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

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THE HERE’S MORE ABOUT POLISH DEFEAT STARTS ON PAG: ONE |) fighting which preceded the fall of Lomaa, 16 miles northeast of War saw, According to Advices from the front, they stood up against the Bol sheviki to the last, suffering heavy casualtion, Warsiw dispatches also told of tif arrival there of the rem-| nants of another battalion of women | for the purpose of filling the gaps in ite ranke And reorganizing prepate- tory to fighting the Bolsheviki again. ’ | A dispatch from Bertin declared the Reda had occupied Brest-Litovak, & little more than 100 miles east of Warsaw. This was a strong fortress, but it fell with alight resistance, ac cording to the German version. War.) mw admitted the Russians were at “Rreat Litovak,” but not that the fortress has capitulated, |_ The Polish armistice delegates, | diplomats here were informed today, | \were to demand the following basis |ae to peace terme: ~ |. First, guarantee that Poland will femain independent, and that its tn | jternal affaire will not be interfered ‘with; second, disarmament; third, the armies to stand on the Lioyd George \line gf demarcation, or the military Une, when the armistice ts signed. | Newspapers here severely criticised |the suggestion credited to Winston |Chfrehill, secretary for war, that! Germany be used as a battering ram jagainst the Reds. The idea that |Ludendorff should disarm against the entente, Dut arm against the Bolahe \viki, waa ridiculed. Several members of partiament were planning to interrogate Pre. mier Licyd George about it in the house factory demonstration week EMPRESS UNIVERSAL PIPELESS FURNACE +} —the low cost and ease with which an EMPRESS UNIVER- SAL PIPELESS FURNACE can be installed in any building is causing homebuilders in all parts of the country to discard their old style heating systems and stoves and install this system. —this week a factory representative will be in our store to demonstrate this wonderful furnace. YOU CAN HAVE A WHOLE YEAR TO PAY FOR IT! —read what one of Seattle's 300 perfectly satisfied users of the EMPRESS UNIVERSAL PIPE- LESS FURNACE has te say: March 10, 1919. USS REPORT NEW SUCCESS IANDON, Aug. 3—(Noon)—Tho $717 Belvidere Ave., “4 * Bolshevik forces are operating north- | West Seattle. wy" - east and cast of Warsaw at distances MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS —that’s one of the pleasures we offer during this week of demonstration—you make your own terms as regards future payments. We accept any terms, provided they are reasonable. : TRADE IN YOUR 25% to 50% saving on fuel alone— —it is estimated that a saving of fuel from 25% to can be accom- erg with an ESS UNIVER- PIPELESS FURNACE over [the Polish eapttal, according to the “In the direction of Lomzha (0 |tems said. Warsaw). |rangin from 90 to 130 milee from jmoviet official communique from Moadow today. Bat Te the Bobr and Naral rivers,” the wire “We advanced to the weetward of Bielostok (10 miles northeast of “We occupied Bielsk fapprozima: ly 100 miles east of Warsaw) and the of the ff) Bilsovesn station. OLD STOVE | iit comstraction ot the’ fur |. “Nortease of Kotete we cocunted —we make a liberal] allowance on your old waste pong ao tie law of © number of villages, breaking stub ful heating stove on the purchase price of the EMPRESS UNIVERSAL PIPELESS FURNACE. this week only $15—AUTOMATIC CLOCK DRAFT REGULAR— —to the purchasers of EMPRESS UNIVERSAL Pipeless Furnaces during this week, or those who may arrange this week for installation later, the manufacturers of this Pipeless Fur- nace will give FREE one of these $15— Auto- matic Clock Draft Regulators. You set the clock and it does the rest. Opens the drafts i= the furnace at any hour desired. A convenience you will appreciate, as it insures uniform heat in the early hours of the winter mornings. Free this week. nature. Perfect com! and fect circulation is the reason. communique indicated fighting at varions places on a 150-mile front. CAPT. DWYER SEEKS OFFICE Files for State Insurance Commissioner Robert E. Dwyer, superintendent | of the bond, automobile and marine |insurance depagments of Soely &| | Co. agency tn Seattle, has filed for the office of state insurance commis- stoner on the republican ticket. ‘er ie’ graduate of Yale, and former member of the Washington state legislature. He was commiy. sioned @mptain of infantry in 1917, receiving honorable discharge in March, 19: Mrs. Ince Sees Improvement in Photoplays “My boys have a motion picture joutfit of thelr own, because one can never be sure that the entire bill at show houses is suitable for children to see," says Mra. Thomas H. Ince, | wife of the Los Angeles photoplay | producer, who arrived here this/ morning en route to Alaska with her two boys, William, 11 years old, and Thomas H., Jr., 8 “The types of motion pictures are improving every year and reputable ACOMA: . SCNOENFELD & SONS ite a Pine ki ® Girl, 15, Confesses She Killed Aunt LONDON, Eng., Aug. 2.—A start | ling confession of the murder of Mrw. White in « lonely cottage near Aber. | gavenny, was made by the woman's Printers Banquet gS = Early in the Morn Because 1:30 a. m, was the only time that all the printers were free to attend, Seattle members of the Typographical union gathered at AS IT SEEMS TO ME Labor tem 16-year-old niece, Catherine Primrose | < gheeg ore ia a | Whistance. The girl had been chided | Producers are pmbining to produce | ‘The gathering was in celebration DANA SLEETH jfor staying out late, She got a |My first class plays ir name of the ¢lection of John McParland |heavy mallet and struck her aunt|° ® picture may Lee neoong gen- ag president of the Internationa | a while the latter was asleep eral public that it orb vd 7" of —_ ‘Typographical union last spring, and yes __ they may go to withou' na ppoint- (Starts on Page One) and gradually increase the time as |atrength comes, I'll guarantee ment,” declared the producer's wife. “Tho people themselves control! the type of picture. that is presented | algo in farewell to the three Seattle delegates to the national gathering of the union to be held in Albany, Woman’s Strength Is in Her Tongue? SEATTLE N. Y., August 6. is getting to be very much like yachting—merely a mat ter of wind, HOME Or T ~ 2s HE. V6 | * that in a month the world will be &.lot better place to live in for that person, And it is no alibi to'say y come home “dog tired” from Office or store, You will be fresh er, more rested; you Will sleep bet- ter and do your work better the next day for an hour with the hoe and spade than an hour in the movies, in the auto, or yawning and gossiping on the front porch. After a month in the open air, following the harrow, and hewing at tree trunks, and heaving at tough old roota, I know once more LONDON, Eng, Aug. 2-—The only muscle a woman has got strong er than a man is the muscle of the tongue,” said Judge Cluer of the Shoreditch county court. Noon — Biane's cafe—Thomas Ingerso!! rome luncheon of Beattie Real ansociation wen’ eafetorin——Women's Cox- Roosevelt luncheon. Name and fh Frank Emmet n, Puyallup, Wash. Kathryn 4, Dunbar, Pt, Huron, Mich. dence. Age. to them by the kind of show they patronize, At the same time I be- lieve that most "good producers are making an honest and conscientious effort to give the people what they should want and teaching them to want it, “There is room in the movies for so many people today because so many more pictures are being pro: duced than ever before, Common! sense and some ability and a pur- jail. Hoe was arrested on a charge,) pose will insure most of those who there, and after once getting a place | 2a\there hard work is the thing that held in $1,000 batt, means they will reach the top.” | What it means to be honestly hun- | ery, to enjoy a drink of cold water, |and to sleep like the proverbial log. Pasquale Vellslia, Seattle, Waah, Mast Danatela, Seattle, Waa Angelo Mustello, Beattle, W Carmelia Muntollo, Beattie, 31) Thomas H., Jr., resents the diminu- 34) ttve, and William, who operates the| 17 projector the Ince children use, in Super Electric AMERICA'S LEADING WASHING MACHINE 4-8-C ELECTRIC SHOP 1831 Thiré Avenue Near Pine ‘Try it, You world-weary brother; |try it for a month. Railway Men May Join Third Party Whether the Railway Men's Wel fare league will join with the triple alliance, the Nonpartisan league and the committee of 48, in forming a today at a meeting of the executive commit of the railway men with the state central committee of the Nonpartisa@league. At a meeting Saturday the Non partisan league, the committee of 48 and the triple alliance voted to join to create @ third party and name a ucket, county third party, was to be decided | > Dommick Maatro, #eattle, Armida Malgiers 6 Fred T. Alvord, Be Legal Mabel Burken, Lenal James A. Potter, Seattle, Wash, ... Legal Carrie D. Henley, Keattio, Wash..,.Legal | Charlies M. Burr, Sumner, Wash... 8 | Helen P. Foil, Seattle, Waah 17 Alien Tt. Carpenter, Portiand, Ore, Legal| Holen land, Ore. . Samad Bten 6. N Wash Legal Frances te, Wash, . Legal | m ¥. Morris, Cumberland Rogel, Beattie, Wash. 26 2 willl Y len, Beattie, Bilen Bowman, Beattie, Warh, . John D, W, Caldwell, Gionns Ferry, Idaho Legal ho DIVORCES GRANTE Heron, Thomas, from Mary nists that he will be an “inventor,” * Mrs, Ince and her sons will retufn to California before the opening ‘of school on September 1. i Used Bible Money to Purchase Whisky JERSEY CITY, N. J. Aug. 2— Using for the purchase of whisky $15 given to her by his mother in July, 1918, with which to buy a Bible for his birthday, is one of the charges contained In the divorce action started by Patrolman Fred erick A, Geiger against Mrs, Luc I. Geiger, Geiger swears she dri the whisky, and also charges inti delity, STAR COAL WORKERS ARE RETURNING Miners Complying With Lewis Order INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, Aug, 2— Coal minera, who have been tying up the Iilinols and Indiana fields by Unauthorized strikes, aro returning to work today in compliance with the order of John L. Lewis, union President, according to word at head- quarters of the United Mine Work- orm here. “If the people do not get coal now it will not be the ‘fault of the min- ers.” ab announcement from union headquarters said erik ‘ Coal Strike Now on in Kentucky EVANSVILLE, Ind, Aug 2~ With the unauthorized strike of Coal miners spreading into the Ken- tucky fields, the mi in the “pock ot” district of Indiana did not re lopen today, according to the Indi ana coal trade bureau here, More than 200 day men and monthly workers left their work at the Southland and Midwest mines at Henderson, Ky, oe Iowa Miners Are Continuing Strike DES MOINES, lowa, Aug. 2— Miners of elght Iowa mines struck today, demanding increases in wager, Secording to reports to operators here, This brings the total number of idle mines in the state to 18, oper: ators said. The number of miners on strike in Iowa ie variously esti. mated af from 600 to 700. . Strike-Breakers Are Due in Denver DENVER, Col, Aug. %—#trike breakers from other cities were ex: pected here today to man the street care which have been idle since early yesterday, as the result of a walkout of 1,100 street raliroad employes, After thelr failure to successfully negotiate with city officials for high- or wages. Americans Beat Jap Gardeners, Asserts Chase “The man who mys Japs are better gardeners than Americans is no American.” This ia the unqualified statement ald he was « marketer in the Sanitary market a few year ago. “The Japa got in and drove me out of business,” he mid. “I'm an the methods they used me out of the market were under. handed.” ROBBED OF $90 IN HOTEL ROOM James Collins Visited by Two Strangers James Collins, arrested at Second ave, and Washington st, early to- day for being intoxicated, told the police he had just left his room in the St, Louis hotel, Main st and Occidental ave., where he had been vinited by two robbers and reileved of $90. One of the men, Colling said, was armed. He #aid he recognized this man &s one he had sean previously hanging around the People's cafe. Collins sald he was awakened from a sound slumber by the pair and found them on their hands and knees on the floor, one of them pointing a gun at his head, “They told me to keep quiet,” he said, “and I did. When they went out I found $70 gone out of my pants, and $20 out of another pocket.” A recetpt found tn Collins’ poses: sion showed he had deposited $300 with the Jap proprietor of the st Louis hotel, and had drawn $50 He came to town two days ago, he told the police, War Medals Save Veteran From Jail NEWARK, N, J., Aug. ~A con gressional medal, the Croix de Guerre, the Italian War Cross and sears from nine bullet and bayonet wounds, saved Frank Sadowski from of carrying a, weapon, having ad. MARRIAGE LICENSES aspire to enter the movies, a place|mitted shooting at cats which had | disturbed his sleep. He was at first but when the |Judge heard of his war record he | changed his decision. HA! HA! J Court Visitor—Mverybody seoms to be interested in this trial What's it all about? Lawyer—Oh, @ telephone girl Is being sued for getting the wrong number, but she seema to have the “numbers” of the jury, all right, . | ety. aelt Jury Gets Case of 99 Conspiracy ot i | epiracy to overthrow ment, went to a ju state inal court at noon ‘eee, | By agreement of counsel, ¢ ave that hour, The trial, the first the IUinols sedition law, te as & tent cane and similag tions in other parts of the Probably will hinge om the of the Lioyd case, rompantong Liey4 and his *pecifically charged with the communist labor party Purpore of forming = the third internationale of and establishment of ment in the United States medium of a revolution peg een take the form of a general Arrests were made in pt \ wide roundup of “redg ny Your's day. Indictments were triad turned soon after, The san May 10, after 52 days Spent in getting « jury. Be $$. STANDARD ROMS ALL OUT Ch Betty Blake challenges the world to beat her record of 2,607 nights of continuous dancing—seven years! Miss Blake is now Sending in “Who's Hopper?” a London musical show. Her dancing includes some strenuous acrobatics. On the oc- casion of her dancing her 2,607th dance she was presented with a fi basket carrying the numerals. Father of Murdered Girl Learns of Death; on Trail of Killer George Caracachenes set out today) capital punishment, and these ideas to find the slayer of hie tile daugh-|have crystallized into principies, ter, ideals. bitter, teardimmed “A man must live up to his prin- Fncd eagahag aes tall, | pies,” he says, “or he le tot & Pappas tormented Jim spayridia| And #0, he would find Jim Sphy- while he was at work in « hay field |Fidis, the killer, and fetch him back, on Mercer isiand. Ina fiash he flung |“Melehanded, to justice. . Justice, as Caracachenes sees her, hia pitchfork, javelintike, and tm- paled her thru the neck. fe not blind. Justice goes at a thing Bphyridia escaped, and somewhere | With both eyes open, sternly, but v6 mee i : Whee G meets Sphy. Caracachenes i VATHER ONLY NOW ridis, there will be no tending of LEARNS OF TRAGEDY bloody flesh, he says. A man must Caracachenes, « restaurant owner |be a man. im Duluth, heard nothing of the trag | “When I fetch him beck, he must He and his wife separated | be years ago. He had gone away. Her|my Mary back. Hanging family disregarded him. No letter/if 1 wanted him killed, I reached him telling of the killing,/nim myself. I will go and get and he learned of it only when be/and send him to prison.” read it in the newspapera He jumped on a train and hurried Wert funday be reached sagie/Banana Blockade and went to the home of A. P. ¢ fe pas, hie daughter's grandpa, where to Bring Down Price e ing Was comm 5 ‘They told him it was true that| BERLIN, Aug. 2—In connection Jim Sphyridis, his former friend, haq| "ih the agitation against murdered his little girl, and described | Prices, the sellers of bananas in the for him in detail how the thing was|*reete have declared « blockade done, against the merchants, in an en- Tearfully, he went with them to|‘eavor to bring down the price of the hay field, to the pasture, where | he fruit. Sphyridis left his horses before he fled, back to the bed where Mary died before the doctor reached and to the cemetery, where he put a handful of fresh flowers tender. ly on her grave. “I am going to° find him,” maid Cararachenes. “He cannot hide from me. Wait!” REVENGE WILL NoT BE LIFE-TAKING The instinct of the envage, the yearning for the kill, for flerce, swift vengeance to assuage his bitterness, Caracachenes declares, have been re strained. He has learned much In Amertea, im not right. He has ideas about he says. He has learned that killing YOUR TEETH X-RAYED FREE Pi a z Z x i D Regular $15 Plate $10.00 This shows what we are doing to bring down the high cost of living. terials, of course; also our guarantee 0! absolute satisfaction. FREE EXAMINATION We will examine your teeth and con- sult with you about them without cost or obligation on your part, THE i NATIONAL DENTISTS Right Across Pike St. frem New Fahey-Breckma® Dr. L. R. Clark eack morning between the hours of 9 and 10:30, No cost or obligation whatever. We have a fine, brand new X-Ray Machine which we are placing at your dis- posal without charge be- tween the hours men- tioned above. Please come as early in the morning as possible, REGAL DENTAL OFFICES Dr. L. R. Clan, Manager 1405 THIRD AVENUE Northwest Corner Third Avenue and Union Street Diagonally Across the Streeg from the Postoffice Lady Altendants on Duty ag All Times | “For acute i a? “4 ge 2 sug Bm) | HEE:

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