The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 15, 1922, Page 13

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Wien, Kame notes isp UE SECTION TWO CHORE DEADLY STHAN BATTLE FOR FREEDOM ‘amous Assassinated;| Cities Razed by) War Fires t BY MILTON BRONNER _ DUBLIN, Sept. 15.—More _ grevious hurts have been done to Ireland in two months civil war than in two years fighting between the British and the | | Ocean What is the toll of death and de g@ruction? Where is the battleground of this civil war? These questions, particularly the first, are difficult to answer, owing} te censorship. The tragic story metudes these outstanding points: Arthur Grif. fith dead from worry and strain; Michael Collins assassi- mated; the finest parts of Dub- lin in ashes; the best buildings in Cork and Limerick destroyed y fire and dynamite; » trail of truction across the west and Atlantic | | | ' | inability to well their produce; Specs hcennbrag ad po dnse Richard Mulcahy (left) military leader of the Irish Free That is the story of the part of| State, Eamonn De Valera (right) head of the Irish Irregulars Ireland known as the Irish Free) and a map showing where the Irish civil war is being fougIX. ce chery cad: pA ye eral The star in the circle indicates the spot in which Michael pteted: and of my ot_peswte| Collins was killed. Arrows show where the Free State troops H landed in the attack on irregulars. Black dots indicate towns in Belfast, capital of Ulster A mee bo gee started f. Dublin | formerly held by irregulars; crosses the positions to which june 2 . when the free state 4 army clashed with the frregulars j they have been driven. led by Do Valera. In the Tatsies| (that followed the famous Four building was destroyed and ‘fine hotels and business structures burned or biown up. Driven out of Dublin as a cober- Sent force, the rebels against free! state authority fought at Dundalk, f Cork and other towns. “Free state troops were eventually and uniformly victorious—but the om ‘was always death and destruc Bootlegger Puts Pep | in House Party “Fun” ‘The bootlegger with hie synthetic, ts given « fair trial. sin surely has put a “kick” In the American house party. The house courts! party once was quite a dignified ‘is, 2a, — it bev pens sont PE orderly event. Men guests who| Suddenly @ shot ts heard on the stroyed. The daily loss while the struck hostesses over the head with) front lawn. Nobody pays any at Moor lamps were almost certain to Valeristas were in the field was from one to five millions. be thrown out and socially ostra- Buch figures as are obtainable—| ‘ed. Women who suddenly took to} | which great playfulness with a carving| Weir ce the nevus! lowes ohow thie] knffe, table leg or Colt automatic| forts i taesgio, Toe clive tutar Ricais eer tee sncatues were stricken from the list of Nice! teres with his drinking. One hundred and People and “set in x cool, dry place”) 346 aiscovers a man In the tultp | killed. for the rest of their lives. ‘Three hundred and thirty-four|_ Brewis were considered poor form. | |bed badly wounded—the man, not | Men wounded. Appeal. Re- trial. Case sent back to the lower Then the host goes out, not be-) three men The destruction of furniture amd the tulip bed. The man's wife ts hundred pris | Dricabrac was not regarded 4&3 doing @ Paviowa around the lawn a ao deucediy clever. Homicides were) with « .3$-caliber army pistol in wien June 1 and June 2$/ frowned upon by all persons who|, ' there were 27 killed in Southern| "24 been brought up well. It was) gylng:0. Ireiand. jthe time-honored custom, up to} “Stop!’ commands the host, re Fighting ts now confined to/!hree years ago, for the guests to! garding the bleeding husband. uthwest Ireland, except for occa-|*4¥¢ the house in their carriages.) «aw, keep outa this,” rebukes the cara or taxicabs instead of ambul ag Tgp erange nd sporadic raids. | vices and police wagons. Coroners, | Wounded husband. | district attorneys and police chiefs| “But, man, your wife has shot seldom were invited in their offi-| you! expostulates the host. cial capacities. | “‘Sallright!* argues the victim from the sen at Cork Youghal, |, 19 those days It was the custom) what's differece? She's my wife, Glandore, Tralee and the mouth |‘? isue Guest liste fo the society aint she? Gotta perfect right to of the Shannon. reporter, Today they issue casualty | shoot me if wants to. What?" lista. | Meanwhile, | “Verily, the house party of today| , seanwhile Inspection of free state military temptng a dance she once saw Isa- | dora Duncan do. Guests have rushed out | this time they realize that it's just | nome kind of a new game, arranged by the thoughtful host with the co. operation of the clever Mr. and Mrs Gunnery, “who are always so darned original.” try in County Cork, and part of Kerry and West Waterford. The irreguiars hold no line in the mili tary sense of the word, but are in scattered concentrations. Street and neighborhood fighting | |i, continues in Belfast. The Ulster! government gives out no figures, but Dall Eireann issues regular bul-| gan's Grove Saturday afternoon and evening seem like a taffy-pull by the campire giris in the refining re- | cesses of the church parsonage. As most any modern hostess will you, the people who attend |house parties these days all seem |to be members of the house wreck lers’ union. The party seldom gets Jetins on what it calls “Belfast Pistols are then passed all around Tiacsion® 3t cialsae that -etece [ener way vétore come of the) aig'« Sood time io more than em Duly, 1920, there have been 447; Suess begin to manifest convictions) joyeq by all Catholics ‘killed, 1,793 wounded, | ‘**t they are members of an acro-|" “on 1 know a new game,” a stout 9.250 driven from their employment | >#tic troupe little bounder announce: “It's by armed mobs, and 23,960 driven| Nobody thinks of giving a party | called ‘Sawing-a-Woman-in-Half” I from their homes. Of the latter,| without having the chandeliers) saw it in vaudeville, It’s an Miu 2.800 are now homeless, while thou.| braced so at least two persons can! sion. Has anybody got a good big jswing on them. The prudent how tess puts a concrete walk on the It is advisable to remove all them with carpets portegts Homebody, of course, has a saw. They carry everything at these par- tien nowadays, Probably some man lof woven steel. | comes forward with a fire axe, Oh, A week end party that recently | you've no idea what fun there is tracted much newspaper attention! to be had! sands have gone to Dublin and other cities. Mother Bird Wins Fight Against Cat |.: TRENTON, J.,fept. 15.—A bird|is a fair sample of what happens flying against her window and wildly|at many @ function. The guests in the world is to be found at any crying told Mrs. Clarence Frost| gather and sample something out of| well-conducted house party. He's gomething wag wrong. Going out-|a punch bowl Later cocktail shak.|the county coroner. Awfully clever, doors she saved a baby bird which | ers are brought into play. Mr. Mil.| He can be depended upon to return &@ cat was pursuing. ton Doofunny has a new recipe, It} @ verdict that the party was a huge ot | success, Unless, was nobody killed, course, there WANTS LICENSE BUT CAN’T RECALL NAME OF HIS BRIDE-T0-BE PORTLAND, Sept. 15.—Steve Lucas, 34, has been nominated as president of the Absent Mind- ed club. Steven came here from Aber: deen, Wash., and lost little time in going to the courthouse, where he applied for a marriage license, He fulfilled the custom. ary requirements and answered the usual questions until con- fronted with this query. “What is the name of the | THE OLDEST OPTICAL HOUSE ON = || ecient cant thine ot it: tt has FIRST AVENUE. ESTABLISHED 1906. | “ONT FIRST ave ese MADISON |= So he had to go after the blushing damsel, who, speaking for herself, said her name was es the wife, still taking} [maps shows more than 30 towns) | \* t. Tay | pot shots at her husband, has been from which the frregulars have wr od be tn Rn ena | nein ‘Will You Love Me in De t . idgewor | cemb You Do in May?” 9 Been Griven, retiring to hilly coun-| sactural Steel Tossers at Mulli-| *™mver 88 You Do in May?” and at-/ But by/ And just the folilest little person | SEATTLE, WASH,, FRIDAY, | | lat the American end of the bridge, | was of heavy build, realized her dan-| Detroit, } | | [bere of Toronto, Juntil it reached the very brink and/ control and discipline. F | | tention until five or etx are heard. | | he fears anyone is being) | | | | Eva Henderson | NIAGARA FALLS Her Auto Backs Over Cliff When Brakes Fail NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y,, Sept.! 15.—An automobile plunged over the cliff near the cataract at Nit agora Falls and was dashed to pieces 200 feet below on the river's edge. Mrs. Agatha Miller, 64 years old, wife of D. H. Miller, of Cleve land, fell to her death with the Her body was recovered. just north | Mrs. in the wan parked on| the customs office! car The accident happened of the upper steel arch bridge Miller was alone in the car, The car near rear seat the grass facing the river on a slight slope. | There is no guard rail the cliff] ledge. The owner and driver of the ear, Edward Meyers, of Buffalo, had} left it, as he thought, safely parked For some reason it began to slip down the slope and Mra, Miller, who ger. Hor screams aroused the by standers and two men, Harry An drew, of Buffalo and Joseph Gold grabbed the rear strove desperately to ‘They kept their holds fenders and stop the car | plunged into the gorge. Mra. Miller| | tried to extricate herself but she was quick enough age sbings — all pe ny er he Just p onar pe x} to a pan. A ped pack The Seattle Star s SEPTEMBER 15, 1 1922, WOMAN DIES IN Oh, Kids! You Can Be C ops| Lieut Carr ‘Has Novel Plan - MNT Y WE WAS CASIO mmeTY An ice WAGON Ly'R! HONOR ' qyiury Bit Oh, kids! Wanta be cops? boys. The police clerk Is a negro You don't have _- wait — boy and the city attorney a lad of you're grown up. You ne oe . i your own policemen, with stare |?% Who 1# an able and efficient nd hold | Prosecutor, who, Carr says, would police court shame many a grown-up lawyer That's the plan advanced by The most unruly and mische- Lieut. Clarence G. Carr, head of * cman the police traffic squad, to end vious boys are selected for po auto deaths in Seattle licemen, They are gtven badges Carr jearned all about the system, just like the reguiar police and when he was in Detroit recently.| operate in connection with The “Juventie court” system has; them, with ranks of sergeant, succeeded wonderfully, not only tn patrolman and captain, The but in many eastern cities more unruly the bey, the quick- er he settles down into a hard and industrious worker. ‘raffic conditions are studied on! every street and “cops” posted there Juvenile offenders of the traffic laws are haled into court and pun inhed by jury trial. Crimes include he asserts. Hy this method, Carr says, auto dents Involving school ehildren have been cut to a phenomenally low figure, saving scores of child lives and teaching the children neif In Detrott schools, court ts held skating in the street, hooking on every day In one school, the) wagons, recklessness, and a thou magistrate is odd similar offenses. ‘The |hand MRISH CIVIL WAR LEAVES TRAIL OF DESTRUCTION! | LEADERS IN IRISH WARFARE GIRL CHOKES||GIRLS FIGHT IN TURK SOLDIER|/ RING FOR LOVE STANTINOPLE, Sept. 15. beautl |{ drina Rakoveky, @ | dot in Ale ful Russian girl ed for strangling Ahmed Bey of the has been arrest o death Gen Turkish army Dispute Looks on as Bets Run High boys and giris are strong for the} ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. Is oys and & ie for the) eroxine 500 persons formed @ system, Carr says |ring in/ which two. women, Saal The teachers are » The also in favor of] Ciogsen, Sadie B. ith bare fist 36 years old, 32, fought love of a man Paimer, for the the court session every day lessens and makes their work The man, a witness to the fray, fe easier in that the children are more). 14 ty have told the contestants he interested in would throw his affections to the sponsibility of over winner awakens the ambitions and latent News of the contemplated fight power of child minds, they deciare.| brought the neighbors as spectators, Carr points out that the ebil und witnesses told in court of bets dren are teaching themselves | peing ed valuable points of law and per- | Mise Palmer landed the first blow, sonal safety, Thru the strict | 9 right to the jow. Her opponent ordinances the school children | countered with an uppercut, but have made regulating their own | jnjured her hand. Both went into | traffic, countless lives have been | « eiinch | saved, | Mins Clossen broke away, and | The regular police of Detroit | when the other swung, witnesses cooperate with their small ri- | vals and often have been assist- waid, she dodged and retaliated with 4 blow to the chin for a knockout. ed in making important arrests | Roth women were arrested and fined thru them. Police officials ocea- | $10 each sionally lecture during the court ss sions, aldi nd directing facie activities. | American Bankers FRANCISCO, — William «| Aid Bolshevists? Cole, head of string of banks on east| BERLIN, Sept. 15.—Private ad- side of San Francisco bay, found! vices from Silesia state that soviet dead in his office with bullet thru agents are buying large quantities Cole held revolver in his|of iron there and making payment with checks on American banks. BAN | heart ew use for Brings longed-for relief from the three- times-a-day reddening of the hands INTO the dish pan three times every day — washing with harsh soap — naturally your hands redden and grow coarse., Don’t let them show tell-tale traces of dishwashing. Wash your dishes with Lux. It gets it preserves the softness, the delicate texture of your skin. Women themselves discovered this use for Lux. ee Women who for years had been getting such satisfaction from Lux for silks and woolens tried it for washing dishes. Thousands of letters have come in to us saying that Lux suds leave your china beautifully clean and at no cost to your hands, and asking us why we never mentioned it. Lux contains no free alkali or any other harmful ingredient. It is as easy on your hands as a fine toilet soap. Start using Lux today for washing dishes. Lever Bros. Co., Cam- FOR WASHING DISHES

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