committne ' ah and hi carry the ampaign expendit | senate, they say The life t w tion of be open man for long and below the best type of rather hort nt normal PILEPSY For Over ap Sams ev | A retessl | Tests j see Mere Or order Uh at ony Bagg gl Calttersia Veteran pig Rae Ng GM end torment from Rptiever - Lreetmer Many tnyered %. tx wow 06 days since the tet = cs is LAL KUNE C8, ed aces A oe fe neither pro-German, 4 Amert that but ts pre 1 feel confic: follow Califor: .|Wood Is Winning Indiaina Primary INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, May Unofficial returrys in the Indiana presidential prefprence primary to day gave in 3,140\ pregincts of a tatal of 3,387: Wood, Lowden, A. 56,810: 24,852 . Governor Cox to Get Kentucky Aid LOUISVILLE, Ky May $.—« James M. Cox, of Ohio), will t ort of Kentucky's de! the democratic nationa’ at San Francisco, The tion, meeting here, voted| jst before adjournment, early todayy, to send the entire dele to the Coast pledged to the Ohio governed, 62,036. 42 Johnson, Harding, 13, United States capital placed tn} Canada in 1919 totaled $100,000,000., | 4 The Hama, like the canpel, Wednesday, | F Thursday, iday and Saturday | madge Kemety —JN— “The Blooming Angel” augh proc a high-be a livewire ng with band and wife. Big “V” Comedy “SWITCHES AND SWEETIES' Gaumont Weekly known only in @ state of dorestica Continuous Daicy | t°l! Direction of Ackerman & Harris Tonight, Last Times— HOMER LIND AND CO. Tomorrow, Friday and Saturday ively New Show of HIPPODROME VAUDEVILLE —WITH— THE CELLI SINGERS In a Classical Musical Offering “RECOLLECTIONS” Other ‘Hip’ Acts---5 FEATURE PHOTOPLAY Though Many Devious Paths, There Is But One Road to Happiness “Beckoning Roads’ —WiItH— Bessie Barriscale | W Topay and ONLY 2 DAYS MORE The story of the love- ly Adrienne, the toast of gay Broadwa whose teachings boom- 4 erang on herself with terrific force! SEX { —WitHh— Louise Glaum Irving Cummings Myrtle Stedman LAVISH! STARTLING! Clemmer Music wions HH gitorn rh “9g BUTTER! { } { "MADAME @ the ut te What to Do! the | friends | { ‘Why do we have such bad teeth to | VOTE SURPRISE |FIVE DEMURRERS TO H. HOOVER AGAINST CHARGE Better Defendants in Freight Case, Take Action Vive of the 17 members of the go | called Auburn freight ear looters now under grand jury indictment filed demurrer to the charges them with the clerk of the ct court Wedne: a against United states dist day morning Lemuel wh Fowler, 6 Mellison, € J. A. Lewis are nam ror, which . al- legen th tment does no onform Lew of the United and that insufficient informa | forth th to enable cused to prepare a defense. r rand Mrs in the at the dem ind tat tates tion In net Fire in U. S. Mail Box A north end fire department was forced to use craft when @ fire was| ered in @ mall box at 43rd ave. | Woodlawn ave. Wednesday ‘The box was saved but a of mail was damaged. and morning. quantity — Ure BS co. 9 Pike St. Seattle Phone Main 652 “Tested” Seeds Are Seeds That Produce Results Seeds, Vegetable, snd Floral De. and Roots, Field Seeds é Flower Cut Flowers nigns, Plant Grams and Cl and Fertilizers. Spraying Materials Appliances, Poultry Btock Supplies, Bee Supplies Garden Tools and and o> and In Japan the sewage and refuse of every house is collected nighly and carefully in agricultue Dr. L. R. Clark “Read What an Authority Says About the X-Ray — As Applied to Teeth Meprinted from November, 1919, issue of “Dental Facta") Investigations Show How X-Rays of Teeth Prevent Disease and Insanity BY DR. HENRY A. COTTON Medical Director of New Jersey State Hospital (Continued From Canse “ef Infected Teeth “The public naturally inquires: day when our parents and ‘rand. | parents did not have these condi tions or, at least, did not have these fatal disease?” There are several reasons for this, In the first place, forefathers did not bother with dentists except to have an offending | exiater NOTICE—. | FREE tooth extracted. In the second place, modern dentistry had not developed to the point of expensive repair and preservation of the teeth as we know it today. It has been esti mated that 80 per cent of the people who have had repair work done, even in the most expensive and t manner, have infected teeth which may become & menace to thetr at any time, “The relation of infected teeth to rheumatism was demonstrated by | Hastings in 1914 This was a very important discovery, for this dis. © had baffled physicians who could find no definite cause for it and many fanc theories were put forward to explain the cause. Not only can rheumatiam be prevefited by intelligent care of the teeth, as outlined above, but in many cases it can be cured by the simple method of extracting Infected teeth Possibly the must commo. xilment | of people in genera: today is summed up in the general term mach trouble,’ and often this condition resists all attempts at eradication by the ordinary methods | and may persist for years, causing the patient to drag out a miserable In the majority of cases, ted teeth are at the root of the and if the condition has not too extraction of teeth, so tofaty cherished for may clear up the chronic h trouble. have proven conclusiyety that the infection of the teeth, after , May spread to other organs body and cause disease in infe trouble progressed nily no tion to the teeth, but, nevertheless, the infected teeth are directly responsible for the eondition * at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, has shown that many cases of pernicious anemia have recoyered when the infected teeth are extract ed It has been shown that serious heart canditions, diseases of | the kidneys—commonly known as | Bright's Disease’—diseases of the | gall bladder and many oth diseases | may be the result, directly or in directly, of a focus of infection orig: inating in the teeth, also | patients and remained jpital until the time of their death. jean only Tuesday's Star.) Nervous and Mental Discases | “Finally, the most serious result of infected teeth is to be found in the relation of this infection to nervous and mental conditions, We have been for years groping in, the dark, trying to find a cause for these unexplainable conditions. We have considered mental diseases as some- thing apart from general diseases where such things as worry, grief, fear, overwork, and many other elements are usually given as the cause of disease of the mind. Since we have found at the State Hospital |at Trenton that many of the patients suffering from mental disease had also very serious chronic infections of the teeth, tonsils and gastro-in- testinal tract‘and that by eliminating these infections our patients recov- ered, we are justified in concluding | that these chronic infections play a very important role in the causation of*the mental condftion. Of course, other factors, such as we have men- tioned, have a profound effect in lowering the vitality and allowing a latent infection to become active. “By recognizing the fact that 1 diseases may be the result tion and the toxermia or | poisoning due to this infection, we ve been able to in the hos “As @ prevention of mental dis- 8, then, it would seem that the Proper care of the teeth is of the utmost importance, and we woul emphasize the fact that the proper care is entirely different from what the usual dental examination reveals, and that only by refusing to have devitalized teeth (teeth in which the nerve has been destroyed), or crown ed, or otherwise preserved, and in- sisting upon having the teeth ex. tracted, can we hope for better teeth and prevent infection, which later will have serious cansequences, This is a matter which can be controlled by the individual, and it is the public in general who can bring about a better state of affairs by insisting upon good dentistry, in the sense we have explained, and by not allowing the kind of dental work which pre serves the teeth to the detriment of the patient's heaith Such Te sults as we are trying to obtain be brought about by edu- cating the public in these matters, well as the medical and dental profession, For this reason we be- Neve that the widest publicity should be given to these facts and their importance emphasized bol from the standpoint of prevention and cure.” 7 Each morning, between 9 and 10:30, ill X-ray your teeth, Come early in the morning, if possible, please, Regal Dental Offices: DR. L. R. os Manager 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third and Unload In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists Diagonally Across the Street from the Postoffice, Be Sure to Geb to the Right Place LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES

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