The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 2, 1920, Page 2

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THE SEATTLE STAR tomorrow the big day of this JULY SALE! —tomorrow we are determined to make one of the biggest days of this sale; the ener- gies of this immense organization will be brought into even greater action to secure this result. —each department, including rugs, house- furnishings, bedroom, dining room, living room furniture, from the main to the : ninth floor, will make a special effort to make it a record-breaking day. : —further sweeping price reductions will be made—quantities of new, seasonable furnishings will be placed on the home! display floors to replace the great quan- tity sold in the past few sale days. —our advice is to buy NOW, during this big JULY SALE! |) —youknow “Your Credit Is Good,”’ one of the many advantages offered at the JULY SALE prices. DUE IN BALLOTS, BY HAROLD D. JACOBS SAN FRANCISCO, July 2—Wwith the business of selecting a demo cratic presidential nominee finally in sight, that none of the candidates had sufficient strength to win unaided. | From reliable sources {t was |learned the best William G. McAdoo an powsibly hope to roll up, by call upon all Dis reserve strength, ta ‘ely 600, more than 100 short of a hot Attorney General Palmer is| AND HE saw the packaga, ‘ ted to attain his maximum tn-| eee lividual strength around THAT I took it trom. Governor Cox about 400 o- AND SMILED evelopment revealed BVERY. WILD.EYED fan. WAS ON his tect on SOMEONE. else's. AND THEIR sot remarks. REACHED THE next county. AND WHILE I'm not. TOF MY cigarettes, ° | ‘Thewe figures are overlapping be and sald. chuse a great number of th nd choice votes of each of the leadin candidates is held by the other tw |and none can ain his full quo! eee “THEY SATISFY eee AND THAT smoke you smashed, . lof reserve delegates until one or eee o- other of his two principal rivals have ASILY EXCITED. WAS ONE my wife, begun to lose ground. . Politica ervers believed McAdoo | 1 @URee Tt was helping. THE PITCHER bean. THaT CLEAN-UP bitter. AND MY good “south paw. would lead from the first ballot BOUGHT AT a bargain. . With Palmer a clone second, Cox waa, believed to be close up for third po- . . 80 THAT makes it, oe ¢ sition, A SATISFY.» c pe pected the attorney general would » his vote, ballot by ballot, until wibly the fifth, when it was ex eee DOUBLE HEADER.” i B gy eee reach his limit, and his followin WIT A fat fan, AND AFTER that, begin to disintesrate xd iJ5 ab oe Following are the presidential can RIGHT IN the vestibule, 1 EVEN . w Hm, didates before the democratic nu e tional convention eee AND HE 5014 “Phooo. ROOTING FOR the umpire, Senator Robert L. Owen, Okla Ae homa, ‘A POUL Up. WENTY hits — twenty ch: Homer §. Cummings, Conneetteut eee with never Attorney General A. Mitchell Pal RIGHT ON my last cigar.” Chesterfield’s ave: mer, Pennsylvania eee package. Trust the Governor James M. Cox, Ohio. AND 1 was sorry. them out. An un William G. McAdoo, New York eee Turkish and Domes James W. Gerard, New York AND GAVE him one. copied. These cigarettes aro there +4 ‘ —they satisfy! Gilbert N. Hitchcock, Nebraska Secretary of Agriculture Edward T. Meredith, lowa, Governor Alfred B. York. | Ambassador Jotm Virginia. Governor Francis Smith, New W. Davis, West Burton Harri BULLET ENDS ment to see what was goltg on home. 600 and Each was expected to in-| FRIDAY Beattie Bar» WOMAN'S LIFE) SATURDAY 48 to Despondent Over Sickness, Thomas A, Dexter, 50, living at : a after 745 Friday morning shooting herself thru the head. The body was discovered by her husband upon his return from breakfast, * About 1:46 this morning, Mra Dex-| | 1920, boy ter, who had not been well the last few months, told her husband that) 4, breakfast would not be ready for|Born to Mr. and Mre. Ierank Hollen lawhile, whereupon he went to a| ¢ 23rd ave, BW. May restaurant at the corner of Broadway ur A wntend and James at. to eat 319 Upon his return, he waited on the /T hve porch for a while, thinking that his 1 wife wan resting in her room. Put pie ae 4 as the did not appear, he finally Be i Mra BM. M. Inge | peeked in her window and saw her rnity honpital, J lying on the bed. The husband |p, Arre, Sidtuneene culled the landlady, Mre, I. Dreyful hoapital Ja Entering the room together, they {found Mrs. Dexter dead, with a bullet |? jhole in her right temple and a 38 caliber revolver lying by ber side./T Motorcycle aMrolman C.D. Fe rich answered the call to invest Bars fr. and M The Dexters were formerly ‘ a Butte, where they 1 ments, wa. tal Friday foi it head as the rem n thru the wind liv in § for some time tr Linbve Mactan | Woman Is Hurled |: By Thru Windshield ,, cae, J ¥ oc y, Van Siclen > he i arne and’s mach Motorcyclist Hit by Auto; Injured , Leo Hartiey, Hillerest hotel, while riding hin ing, at W HERE’S MORE ABOUT SHOOTING STARTS ON PAGE ONE ea attic rison, ENrl, Beattie an pe lay bandaged in the city z nina meg e by ake. Marry hind. entth hospital. He was in the hall, helpowell Margaret inabel Wark mald, when he saw (three men run! thru the place, one with a gun. | He followed them into the base | Mw He Draper, be # and beard m say: “Can't give a fellow a chance? wa ot Just reco to shoot ? Our wanted The janitor men rus! n the nd somebody tenant said that he k out to get “Just one gal Olmstead, oker At and O'Malley > Draper t . Dem at Me on will of « | eee He said he did not know where | tert Ae Bi A "i he lived, but thought his homehig the platform. the kere was in West Seattle yecch of H. §. Cummings, and ‘I'm a longshoreman,” he en fies nd 1 guess Si wan He helped |i e'y rig It waa me Hathaway meant | pron den ‘0 shoot; me, air, not si.” MOTHER TOO WEAK TO LEARN NEWS When Olmstead learned that the} dead man's familg lived at 1419) Dexter ave. he went to that ad-! drews and found Tabit's mother jtold her 81 had been hurt be }and, the shock of the a ment so unnerved and sick that the policeman waa \ tell her the boy was dead. Charles Tabit, the borther, But He Got Caug! 1O8 ANGELES, of Cha was | found, and Olmstead told him the| details of the shooting, Charles | went to the morgue and Identified | Chand the body. He was nearly over.| had ‘ vight come. The dead youth's father ts Joseph Cupid Ha: t, a shoe repairer with a shop at 2221% First ave Da At noon today witnesses of the N FR foned at} shooting were being qu length by Detective Capta Tennant and Asaintant Prosec John D. Carmody, to determine what charge, if any, should be placed Against Hathaway John Milton, of 2010 Fifth ave, nightwatchman at the U. 8. immt aration station, with whom Hatha. way left one of the three men be fore the shooting, was among those questioned “Young Hathaway was not a regu lav night patrolman, but was hired| for the one night, and had no com: mission and no actual authority to » si fon, the Philippines, Senator St a Simmons, North TE Pm rh Senater Carter Glass, Virginia, Gov, Edward Edwards, of New ‘CIGARET ees carry & gun or make an arrest,” de clared Tennant. Insects cause an annual Ions of ap Proximately §1,600,000,000 to the GOV: 'Had a Good Scheme oolation dinner Prof. Coutts. She Kills Self BIRTHS - ~ Born to Mr. and Mra Dy C. Mack Thought to have bern despond Sone oavave Wa Mgrch 2 ent because of long illness, Mrs, ir. and Mra, D. C, Mac and Mra A. A. Tim ‘ie! Pinched for Taking er, ry ne |Woman Wants . FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1920 BERLIN riots man, hich tension CHICAGO. entrusted with line. sow SMV. ty. Flowers From Grave chi ‘ July 2 A » mou man aly it is anno ttle man rento Duty on Birds | Wire Briefs | Many injured in food} Two policemen wounded, | CHEHALIA.—C. W. Gray, line electrocuted while working on Alleged to have been $6,000 which the con y filled given “ys Harbor lumber ‘ are for shipping lumber in closed indefinitely, THE BODY of Marry who died Mon will arrive in se Butterworth will take received. EDwin ey. MeRDpEe tit: The Question Is: Was It Worth It? CHICAGO, July 2—-The handy lade with the figures have decided the G, O. P. convention cont $9,095,- 600, all told, including candidates’ preconvention expenses, Charles Hall wold $5,200 worth of sandwiches jand near-beer and lost $1,100 on the decoration contract. Music cost $600 more than food, costing $5,800, Protacle Sell ‘ As Well as Eves EVANSVILLE, Ind., July 2.—Pre hibition didn’t hurt the pretzel bust -7AT American ting three eliation of 8 reason. Becaung of W. Pratt July 2—- ), | CLEVELANI Mra. L. ¥ ee, 12 yearn old, | Burkett has asked yport here for ath under the back ness, says Willlam Stadler, a pretzel }& bill in congress putting a tariff of ‘Three others in ucer here. And there is pretzel ww | $5 per bird on imported song bird: unhurt when ft | pre ering, too, Stadler says the th, | “It's to save the American bird bu ver e back of the car) price is up 3 or 4 cents a pound nen nya she w ae the girl's neck lmince the nation became wetless 48, 1 pa te tothe bolt rf : lice clock, when G. W. Krippner,|Lovelace, Blanche Maureen. Se | the janitor, ry t 304 Siet W att » aoe DIVORCES GRANTED | [HEARD HIM SAY Roth. M John. | HE'D SHOOT "EM ALI H " | } Cart Norman, room 228 Newport | [ove | ment and witnessed the s Ww jsaid he was the man w Hathaway to put + w “I told him,” a fth we didn’t want an a! » +d down there. Then se hare Lnfien barr ped him and ran ba ave. Hathaway cut cloone Si Isabel, 69, 722 10th a I'm ding Rafferty, Frank. 44, itinerant | told janitor to call the police. Hathaway inting Leen at teetetody ty *2"""| Demos Here to y. hoo y ony “ ” Rien sar, Y'1) stione Talk “Platform | There w © no formal wees 4 by questions by Li Pi iu b forn 5 ent ht | The ~ TEETH X-RAYED FREE AT THE REGAL DENTAL OFFICES I and 10:30 a. m, this opportunity. . The X-Ray Will Quickly Disclose Abscessed Teeth if They Exist And abscessed teeth are one of the most dangerous, if indeed, not the MOST danger- ous form of tooth trouble. The reason is that sed tooth continually manufactures deadly poisons, which are taken directly into the system, and very often cause very serious an absce disorders of the human body. Stomach and Digestive Troubles Diseases of the Eye Disorders of the Ear Throat Troubles Spinal Diseases and the éld bugaboo “Rheumatism,” _are just a few of the many illnesses that are now reco medical profession as very often coming from abscessed tee’ given off from the pus sacs around the roots of the These the The deadly poisons h morning between the hours of 9 a. m. Please come as early in the morning as possible, as a great many people naturally want to take advantage of ized by infected: tooth attack the most vulnerable spot they can find, and there they congregate. Wherever this spot is there is sure to be trouble. Pain, swelling and inflammation are very likely to follow. Taken all in all, an abscessed tooth may be considered almost as dan- gerous as a rattlesnake. But unlike the rattlesnake, the abscessed tooth does not always give warning before it strikes, It does its deadly work very often without the slightest warning to the unfortunate victim as to where the real source of the ‘trouble is. The tooth may be perfectly sound and healthy appearing on the surface, feel entirely all right, too. and it may That is where the work of the X-ray comesin. The X-ray pictures will quickly show the doing. Our Dental Service Besides the brand new, up-to-date dental service includes: Expert Graduate Registered Dentists Every one of whom has his cer- tificate from the State Dental Board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair, in plain sight of all. Most Reasonable Prices Made possible by the very large volume of business which we do. It stands to reason that we can afford to take a smaller profit on the indi- vidual case than an office which does only half or one-third of the volume that we do can possibly afford to take. Best of Materials That is the only kind we use at this office. Painless Methods Our painless methods of dentistry X-ray machine, with which we are | ving very fine success, indeed, our | | ui broken-down tissues caused by the abscessed condition. ¢ ‘This permits the dentist to work intelligently and know exactly what he is have brought us to such a point of perfection that we can perform prac- tically any and all kinds of dental ng without hurting the patient a bit. Guaranteed Work All work that leaves this office is guaranteed to give satisfaction by an ironclad guarantee, which is ‘signed both by the operator who did | the work and by L. R. Clark, D. D. S., owner and manager of this of- fice, who is thoroughly responsible. Absolute Sanitation This is a hobby with us. We have spent a great deal of money to pro- vide the most modern and efficient equipment for the thorough sterili- zation of all instruments. All at- tendants are dressed in spotless white at all times, Free Examination We will gladly examine your teeth thoroughly without charge. We will consult with you about your dental needs, If you need work done, we will tell you what it will cost. All this without cost or obligation to you. Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third and U; In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists Sure Diagonally Across the Street From the Postoffice, Be LANY. ATTENDANTS. ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES to Get to the Right Place ek cen eee nae

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