The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 21, 1920, Page 4

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oti Finds Him Wear. ing Stolen Jewels on Se- attle Streets Detectives were investigating the ‘activities of Arthur Waters, 22, Sat | Urday, after finding foot from three at First ave, and Colum Dia st. where he was arrested Fri @ay afternoon. Detective BE. BE. Yoria arrested Waters, when he ‘eticed a woman's ring on one of Waters’ fingers, He also recognized from a police picture. Yooation. Yoris says this was favorite ume to work. | ring Waters wore was stolen the home of Mra. J. H. Keeler, ® Slst ave. S. Another ring, Woot | prowl, was found. two other burglaries al- | up consist of a gold watch, taken from L. C. at 6235 Palatine ave., He admitted being regon prison last fall, A picture taken when in the prison was cra Yoris recognized h: who looted the of the family, August 17 Lo Sey come to the city | and attempt to identify — thie frightened thief. The home was entered August 13 | 7 gee who forced a window RMEN ROBBED, i| BANDITS ESCAPE ide Police Cordon After! ~ Early Morning Holdup | Aer robbing two carmen at the! @f the Mt Baker car line a! - mm «a solitary bandit , the car started for the barn the holdup appeared. Elsner) Feported to the dispatcher. The) carmen were walking beside F, on their way to get on front entrance, when they p atartie by the command: by the car men} wy-set, with a) ‘Telling the motorman to keep s! the bandh hurriedly went thru = of the two men, obtain- ‘The conductor on the ear ahead the robbed tram declared that he ag the bandit to the end 6.0, P, PLAN FOR A NEW } LEAGUE “Elihu Root Is Expected to Bring It From Europe BY RAYMOND CLAPPER MARION, Ohio, Aug. 21-—Rehind Beenes leaders of the republican are framing in detail ne for international peace, it wa! Bndaratood here today. | ‘Werld prominent figures of Euro- powers are said to be working| full co-operation on the plan. This elaborated in full will be hauled | @ut on the political stage at the! Psychological moment of the cam. according to present Root, representing the t abroad on the profect, now is| @xpected to return before ing with of the entire plan. ®% will be| e's answer to the democratic eharges that he favors staying out of the League of Nations. Harding and his advisers are in Wiis manner planning to take into full-account the desire of American ‘Yyoters for some means of interna tional co-operation to leasen the dan- ger of war. SUDICIAL RATHER THAN ADMINISTRATIVE BODY ‘They will continue vigorously to| @ppose entering the present league as framed at Paris, but they will just aw @mphatically declare for organization of 4 new association based on the Plan they intend to present during the campaign, it is said here With announcement of this plan the argument will be made that fu-| fopear nationals are not manifesting! any interest in the present league Gnd that it is dying of neglect. They | Will present the Koot plan as one | having the approval of Furopean statesmen as being a less ambitious ect and therefore one having a! iter chance of getting started. Col. George Harvey, publicist, in| ‘expected here today to confer with ‘Harding on this question. Only vague suggestions are avail- @bie here, but it is said the Root plan plates a judicial body rather An administrative one as pro- for in the presen? taverns cov. 7 | Ballard | beach, 1A five-day | cratic ‘ot |Want to Build House of} rn Ne enn aware Miss Alice Robertson Carr Ben” ; below, “Ben” himself. Big Ben, of Buffalo Pon, Wood park, ts having himself “done” miniature, of course. “t's all the rage, you know,” nays Mra. Ben, “Our baby and I are go ing to have ours done too.” Miss Alice Robertson Carr, 421 th ave. N. B., is modeling a minia ture group of the buffalo family The figure of Big Ben is almost completed and is about 12 inches long. The buffalo cow and the calf will be done next. They are in clay and will be cast when the group is completed ' NO ROOM FOR MORE BABIES Launch Big Drive for Day Nursery Expansion Seattle has outgrown her Day Nur sery at 302 Broadway. There is no | longer for the many whose mothers work and who must be cared for thru the day or grow up in the street. Today a fine nee a new and larger day nur 4 to build branch nurseries in Youngstown and at Rain where they are most ne campaign with a goal $30,000 will be made. tag planned. T money will be if posible, t subscriptions on personal solicitation room babies drive was started to raised, Peace League Agent Talks to Democrats Newton of 2 York the 5 Dem¢ at cafote med Lyle w King John addressed club a commiss gue to Bi address Americanism” Democratic vernor will be in the club Saturday, speaker of force I Phe theme } was Le his tutes candidates for ¢ vited to addres: August 28. NEIGHBORS NEED $1,000 AID FUND Destitute Family Neighbors and friends of Mr. Mrs, W. I. Herring, who, with their | two little girls, were made homeless when their house burned last Sun day, are raising money for the con struction of a little one-story house for them. Everything the house with the exception of a fireles# cook er, was burned, while the family away. Women of the neighborhood have been caring for the family and |making clothes for the children. A lumber company in West Seattle has agreed to furnish the lumber at cost and the house will be built by men in the district. Already $270| has been raised but $1,000 ix needed, | All contributions to the fund are re- quested sent to TC. Miller, in care of the West Side State bank. | contained was fat the A Bonney | tour to | of and her miniature of “Big| Miss Carr, who tg the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Watts Carr, recently returned from New York, where she nt of A. Sterling Calder Students’ league. Several pieces of her wo the buffalo group, will on at the Fine next month Every afternoon M outside the fen was a st Arts socie « Carr stands and works a on a small pedestal, modeling Sb ° hes to do the on ether animals in e future. _ |MRS, NANCY FRY, |: PIONEER, IS DEAD ‘Prominent Relief Worker Ill Several Months several month N M. Fry, relief worker and resident of Se attle 24 years, died Friday at} the home of Mra. Minnie R. L 2261 14th ave, W was the widow of Henry Fry, civil war veteran, and was promi G. A KR. and W. RC ye was a member of thi nt Assock of Nurses of ivil War and of the Order Kastern Star. She ie mur by von, ree L. Fry ttle ral services will lock Sunday Watson under auspices The Christian read and After iNnews, Mrs. 73, prominent for abn. ken, nent in a be held afternoon pt at of the W. R. ©. the body cremated, LESLIE'S TELLS OF TITUS’ SPUD Weekly Gives Publicity to|j—= “Some City” Slogan The story of the rise of Hazen J. Titns by the baked potato route is told by Warren Eugene Crane tn an article in Le Weekly August 21 the yarn relates, first conceived the Wea of featuring the big Yakima potato in the dining cars of the Northern Pacific rail road, of which he was superin tendent, in 1908 becoming Wright years Titus, Chauncey three AK up a big indebte put the musi ness on a paying “basis and tn creased the number of places from twelve president of the Restaurants here, Titus ress, has cleared article in Titus’ advertising cluding the famous has: 84 Sebi 4 31 Boule Shops. ‘The Leslie's of tells r in Miles coy Wright City!” Oh, Gals! Geranium Smells Up 2 Kopeks This very cruel, girly, but xeranium perfume has gone per pound, is two cents © of the buffalo park | the) establishment, | lence ritual will be| THE Rake MIT STAR Ravenel Achillea. was no greater than No one is, ‘There in bound to be @ spot, Somebody.orOther must take hold of us somewhere when she dips us in the Something» orOther that makes us unvulner able, He read aloud this verse tn the maguzine: The Four Roses “One rose I twined within your hair— (White rove, that spake of worth); And one you placed upon your breast-— (Red rome, love's neal of birth), | You plucked another from tts stem— (Tea rome, that means for aye); And one you guve-that bore for | me ‘The thorn# of memory.” “Th 4 ornckerjack,” sald Sam- my, admiringly. “There are five more verses” raid Ravenel, patiently sardonie. yne naturally pauses at the end of each, Of course—* “Oh, let's have the reat, olf man,” shouted Sammy contritely, “I didn't meas to cut you off. I'm not much of a poetry expert, you know. I never naw 9 poem that didn’t look ike It ought to have terminal facilities at the end of every verme. Reel off the reat of it” Ravenel sighed, and laid magnaine down. “All right,” aid Sammy, cheerfully, “we'll have it next time, I'll be off now, Got & date at 5 o'clock.” He took a last look at the shaded green garden and left whistling tn an off key an untuneful alr from 4 roofless farce comedy. * The next afternoon Ravenel, while polishing a ragged line of « new sonnet, reclined by the win dow overlooking the bestowed sur den of the unmercenary baron. Sud denly he ant up, spilling two rhymes jand & syllable or two. Thru the trees window of the olf mansion could be seen clearly, In ie window, draped in flowing white, loaned the angel of No his dreams of romance and poesy. Young, fresh an a drop of dew, graceful As a spray of clem atis, conferring upon the garden hemmed in by the roaring traffic the alr of a princem’ bower beaw tiful ax any flower mung by poet thus F time, She fingered and then dinappeared ing a few notes of a bird! of wong to rench his jears thru the rattle of the snarling of the Thus, an if to challe flaunt at romance and him for his reoreancy the un dying spirit of youth and beauty this vision had dawned upon him with a thrilling and accusive And so metabolic was the power that In an instant the atoms of Ravenel's entire world were redis tributed. The laden draye that |panned the house in which she [lived rambled a deep double-bans | to the tune of love. The news| boys’ shouts were the notes of sing: | ing y birde; that garden was the |plainance of the Capuleta; the jant tor was an ogre; himeclf a knight, ready with sword, lange or lute the for a while, within, lea ke ripple entraneed cata and ctric cars ce the poet's to to power (0. HENRY STORY =" enel naw her for the first! | nutties jto Speak in Seattle my Brown was shone upon by the tarflung rays of the renaissance, Sammy, with his ultra clothes, bin horseshoe pin, his plump face, his trite aang, his uncomprehending ad. miration of Havenel—the broker's clerk made an exoelient foll to the new, bright unseen visitor to the poet's sombre apartment Sammy went to his old seat by the window, and, looked out over the dusty green follage in the gur den, Then he looked at his watch, and rose hastily. “By grabef he exclaimed. “Twenty after fourt I can't «tay, old man; I've got « date at four. thirty.” “Why did you come, then? anked Ravenel, with sarcastic jocularity, “if you had an engagement at t time, I thought you business me kept better account of your minutes and seconds than that.” Sammy hesitated in the doorway and turned pinker., “Fact is, Ravvy,” he explained, an to 8 is exhausted, it til 1 came tell you, old man—there’s a dandy girl in that) old housq next door that I'm dead gone on, 1 put it straight-—we' engaged. The ojf man says ‘nit but that don't go. He keepr her! pretty close, I can see Edith’s window from yours hy me a tip when sty ping, and I meet ‘ thirty today, Maybe I ought have explained sooner, gut I know it's all right with you—#o long. “How do you get your ‘tip,’ ax you call it?’ asked Ravenel, losing & INtle spontaneity from hia amile. mid Sammy, briefly ‘em today, Means 4 o'clock at the corner of Broadway and Twenty-third.” “Dut the geranium? persisted | Ravenel, clutching at the end of fying Komance’s trailing robe. “Means half-past,” shouted Sam: my from the hall “See you to- morrow.” First “Dean of Men” Thomas Arkie Clark of the Univer sity of Illinois, the man who invent od the ponttion of “dean of men” in American colleges, and worthy grand” chief of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity was scheduled to arrive in Seattle Saturday for a three-day visit. He will address the ntudent body of the University of Washington next Tues day and will be entertained by alumni of Hlinols and members of the local branch of his fraternity 6,000 U. S. Employes| Are Retired Today WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.—(Unit Pross.)—-Approximately 6,000 of the government's 420.000 employes did their jaat day's work for Uncle Sam yesterday Today the civ service retirement | | DIN becomes effective, when thir | number of employes will be placed) on pensions. | Under the law the retirement an-| range from $180 to $720, } Thus does romance show herself ep me § « w Baruch POE 96.08 of service ainid \forenta of brick and at when she gets lost In the city, there has to be sent out a genéral alarm to find her agnin. At 4 in the looked out acrons ndow of mall eat, full-blown And, # ned above t her love! her his own ithe _ [but ardent fora }leaving the frawrant the ow will emblemet [wot fr if he had net understood. | [She had read his poem. “The Four Romer”; it had reached her heart 1 this was its romantic answer. \¢ Mf course she must know that Ka poet, lived there acrons His picture, seen in the macnuzines. nder, modent, flat tering measage could not be tenored. Ravenel noticed beside the roses Ja smal! flowering-pot containing a |plant. Without shame he brought | his opera-glanes amd employed them from the cover of his window-cur. |tain. A nutmeg geranium! With the true poetic instinct the In garden | four ja « hopes were containing rone—red and he gaged, she framing them and seeming to. toward ”, as tful away, vanes, cach wt Ie wit m, as eyes window ight pensively And his she melted th had « re lema on < the line ipsa too, must have The gelicate, t afternoon Ravenel ‘| Paving : Bids Asked for Ballinger Road} Hide for paving one mile of the) stretoh known as R. A. Ballinger road were called for by the board of county commissioners Friday. ‘The paved highway, ten feet wide will run from Lake Forest Park! westward. It is designed a de tour on the Everett-Seattle highway Seattle’s iLeading he, | | Aragged a book of useless informa | tion from hia shelves and tore open |the leaves at “The Language Mowers.” “Geranium, Nutmeg—I expect meeting.” | got doen comes Romance never by halves, If she you she brings gifts and her knit ting, and will sit in your chimney corner if you will let her And now Ravenel smiled. The lover smiles when: he thinks he has won The woman who loves ceases to smile with victory He ends a battle; ahe beg s hers. What a pretty idea to set the fours roses in her window for him to see! She must have a sweet, poetic soul. And now to contrive the meeting A whistling and slamming of doors preluded the coming of Sam my Brown, Ravenel smiled again. things back to een, 2190 ot | GINNING of) Even Sam. ; he would be uf :Dentist I am now devotin, my entire time to my dental practice. T make all examinations and diagnon® each case, as well ax do all extract ing between the hours of 9 a. mand 6 p.m My offices have beer eetablixhed for more thant a quarter of « century, and under my personal MANAgEMeRt mune sure 2a, 01. I,do not compete with cheap, transient, advertising dentista. My prices fre the lowest | he |aistent wth firat-cta EDWIN J, BROW D. Seattle's Leading Dentist ed € or st. Thoroughness Charactertzes every t tomers t at rae 4 our tn ous ald om Savings Accounts Accounts Bubsect te Check Are Cor- ally Invited Peoples Savings Bank GECOND AVE. AND PIKE er. PANTAGES Nights, Tana MORKOW MATINEE TED SHAWN PRESENTS “XOCHITL” Fasctoating Dance Drama | VAUDEVILLE’S CHARMING NOVELTY | Prenen antngescope Show GENEMAL ADMISS! up ‘ i “THE GOLDEN BIRD” ed by Lorraine Evon, Talented Viol ed on a Toltee Legend, Fea MARTHA GRAHAM arge Company of Dancers Trained by Ted Shawn JARROW Humorous Trickster |be supreme,” ‘She Would Close COXHITS AGAIN |Roosevelt Bids for - ,§ Independent Vote AT ‘OLIGARCHY’ Harding Described as Iso- lated From Public Opinion nY HERBERT W. WALKER (United Prees Staff Correspondent) | ORRVILLE, Ohto, Aug. 21.—The aim of the republican “senatorial oligarchy” ta to turn the senate and) the presidency into a “single unit of | it!ked plainly of the tnnuen government,” Governor James M.|Volved in the national campaign Cox, democratic presidential candi.|"4 made an appeal for independ date, declared here today in address. | Mt, Promrenmive #upport. ing &n openair public meeting, Hija), “Hrom const to const,” he speqch wan in direct reply to @ re| “We find the same type of rugged! cont front-porch address of Senator | forward-looking Americans, deter Harding in whieh tho latter praised |Mined to make good and to make and defended the senate. | thetr country a better place to live Cox made it plain that his attacks | in.” were directed at the senate leaders) NO PATENT ON. on ry at the senate as an tnetitu:| U. 8, PROSPERITY on of government. c recent #peech, Aide "Ghatetioriacs aglle es at Bh Lape 7. reactionary {olation from the sug | Yelt Pointed out, and it ix “not the Fent of public thought, failed to re-|PronPerlty of @ handful of men con lize the distinction,” ‘the governor | f2lled by privilege, but the prow claimed, perity that extends pretty deeply | “The ‘elation between dent trout the communities and congress should be cordial, but] “We feel very dertain this year the influence of the president should | that the republidans will not the governor maid. to take out @ patent in this cam For the fourth time this week the | Palgn on the ‘full dinner pail’ The governor sharply attacked the cam-| democratic party does not adopt the paign fund of the republicans, refer-| “full dinner pall” as ite slogan be ring to the “unblushing continuance | cause, as Governor Cox has so well of the gathering together of millions | said, ‘We are not satisfied with the of dollars for campaign purposes.” | “full dinner pail.’ Human beings in the march of civilization, must have more than animals, To stop) short at satisfying their stomachs |is an insult which apparently the present leaders of the republican Franklin 1D, Roowevelt, cratic candidate, for Wnared dent, wan speeding south Sat urday after speaking to 3,000 Seattle people who vigorously applauded his discussion of polities and national welfare at the Arena last night. With «miling good nature ir Jit Injunction Up in Supreme Court OLYMPIA, Aug. 21—-Decision on| party do no’ ” the writ of prohibition restraining area: ives ate King county courts from dissolving | 4 temporary injunction preventing) ™@ FACE BOTH WAYS Beate officials from interfering) The republican piatform ts a mass with the operation of jitneys was|of words that can be read two ways, taken under advisement by the su-|he said, to catch voter—it “faces Preme court here yesterday. both ways at the same time—this Is true of the whole campaign they are staging.” The democratic thought, Roorevelt declared, is not to be satisfied with things they are but to bow to |the sbrine of the “God of things as they ought to be.” He said: “We want the pronsper- ity of better homes, better living conditions—« prosperity which elim- inates the sweat shop and overwork- the “Wildest Cafe” , Aug, 20.—~ “The wildest cafe in California” ts the utle given “The Log Cabin,” « cafe and hall in Laurel canyon, by Mrs. Aagard. She wants an injune clone the piace, try} BATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1978. ing of our mothers and children. Wo are trying to think in terms of the United States, and we believe that natgonal candidates shoyld be nationallyminded and not Marlon minded” LEAGUE SOLUTION "TO SMALLER COSTS America, he eaid, wants the pro tection of an efficient army and navy. This can be attained by & | race in armament, et tremendous Jexpene, or armaments can be cur tailed by the League of Nationa. “In thin worth while?” he asked. In it worth while for America to take part in something which will merely serve to lift the burden of maintainitfg armaments from the shoulders of humanity, but | which will aleo immediately reduce lthe danger of war by reducing the | weapons for waging ware in the |hands of nations which might be posuible aggressors.” RECOGNIZE NEEDS OF PACIFIC COAST The Pacific Coast's needs have been first recognized by the demo- |erats, he said, and it is logiea) to | believe the democrats will be mort alert to carry out needed programma, such a* reclamation and improve ent of Pacific naval bases. 4 | All the democratic candidates fo governor and a following of demo cratic politicians are touring the state with Roosevelt, who spoke at * |Grays Harbor Saturday. | cietinceili | Three Victims of Drowning Cremated After the reading of tian Science church services Friday evening at the Butterworth & Bone establishment, the bodies of Mra, Marie Gilson and her two sons, Bertram and Theodore David, who were drowned in Lake Washington Monday, were put and cremated together. JOHN NEZIK, a mining man of Inyo county, California, is visiting in Seattle, He states that many people of his locality are looking to the Pu- get Sound country as their future turn to Inyo county in a few days, You'll go some, too! Your laugh apparatus, or impedimenta, will travel in high gear all the time you are looking at the top- notch comedy which opened here this morning—~ The quick-action story of the eternal antagonism between the cattle ranchers and sheepmen of the West, in which fun invades the sacred precincts of love and in which a boastful easterner faces his Waterloo! PATHE NEWS FRANCES DRAGER, VIOLINIST PATHE REVIEW the Chris in one casket - homes on retiring. Mr. Nezik will re | 1

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