The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 12, 1919, Page 20

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ING INDIAN ~ SUSPECT HERE “Friends of Murdered Taxi Driver Wait Arrival ur Farron, Indian, who was d at Toppenish Thursday, ed by the sheriff of being the of Thomas Ryan, rent car » Whose body was found in th h on the bank of the Duwamish Juno 30, will be brought to Se- Saturday. Upon his arrival here, Dominick va, Harry Burke and J. E ‘Will meet him to see if he can be tified as the man seen with on the night of the murder, va is proprietor of a fruit at 20914 Yesler way, and Ryan in the habit of standing his car front of his place. On the night the stranger hired the car, Cee, player at the Lyric theatre, with Scazzafava and saw the hire the car. @ is the stage driver on auto the man believed to be murderer took passage to Olym- & after burning Ryan's car, near two women thought by the eriff to be implicated in the mur- Ger have not yet been captured, al- © their identity is believed to be ne doubt now exists as to Farron {ts the right man. ng to latest descriptions of he is somewhat larger than the geen with Ryan on the night of i All doubts will be set- [as soon as Sheriff Rufus W. it arrives here, Saturday noon, AYS CRASHES RE AVOIDABLE d Stop Auto Parking on __ Cable Car Hills ts |tO state frankly that he could not ave. been the had H il hi 83 years old, and I took 8 for rhumatism ever since out of the army, over 50 PS ago. Like many others, I spent n freely for so-called ‘cures,’ have read about ‘uric acid’ until I became tired. I could not nights walk without pain; hands were so sore and stiff I not hold a pen. But now, as _ magic, I am again in active ait and can walk with ease or ali day with comfort. Friends ‘@re surprised at the change.” HOW IT HAPPENED Mr. Ashelman is only one of thou- who suffered for years owing the general belief in the old false ry that “uric acid” causes rheu- This erroneous belief in- Be ed him and legions of unfortunate ME and women to take wrong treat- Ments. As one well known authority Bays: “You might just as well at- _ tempt to put out a fire with ofl as | to try an aed rid of your rheuma- ' dar. neuritis and like complaints by taking treatments supposed to drive a Bcid out of your blood and f Many authorities now know uric acid never did id never il cause rheumatism; that It is a tural and necessary constituent of blood; that it is found in every new-born. bi and that without it “we could not live! These statements may seem inge to some sufferers who have along been led to believe in the ad “uric acid" humbug. It took Mr. helman 50 years to find out this uth. Hi true recover from “The Inner seve. & remarkable book now be- istributed free by an authority over 20 years to the of this trouble. if @ copy of this book that fact look: ; {had to do it. When Sheriff Berry otice, lest ny a your- THE ~—(DEVALERAIS | CHICAGO GUEST Irish Leader Is Cheered by| Thousands CHICAGO, July 12.—"Tf the people of the United States tell President Wilson they want him to support the Irish cause, the president, as their | representative, will carry out their | wishes,” Eammon de Valera, presi: | | dent of the Irish republic, said on his | arrival here today. | Da Valera was given a warm recep: tion by Chicagoans. Stepping from | | the train he and his party had dim | culty in making their way to a wait ing automobile. The crowd in the} streets was so thick that his car fair: | }ly crept to the hotel, while thou-| | sands shouted, waved flags and shook | the “president's” hand. | “With regard to the question of the hissing of the president at an| Irish meeting in New York,” de Va-| lera said, “this is not the attitude | of the Irish people. I believe we can | get the support of the American peo- ple. President Wilson said he will) give his support, and I believe he} will.” | De Valera said that Britain has no| more claim to Ireland than Germany had to Belgium, He said the peace conference was not merely to settle | the question of war, but to straighten out the problems of the world. | “The Irish question,” he added, “is | @ matter of human law—the justice | of justice.” ITALIAN DEPUTY DEFENDS WILSON Says Attack on President Is Outrageous ROME, July 11. — (Delayed.)— (United Press.)-—Speaking in the chamber of deputies today on Italy's foreign policy, Prof. Enrico Ferri, socialist deputy, declared that ex- Prer‘er Orlando and Baron Sonnino, ex-foreign minister, thru the press had led the nation to believe that President Wilson had shamefully de ceived the Italians. “We know that before entering the peace conference Wilson wished conscientiously uphold all of Italy's aspirations,” Ferri said. “Sonnino asked Wilson to keep quiet. “Now if this is true, why has the government permitted d’Annunzio to attack President and Mrs. Wilson? This is outrageous, as Wilson is fundamentally honest, like the great People he represents.” Signor Murialdi, under secretary of supplies, declared in a statement today that if agreements with the allies are not renewed before the end of July, Italy will be without bread before the end of September. “The solution of the food ques- tion rests with the workers,” he said. “Italy. must produce more and consume less. Cereals especial- ly must be produced.” Today’s cabinet meeting took Measures to prevent the renewal SAYS HEART IS $250,000 HURT Charges Woman Proposed, Then Jilted Him; Sues Asking $250,000 heart balm, Frig- brid O. Sandberg, 1424 Sixth ave., filed suit against Miss Ida Lilly Fri- day, claiming that she proposed mar- riage to him, and after he had ac- cepted, refused to marry him. Sand- berg was in the Swedish hospital April 7, and it was while he was there Miss Lilly proposed to him, he asserts in his complaint. No record of Miss Lilly being at the Swedish hospital could be found, and she could not be located at 1330 Eighth ave. the address given by Sandberg’s complaint. Troops Guard Race Riot Zone in Texas LONGVIEW, Texas, July 12.— (United Press.) — Army airplanes, militiamen and Texas rangers to- day patroled Longview to prevent repetition of yesterday's race riots when one white man was probably fatally injured, three other whites were wounded and several negroes reported killed or wounded. The negro section of ine city was par tially burned, General R. H. McDill, command- ing the militiamen, said no further outbreaks were expected but that troops would be kept on hand for @ time. Rioting broke out following an at- tack on I. Jones, negro school teacher, and reputed author of an alleged inflammatory report of a lynching near Longview in June. AUSTRIA GLOATING OVER’ CZECH WORRIES (N. E. A. Special to The Star.) VIENNA, July 12.—Austria is gloating over the political troubles | that beset the government of the new Czecho-Slovak republic. Pressure of Agrarians and Socialists on the gov. ernment {s increasing. They would hasten the nationalization of the land, mines and industries generally, re- moving the big owners. Viennese who draw large incomes from indus- trial concerns in Bohemia, are espe- cially angry over the plans for liqui- dation of German-Austrian concerns within the new country, under au thority of the peace congress, a pro- vision for which the Czecho-Slovak government is responsibl: SLAYER ESCAPES THE GALLOWS BY 2 HOURS CHEHALIS, July 12.—J. W. Cline, who is in the Lewis county jail for the murder of his brother-in-law, Kirk Asbury, at Morton, is not wor- ried about his own fate or the decd he committed. He maintains that while he was sorry it happened, he remarked to him that if he had waited two hours to commit the deed, the capital punishment law in this state would have been in effect SEATT LE STAR - Adams’ California Fruit Shares in the Conquest of the Air The R-34 came to America with Adams’ California Fruit Gum as a necessary member of the crew. ites It carried nothing that wasn’t essential. During this great voyage it gave the air- men courage, steadied the nerves of the new Columbuses. It did its duty in this triumphant struggle against the uncharted space just as it served valor and victory in every Allied’ trench for five grueling years. @ And it served so well at a moment and in a Denies Hitchcock and Wilson Break WASHINGTON, July 12.—Secre- tary Tumulty {ssued a statement declaring reports of a disagreement between President Wilson and Senator Hitchcock, who had been one of his most ardent supporters, are untrue, The statement follows “The stories appearing in the morning papers of a disagreement between the president and Senator Hitchcock are without the slightest foundation, ‘There has been no conference between the president and the democratic senators either at the White House or at the capitol since his return. What the newspapers refer to as a confer- ence was merely an informal meet- ; ing in the president's room in the eapitel which took place immedi- ately after the president addressed the senate when many democratic senators, including Senator Hitch- cock, came to greet the president and congratulate him upon his ad- dress. “I was present when the presi- dent met, Senator Hitchcock, ‘The meeting was most cordial in every way. The president deeply appre- clates Senator Hitchcock's fine support as the ranking member of the committee on foreign relations, and, will at the earliest moment seek an opportunity to confer with him on all phases of the peace eat) wee : Se IT tas inch aeietiiet naan ae eee aia Chicago Car Men Demand Increase CHICAGO, July 12.—Pay of 87 cents an hour, an increase of 77 per cent, was demanded by street car men here today. Employes of ele- vated lines joined in a strike threat, demanding 37-cent raises to 87 cents | for motormen and 82 cents for ¢on- ductors. Employers said granting these reque will mean fares of 9 or 10 cents, Relatives Search for Lost Soldier Frank Orris Pierce, machine gun company, 139th infantry, of the 35th division, has been missing since Sep- tember 29, according to Col. 0. W. B. |arr, of the recruiting office. He | was near Cheppy, in the Argonne, lon that day, and has not been heard |of since. His relatives are searching for him. THIEVES GET CASH AND MUCH CLOTHING ‘Thieves ransacked the West hotel, in Riverside, Friday, and stole cloth: ing belonging to William Allen and Edward Curtis. After burglars had piled the fam- fly plate in a tablecloth, ready to make off with it, they were fright: ened away at the home of J. J. Bar- ber, 7025 16th ave, N. E., Friday. F. C. Halverson, 6732 Second ave. N. W., had $25 in silver Friday, until thieves who gained ent thru an unlocked back door visited the place. | 5,585 BRICKS SOLD FOR HOME BY POLICE City Detective C, M, Ballard sold $1,875 worth of “bricks” in the Mother Ryther home drive, accord- ing to figures compiled by Captain W. H. Searing on Friday. The en tire department disposed ‘of $5,585 * os ~ Worth of “bricks, SUICIDE OF BROTHER PUZZLES SEATTLE MAN E. Ryberg, 1627 Belmont ave., can assign no cause for the suicide of his brother, Victor Ryberg, 27, in a Tacoma shooting gallery Friday. Victor Ryberg is supposed to have turned a gun on himself while shooting at targets in the shooting gallery, The body is being held in ‘Tacoma, |PLAN EXAMINATIONS FOR PHONE OPERATOR The United States civil service | commission announced Saturday an examination for telephone operator, for both men and women, will be held August 13, to fill vacancies in the federal classified civil service, at ‘tle, The salaries range from $900 a.veare, . > England, place so totally unex- pected for its use that this incident was set down in the log of the R-34. The R-34 sails home with an increased sup- ply of Adams’ Califor- nia Fruit Chewing Gum. The New York World of July 9 says the supplies put aboard the R-34 for the return, in addi- tion to 5,000 gallons of gasoline, include 200 pounds of bread, 125 pounds of cooked meat, 45 pounds of potatoes, 36 pounds of chocolate, 6 pounds of tea, some pound cake, jam, and plenty of chewing gum. The takes the place, in a meas- ure, of tobacco the men are for- bidden to smoke during the voyage. The thinking man’s, the fighting man’s, nerve ration. AMERICAN CHICLE COMPANY ELOPED IN 1910; SHE NOW SEEKS DIVORCE RENO, Nev., July 12.—Edith Au- gusta Vingut, daughter of former Mayor Gaynor, of New York, is plaintiff in a divorce action on file today against Henry Kermit Vingut, New York financier, Mrs, Vingut charges cruelty, Vingut has filed an answer, denying the charge. The Vinguts were married in 1910, an elopement featuring the romance, With her sister, Mrs. Ralph H. Is- lam, Mrs. Vingut has resided in Reno since May. BOY AND MONEY ARE GONE; TELLS POLICE Harry Gasaloff, 519% Seventh ave, S., left a coat with $505 in one of the pockets, hanging on a chair, while he went into another room Fri- day. A boy was in the room when he dent out. When he returned the boy and the money were both gone, He has furnished a good description of the boy. FUNERAL DE The body of Ernest Tivendell, 52, who committed suicide at the Ballard locks Friday by drinking poison and slashing his throat, ankles and wrists with a razor, is being held at the Bonney-Watson mortuary pend- ing instructions from his father in POLICEMAN ARRESTED FOR SELLING BOOZE DES MOINES, Ia, July 12.—A shakeup in the Des Moines police force is expected, following the in- dictment and arrest of Police Sergt. Charles Hall, for alleged owning and selling of intoxicants. The indictment and arrest came on the heels of an investigation by fed- eral operatives and agents from Gov. Harding's office. Investigators hinted that other sensational evidence against the po- lice department would be made pub- Ne soon. OPINIONS The world scems now disor; And different forms of grie’ at in possible to find. 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We want to show everyone at our own ex- pense that this new method is des signed to end all difficult breathin ail wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms at once. |" This free offer is too tmportant to | neglect a single day. Write nowand | then begin. the method at once, |Send no money. Simply mail cou: below. Do it today.” sos | | FREP ASTHMA COUPON FRO TER ASTHMA ag Room 583. Niogara sts., Buffalo, N, x tapes i Send free trial of your method 03

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