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}SEATTLE MAN HREATENS EM Weather Jul Tonight, fair; Sunday, fair and warmer; moderate VOLUME 23. southwesterly winds Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 62, Minimum, 52. Teday noon, <> ee oa a ae 2 eect td U. S.SENDS TO DANZIG Ordered to Protect Refugees From Scene of Russo- Polish War Aug. 28. the Navy | miral Huse to proceed imme- | diately _.with the armored ot/cruiser Pittsburg to Danzig en nm | to offer protection to Ameri- nejcan refugees there. men evening | favors like stars upon| The Pittsburg was sent to Danzig, gi | Daniels declared, at the request of ©f | ane state department. It ta under. Jap bank in Sea Aug. 28.—The time lim ot be- | the Anglo-Italian ultimatum having expired last night, interest centered | today in indication by the Btitish lgwovernment ag to whether the an- hag |*wer Thursday fulfilled the require- gonfron! ments, before er The Bolshevik note was being ted, | tudied in the foreign office, anda copy has been forwarded to Premier | Lioyd George in Lucerne. It was an sumed that an identical note had been sent to Italy, Altho the Russians withdrew their demand for e@tablishment of a “civil militia” in Poland as part of the peace agreement with that country— the principal cause of the entente ub timatum—there was a disposition in some quarters to regard the Bolshe- vik communication in the light of a studied insult to Great Britain and Italy. In the more important matter of reestablishing peace, however, it was believed this would be pasued over, and that the British govern- ment would lend {ts influence to bringing about complete cessation of hostilities between Rusisa and “Po- land, Latest advices from the war zone indicate the red right flank had been withdrawn until it rested on the Kast Prussian frontier, west of Augustof (40 miles west of Grodno and 140 miles northeast of Warsaw). The principal Russian defense was being made on the line between Au- gustof and Grodno, where the reds had the advantage of marshy, brok en ground and ideal terrain upon which to halt the Polish rush. Spo- radic fighting continued on the rest of the front. RED ATTACK IN BREST-LITOVSK REPULSED WARSAW, Aug. 27.—Three Rua sian columns attacking Brest-Litovak have been routed and 650 men taken prisoner, the Polish communique to- day stated, The battle on the north front is nearing an end, the com- munique said, uncompromising @addenty found himself by a thing be had never innermost, He saw all the of pretense and egoism that | Washington. in his armour. And how free either she had always been— But why— doubt courted it. ‘whom she was about to give herself. But even that poor consolation had een wrenched from him. For, when Re saw that swift, limpid, upward Wok that she gave the man when he eek her hand, he knew himself to fe forgotten. Once that same look Bad been raised to him, and he had Shuged its meaning. Indeed, bis con it had crumbled; its last drop was gone. Why had it ended thus? ‘There had been no quarrel between them, nothing — For the thousandth time he re- Marshaled in his mind the events of those last few days before the tide fad 20 suddenly turned. had always insisted upon plac- ing him upon a pedestal, and he had her homage with royal) grandeur. incense ready begun. Silk hose, pajamas and nighties, not to mention a Packard automo- bile, figure in a suit filed in superior court by Mrs. Carrie Booth to recov: er $50,000 from Vale Dwyer, a mil- liner living at 45th st. and Sunny: wide ave. for alienating the affec tions of Donald H. Booth, the plain tiff'’s husband, The silk apparel, automobile, hats, It had been a very sweet that she had burned before him; so modest (he told himself), so childlike and worshipful, and the Would once have sworn) #0 sincere She had invested him with an almost Mpernatural number of high attri and excellencies and talents, find he had absorbed the oblation as B desert drinks the rain that can| @ax from it no promise of blossom OF fruit. As ‘Trysdale grimly wrenched! Spart the seam of his last glove, the The Russian communique August 26 announced the Bolsheviki had at-| tacked Brest-Litovek. ‘ of are said to have been among the costly gifts, including the automo- bile, which the defendant showered |upon Booth to lure him from his ffowning instance of his fatuous and «ee wide ‘ardily mourned egoism came vividly ack to eae *|GERMANS Mrs. Booth describes her alleged rival at “a widow of the mature age of about 50 years, a milliner, and used to the ways of the world.” The scene was the night when he Bad asked her to come up on his with him and share his DESTROY PLANES GIVEN TO ALLIES Entered as Second Clase Matter May 2, 1 shoes and sults of clothes complained | 9, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash. under the Act of © rene March 3, 1 SEATTLE, WASH,, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1920. as the U. S. senate, it is time for all good Americans to stop, look and listen! The Japs are doing that very thing. The facts are plain:. A young lawyer just out of school locates in Seattle and is at once made the pet and the dar- ling of Jap interests here. He acquires stock in the larges Why? Is it because he is young just out of school? Is it-becausé he has had but little | re Ae: Sth tne ™ experience? No. The Japs haven’t gone into the elee- mosynary business yet. They picked the lawyer because his father is United States senator from one of the Pacific|=:""™. Coast states; because he is the son of Wesley L. Jones o The“peaceful penetration” of the U. S. senate has al- Young Wife Charges |PALMA LEADS Woman of 50 Stole Her Husband’s Love Her husband, she says, is “an un- sophisticated young man of about 30, unused to the ways of the world,” whom Mrs. Dwyer “began to vamp ‘© at firet by flattery and | ‘Then, by persuading him to drive [her on auto rides, to escort her to | cafes where she invariably contribut- ed the expenses, she is alleged to have completely fascinated the young man. Often, his wife says, Booth was in. veigled into accompanying the widow |home, where he sometimes remained jentire nights. He finally informed her, Mrs. Booth «complaina, that he loved Mrs, Dwyer and had lost alto- gether his affection for his wife, Mrs, Booth wag represented by At: torney George Olson. Aug. 28—Workmen in factory at Furstenwalde, miles east of Berlin, have de tal Eines He could not, now, for pain of it, allow his mind to il upon the memory of her con-| ing beauty that night—the care- wave of her hair, the tenderness 894 Virginal charm of her looks and | ‘ALL SCHOOLS TO OPEN SEPT. 7 25 stroyed four seaplanes and 28 tor- pedo throwers destined for surrender | to America, Great Britain, F nee fords. But they had been enough, | ana Japan, it was learned today. The| _ had brought him to speak-| workmen professed to believe the| oid thelr conversation she had) materials, valued at 60,000 marks,| gchools thruout the county will were destined for use by Poland. 'RUSSIAN.POLISH | this year have a uniform opening day, Tuesday, September 7, accord ing to the plan of Assistant Super- intendent Thomas E. Hulse, who to- “And Captain Carruthers telle me that you speak the Spanish language 4 native, Why have you hidden accomplishment from me? Is} as for th anyining you do not xnow?”, [NEGOTIATIONS | aay competed arrangements for ihe Now, Carruthers was an idiot. No| RESUMED way high school September 1, 2 and 3. he (Trysdale) had been guilty MOSCOW, Aug. 26. via Wirelews to| “The King county inatitute,” said te ne nee aid such things) Of | London, Aug, 24—Russo-Pollsh ar-| Supt. Hulse, “will be attended by meal: 1 canting | mistice negotiations have been .re-! every teacher employed in the coun | } vee Os Se etey, |umed at Minsk, it was officially an-| ty outside Seattle, J ‘plage? ge Pa shin pars fn, |Rounced here today | “A new county course of study, icisten ater” One of his in| “The negotiations at Minsk are| based upon the text-books adopted EES nese anannesen’ 4 ¥|continuing,” the statement sald.| by the county board of education In rave magnified this exhibl:|wpne Poles have rejected our condi| May, has been prepared by this of: % doubtful erudition ions, but have offered no alterna-| fice and will be distributed and ex But, alas! the incense of her ad-|tives. The Poles are relying upon | plained to the teachers at the insti “urn to Page 2, Column 3) their victories at the front.” tute." STOP ATTACKS IN CITY PARKS Roy Davis, a park motorcycle patrolman, has been appointed cap- tain of park police by the park board in an effort to stamp out attacks on small boys and girls in [various Seattle parks Davis will take the civil service examinations and if suc ul his appointment will be m perma nent. He will receive a full cap: tain’s pay. This is the first time, it is said, in the history of the police department that a patrolman has reached the grade of captain without passing thru the examina: tions of sergeant and lieutenant. FEDERAL GRAND JURY con- | venes Wednesday, September 1, Ver Year, by Mail, $5 to $9 | It is immaterial whether U. S. Senator Jones feels him- self obligated by the Jap sop thrown to his son, or not. A senator, like Ceasar’s wife, must not only be inno- icent, but above suspicion. Senator Jones must have known the motive behind the Japanese interest in his son. And his son, Harry B. Jones, knew it. Yet they permitted it, sanctioned it, and no ELGIN RACE) Mulford Second in Big Auto Event SPEEDWAY, Elgin, ™., Aug. 28. Ralph De Palma opened the eighth annual road race here today, getting his Ballot Spedial away at 12:02 Jimmy Murphy, in a Deusenberg, took the starting signal at 12:03. He Was followed at intervals of one min. ute by Joe Thomas (Revere), Tommy Milton (Deusenberg), Eddie O'Donnell (Deusenberg), Gaston — Chevrolet (Monroe Special, Percy Ford (Fron: | tenac Special), and Ralph Mulford (Monroe Special). | De Palma made the first lap in 6! minutes, 30 seconds, The lap record | | is 6:18, Murphy made the lap in 6:49. Chevrolet on the first lap slowed down at the pit and prepared for a stop on the next time around. Ralph Mulford was four seconds behind Ralph De Palma at the end of | the fourth lap. Gaston Chevrolet went into the pit with engine trouble before finishing; his second lap | De Palma increased hig lead at the | end of the eighth lap to 14 seconds. Tom Alley replaced Thomas in a Re vere at the beginning of the ninth lap. PRESTR ai Bride Never Lived With Him—Hubby On his testimony that his young wife never lived with him, and only married him to obtain her release from Seattle juvenile authorities, Harry Drummend got a divorce in Los Angeles yesterday from Hazel Innes Drummond, a dispatch said to. day, | ‘They were married here June 12, 1919, the records show, after Mra. Drummond's mother had given her consent, The girl was 16, NEYMOON MURDE FROM PRISON TO AWAIT HER BABY The U.S. Senate —and the Japs! ONSIDER the case of U. S. Senator Jones and the Japanese. When the long arm of Japan reaches out for as high a goal PLANS FOR FUTURE OF THE INFANT Pearl Odell Changed From Tiger-Woman Into Mother Type in Few Weeks ROCHESTER, N.Y, Aug. “More Jungle-wild tha Mre. Pearl Beaver O'Dell when she wan brought to Auburn prison to be: | imponed | enlixt the aid of Queen Mary in ob-|came abusive, gin the 20-year sentence human” was | O'BRIEN DIDN’T SEE BRIDGET’S NOTICE, HE TELLS THE JUDGE FRANCISCO, — Dennis O'Brien declared he didn't see the summons his wife, Bridget, pub- lished in her divorce action, tho he read papers constantly. Bridget |] explained the notice was pub- |] ished in a yiddish paper. QUEEN MARY IS BAN Redmond Howard Sends a LIFE OF WILSON On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star a7 TH LATE EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE _ ASKED TO AID Note in MacSweeney Case AGENTS OF U.S. NAB WRITER OF THREATS! | Sanity of Prisoner Is to Be | Probed by Alienists in State Courts Said to have admitted the author- ship of letters threatening the life of President Wilson, Joseph Randall, 48, was arrested Friday evening by secret service operatives under Capt. Thomas B. Foster, and was held Sat- urday pending examination as to his sanity. Randall is said to profess to be- lieve that his “traditional rights to inherit Alaska, or land in that ter- ritery worth millions of dojiars,” have been abrogated by the chief executive. His first communications to the president in regard to the matter re- LONDON, Aug. 28.—An effort to|maining unanswered, Randall be- it in said. He ad- upon her for the murder of her| taining the release from prison of ressed President Wilson in highly sweetheart, Edward J. Knelp, last January. She leaves the prison now to be admitted to an Auburn hospital, a | the hunger-striking Terence Mac: | disrespectful terms, and finally | Sweeney, lord ‘mayor of Cork, will be | threatened bodily harm, according to | made tonight Redmond Howard, nephew of the| | Foster. At a rooming house in the north gentle, softapoken, bravely smiling | late John Redmond, whose appeal to |¢d of town, where he was found by girl, whose whole thought and de-| King George was unavailing, sent a/the secret agents, Randall is said to NO STRANGER CHANGE IN HUMAN CHARACTER No stranger crime than hers, and man, was hand- & tree, battered him to death with a heavy file. O'Det is in Bing Sing awaiting Mra. O'Dell, from the moment of ber arrest until a few days ago, was sullen, remorseless, bitter. She had to be guarded from violence at the hands of enraged women during her trial, She mneered at the mob, at her guard, at the world. COMING BABY ONE BIG INTEREST OF PRISONERS Col, Edgar 8. Jennings, warden of Auburn prison, says that Mrs, O'Dell, after she was promised that she could keep her baby for two years, underwent a complete change. And a change has affected the other wo: men, many of them regarded as hopelessly vicious, who were con fined with Mra. O'Dell, The coming baby is the one big Interest of their ives. The child may be given to some one for adoption when it is three yeara old, it may be taken as a state charge, it may be delivered to Mrs. O'Dell’s relatives, or— The spectacle of a young mother with a babe in her arms might move almost any governor to exercise the pardoning power. Mra, O'Dell is receiving special medical attention. The emotional stress she has been under may have disastrous effects it is feared. Vets’ Convention Bidden to Seattle Veterans of Foreign Wars will be invited to hold their national conven- tion here next year, in a resolution to be presented to the city council Monday by Councilman Phillp Tin- dal. Lawyer Refuses a fi Fee? Honest, ’Tis So SAN FRANCISCO. lawyer re- fused to benefit by the court's order, which would have provided the $350 fee immediately, The judge gasped with surprise, It was a woman law- yer—Helen M. Kaufman, Income From Cow Is $1,000 for Year MINOT, N. D., Aug, 28.—A thou sand dollars a year on one cow is the remarkable record just estab- lished by Major BE. 8. Person, cattle breeder. A Guernsey heifer on his farm near here, besides producing nearly $500 worth of milk in the last year, had a calf which sold for ap- proximately this amount. 500 Are Homeless Thru Cloudburst| SHIP FLAG POLE CINCINNATI, Ohio, Aug, 28. Three persons were reported missing today, 600 are homeless and property loss of $500,000 resulted from a cloud- burst which swept thru Carlisle, Ky., Friday night Bad News: Eggs Take Wing. Eges aviated an average of two cents a dozen Saturday morning. Fresh ranchers are established at 60 cents a dozen, VPullets at 49 and 60 cents, fire are centered in approaching| message to the queen at Balmoral|h4ve indulged in lengthy and mys motherhood. castle, asking for an audience with | terious dialogues, talking with him- her tonight to present his appeal for MacSweeney’s release. He said he planned to enlist the aid of Lord Chancellor Birkenhead and Sir Ed- to Send Protest WASHINGTON, Aug. 28,-—Seere- tary of State Colby today was asked by a group of Irish women pickets to protest to the British govern- ment against letting. Lord Mayor MacSweeney die in a hunger Strike in prinon, AUSTRIANS PLOT FOR MONARCHY? VIENNA, Aug. 28.—Minister Streter revealed in last night's ses- sion of the Austrian parliament a | plot to restore former Emperor Karl to the throne, Sixty-nine deputies, members of former Premier Frederich’s party, were said to be implicated. Their names Were to be revealed later at a secret session of parliament. HALF FARE FOR __VET STUDENTS War veteran students of the fed- eral vocational schools in Seattle will be able to ride on the municipal street cars for half fares, if the city council acts favorably on an ordi- nance to be introduced Monday. The proposed bill, which is spon- sored by Councilmen Philip Tindall and John E, Carroll, will give the jexservice men the benefit of the rates allowed to school children, LIVES IN PERIL | Tugs from Grays Harbor were at- tempting again today to reach the schooner Defiance, which grounded on the rocks near there Wednesday with several Vancouver people aboard, according to reports received today by the Seattle Merchants’ ex. change. Similar attempts failed yesterday. It was hoped to float the vessel at | high tide and tow her to Portland | for drydocking. Tugs have been sent jout by the Grays Harbor Stevedoring | company. WOMAN HIT BY Struck on the head by a falling flag pole, Mrs. Peter Soret, 19, of Fragria, Wn., lies in the Lakeside hospital in serious condition with a possible fractured skull, The ac- cident occurred at 9:30 a, m. aboard | the steamer Virginia TV. as the veo sel was nearing Seattle. | Mrs, Soret was coming to Seattle | to visit a brother, Claude Quick, who jis iM at the Lakeside, A small child was tampering with the ropes at- tached to the ship's flag pole, when in some unexplained manner the pole fell to the deck, striking Mrs. Soret in its fli, three cents straight fare, two for a| self. He ts « fastidious dresser, as often as three or four times a day, it is said. i He worked for @ time as deck hand. on a tug boat here, and later as machinist. Alienists will be called in the-state: courts to pass upon Randall's sanity. F ———— ourth Div 1s soy in Monday stirred when a troop train with part of the Fourth division passes thru Seattle Monday afternoon to Camp Lewis, where the division is to be stavioned. e The troops are traveling over the Great Northern. The train will stop but a few minutes in Seattle, it is said ey RPE SE Lamping to Resume Stump Next Week George B. Lamping, candidate for governor, who was hit by a falling tree two weeks ago, will resume ac- tive campaigning Monday. The au- thor of the soldier bonus bill finds himself almost entirely recovered and will take the stump in earnest next week. Lottie Pickford _ Is Divorced Now LOS ANGELES, Aug. 28.—With- out contest by Alfred G. Rupp, New York broker, Lottie Pickford Rupp, movie star, was today granted a di- vorce on charges of desertion and nonsupport. Today's court proceedings were brief. Both Miss Pickford and her mother, Mrs. Charlotte Smith, testi- fied in support of the charges made in the complaint, Four Band Concerts on Sunday Program Bathing beach enthusiasts and park-goers Sunday may choose from |four band concerts arranged for jafternoon and evening. At 2:30 p. m, Wagner's band will play at Alki Beach, Adams’ band at Woodland park and Carrabba's band = at Seward. At 6 o'clock Adams's band will entertain at. Volunteer: pantie ; # King Lee Out Again Tt Awaiting U. S. Jury King Lee, notorious Chinese dope peddier, furnished $750 bonds Friday afternoon and is now at liberty pend- ing the action of the next federal grand jury, which is called for Sep- tember 1 36 Motor Mishaps Wet Day’s Record Thirty-six motor vehicle mishaps were reported to the police traffic division Friday. Wet pavements were responsible in a great number of the cases reported. Bring Back That. Plow, Old Fellah Will the police officer who bor- rowed a plow belonging to F. Gillett, city carpenter in the basement of the Public Safety building, please return same as Gillett feels the of- ficer has had the plow long ¢nough. Gillett refused to divulge the name of the careless one. Last Alaska Mail “Sails on Sept. 12 The last mail of the season for Alaska will leave Seattle September 2 on the steamer Victoria, of the Alaska Steamship compa it was announced Saturday by Edward Me- Grath, superintendent of railway mail service, meee innit mci ie attnctenibtcmtatsitiinltin tia 44