The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1920, Page 4

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AWAIT OVALOF A IAY Then to Talk of Future, Says in interview MILTON BRONNER RAN, Jug. 7.—Arthur Griffith, f ef the Sinn Fein, vice prea oat the entire movement, has ‘an exclusive interview. ‘him what truth there was ourrent in Dublin, that about to get together George on dominian replied: . ‘The whole thing started by editorials . Journal, which «peaks, Pein, but only for it only organ is Young ‘® weekly paper which bas getting out of Ire om te ‘tind have our provisional presi- | Wice president, parliament, and city and country edun- If You Are an Ex-Husband, Be. Careful ex-hushands fougd themselves in suparter court Satyr: day morning by the cbench warrant orders instructing them to pay ili mony, following divoroe decrees Edward M. Lindsley, eceording to attorneys for Mrs. Hild M. Linde ley, lett Beattle several months Ago, after @he had obtained her freedom. GAINES FILES FOR NEW TERM County Treasurer Asks for Re-election ‘Wm, A. Gaines Saturday filed for re-election to the office of county treasirer, Gaines has conducted the Office since January 18, 1919. He has instituted new methods of han @ling the work of the office which have resulted in the employment of a minimum of clerks, He promise: that he will be well within his budget this year; his extimate for 1921 shows ® reGuction of $6,020 t salaries as >Loomplired with 1920. In May, 1919, he recommended to the county, commissioners that no certificates af delinquency for un |is now paid in to the county of King. hubby, “Janie Burria, hia former | wife, had him arrested because, she | claimed, he failed to pay $160 support | money due ber children. Burris) promised to,pay by next, Tuesday. | He, also, was released frasn jail. and Plate Taken rom Residence Fashionable homes here are serv. ing as prey to a clever gang of burglars, detectives sabi they be | leved, after W. W. Stell, 3408 Mt Baker Boulevard, reported to paticg | Saturday that his home had been | looted while’the fumity was out «) town. | More than ‘six homes tn residence | districts of the wealthy have been | deputy U.S marshal under John M. | the Prowled within the last three weeks | In most of the cases, the thieves [entered the houses whe the fan . | afr, ies were at thelr summer hames. Silverware and plate were stolen, prowler gang ‘uses an automobile tectives suid. Four File for ’ Office Saturda Four designated their tntentions Saturday of running for office by filing with County Auditer Norman Wardall. ‘Those who filed were: For Sher- Joe Williams, democrat; for “| county treasurer, William A. Gaines, republican; for representative, 4ist district, Thomas D. Page, repubii- can, and for justive of the peace, ‘Issaquah district, W. W. Sylvester, —— r\Funeral Services attorneys of Washing- gotn in the presentation at tt seasion of the legislature of Making it a felony for any per- sell, or have in his posses any narcotics, as to 4 doctors and “nurses, for Purposes. .This was an Saturday by Prosecutor C. Brown, who was responsible the proposition. + utor Fred C, Brown was mted at the State Prosecutors’ tion, held at Aberdeen during he jatter part of July, by Chief ty Howard A. Hanson and ly Prosecutor John PD. Car- other recommendations by Prosecutor Brown was one ‘on a full enforcement of the ism law; « bill to appro- & special fund by the legisiat- for the extradition of men who their children, de Pacific Coast League BASEBALL DOUBLE . HEADER Wiest Game Called at 130 Take Fourth Ava Cars for Mrs. C. B. Cowan Funeral services for Mra. Mary C. the usual lettering of the cam. “These kids playing hookey, plained one member of the beard, “will know that the truant . office uses a Dodge and they will hide whenever they see one approaching. The suggestion that 4 camouflaged car be used was voted down. So the kids, who like to stick thetr teachers | cocasionally, still may have a slight Kennedy O! Funeral services for H.’ B. Ken- nedy, pioneer steamboat man Puget Sound, who died Friday after- Noon at the home of his sister, Mra. Lydia N. Norton, 1722 18th ave. 5., will be held Sunday at 2 p. m. from Bonney-Watson's. Kennedy, whe was past 69, came to Seattle in 1897. Hie firgt business venture was the purchase of the steamer Athlon, Which became the first vessel of the Navy Yard route. He suffered a! stroke of paralysis two weeks ago and declined rapidly. The Polynesians believe that the moon at its waning is devoured by u rite of the dead AMUSEMENTS PALACE HIP = ' Direction of Ackerman & Harris sean Aer or DROME, VILLE OCORINNE GRIFFITH KHUMAN COLLATERAL” | MOORE cmeurr™ || SINGER'S MIDGETS Roy La to Be Held Sunday | Hecause of his long expesience in the financial business. be is well qualified to take care of the county's interest in bend sales, pars upon col- lateral deposited as security by tile wanks, and take care of the vurious financial transactions which come to ‘the treasurer. The treasu office wit) do a business‘ of $42,000,000 in the year 1920. : Sheriff as Demo Joneph Williams filed for shertff on the democratic Ycket Saturday, He came to Seattle 199% He has been engaged in busipess for 20 years in this city, with the exception of one year spent in Alaska. Mr, Williams ts married, owns bis mn home and bes resided at 753 32nd ave. for nine years. He is broth of Jack Wiliams, a deputy sheriff several years ago, who was wounded by Harry Tracy, in an at tempt to catch that meted outlaw. His other brother, Edward Williama, recently retired after seven years as Boyle. Mra Lous F. entirely around the SNOHOMISH AN SKAGIT-GROWIN Washington Counties tn- crease in Census WASHINGTON, Aug. 7—The con- wus bureau today announced the fol- lowing 1920 figures: Counties: f i i Mont, 8.969; Rosebud, Mont, 8,002; ‘Wibaux. Mont.. 3,113; Grant, Wash. T.771; Pend O'Reifie, Wash. 6,363; Skagit, Wash, 33,358; Snohomish, a he University of Minne- medicine, He com- course at the Uni- of Washington last spring. BREMERTON.—6ampson Hughes, veteran of the civil dies at Veterans’ home. r war, THE SEATTLE STAR “BEAST MAN” IS STILL AT LARGE Assailant of Georgelpwn Woman Escapes Stin at large todny was the “heast man,” who yesterday morning | viciously attacked Mrs, Sidney | Stepp while she wes pulling clover for her ratibits, near her home at {1578 Dawson #t, Grongetown, Detectives admitted teday they are practically withodt « clue, and said there ts little hope of catching the maniac. Mré, Stepp ts «til unnerved and suffering from the shock of the ter- rible benting she wjthetood at the hands of her brutal assailant. ‘The police believe the man t# the same who, about a week ago, war annoying women on Second ave, by approaching them from behind and embracing them. Several women complained that they had been thus annoyed one evening, but the man eacaped. AIN IS AlD TO FIRE FIGHTERS Forest Crews Hope They Can Check Destruction — SPOKANE, Aug, 7.— Rain over sothe portions of the Inland Empire | today gave forest rangers and weary fire line patrol crews bape that they would be able tq check a thousand | timber biases raking thru national forests and private holdings. Fires in the St. Joe forest, on the middle north fork of the Clearwater, Were reported out of contro! inst | night. In the Kootenai forest things are reported in hand. Around the Missoula Gistrict one fire is burning over 3,500 acres near | ever, WORD OF CHILD Se Japanese Aristocrat |2 JAP GUNMEN DOOMS FATHER) Accused of Selling Maps toan American tittle Boy Says He Saw Mother Pushed into River ABTORIA Ore, Aug. 7—Papa Pushed «mamma out into the river and then rowed the boat to shore That's how #hé came to be drowned.” The diminutive 4-year-old son of Olaf Anderson eat up very straight in the big witness chair, with wide- open eyes, end spoke Very solemnly and asauringly. “Bo there now,” he added. ‘1 saw htm do tt.” | The coroner's Jury filed slowly out, ‘They returned with a verdict | thay Mrs, Minnle Anderson came to her death at the fands of her hus- band. Word was carried to Anderson tn) the jatl that his som had told. He) troke down, Last night he con- fonned. ‘The @rowning occurred in the Co- lume river near here last week Mra. Anderson's body was recovered yesterday. She and her husband: had quarreed, This Picture . Bride Found - He’d Married ing of picture brides,” said Jom HH. Sargent, assivtant U. 8. commissioner of immigration, “here & funny’ thing that eoourred aout « year and « halt aco: “A Jap who had been living here) went back to Japan for a visit, and while there fell in love with a girl and was going te marry her. Before| the ceremony was performed, how- | be returmed to the United Stgten, and tack on a farm in lown he met another Japanes girl that he | thought be Joved more than the ene) he hed Jeft behind. “Ho he wired » menage to Number One that read like this: “De not) come no more.’ “Well, the poor girl 414 mot know | what the message meant so she) took ft to a Jup cofiege profemor. He! looked ut tt and hin mental procemnes | -| Worked somewhat after this fashion: . | proximatety $1,000,000 to cart away the stolen goods, de-| Special entertainment was pgovided| Northwestern Michigan, according to agricultutal* statisticians. Lack of (impatiently) — “Bay. luctor, can't you have this train run « bit faster?! Conductor—“Sir! I've been on this line 15 and— Passenger—"Great guns! At what station did you get on™ DAWSON .—Dell Bandy, 37, killed when auto jumps off Bear creek road, eight miles from here. Gives Signed Statement for Publication in Seattle Star. s Kirkland, Aug. 5, 1920. I want to tell all who are affing of Loughney's Human Bake Oven and curative plan of eating. L have had rheumnattam for years and years. Doctored all of the time, all to no avail ‘The Bake Oven has actually worked marvels with me. “I'm eo tickled” —I can even run+—my, I am well. pleased. My Imbs were swollen badly with dropay—it's all disappeared. I have had varicose wicers for 33 years; they are healed over—tt's wonderful. My tongue was coated all of the time; my stomach troubled me afl of the time, I was consti- pated, and oh, what misery I suf- fered. ¢ T tel you T feel just wonderful now. I can werk in comfort, and I have heen taught by Dr. Loughney to combine and proportion my foods | correctly. I intend to continue with the Bake Oven treatments and fol- | § low Dr. Loughney’s ecurntive pl of eating, and I want my friends to take th same treatment and be benefited.as I am. Captaih and Mrs. Harry Code are both surprised and pleased at the wonderful change in my health, and T nan #0 plensed with the treatments. They are plearant to take, no dis- comfort in being baked at all. My cireulation was very poor: it's so much improved now, and I can sleep Uke a ehild, sbrhething T have not been able to do for yearn, 1 don’t know 1 have nerves any more I had stiff, swollen joints in my wrist and ffagers—they have re |duced in «ize and timbered up fine,| Seattle Office Hourw I've had but a short course of bakes, but oh, such good resulte— they are wonderful. Mont sincerely, MRS. MARY C. FILLMAN, ‘Wash, Mrs. Mary C. Fillman NOTE—Take ferry at Madison park to Kirkland, Wash, and walk three blocks to the right, or phone Red 522, and auto will moet you, Dr. Loughney’s hoore at his Kirk. | land Sanitarium are 1 p. m. to & p, |m. daily, Sundays included. | Chronic arthritis, nepritis and kin. dred invalid cases especially solic. fted. Lady nurses in attendance. Dr. Lough. ney can be seen personally daily from 9 a m, to 12:30 p, m. at the Hotel Congress, corner Fourth Ave. and Marion St. Seattle, Wash, Have Dr. Loughney make a pains taking diagnosis of your case, “Do not rthat ts « double ‘Degative, two negatives make an affirmative” Se he told the girl that Meant for he@to come lover married to the ‘other “We finaly admitjed her, since) whe had come ever in @ood faith and Proved that she was not Ukely to be- SE BY HENRY W. KINNEY TOKIO, July 10.—(By Mail.)—Thel arrest of Teunanory Oyama,a young member of One of Japan's very high ent families, on a charge of having sold military maps to an American, in turn handed them over to certain embassy,” an the ver- nacular press carefully exprennen it, has caused considerable consterna tion in official circien as well an the matter in at present veiled in the mists of official secrecy Young Oyama ts a nephew of the late Field Marshal Prince Oyama, one of Japan's foremost statesmen of modern times and a member of the elder statesmen group, which is Virtually the ultimate power in the country. The young man ix alo « cousin to Prince Oyama, the pres ent head of this great family, and his prominence makes the incident expecially interesting as well as the fact that, while no direct charge has been made against the American embassy, the accounts of the affair charge d'affaires had called on the foreign minister and complained about the various statements which had been made in the prens, and as & consequence an Investigation war made Which brought out that the gendarmerie had told the story. MAY FACK CHARGE OF TREASON , The préas states that the author ities are rather in @ quandary owing | with the public in general, altho! to the fact that they have no @eftn ite information "es to the exact na ture of the maps, and upon their importance depends in large meas ure the severity of the punishmen’ to be meted out. “To secure that information i*# almost impornible.,” thus remarks the Nichi Nichi, “as the maps are already in the hand» of the embanxy concerned.” This statement in to some extent borne out by a remark made by a war department official who said that the authorities were stil ‘un decided as to whether Oyama should be charged with treason or only with grows cheat, If the maps are take pains to veil their allusions #o| thinly that no room ts left open to Goubt as to which embassy fs re- ferred to. ‘ stated that the young man ith the 14th gavalry regiment when it seized. Habarovek in August, 16, as" momber of @ surveying detail, and that at that time he secretly took porseesion of about 260 maps which had been in possession of the enemy. While in Siberia he is supposed to have become friend. ly with « certain American and to have disposed 6f the maps to him, the military attache of the Amer. ‘can embassy being, it i said, the ultimaze recipient of the maps. * Several other young mén have been arrested as Oyama's accom Pilces, and the authorities are not making @ thoro investigation of the affair, It M@ certain that consid erable importance attaches to the matter, an ts evident from the tact that Oyama has been arrested and an the gendarmerie, which handled the case, claims that it made abso lutely sure of ita grouhd before tak- ing stops, owing to the high connec- tions of the young man. On the other hand, it seem quite plain why the embassy, or any other embassy, should pay 40,006 yen which ia a} red to be the amount paid for ° AT TLI S BEST PHOTO PLAY be brought, but it i* thought possible that they have merely been faked by young Oyama and that he passed off a bunch of worthless data in ‘exchange for a connigerable sum of money. The military attache of the Amer. ican assy states that nothing whatever is known about any such transaction either by him or by his arpocmtes, eee It Was Rough Night for Two ap Sailors Oriental | | i : i : el ! Hl [ i | if i i H i iF iy Hi i i i j g f { i fs f i if ine they started in to works, After a quar. tf lifted bodily, kicking, scratching, biting and ki- Ing, and tossed into the “black cell” to settle it between them, HOUSE ONE WEEK—STARTING TODAY SCOTT’ Novel of the Und SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1920. — UNDER ARREST, Flashlights “and Weapons Are Found on Orientals were Two yar mena ave. and Washington st., early today by Policeman K. Gustot- son. Both ran, one tossing away @ flash light. Thirty minutes later, after » chase, both were in i. | heshiosk noticed the men crouch ing in the shadow# at 2,a.m. When |they saw him approaching, they darted for the mouth of tie alley, land, turning, ran in opposite direo- Uone. Three blocks away Gustofson over wok the youmwest of the pair, who ¢ the name T. Kato, and said he was a laborer, 18 years old. At \headquarters, where Kato was |neareehd, a revolver was found in hin possession. He was locked up on an “open” charge for investigation |by the detective department. | Gustofson then started out on & | stil hunt for the other Jap. | found Y. Yomiku, 26, a porter, in the New York hotel. He identified him as the man he had surprised with Kato, and arrested him. Search at the jail revealed that Yomiku was also. armed. An “open” charge was Placed against him. ° IDENTIFY AUTO CRASH VICTIM Friends Trying to Find Wife on Way to Sweden The man who died in the Tacoma General hoepital as the result of injuries recefved when his automo bile was forced off the road Thurs day night by an automobile said to have been driven by a Jap, was identified late Friday as Gus Peters fon, 36, T16 N, 49th st. Senttle. Mrs. Emma Wallen, Metropolitan apt and Mrs. A. B. Wilson, 211 Union st, also victims of the acci- dent, were released from the Ta> coma hospital today. Peterson's wife is on her way to Sweden for ea visit Friends are ettempting to intercept her at New York. “Gee, but Boldt’s apple good !"—Adv. pie io lerworld— “PARTNERS of the NIGHT” Featuring that amaz- ingly original * and fascinating personal- ity known as MARY CLEMMER MUSIC— LIBORIUS HAUPTMAN, Dtrector CONCERTS Afte@foon and Evening Selectidn, “Bells of, Normandy” e+ teeceeeees... Planquette “TPO” sesseesssee cowereceesteceseecermences Cunningham REGAN COMEDY— “Little Miss Jazz” PRIZMA SGENIC— “Fishing at Oteu"

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