The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1919, Page 9

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NTELIUS Music Is Sweetest EVEN A CHILD Can Play Like a Great Musician ONDERS will never cease and here indeed is a won- der that will make you rub your eyes and disbelieve your ears—an instrument that a mere child, untrained in music, can play with all the perfect technic and grandeur of expression of a great concert artist. “A Player Piano,” you will say; yes, but SUCH a player piano, The only HUMAN-LIKE player piano in all the world—the MONTELIUS SOLOELLE The Tone Coloring Player Piano The SOLOELLE ts absolutely unmechanical im effects, securing tte wonderful expression throagh separate co 1 ef the Melody and Accompaniment—aino bj controlling the force of the hafmer-stroke Third Avenue at University Street ; MORAL: DO NOT FLIRT | WOULD PROTECT WITH A POLICEWOMAN officer and thereby hangs the down. nn foe onrtaten Of einer aight "as ale Garland: was lap Stockings walking thru Central park she was| accosted by the aforesaid’ young! LONDON, October 10—Japanese|™&R. Who asked her if he might stockings menace a British industry [ee such eee tun tts Grea boy <4 te gerne Foy ag Bot under her breath. To the “masher Ball's domain, Therefore the Ma, {sh¢ replied: “You sure can,” and ho} |tional Industrial Council of the hos. ion yay omg é: ggg ME oral }lery trade wants importation prohib- | 7) 0 org ; 79) pM, ited for another six months. It SN ce ant nag me 8 - Mi that the restriction be extended to|Dered that she was a police ‘ell articles that are manufactured in| Wen she arrived at the countries where the standard of|tion she turned him falia below the recognized | *icers. ae i> Baaiens nized) it cout the fresh young man $17 to take that “stroll.” over to the Vineyardist Found Murdered by Axe SAN JOBE, Cal, Oct. 10.—The| body of Alfonse Christy, terribty | mutilated, as with an axe, was found today lying under a vine in his} | vineyard. He Had been murdered during the |PARROT PROVES TO BE LONG ISLAND THIEF NEW YORK, %. ¥., Oct, 10.—-W. B. | Post, of Ro in L. lL, wae about to advertise the lon of a din mond from his scarf pin when he fiscovered lis pet polly banging it | n Wamatiant inst the bare of the cage The Levior’ tsa complowe mystery, for| Ga? before, My. Post renemberei, ae danitee hee then found he had been reclining on the iounge | on ae | and the bird had strutted about his r | SEEKS HUSBAND WHO [sewn occasionnily pecking at the } jewel that iiuminated bis scart. : BLEITZ LEFT HOME WITH $800) rot in attempts to disioa a NEW Evidently Polly was very succens | Mr. Post took the recovered diaz Mre. J. B. Melyin, of Wenatchee,| Mt. Pes ce ee Kryptok @oubte-vision lenses are a new senration in comfort, expecially if you have worn any other kind. No casightly scar — they jook like ordinary singte- vision glasses. We juar- antee accuracy and patie- action. the stone Wash., bas axked the Seattle poli 1 ee oes © Be : to aid her in locating her husband.) vis ; who has been missing since one! NEGRO 1S KILLED ber 4, She says Melvin was in poor! yoUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct. 10,— health and left home with $900 in/Ong negro is deat, another in the! UNDERTAKING cash. Bhe believes he came t/ nespital in @ critieal condition, and | PARLORS AND | Seattle several others were injured in a CREMATORY | oe sears - Jolash between negroes and foreign ¥. M. ©. A. CONVENTION |b rn steel workers at Hubbard early STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Oct.| 4 }10—-Bixty delegates representing | | various universities of the West, at-| An arca of 436 acres was burned tended a Y. M. C. A. convention t ‘over in the great fire of London in todey. It will continue over Sun 1666 Are now located at 215 Kil bourne #t., just two blocks west of my OLD location Thowe who have had oe- to use the Peltz found it re- fined, courteous and com- forting in time of bereave- ment yughtful, sympathetic ion is Kynonymous Bleitz Service. NORTH 587 att with MIKE SACKS: ADROVE oF w/# : \[ French Delegates | “DANCING DARLINGS THE MUSICAL REVUE DE LUXE ae Manard Rental Agency «< pn iid 1726-7 b, €. Smith: Bldg. . . * ELLIOTT 4993 BUSINESS LOCATIONS PMLLD—iigits, OVC Ww & SEATS NOW fi \ a err ’ A I ON SALE be THE SEATTLE STAR-—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1919. “i ‘Was Absent Without Leave; Court-Martial | Gives | Him 15 a outstanding jndigtiments against went ‘s meted out by our army courteshartial under our present system ate they are barbarously harsh and that the courts seem to close (hele eyen ely to the Human faetots and the aching hearts that are to be dis- cerned behind the mote legalistic Prowenutation of the bare facts in & Came Arthur F, ‘Townsend was a cook in the headquarters ard Missourt — intai Guard 2 was accused to respond to the call of the president on Mi 1917, which was before we were at war He: did not come becwuse hits child wan ill apd because there was a doubt in hia mind as to the legality of requiring, service from him, The courtumartial aequit- ted Him, but the departmental com mander sent the case baglt. Remember that. In our civilian courts an acquittal enda the matter In army courtemartial it doesn't When the courtmartial reconsidered ita verdict It gave this man six months at hard labor and forfeiture of one-third of, his pay for that period. ‘The reviewing authority ap: proved this, but cut. the punishment to forfeiture of onethird pay for three months, Some Shoeking Casee Now I want to cite some shocking cases General Ansell, former acting Judge advocate general of the army wit of, and the records in which 1 wae not permitted by the army to see, Hence I can't give names A boy got an enormous prison sentence. The bare facts looked bad for the lad. Ho left camp and went Home, staying there from the latter part of December until June, This would set up the natural preeump: ton he was a real deserter. But the human facts were he came from the class of poor, humble people to be found in the backwoods district of the South, His old futher was seriously ill, and the boy went home *o be near him. He remained until the old man died, and the nest day, having never taken off his uniform, reported voluntarily to his nad, Senator Knox Irate When Ansell told the senate committee about this, Senator Knox, himself former attorney general of the U.S. A. exclaim. ed, “You should have court martialed: the court-martial!” Another soldier, accused of deser- en, was convicted and sentenced t 25 years’ imprisonment, which PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 10—Win tor WI, 24; haw been returned. to the Oregon penitentiary, and must worve & term of 10 years there. Willis escaped from the penitenti- ary last August, when he had only a fow weeks more to serve on a charge of stealing twe automobiles. But it te not to complete this sen- tence that Clrowlt Judge McGinn sent him to the penitentiary for 10 years. Rather, it was for stealing another automobile after he had made his escape. MoeGinn announced, in sentencing Willis, there: will be, no leniency in his court hereafter to automobile Uleves. Urges Deportation. com: | Years reduced to fi the convening au thority, prison three and one the clemency ance remitted. Thia would leave the soldier dimbonorably digcharged from the army, His Wifp Was Il Ansell says the man piead guilty With apparently nm comprehen: | Provecur 0 The ac | cused said he got a letter from his Wife, saging she was ill, They lived | in ® seation not thickly settied and ith wilen from the nearest doctor | | No nurse could be secured, #9 he thought he “would daaive to go back | home.” Ha. felt there Was no use deking.a pass, because the camp war quarantined for measles. When hg, got home hia baby was bern and he | Femained with his little family | Another rvldier was conyleted of | being abeont without leave for six | | weeks. fe Was Given 16 Yeara at | Hard Labor, Which Was Meduced to Three, He Testified, and It Was Not Denied, He Went Home to Hin} Young Wife and Baby Who Were | Sick and in Poverty | Lang, honorable service in the jermy does not protect a soklier any jmore than ignorance protects the new reerult. A man 39 years old | with a wife and two emall children jhad had a splendid army record for 18 years. Ha. was absent without {leave for seven days, He was de {fended by a lieutenant who had Just entered the service, The man| waa nentenced to forfeiture of all pay, to dishonorable discharge from | | the army and to prison for one year! iM hard labor | | A Heart Throb Here'a another heart-throb story. | A private was found guilty of deser on and sentenced to five years in | prison, The examiner who reviewed | the cane said it wax one of absent without leave and recommended re talawlon of the rente remaining | unserved. Accused w at} the time of hin offense had been a noldier nix weeks. He went home! | When his mother wrote she was | | He felt he was doing wrong when he | Jet camp, but he had always gone to his mother when he was sick, no |tmatter where he was, He would) jhave returned to his command at| jonce, but was frightened by neigh bors, who said he would be shot The examiner reported the boy should not haye been tried at all./ What he needed was sympathy, not | punishment. | | Another private way absent with out leave for « few hours in a vil-| \\eee near Richmond, Hix purpose | was to see hin wife, who had come} jto visit him. He had applied re peatedty for a pase and been refused. | He got dishonorable discharge from | the army and two yeary’ imprison. | | ment, OO | [PGete-1t” Leaves Simeoth as Your | Palm. Never Fails. | Ever peet off « banana skin? Well thats the way any corn or callus, . Wea ‘Otbing elee In the world wil of Misfit Aliens’ A» & remedy for the unrest, which pervades America today, edneation of the allen i® the only, remedy, Dr. Floyd I, Beckwith, pastor of the Hirst membere of the Young Men'a Busi. ness club Thursday, If the alien falls to fit in with American ideals, he should be de- ported, Dn Beckwith said: 3% {ine This the ac Kates to the pe 0 neeau heads the lst. With him ag appear under the face of Clem- left to right, are: Stephen Andre Tardieu (who is commissioner of American au, on, ench offairs), of finance. Baptist church, told | Jules Cambon (minister of | meat-eaters . and Louis Klotz (min-|not injure effervescent lithia wat | | because ret principle in the via. "Gets-It™ d away forever | with “contrapt . “wrappy” pi | tora, ointments that rub ctf, blood: | letting knives, and sciesora that snip | jinto the “quick.” “Get e pain. It takes but a sec to ure “Gete-It” ‘There's nv troubles aries f the new m Jote-It" forn fussing immedi cht a losaly in complete pice cCOTAMON- sense. It never fail "Gete-It,” the only sure teed, money-back corn-ren but a trifle at any drug ufnctured. by K. Lawres | Chisago, 1 |Says Backache is a sign you! have been eating too much | meat, which forms | uric acid, | } when ou wake up with backache! and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been jeating too much meat, a well |known authority, Meat forms uric acid, which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood, | and they be sort of When your kic¢ and clog come raralyxed | your bowels iy'’s urinous , sick headache, dizzy » ; stomach |sours, tongue js coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic jtwinges. The urine is y, full of channels often get sore | water sca 4 you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night Fither consult a good, reliable phy |siclan at once or get from your phar: | about four ounces of Jad a ful in a glass ast for a tew kidneys will then aot $ saits 1s made from pes and lem with lthia, ¢ days and yc ager irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a lifesaver for regular It is in and ma drink, | | SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Special Price Basement X A Very Special Purchase of 103 } 1 Co, Women’s Newest Fall and Winter Coats ~ “WaT? ‘At 1-4 to 1-3 Under Prevailing Prices 41 Polo Cloth and Velour Coats 18. Fur 22 Long Plush Coats 12 Long Plush Dolman Coats 10 Short Muskratine Plush Coats, Every Coat in the group bears Fashion's stamp of approval, being in the best of the season's belted, sem#belted and full back styles. Some are full lined, others lined. to the waist. All sizes are here. represented, 36 to 46, and in all the desired Trimmed Coats _, = All at One Price $25.00 shades of Blue, Brown, Green, Burgundy and: Black. Shop the town over, then come here and know that you are saving one-fourth to one-third in this Satur- — day speci al. A Saturday. Sale of Hats $4.25 And anyone who sees them will agree that they are really extraordinary, values. Of course the styles are all correct—but more than this, the terials are excellent quality and the tailoring is high class. In. every. reg) these are hats of much higher value than the price would indicate. Lyons Velvet and Hatters’ Plush are developed in broad;brimmed. pokes, sailors, turbans and rolled brim effects. Velvet and silk flowe novelty ribbons of gold and many colors, and ostrich in fancy ornaments, trim them. Practically all colors are included. At: the one price, $4.25. 7 sizes, Saturday 200 Black Petticoats ' A Special at Only $1.69.Each at a great saving, $1.69, 400 Georgette Blouses Superior Values at $5.00, co a * yive q ~—Petticoats of fine silk finished waterbloom percaline, in, both regular ont ae Finished with pleated and, tucked flounces and with elastic waist) ty 2A. —Presenting a large variety of new styles—collarless, round, square and V- necks, with the newest trimmings of silk embroidery, beading, braid and lage, The colors represented, in this lot are. flesh, rose, beige, mais, gray, white and the darker suit shades. ; —A very low price for very good Capes. dng a ~-4 + Semone, 100 Children’s Rain Capes Special, Saturday $2.50 Each Zé Made of a tan Panama “= cloth, rubber lined, with hood attached. All sizes 6 to 14 years. While they last, Saturday at only $3 50. \ ‘ bean 4. A Sale of Girls’ Dresses (Sizes 6 to 14 Years)» . :isigitite at $1.79 Each | —_ ~ it cs aw fi Dresses of splendid chambrays in a dozen or more late styles—belted, pleated, button trimmed, with a variety of stripes, checks and plaids, in blues, tan, greens and, rose. The materials ings, with a few Zibelines. These coats come in, the cor- rect styles for youthful figures, The qplors are Navy, Brown, Burgundy and a few mixtures, —The quantity of each size in this lot: Size 14.. Size 15.. nee he oo A Fortunate Pick-up of 36 Junior Coats To Go at $15.00 Each —A very Jimited number in the lot, but most unusual values for the earliest purchasers who arrive at the store. are splendid Velours and Kersey Coat- Size 16.....15 Garments Sige 18......8 Garments + +9 Garments .-4 Garments a

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