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Tonight fair; east Weather and moderate rly winds Temperature Last 2 6. Wednesday, south- Hours Minimum, 55. X WINS DEMO NOMINATION On the Issue of Americanism T here Can Be No Compromise TheSeattle Star ORAL ALARA ™ E@ DITION i: AS IT SEEMS TO ME DANA SI SLEETH The harp at Nature's el strung Has never ceased to play; he song the stars of morning swung Has never died away. And prayer is made, and praise is piven By ali (Rings near and fer The ocean looketh up And mirrors every star to heaven time I get back to t countr I notice that I relish the old pas toral classies, I prefer Homer to Poe, and the | Fural odes of Horace to the Smart Bot. Plutarch, Milton, Phus, the Spectator, the ancient lays and iaca that ame fresh from the n heart of Nature without sophistry, cant or smartness, There is a definite reaction that takes place in a ho | eaves the ©n sod, bares his head to the nig Winds, and watches the sun in its great rhythm swinging up and up, ™ and over, and then. down and ‘ Gown, his orange and crimson and Bold ever fresh each’ morr , and ever dyed, cach Vesper time, in the Velvet black and blue and purple ©f infinite ether. I think all farmers feel Hesiod, Jose Rollins, alt this, whether they can express it or not. n in I think this being born « the lap of the fresh fu earessed by the benign breath the little winds from the great Woods is what keeps men in t te thé toll and t and the frequent Gisappointment, and lack of just > reward. If we be sons of God, and there some indications to prove that are—or were—surely, only as Bet back to the primal cause, as lg@ve the manmade celis, and 4 cities, and, In every pore of us, breathe the suniight, and the Mir, and the breath of the hay field, @nd of the new-plowed orchard, do ‘We resume our divinity. ose w oh ETTING back to the old, simple annals and phil- Osophies of the race al ways shows me how far we have strayed from the path of content. One cannot read the annals of the old Greek states, and ponder on the sort of men there were on earth in those days, without - ing somewhat ashamed of human ity: today. It you wish a contrast, read the current accounts of the conven tions of the two “great” political parties, and then turn to Plutarch and read the account of the Spar tan state under Lycurgus. There you will find an account of the candidate who was running for the office of one of the 300 leaders of the state. He was defeated, and he danced with joy that in Sparta there were 300 better men than himee!f. ‘When I discover a modern poll gticlan who openly rejoices that be ‘was defeated, and that the state is Diessed by the election of the better man, I'll begin to believé our mod- ern theory of government has something more to it than Sparta had at the dawn of liberty. ore ODAY the chief chore of tens of thousands of grown men and women in every great city Is to amuse their fellows. Clownship is our most highly paid profession. The man who, with a pair of silly feet, can stir a laugh, and the man who can fall t custard pie quaintly—these m: are more highly paid than presi denty, or professors, or ministers; ore highly paid be more ©. popular, because the a real power over the mass of the peo ple. But when men dwelt under the stars, and in spirit reached out and became one with the icy solftudes of the cloud-shrouded mountain peaks, flat feet and the ability to wrigtle the ears and the art of slapstick were not the arts chiefly prized by the sons of men. In nine months of life in the most beautiful city of the country, I never reall nor @ saw a sunset mountain, no moonacape out here on the tat the Columbia, I feel sum the fairy parade of the moon, and attendant stags each night. One are light will ruin any and the winds from-the forests and the voices of the treetops er venture even to the outmost bounds of a city. I believe there is a defini fological and historic bond be men and the in the infancy of the rac eradied amid the etern that gave us our stre and of mind, and I E whenever the majority of our lead ers, of our writers, our preacher moonscape, fresh soll I belle believe th and our chers, become wholly sophisticaf@a, wholly citified, en tirely surrounded by routine and entirely removed from all natural truth and natural uty, our ation is headed tow dissolu tip Met any tired city man spend a night alone under the stars, rolled fn @ binanket, under a great cedar, with @ mountain stream chatter ing beside him, and then let him gay whether the night brought him peace and knowledge or no, VJAPAN WAGING » SECRET WAR OF IMPERIALISM! 1 | | | | | | | | Wet Convention Held nN CONTROL | Judge Gordon's Court | ‘Today noon, ond Ch Mattor May 8, 1899, at the Postoffi at S#attia, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1179) Per Year, by Mall, $5 t 89 VOLUME 23. —— . SEATTLE, WASH, TUESDAY, JULY 6, “1920. eee i, ig TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE 163 Ballot for J.Barr Leqorne FOREST FIRE Co= Family AT REDMOND 5, Rather in Doubt Seattle Cox to Vote ra | | ing—and Vice Versa Seattle Fire Fighters Help a pig mony onl : Check Flames at Chelsea; | vore Will the clans gather round the Losses $200,000 One hundred and sixty-three dele » to the Morning After conven in Judge John B. rt Tuesday unanimously several wet, slippery planks Gordon's adopted for their platform nd without a dissenting banners of their namesaker? vote noniinated John Barr Leqorne | Some of ‘em will—and the others ae 4 | * “ as thelg candidate, first, last and all| Forest fires at Redmond and Chel | |, . Mask Torn From Nipponese Opera- ‘i tin |e en oppories sides of take Wan (7 (Nomination for Vice President to B The convention war called to or ,| Consider the case of Charles } . : * . ington, were reported under centro! ide y udge Godtdo ‘The roll oa Co 370 Jenamore ave. is e | tions in Siberia; Conquest Is don hy Tae oho. Re ol lh ee ere tomono wort, Gow 2704 Densmore aves ats wits Rushed Thru Today as Democrats _ je Ron mead oO he cw h ways, iret cousin of ne dtomary “present,” delegates signi. |Of Umber was destroyed and two ; a Sole Aim and Object Ge Ghats’ sracancs "ty" cepision | héenan heed fo, the’ grevhd at mea, [OMS EOTeCnOr. Hut will that otade Plan Adjournment | guilty.” Judge Gordon recognized | mond |him to boost Cox for president” BY JACK MASON ech “delegate, saving “Pine! 882) govera; nundred volunteer fire | sed. net. Charles ‘Cox 1 strong} M, San ‘HUGH BAILLIE | SHANGHAI, Chita July 6.—Behind a screen of strict) John Rarr Leaorne’s nomination fighters participated in a four days’ |") Om OS eacnitien eatied on! AUDITORIUM, San Francisco, July 6.—The democ! | military censorship, Japan is boldly, arrogantly, pushing her | 8% made almost withous opposition pry mae hs Boag, Ape ta ot eats i! "' national convention met at 12:45 p. m, today to nominate @ y censors , #ape - ve © ~ 7? Several native sons, wever, were 0a fire Was finally blocked Monday |the telephone today, two were sure » ne project to conquer and absorb the ‘maritime provinces Of jiso present. creating much disturb | PURHt by backfires and a small hove ‘they were NOT related to the presi bap Det han Pai gn Te cae Ay poser: h Siberia ance. Among them were J. Ginger carried out from the city by Bat | dential candidate, One we lated, | an * ody ranklin D. Roosevelt as the ng } aah al C wan given a roun.|talion Chief J. B. Kinney and two ‘e** nee, but the New York delegation had not decided wh | A real war of aggression is in progress, comparable to (00 jon, noma. dele. firemen from Station No, 11. A/#"d the others were ‘uncertain to place him formally in nom-| that begun by Germany in 1914. It is like the Prussian pyies ay ng time | SMa! gurage was the only bullding| Mire. Chirke Cox, $048 Meridian ‘ HARDING PLEASE! attack both in the ruthless methods used and in the great) b> confusing him with a well-known ge 4 na (atte declares that the fact that | RO Oto delegation was! D rz ric! 2S > " arr ry coveter . »/ faxorite, nicknamed “Drug Store; At Redmond the flames, whipp they are both democrats and Bap-| “ natural richness of the wide territory coveted by the one |hy a brisk wind and far out of reach |tiety jafeuffigiont to decide that par.| Waiting to hear whether Gov- THAT “NEWSBOYS” invader. . po of howe lines, put up a stubborn re ‘tieular Cox vote in the governor's! ernor Cox hai y RIES OF GRAPO any preference ; : : ; . xt of a | niwtance to the fighters. Gaining the | ayo ‘ ; ba | This war is being conducted on the flimsy pretext of a AMONG THE SLOGANS Set cr cha Lin’ back er: Medinsees fom a A page a |for his running mate on the “friendly occupation,” to restore law and order. It is actu-| | Crivs of srapo, saki and moonshine | i.e) icked up two xmall dwellings ser ernie tata tied we ken) ee ‘org ator# Warren G. Harding, ally a grim and terrible drive to spread the confines of the (Riey7ples the conven om at Var before their headway was stopped. | guider Gad he te. Gietinetie’ a4 es | The damage to Umber at Redmond Governor James M. Cox, of Ohio raphed from Marion anese . any « © delegates ¢ 7 de or" t, b he is not © sure of a | AMERICAN AND BRITISH GOVERNMENTS Gee; deiantin dae, haaines Rel 66 da: Gee te toate. Ot tas ocratic candidate for president of ernor James M, Cox, democi KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON shan Riese aan tha Spetared sn, 18 wore, oppbest to Governor| the, UaMed States, nominee ‘ : Maver -egatn... al for Witttd Cox, 11 were undecided, and only The nomination came during I recall a much remarked m The governments of the United States and Great Britain’ jennings Bryac two positively for him. the 44th roll call. Samuel B. stoon busi portrayed Fes ay | "i : fi Amidon, Kansas national com- as newsboys contending for lare fully informed of its progress and purpose They a! ugh Rou ee, of the wasn maton Danan in Harding «survort Te | | Saltteethan avd 6, MeAdeo leader, White Hoss. aelimeeee a elegation, protested that he ’ to have been prophetic. As | know, because they have secret intelligence agents scattered | thruout the Far East. |_ Thus far, however, they have taken no steps to thwart | Japan’ ‘8 aggressive purposes, nor even to inform their peo-! ples of what is going on. | Japan hopes for a free hand in her war of conquest, for ‘security from interruption or interference, thinks the United States, Great Britain and other allied THEY CELEBRATED their own domestic prob- | THE powers are up to their necks in !lems, and in the general European mess, nearer home. | Frem private sources of the utmost reliability Th \ because sh@/s0 1 took a few more.” | received information about Japan's war in Siberia that) | should open the eyes of the world. It comes by secret chan- nels, from Vladivostok, which Japan has sought to shut off from the world’s view. The facts I present cannot be gainsaid or denied. . The various foreign governments cannot make pubife the reports of their own secret agents without proving all this and much more which I cannot tell at this time without going beyond the positive information at hand. Japan’s new war in Siberia began late in the night of April 4 with the capture of Vladivostok from the Russ provisional government. It was accomplished by a treac jerous coup d'etat against provincial officials with whom Japan had been dealing on a supposed basis of friendship | and peace. HUNDREDS OF CIVILIA? SHOT DOWN IN STREET: During that night, and succeeding days, hundreds of peaceful, inoffensive civilians were shot down in the streets of Vladivostok and: other Siberian cities. The total numbered thousands—how many thousands no one ever will know. dren who happened to be in the streets, and who offered |no resistance. Many of these dead were buried secretly, by night, to conceal as far as possible the direct evidence of unprovoked, wholesale murder. In at least one instance, where THERE WERE NO WOUNDED! The coup d'etat was planned with military cunning. was executed without a hitch. It was a complete surprise. In this it was typically Japanese, like the attack, without | notice, by which Japan began her war against Russia in | February, 1904. Japanese soldiers now rule the occupied territory with an iron rod, merciless in severity, intended to wipe out all hope of resistance, MOVE MEANS JAPAN’S |GETTING READY FOR RACE WAR | The prize Japan seeks is big. It is a very |of territory, bordering the Sea of Japan, the ( | tary and the Sea of Okhotsk. izing Japan's crowded millions. It has great wealth of | mineral resources for Japan’s rapidly expanding industri | In Japanese hands this Siberian territory will be an ine haustible storehouse of military suppties for a war of world conquest, as well as a great breeding ground of himan cannon fodder for such a war. Only three things may stand in the way of Japan's suc- | ; in grabbing Eastern Siberia: | ONE—The desperate resistance of the sturdy, patriotic | Siberian peasants, who will fight against Japanese domina- tion to the point of extinction. TWO—Possibility of financial panic, industrial depres- |sion and popular revolt of the Japanese people at home, | struggling under a terrible burden of taxation. | THREE—Bold action by the governments of the United States and Great Britain, and perhaps others, acting in | eae “4 ner Japan ie ¢ evry and sa mae ‘18 REGIMENTS JAPAN CABINET OFREDS LOST GETS A SHOCK | LONDON, July 6.—General Wran- rOoKYO, (Pelayed.)—The hundreds were killed, It arge stretch wlf of Tar-| | July 6 anti-Bolshevist ler uth | diet thrown por in wan into an uproar Russia, surraypded and annihilated | today by et made by a mem 1% regiments of Bolshevik cavairy|ber that. cabinet members had nd took 19,000 prisoners, the Brit-| profited on the stock exchang war office announced during the recent slump. ‘ ish today. | | Only 150 men of the entire Bolshe- vik force escaped, the report said, ‘The member was ofdered to sub- stantiate his charges It has wide areas for colon-| dead Elks to Meet i in Most of the dead were unarmed men, women and chil-| apport, seeing the tide sweeping toward Cox, moved that the rules be sus- pended and he be declared the unanimous choice of the oy Cox families, their enthusiasm will | no pane be © dampened somewhat by City Utilities Chief, Garitg, GBs. In’ Seattle ‘woo't do} Amid scenes of tumultuous joy, Mi c Says So | nekiae Sind spii 1080 for the re) with mundreds of delegates cheering P Put P. Harding, 6211 Fitth ave.|#"d yelling, the motion was carried Geattie Sitneys will operate here |N. E...for instance, declared himself with @ thundering shout of ayes. ifor the last time Tuesday, if they |for McAdoo until he learned Cox} The finish came after the conven- lobey. the order issued by Caf H wuperintendent of public lidn't belong, j derision wan this way.” be explained. | “" had a few and thourht I was “| peeves; Uttie drunk. And being drunk 3/ lconctuded I was seeing double and hadn't had as many as I imdgined, but was greeted with | congra’ vietory.” DRYS MAY PUT UP OWN TICKE late you on your a nad been nominated. Now Harding | tion had been in session-—eave for & ls preparing to eupport @ox, for he| brief dinner recess—since shortly after 10 a. m. yesterday. FOURTH The tce whortage why keenty felt | Reeves, 7 several delegat whe Were | Utilities. Reeves ordered the jitneys |!s by no means a republican ’ AVE | dubbed “ewolled esas” Y their | Off the street by midnight of July 6! Om the other hand, Mr& A. Hepp The deadiock was broken after the po - neighbors. : | A report of the city utilities com: | Harding. 2 16th ave, declared: | 38th ballot, when Attorney General Prohibitionists Divided It was rumored that some dele. | Mittee recommending that all jitney “Of course we will vote for Seni of | Palmer withdrew and released his Cc S gates had been indulging in social | @Pplications now om file be dented /Harding.” and we felt foolish for|Gelegates. Cox got most of the votes | Ox Success activities by doing the latest “spiral! ¥a# before the city council Tuesday |asking. “No, he ts no relation, but|Palmer released. and as balloting | —_— |waitz” up Main st." afternoon for considergtion we are REPUBLICANS progreswed he gained steadily, while; CHICAGO, July 6.—Ni he city treasury was enriched) Prosecutions will be brought Mrs. Mildred Hardirig, 2914 Ninth) MeAdoo's strength declined corre tion of Gov. Cox as the deme $1.620 py the convention, each dele. aeainst fitneurs operating ave. W also declared herself for, sPondingly. cratic presidential nominee gnte paying $10 as the price of his Wednesday in defiance of the city | Harding On the 434 pallot the McAdoo! certain the placing of an a1 . Not since the state went dry OfMlinance, Reeves declared. The) “Cox for Harding” and “Harding | forces began to crumble. The 44th| “dry” ticket in the Geld, accor®: were there as many reste. for Penalty is fixed at’ $100 fine or 30! for Cox” will apparently not be un call was still in progress when ing to a statement here today by drunkenness” over a single week- | “ays in fail common. in 8 and elsewhere end came. The count stood: Cox| Virgil G. Hinshaw, national ond period. These 163 celebrated the| Officiais tn the city comptrolier’s i 69914, McAdoo °70, From 728 to 730! chairman of the prohibition par Fourth for two days: department we busy Tuesday Door Left Unlocked, votes, depending on the total cast,| ty’s mational committee. anes checking the signatures on the peti were required tonominate, Michigan| “The rum forces have WATER SHUT-OFF NOTH tion calling for a special election on He Loses $111 Cash 094 passed and was caucusing evi-| maneuvered well to secure m Water will be whut off on the Jitney question. Charles West left fix door unlocked | 4®tlY Preparing to throw its“whole | tions to their liking In both olay Juneau et, between 1th ave, S. at 117% Washington st. Monday | Vote to Cox* Colorado, thru its chair-| ties, Harding, the champion’ of and 18th ave. &, and in the dix night. He fell asleep and Js minus; ™#" Was in the act of changing its | seven year clause in the 14th trict north of Juneau st., south $111 cash and a $129.29 check Tues- | Yt and casting it solidly for Cox. | ment, conceived by the wets in Peditl st. east of Duwamish ave. day. At this juncture Amidon appeared | of defeating it, and Cox, the imp and west of ith ave. 8, sup _ —_—- jon the rostrum. The weer tans put able and schooled enemy of the 7 y the old Georgetown | | ¢ his motion pandemonium broke loose. | forces of the country. ee ie ca Gistoasien nals 7 iS DUE TONIGHT Takes a Kickful ; Chairman Robinson's voice could) “If Diogenes had returned with if om § a m. to 12 m scarcely be heard as he roared the lantern and searched the countl ha . Quart to Mayor! question, The yell with which it was/over, he could not have found It was a quart bottle, and it was carried neatly lifted thé roof., There- almost Tull of the stuff that has after confusion reigned. better adapted to the fulfiliment the purposes of the liquor elen = Sent by President to Sit at 5 been making the residents of Queen - sy YON’ on ” Los Angeles Next Hearings Anne hill wild Ouse" | DEADLOCK CONTINUES OAWvith both oktiGidates of taal cunea: July 6.—William N William F. Howe, 420 New York|UP TO 3TH BALLOT patrise Uneatistuctery, Hiss of San Francisco, James A. Allport, mining engineer, | block, placed it on Mayor Caldwell's| Up to and including the 38th ballot, | 6a that if the prohibition pal hosen grand exalted ruler of the appointed by President Wilson to sit desk Tuesday. the deadlock which had gripped the | 54°00 ‘nominate a ticket of its : tlhe at thelr convention here today as the fifth member of the board| “This,” quoth he, “is what’ haa/convention since it started voting |{ “tie, MUM OE tt SC ots SS to succeed Frank L. Rain, of Fair bearing the wag ntroversy be been driving the people of Queen | late — e sib ats eS oe tna ‘ > bury, Neb. tween the Washington coal mine op-| Anne crazy of late, Look out! Don’t t of relie! ter the 38th, ree | einions y selected an the city for the next | five in Seattle Tuesday night wigs will devour the kalsomine off|Peared on the rostrum and an-| 00) OPly Hn culty i Staal rs convention by the Hike today Allport's appointment came after the wall!” jRounced that Palmer unconditionally | ft" Tes ire intended for Iemma 2 long deadlock between miners and need his delegates = ometia®ly ing pt J pe i ‘ ates tuhen while in the alcoholic content of ligue O-minute re e Ke als adjusted themselves to the changed situation. Wh batloting was resumed, it looked as if the deadlock still exist- ed as strong as ever. Both Cox and BANDIT PROBE McAdoo had captured large blocks | COM ‘ . Of the Palle legates and there| “The national cohvention of th | prohibition party will be held at Line” Are. Arrested by Deputies in| vere net enough other votes in the | rators following their inablity to seeict a fifth member to the local me. fon board to decide upon a just He hails from Rarns SAYS IT’S VERY. ings rey h will be held in the quar ters of the Washington Coal Operat above of one-half of x per cent, provided in the Volstead act, then the dry forces will be in a sad plight for a representative in the presiden j tial race, so far as the old parties are 7 concerned,” he said. . ors’ rooms © Lyon build it h. : Workers’ Nonpartisan or rooms, in the Lyon building Qaivoad Yan |convention to swing the nomination, coln, Neb. July 21 to, 28. "The mi | so long as both sides held firm, ions of ry people whose represen: — League So Declares ‘DOPE PEDDLER ailroad Ya |"“on''the 40th tailot, Cox had 490] tatives have Knocked at the door of | y Shee! string and McAdoo 467, the rest scattered, | both old party conventions, ded “The liveliest corpse ever buried. 1 ved by Sheriff Stringer’s de | The tint’ gave Cox4 ig and ‘Me. ing they. would, support no wae pri: partment to have inside information ministration nor silent-platform, will on the reign of robberies which have | be notified that the prohibition party ~ fallen over the Cumberland district | is in the field, ready for the cam- during the last fortnight, Erick | paign, and invites the co-operation of » league, by Adoo 480 On the 42nd Cox mounted to | while McAdoo slipped back to 42 Cox, on the 43rd, had 568, and Me- | is the workers’ nonpartisan viciously attacked labor officials and: \ w 0%, which tion state fede Frank, 27; Fred Holdergge, 26, and | delegates assembled here last & . | Adoo 412 all the hosts of prohibition thruout Frank Peterson, 30, are being held ” week,” D. J, McClure, chairman of | |Chang Fook Wanted TO RAH sc tiwaetigntien” Susnday “in oan: ‘Then, during the 44th, the McAdoo | the land. Re \the Spokane county bi of the county jail. structure toppled. Arkansas gave baa EAe ow bh rie izati 1 in an Away ain cts were arrested tate| COX all her 18 votes. Florida flung | |, WASHINGTOMS Joy ae ‘out hal organizati ay night. provAing about the|im her 12. Georgia, which had gone tions that the democratic drys will” | interview today Chang Fook, indicted by the last ific wards in Renton by |to McAdo@ at first, after being re-|NOt oppose the Reserve. G f | «an an attempt to bury and blot! grand jury for alleged violation of | 1 Sher: 1 By liensed by Palmer, had already |¢™or Cox because of reported antly n | Deputy Sheriffs Matt Starwich, . sox | Prohibition beliefs, were seen today it from the minds of the common |the narcotic laws, was arrested by | “Rud” Loveall and Stewart Campbell, | *Witched to Cox. Indiana gave Cox| MiNi bout aie Me ht was bitter and un.|Deuty. United ates.) Marshal|trank had a gun in his«poasession, | her solid block of 30, Kentucky gave] When Senator Sheppard, exas, ary people, the fight was bi Thomas Waters, ag he was about to " : “lal! her 26,. Massachusetts smashed | leader in the senate, approved hig It ix believed by the officers that the But like the preaching | ma ‘A few McAdoo strong- | 2omination. “Hearty principled. his ¢ on a ship bound for aps other two men discarded their guns, |!n with 35 congratulations on your” of the aposties of old, the more /the Orient, Sunday night » three men tally with de: ». holds, sdch as Oregon and Texas, they persecute, the faster - Fook was scheduled for trial June| tions of the men whe Attempted, to| held the line to the last, but the | nomination and I ee your a x es 22, but failed to appear on that date! hold up an automobile by building a| Movement developed into a land-| tion by an overwhelming majority, message will spread. and forfeited the $500 cash bail he | barricade across the highway near|Slide,.and as Cox's total increased, Sheppard wired Cox We will be at the Yakima con hed put up ag security, He laid low, | Enumelaw late Friday night. | the excitement in the auditorium in- aE vention with a full dele ation from|and nothing further wax known |creased correspondingly, until it was Rescue Baby From 3 each county, our organization ¢0| about him until a tip came to the au J a maelstrom of noise. es operating with the furmers’ non-|thorities that ook was about to BY RGLAR GETS Ra cada renting ona 100-Foot Well partisan league, the committer of |jeave the country, Deputy Marshal CANARY BIRD) jubltators, facing the storm of up-| HERRICKS, L. 1, Juy 6. 48, private soldiers-sailors league.) Waters went down to the boat and| An artistic burglar stole John Alm-|roarjous cheers from the rapidly} Launch, 19 months old, tumbled int railway men's welfare sue and arrested the fugitive |gren's canary and of his phono-| growing ranks of victors, Amidén|/a 100-foot well at his father’ any other progressive organizations | ook is scheduled for an early|graph records during Almgren's| strode to the front of the rostrum) He was rescued without a scrateh, going our way politically~-the way|hearing before the United States) Fourth of July vacation, Almgren|and stood looking over the|The well contained mud and slime of love and justice. commissioner, lives at 1826 Sist ave. (Turn to Page 2, Column 4) sufficient to break the child's fall, the ; line No, the disgusting ‘“shimmie”|find the square dance, the quadrille|charge of the benefit | Pyncheon is now employed by act, to be precise, will not be tolerated .at the Seott and the polka on the extensive pro-| William Pyncheon, formerly a} P es theatre, He told Barr to-| ‘Tickets for the dance—the third Kiddies’ benefit ball * | gram, |deputy sheriff, who was with Deputy |day that he would have an excep: | benefit dance for the penniless widow But | This was the ultimatum delivered! Sheriff Robert C, Scott when Scott| tional Vaudeville program to enter-|of Deputy Sheriff Scott and her two What isn't seen won't be prohibited, |today by William ("Big Bill") Barr, | was shot to death in a gunfight with | tain folks between dances. children~are now on sale. They And that all—even the old folks—|master of ceremonies and chairman | desperadoes, has promised an enter:| Every theatre in town, Pyneheon fait the hande of al gene may be entirely satisfied, they willjof the deputy sheriffs’ committee in| tainment feature de luxe, sald, will contribute an act—a head: