The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 7, 1920, Page 28

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~ a ’ ‘THE SEATTLE STAR Reds“Put Butte on the Bum’; Business Almost at Standstill CZAR’S DAUGHTER ALIVE AND IN NEW YORK? MANY ON LOWER EAST SIDE BELIEVE STOR Bh yp ad utr of her father, moth. Such are the takings of but # NEW YORK, May t-—Kor many 00 her fatet, ee ea months, I am told, many in | maine io Oe See that one of th be true. I haven't looked th Fut they are pale and lifel * | day,” the girl who was being invol untarily m d to my form 1 ght's subway erumh told her know a girl who knows Bhe says there is no into which t ¥ lamations say they should be shot as) traitors, Hut, say the LW. W,, the worst handbills are printed by the Bide danghter in ry of the empr’ nurne degree im of it.” The nurse talked with her, aor N to the atom of known fact to justify t Siento a rumor, but ane of these days it may |tne tittle princess tri | rine to the dignity of the tradition | jgontity. “But the n of the Lost Dauphin of France: and no th © daughter | atural repository for old world ro- | “Fler olf nurse naw her the other | told her pitiful tale had been| mance, It is a gree up It mEht| compared to some of the pro’ ay be cer | vories that have come from the tmost Cosmopolitan section of thig: J) || moet commopolitan elt ng companies themecives and] ‘Orient Gets Wetter, Says FairT raveler bly literature the mor ny her | 1 for the pri w her|to come to New York, This incredible WE keep in intimate touch with the style tendencies of portraiture and can al- ways tell you just what is a month of 8 Within the last week T have heard tumate holder of a title il; of Mon daughter, a French “cou who was once a figure in the way world in Paris, and who now city. ‘The office of the Bulletin, the radi Paper, ts a fortress. The news| , Oddly enough, is housed tn an Methodist church, Down a stair cunningly harrowed to admit one man at a time, is the edi room, Reporters come in around a holster, slap a 45 on the desk and “pound the in a shoe clerk; of a leader of the training have fitted them to render | Henry, Seattle financier | the most intelligent service pomsl-| The bestowal of the order 1s tn s a | ble, and you will find this eepecial-| recognitions of Henry's work as “ih ] Ted the mines and guns and tan. seen a ming . BUTTE, Mont, May 6.—I¢ tt wag! Kune in homes, A town divided intention of the reds to start a| against iteelf, with the business man fatled. goat ‘ palmed off as w It they merety tntended to “put| If the LW. W, mean all thelr proo- | wwae MUST PREPARE TO ded. | e | ni wie w t pt | agp gh Reale ag pare’ to fight the government ot ihe Millions of dollars’ worth of| i] 5 jpare to fie « | have been taken from this hunk 9 | “The compantes printed ft them, 1. Here is wealth in abun |nelves,” sald “Bil” Dunn, editor of | eae & spark of life remained and| tured, bull nough to make every citi-| amugnled her body out of the pit|city and ther ore The copper compantes undoubted. . | man or woman. ly “own” Butte, They contral three With Her Pet Cat h of Fourteenth street and CITIZENS | i NEW YORK, May 7.—When Mins UTESON-DONAHEY yt | Spreading Abroad on the sixth Moor of Ontical : ———— ennessey building, | died, she made the request in her icaltom) — | But Butte ts “on the bum.” Bust. | " _ : » BY MILTON BRONNER will that her favorite cat be burte fe almost at a standstill Many SMewapaper sen hdmi Saving the atte Hotels, /henest to gentnes leather from sole|ens of stores, they my imme cat ws cbt rotormed and the | gi ms 0 Ups for $2 sh fulfilled orne de ence R wan nec » make | Control of news sources being the TECT YOUR € 0 0 °c ont powe: hing in the world, it hen he petitioned ter the naming om , sober, serious fact | moat powerful t when , ‘ : Drummers” shun j re ‘happened this way: Recently | stands to reason that what the min. lof an administrator for the hal! of parliament, opened a clothing | world to believe-—a good share of the | left for charity store where he sold made-to-measure | autside world believes, o ¢ Result was the police had to be| er three times a day, unauthorized | British Shoes to n : Ja rempectable business man; of a called to keep the anxious customers | newspaper dixpatebes. I don't sup. | | captain of a German U-boat who is Be Sold Cheaper? 2p » Mee That made 8 and M. Bolsom @o]ing they were guilty, did it from | yy b Sas ELE GERD ULE some thinking. If Mallaby-Deeley | phitanthropic motives. | dealers believe they can find a mur * yt] Ket for their product in the United ARE Pp H. C. Henry Wins directly, why couldn't they do the| “It's too hard to work tn the States. Representatives have boen | | French Gratitude strikers aver, “The heat ts | Sak bho thavlites aiith bead wands | anmeorehen” shoes to sult American taste, The |Your Eyes edit ob thy Adteien ct Brann whem for e Rove the e 1 1h ee sfiden: . h he children o' a ner shoes for the government during the| Mining companies" officials say the British dealers feel confident that Demand and Receive the fathers died in battle on the West business openings? |miners quit in the spring to work quite as stylinh and better made Tica’ ten Monediabin Geetennendons ‘ bs < tha o roo ashingtor mn based o (ahmed Ee ie tee Oe SORE One the om | eutaido j aRe Ce Amecionn goede, In every profension you will find| has conferred the degree of cheva Stivers, alleged “chief of the| would be sold to men and boys at cent trouble was caused matniy by | | " When the writer got past | £1 (as this in written, $3.91) the pair.| “floaters” who came in looking for | AL acer d tango Legit a couple of secretaries the colonel 1 y 0 die ednos. jback to normal, this will only be| Hines, Everett, and other I. W. W.| | - . . H@ i» survived in Seattle by hia| ly true in the matter of the caraof| treasurer and head of the Seattle y 8 he sho b | tro < 0 of the s@helis into an automatic. It lay on/ $4.86 a pair, The shoes come with | stron 4a. Some of them ev n| | mother, Mra. Augusta Freed; a mon,| the eyes, | branch of the Fatheriess Children of There's a big job waiting for| Services at 1 p. m. Friday at the} much care as you would your phy-|than 2,000 French children have “Punnyfoot™ Johnson when he fin) Bonney-Watson extablishment | stefan, | been cared for. | BY JIM MARSHALL jon the atreets; guns tn offices and lution in Butte, that intention and the common citizen, as usual, the | mi re oe CE” ayive peeety | FIGHT GOVERNMENT* | United States,” et earth. Millions more lie under — ~|left for dead, but @ servant found | ered, pushing, ate hyenas Spinster Is Buried ; in Butte a happy, contented, weil: | " a and true stories packed into that din |Profiteer-Swatting Idea Is S newspapers, Mont of the local news | ns VING THE CITY Maria Louise Ewen, 70 years old, | 4 could shoot in nda company's offi 41 es dnguuted at continusus trow.|, LONDON, May 1.—Shoes made of in ts celia “with ber, Street Floor Joshua GreenBldy because they tauch #om tions weeks in adva: ‘are| No, fellow Americana, no joke. It's |told Justice Cohalan, in court here | Mallaby-Deeley, a very rich member|ing companies want the outside | Hondollar estate which the woman > % |suits for from $10 up to about $20.| Last week somebody sent out, two | ¥ | Apaches of Paris, who has become from hreaking down the doora. | pose the mining companies, presum- | a bookkeeper LONDON, May 1.—British shoe could swat the profiteers by dealing | Many miners are leaving camp, pe * : he output o eo,” seer La Metas ne thing by taking the output of | mines, sent to Amerien with samples of Should |. % rreornition of his work In be war and were now looking for new|exodus is normal and that many heir goods will be much cheaper, Most ¢ reful Attention ern front, the French government, Lieut. Col. D. . he pons | building sits Lteut. Col. D./nouncement was made that shoes| It seems fairly certain that the re | | specialists whose knowledge and | lier of the Legion of Honor on H. C. Even when the English pound climbs | trouble. Many of them came from | . be _ Pwas slipping a new magazine full of ; f day night at th sh hospital us as talked. ce | were leawers’ ele’ “ (ies. Minsrice T Price sas we talked. | light, medium and heavy soles, black | wore loggers’ clothes and had never tee ican eae cee | aes pans iin <i ac ee ce ee cee jinhes his campaign in Magiand, for the Orient is getting wetter and wet ter as the Occident gets drier } So mays Mra. Maurice T. I’rice, eo | celal worker of Chicago, who has re twirned after a year of Investigation in the Far Bast. | American rum and Japanese! “dope” are Mooding China, the saya, and while the situation ts critical, offictaidom ts doing nothing about It eee | She Wears “Bustle” Filled With Booze | “Well, well,” mused the customs inapector, as he eyed G. Ecomonua, | Greek restaurateur, and bis Amer | lean wife, Jane Dor, “can it be pow | that bustles are coming into ) Omerereey CaP NMED STE PET EAT} Fes | then he remembered that! i thelr effects when they had} gone to Victoria a few weeks ago he bad #een « brand new hot water | bottle. | He found tt—filled with good Cana dian whisky, Now G, and Jane are | charged with violhtion of the na- onal prohibition law. The offictal report reads, “Four quarts, ore pint, and one hot water bottle full of Uquor.” rar Today, more than ever be- fore, men are Dae for REAL VALUE, and at such moderate prices as Find 70 Gallons Mash, | Shingle Weaver Jailed Held tn county Jall pending investi. gation, Frank Worthington, shingle | weaven, of Allentown, ts accused of |moonshining. Deputy Sheriffs J. C. Conner, C. MH. Kearney and J. Von} Gerst ray they discovered 10 gallons of mash in Worthington's house, | This Saloon Is Trying e ( ‘ , \to Be Respectable One ‘ 0 m m u nh | jean ron a tines of nga | nn alon, of un! eh: | e |able reapectabiifty le proved by the| mucoem: of the ship in Artillery Lane. | No one may be setved more than) one drink, smoking is prohibited and) even loud talking ts frowned upon. | The house has been under the man: agement of the same family for 70) years. we can still offer good looking clothes that represent the absolute limit of value in clothes buying. At the same time we can show the men of, Seattle the products of America’s best makers at prices ranging up to $60, but the great point is that no matter what price you decide to pay there is always a substantial saving awaiting you at the LUNDQUIST-LILLY store. And Hats $3 to $10 The styles that the most particular men demand, and in such variety that every individual taste can be cer- tainly met. Caps $2 to $3.50 New models, attractive colorings, dependable fabrics, positive savings. Fashionable Spring Coats A light weight Coat is stillnecessary these cool morn- ings and evenings, and the nifty styles we are show- Bar for Bootlegger ing will mark a man as “Well Dressed” in any com- HINTON, W. Va, May ¢—Appar- ently having @ nice sense of the fit-| pany. Prices from $20, with a saving on every pur- | nens of thin, jordon Kirby selected chase. ' More than a Million Dollars have been expended in the development of @ Alderwood Manor, and the end is not yet. The Puget Mill Company is spending vast sums in this laudable enter- prise because the plan itself merits ite | The wonderful growth of this re _markable community and the success of every individual who has “embraced the opportunity to engage in a profit- able industry on his own account” has justified the faith and good judgment of its founders. , There isn’t any question about the future of Alderwood Manor. The big- gest landholders in the State of Wash- ington are behind it morally and fi- mancially. The basic principle upon which the great poultry and berry dis- trict is being built is both practical and sound. | Whisky Causes Death of London Minister | LONDON, May 6.—Aleoholie pols oning waa returned as the cause of| death of the Rev. Charles Burston, | 64, & retired clergyman, ‘Testimony | At the inquest showed that be drank | two bottles of whisky a day for eight days before his death. | eee Secondly, you get in on the fastest growing suburban community in the Pacific Northwest. In a marvelously short time a live community has been brought into being where only the open countryside existed, Electric lights, schools, beautitul homes, in fact, practically every city home convenience may be had at Al- derwood Manor. & cemetery as the place for dealing And around each of these homes is lin spirits Stone in Cemetery Is Extra Trousers Double the Life of a Suit This great and very important department of our business is growing every day. Many men have found how easily they can add months to the life of the old suit by the simple expedient of choosing a pair of extra trousers from our vast stock of all sizes. Money Saving prices from $5. Mothers of Boys | In our Boys’ Department we are able to offer the same wonderful service, the same splendid assortment and the same money-saving prices as have made this the store of thrifty, exacting fathers. Thousands of Boys’ Suits from $10 to $80 and every one a remarkable value. wuist-Lillly We Fit the Stout Our ability to fit is not limited to the men of average figure. In stout, or other out- sizes we are able to give the same perfect fit as has made this part of our service so favorably known to thousands of men of nll heights and sizes. Those who follow the teachings of the skilled teachers who are out there | to guide them, soon find independence and a bank account. You buy not only a home at Alder- wood Manor; you are buying an income » just as much as if you were purchasing first-class investment bonds. First of all, you get our land, which | is sold to you at a figure which makes it worth to you, as an investment, every _ cent you paid for it. wer a? ; TO Po s OX $ 2 % Pan McLennan and | James Doom were doing the eity in |the vicinity. of Westlake ave and| Stewart st. when McLennan's eye enough land to support it comfortabry. | ‘The bibulons of the district, if they is Henig! the land anf an eon: feared ghonts, overcame their timidi-| to prohibition agents that big quan- wise, all are sold to you at a figpre less ee oe eee eneny Were Soe than you would have to pay for a home neighborhood. But where. Suspicion attached to Kirby, and| In fact, downtown dwellers could buy |the lonesome graveyard on @ bleak an ALDERWOOD MANOR estate with nin, in lcaught him in the act of nelling g- |iiquor. All transactions were carried At 218 Pike street, near Third ave- | Kirby quietly conveyed each night's rs stock to the cemetery and then sold } MANOR display room. There, an ‘ ‘ 4. jstone as a counter a Meiny inspection trip, at company ex- lohange over it. Kirby waa arrested, you can see for yourself |and sentenced to 60 days in jail. what ALDERWOOD MA- esp |Keg 0’ Booze Held SINCE 1853. | The fact that Fred Harris, 46, a months back on a charge of selling | ton eggs led to his undoing again | Exhibit and Salesrooms Open Evenings ty, f it bee vident Ke modation service, financial and other- 2 pro » agente that big quan. tributed from somowhere in the in some outlying part of the city. the prohibition officers trailed him to; the rent they are accustomed to pay- [§| They lay tm watt for htm ana out under cover of the night. nue, there is an ALDERWOOD | [it to all comers, using a fallen tomb- pense, will be arranged, and |fined $200 by Magistrate Argnbright NOR has to offer. Unhappy Janitor and | Janitor, had been arrested some nix 218 PIKE STREET SEATTLE Phone Elliott 1470 ?. 4 vy pe | fell upon the unhappy Harris sitting Jon a bench nestling to his breast a small keg. Conversation ensued. The detective smelled the contents of the keg. Harris once more is in Jail and the keg, said to contain | whiskey, 1 belng held by the police as evidence, D. D. STEWART, who for the past 10 months acted as assistant secretary of the Chamber of Com. merce, resigned Friday. Mr. Stew: art will be connected with the Puy- allup and Sumner Fruit Growers’ as sociation, q 2S ‘Clothes JI. op wWOSHUA GREEN BLDG.

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