The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 28, 1920, Page 16

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Deciding Contest | m Sir Thomas Lipton’s _ Challenger Shamrock NEW YORK, July 28.—With “the America's cup saved to the York Yacht club for at least year, Resolute, the white ‘the finish line 12 minutes and seconds ahead of Shamrock hhae ended Bee carver. With no celebration, the Herres | ff yacht will be taken to the yards) diamantied, Nor wil! Lipten’s challenger race again, She be left behind when her owner to England, there to prepare | fifth challenger for 1922, and to) his fifth Shamrock. for the next challenger nder will not go forward un various suggested changes in and conditions have been thor ne by the New York Yacht series has undoubted sadiatied yachtsmen that radical fre needed if real tests of and spirited contests are It ts altogether likely that) “cup race has been sailed over 2 ly Hook course. ees COURSE “the opinion of Charles Nichol- Shamrock’s builder, who has ‘with American yachtsmen, the | ile Nature of wind and sea con pabout the Jersey coast make @l racing impossible. A course off or Newport has been “time gllowance, Shamrock’s| ‘leo may be eliminated. ‘to be the first to wrest the yacht: | supremacy from Amerita, forged ly-white Resolute, dodging fishing fleets and when still far from the stake, tacked to the star-| 7 herself dead ahead of , and the race Was won. question then was whether sloop could make it) to the finish at Ambrose light: | nd the committee boat before Ag gsv- nal s ulstene i i i H z if gf i his inspiration from his fa- John Quincy Adams, who used Nake bim on fishing trips just out- @ She Boston harbor in the little than Adams in the game. Still Hope : to Capture Trophy| DON, July 28.—"That the tem- | wherewith Sir Thomas Lipton/| defeat notably helps to pro-| g00d feeling between the two} English speaking nations goes | saying,” the Daily Mail de- editorially, commenting on ‘the Pitory of the Hesolute over the it; “No ‘peante are quicker than the to recognize sportsman- h We have not abandoned hopes | Fecovering the cup.” ddy, Have You Victory Medal? | fictory medals are not being called | ‘a8 rapidly as the war department Anticipated, according to mem- ' of the army recruiting office hb To obtain the medals, veter "ana should apply to the recruiting Mutual Life building, and ob- Recessary forms. Adams on V Way to Capital Duties FRANCISCO, July 28.—Mrs. Adams, former United Gistrict attorney here, today FRNTME route to Washington to take her duties as an assistant United attorney general. July 28.—Picnickers for opening a switch that two cars carrying 150 log- Monday and resulted in injury ‘bf the men. The accident oc- mile northwest of Copalis, | “the Copalis Lumber Co. logging r Price Paid Samoa Stamps , July 28.--For a com- German Samoa stamps marks, overprinted G. R#., $1,125 was realized at a wale here. It we a record price. May Sit on " Bel; Parliament U of Belgium, July 28.-~ chamber of deputies has deci cided | ert eligible to become and senate. ‘wese only ten dissenting votes. ROBERT EMMONS Thirteen was just like any other numbet for the Resolute. THE SEATTLE STAR Under the management of Robert W. Emmons and with Skipper Charles Francis Adams at the wheel, the America’s cup is still ours. After a series of 13 challenges covering 69 years “of international yacht racing, the Resolute kept up America’s winning streak. MAN INJURED Bolsheviki on Wave BETWEEN CARS) of World Conquest, Three Ribs Broken in Freak Accident injured two men Tuesday night. C. R. Whitne: 43, salesman for Grote-Rankin ‘was cranking his auto tn front of down. The auto backed suddeniy and crushed Dishman between it and his own car. He was injured in- ternally, bruived about the head and three of his ribs were broken. Whit. ney lives at 17 W. rfield st. He ee been visiting at Dishman’s PARCEL POST IN AIRSHIPS NEXT Planning “Blimp” Across Country WASHINGTON, July 28.—The postoffice department now has be- fore it a proposal to carry parce! post from New York to San Fran. cisco by “blimps,” it was announced today. eA representative of a New York firm, who claims to have a type of limp” capable of carrying 15 tons, and able to travel faster than trains, is sponsor for the proposal. ‘The postoffice department has asked for bids for carrying the mail. Their bids, which are to be opened September 10, are on routes from Cleveland to Detroit, Pittsburg to St. Louis, New York to sc and New York to w York to Atlanta. HE LEAPS FROM WELLER BRIDGE |Unicentificeé Man Commits Suicide The body of a man who commit.! ted suicide by leaping 25 feet from the viaduct at Fourth ave. 8. and Weller st., Tuesday night, is in the county morgue, unidentified. He is ahout 72 years old. He died in city hospital four hours after his leap, Hebrews to Meet to Discuss School Erection of a bullding for the new- ly Incorporated Seattle Hebrew school, 17th ave. and EB. Alder at will be discussed at a mass meeting to be held at the It i# the intention of those behind the new project to provide facilities for the study of the Hebrew lan- guage, Bible, Talmud, Wterature and religious code, free of charge. Bee Keepers Will Picnic August 4 Washington aplarists will picnic, August 4, near the Grangér bridge across the Yakima river, A short business meeting of the State Kee keepers’ association will be followed with sports, Honey prices, advertis ing and the disbanding of the North west Honey Producers’ league will be taken up at the meeting. The pic- pie will begin at 10 a, m. New York has» motion picture theatre with a seating capacity of 5,300 Route | the | Bikur Chotum| synagogue at 8:15 Thursday evening, | Declares Ludendorff WASHINGTON, July %3%—In a Diem to the “civilized nations of th | world as a man who knows war,” Gen. Eric Ludendortf, former Ger eared wer leader, declares that com- on th a mal for the Bolsheviki in Poland Goeaeione over Europe and finally the whole world. His memorandum has been receiv. ed in official circles. Ludendorff says that Poland's fal! will cause the fall of Germany and Crecho-Slovakia and eventually the other civilized nations of Europe. ‘His statement follows: MUST FIGURE ON ADVANCE INTO GERMANY | “Bolshevism is a monster that | must advance to exist. It is advanc- ing now, a gradyal progress and crushing midiand sea and the Atlantic. Bolsheviat armies would attack to- ward the middie of May and defeat the Poles. “The world at large must, there- fore, figure with a Bolahevist ad vance toward Berlin and Prague. | Lithuanta i# already joining soviet | Russia and is demanding a slice of |the Prussian province of East Prus sia. The moment will come when) Bolshevist armies will menace Ger. |many and’ Cascho Slovakia. \the frontiers of China, Afgbanistan, | | Persia and India and is now prepar ing to continue his progress, “The HBolshevist enterprises en counter resistance east of Lake Rai- kal, on the part of Japan and Gen Semenoff. The tenacity ard the su |perior shrewdness of the Japanese make it probable that the Bolshe- vista will meet reverses in quarter. However, the Bolshevists have the inner line in the direction of India and Persia, no leas than in Europe, Japan's turn will be later. “The Bolshevists have England's | world power to face in both direc tions, but in addition we must re member they must face what the world calls civilization, besides. | A conflict between the Bolshevists and England is not the only problem, ‘The world could not af‘ey ko be an onlooker, The real problem is a conflict between civilization and bar- bari#m, “The prodigious resource of Bol- shevist propaganda tackled both its far-flung fronts long ago with per. fect logic. Wp must get used to re- garding propaganda as a combative resource of the first rank. The Bol shevists made more masterful use of it than Great Britain, France and the United States did to compass the |ruin of Germany. “Their propaganda is stirring the ‘|masses of India to the depths of their heart. It is successfully bridg: ing the gulf that subsists between |the Moslems of India and the dis. ciples of the native religions. “In Asia Minor and Persia “and all the way into Arabia and Persia | the Boishevist propaganda conducts its moves in the anti-Christian, pan- Islamic spirit. “Poland and Rumania are under mined, The Bolshevist propaganda operates with more caution In Fin- lund, Sweden and Norway. ‘These countries are expected to |drop in the lap of Bolshevism with jout noticeable effort. The great ob Jectives of the Bolwhevists are in Germany and perhaps Czecho-Slova- kia and Austria. SAYS SOVIETS ARE GAINING POWER “Bolshevik propaganda in Ger- many amsumes a great variety of shapes. With sociali its preach Sena adveseie was on capital and mean a red wave) everything between the/ “It waa easy to foresee that the) emtablishment of @ proletarian dic tatorate; with German nationalists ite minsionariea demand deliverance of the country from the entente yoke; manufacturers and merchants are promised commercial connec . altho every one knows the Bolahevists can give nothing but can only take, Yet we are compelled to acknowledge that the Bolshevist propaganda is a perfect muccens. “The proof of it is that the Bot shevists already have an advance guard stationed in Germany, which | yearns passionately for the conquer. ing approach of the Bolshevist arm, jew am the signal to hurl ite own following into the fray. remainder of comprehend tion and cheerfully allows its vigt-| |lance to,be drugged. “I venture to assume that the Bol sheviat managers operate with sim: ceen all over the world, including the United States. | Wanizations, like a stimulant or like |a narcotic poison, It rallies the pro. jletartat and puts sensible citizens to | |aleep. The bourgeois world will soon have a rude awakening. The armies of soviet Russia are gaining ground in Persia. They have a firm hold | jon the territories near Baku and/ lalong the Donech. |lion in Asia Minor ts overcome. The “Lenine has advanced his lines to} | Egyptians and Arabs are taking up | arms. Even the} Germany refuses to! Roisheviam's construc: | ilar methods and with “kindred suc-| It affects feeble or) Turkey's rebel. | FEAR SAILORS f DIE IN BLOWUP Tanker Avalon Explodes Off East Coast ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 28 -—The entire crew of the tanker Ava lon in believed to have perinhed in the explosion and fire which oe curred on the vensel Tuesday The Avalon was about 20 miles south of | this city when the explosion oc curred | Government coast guards have) searched the waters about with « hope that some of the crew had en-| caped in lifeboats, but the search has proved fruitless, ‘There in # iaht possitility that an excape was fected and the boats picked up by an unknown vounel. | THIEF SNATCHES $4,000, ESCAPES Shanghai ~ Woman Also Loses Wrist Watch Police are searching for an adept| purse snatcher, who robbed Mra.! I) Sophie Poes, wife of an American merchant now in Shanghal, of a let- ter of credit for $4,000, a gold wrist watch and $42 cash Tuesday after | noon, So skilfully did he snatch the purse, containing the valuables, that Mra. Poes did not notice her jon» until she was aboard a car on her! | way home. She in visiting with her brother, E. Raphael, 1919 Nob Hill |Rotari ns Hear Highway Address| “The nest Highway System in America” waa the subject of talk by Robert F. Hall, of the Washing ton State Good Roads association, be fore the Rotary club, Wednesday | noon, at the Masonic club rooms. | Secretary T. L. Monson reported on the international convention at At | lantle City, The annua} club plenic will be held Saturday, August 1¢ Ba Rainier Lodge Will Hold Smoker Here) Members of Rainier lodge, Inde pendent Order of B’Nal Frith, will hold @ amoker and entertainment at Educational Center hall, 1fth ave. 8.| and Main st, Wednesday at § p. m.! Affiliated members of Seattle and Tacoma lodges will be guests. | ADOLPH BEHRENS, $12 Second ave, W,, filed his candidacy for state representative from the 46th district | | Tuesday afternoon with the ee | auditor, | weight. In sizes for both single and double beds. , good values for $1.45 a pair. extends from the Black sea to ,the| White, with the Rumanians and! | Finns harassing its two wings. These | are merely areas of subordinate con- fliets, Poland, Czecho-Slovakia and Germany are in the decisive axis of| | “In Europe the Bolshevist ‘advance | The Corset Event of the Season at $4.25 An event that enables you to get a better corset for a smaller outlay. Wo- A Jobber’s Clean-Up Brings 1000 Bargains in All- Wool Sweaters At $2.95 and $3.95 || Eleven Slip-On Styles in American Beauty, Peacock | Blue, Turquoise, Copenhagen, Coral and Buff. In all sizes from 36 to 44 THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT SPECIAL Thursday and Friday Only | |40-Pound Felted Cotton Mattress, $10.75 Almost any kind of a mattress at this price would be a remarkable value—but these are very carefully built, covered with durable ticking in floral Patterns, and yastncieed full Lower Prices on Boys’ Footwear | Boys’ Tennis Shoes Reduced, $1.45 Boys’ Calf Shoes, Reduced to $2.35 The Tennis Shoes are of heavy white duck with 14-inch heels, sizes 214 to 54 —very The Boys’ Shoes are of a good heavy, dur- able grade of grain calf; staunch and durable for vacation or hard wear—specially priced at $2.35 a pair Sizes 8 to 1% LOWER MAIN FLOOR—THE that | the shock of the Bolshevik armies view of conditions in Poland. One can probably recognize that the Pol ish republic has not had time to set tle its forndations or rightly to ad | just its administration and finances cipline. “A state of that sort Is unable to observers of European have predicted .will probably take | place: Poland will be engulfed by Bolshevist Russia and it will then curse the men who created it and McAteers on Way to Join Pilgrims John McAteer, of the McAteer Shipbuilding Co,, and his son James left Seattle Tuesday to join in New York a party of Knights of Colum. bus, who are going to France to aid in the unveiling of a statue of the Marquis de Lafayette at Metz next month, Maj. .Gen. Liggett Due From Alaska Maj, Gen, Hunter Liggett, in com- mand of the Western department, is scheduled to arrive here Thursday evening or Friday morning from Alaska, where he has been inspect: ing army posts. AFTER A SHORT ILLNESS, George Andrew Misener, 26, of, Seat- tle, died at Bothell Monday. He is survived by his mother, Mrs, ‘Lydia Jones; three sisters, Mary, Anna and Alta, and four brothers, Roy, Harold, Douglas and Walter Misener, all of ye Arrangements are in charge ) R. Butterworth & Sona. Crecho-Slovakia Is the first coun: try In Europe to adopt the eight. hour day by law, “It is difficult to obtain a clear to innoculate the army with real dis conduct a serious war, So what good conditions | refused to aid it in its death agony.” | men who know values and want to economize will appreciate this offer of “Nemo-Economy” Corsets. Made with very low bust, Empire top, free hip—graduating front steel and elastic section in the back. | White or pink—priced at $4.25. ECONOMY PRICES ON BANDEAUX AND BRASSIERES Bandeaux at 59c Both front and back closing, and made of cotton mesh—sizes 82 to 44. Silk Bandeaux at $1.15 Allover Lace Brassieres at $1.50 CORSET SECTION—-SECOND FLOOR Infants’ Shoes at $2.95 Shoes ‘reduced to $2.95—but- ton style with hand-turned soles —patent or kid with cloth tops —or kid with tip or plain toe. Sizes 1 to 44. wear, Awning Stripes 39c a Yard For protection on sleeping porches, and for porch screens—these Awning Stripes, in red and white stripes, are just the thing. Make them yourself and save; 27 inches wide at 39¢ a yard. THIRD FLOOR ICE CREAM 35c Quart When purchased. with Thermopack con- tainer. With a Thermopack container we offer ice cream for 35c a quart. Container and _ ice cream, $1.85 Thurs- day. UPPER MAIN FLOOR Broken Ends of Satin-Finish Candy 40c lb. An assortment of different kinds and flavors of delicious Jandy. UPPER MAIN FLOOR Mary Jane Pumps Children’s and« Misses’ Mary Janes with hand-turned or welt soles—footform style, for dress BON MARCHE Little Prices on Little Shoes Children’s Shoes at $2.95 These Shoes have .been spe- cially feduced to $2.95—patent leather, footform style, with welt soles and spring heels. Sizes 814 to 11. Sizes 1112 to 2 at $4.65 Sizes 81% to 11, $3.65 Sizes 5 to 8 at $3.25 A special lot of Mary Janes, sizes 81% to 11, at $3.15. CHILDREN’S SHOE SHOP—SECOND FLOOR Fiber Sweaters $6.95 LIKE A FLASH THEY COME TO US— LIKE A FLASH THEY GO Sweaters that will go quickly because of their good value, their good colorings, their low- ness of price—$6.95. Plain and fancy weaves in plain colors and mixtures— Tuxedo style, full belted coat style with sailor collar and tasseled sash—some contrast- ingly trimmed. SWEATER SECTION—-SECOND FLOOR

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