The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 11, 1919, Page 18

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Dry squad officers swooped down on a houseboat at the foot of ine on the east shore of Lake Union, | eiday morning and captured two <tils and arrested Chris Hartwik Man Rescues Her Child From |". ant Pavt c. mitchey, 19 Apartment Fire | ‘The men are elt on an lopen charge pending federal investi mation The police believe th PORTLAND, Ore, Gct. 11.—Mra, | Stills have been — respo G, Begenisich leaped from the third much of the bootleg liq floor of a burning apartment house | been sold recently here late Friday afternoon without} Besides the two Serious injury. Then she remem.| police destroyed ; (dered she had left her infant child/mash and brought eight im her apartment grapo to the station as evidence ©. G. Duxbury, a neighbor, in Whose fiat flames started, wrap- Ped himself in a wet blanket and Wet after the child The child was Fescuei The flames were extin Sulshed without @reat damage to the Continued reports of small bur Dduilding glartes during the night filtered into Mrs. Begenisich’s fall was broken | the police station early urday By her landing on a shed roof. R. Oka, Japanese jeweler, 208 Sighth ave. 8, reported the loas of e nh cash and a gold watch, while McGrath Gives Up 2" tartinwon, Aatenie theta test . «s gold wateh and chain nad $11 in on Crime Charge {5° Wilton spicier sting wee BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 11.—4By | ond ave, lost $18 In cash a Gnlted Press}—William MeGrath, | watch. Business agent of the stevedores c Mion, which is on strike, surrend @red himself yesterday to ¢ 1a gold Dewereport, 701 First ave. lost a gold watch, while A. M. Jan gen, 2615 BE. Cherry st., lost a watch Sharge of murder, He is accused of FH. J. Gillette, 212 Pike st, had a bag @hartering the automobile from | containing $30 stolen from under hia @hich Nelson S. Dunning was shot. | sate. Dunning had been working on the — Waterfront with his brother, unload " Mea ship. He was shot and killed LONDOS BEATEN Phile riding home. OMAHA, Neb, Oct. 11.—John | McGrath was by the! Pesek, ‘on, Neb. won one fall ®rand jury ich into the| from Jim Londos, Greek champion ‘fase, it was learned. here last night and was given the match when Londos refused to con Dr. eeeallo Guest tinue because of injuries. The first of Chinese Society | «'«: }fall took two hours and 26 min Henry Sugrallo, president LT.-COL, BEALS W « RETURN Expecting to resume commemorating the eighth an-/attle attorney of the republic of China in|the Sist division, will safl from message received by his wife here. THIRD A “BULLY GOOD” DW THAT STARTS UNDAY (230 P. M. A CONTINUOUS D CE A BIG SENSATIONAL DANCING REVUE WITH PRETTY MAIDENS IN TRANSPARENT GOWNS—SUCH IS THE DANCE OF THE ATTRACTION IN RRING FAMOL AND ERT. C. HUNT ; LAST AND FINAL EPISODE OF SUNDAY AND EVEN THE Cotherine TL! Chepiru cher quit his pulpit and led his congregation into battle during the Reve retary Daniels of the navy chose lit olutionary war, naor one of Uncle her revolutionary hero o | proved equal to the occasion ing the sparkling wine bow and christened it Another of her Muhlenberg « DISMISS. CHARGE Two charge * against University, and Professor FE. ‘* ~ . da Callaghan was convicted of were guests of the Chinese} Expec 7 W practice one charge in connection with nec’ . 1 Welfare society at a ban-| here, Lieut-Col. Walter B. Beala Se ing 1 Judge advocate of | claims He was pa 106 Second ave.| France October 18, according to a/fore his sentence of two and a half | years RPHEUM MADISON ee | AND lto recommit the bill so that only | VAMPIRES AS THE BIG EXTRA ADDED “ROAMING ROMEO” LEW WHITE HEBREW COMEDIAN vik HOUDINI'S tis" NGS 40¢—CHILDREN 20¢ erie Gun Fight | BOZEMAN, Oct. 11-—-Standing off a posse of 200 enraged farmern for 1 than three hours Friday afternoon, Buford Webb, who had} killed earlier tr © day Deputy Sheriffs Pomeroy Vv Frank Curtice, of Manhattan, Mont., was killed in a granary where he| had taken refuge | The farmers were preparing to dynamite the granary when Webb 4 bullet from the gun| was Killed t of the ol " wild ¢ r wan started more than & week ago when he was arrested and fined $50 following a| quarrel over wages with his em ployer, Harvey Plumlee, a ranch man, Webb waylaid Plumlee Friday morning and Plumlee ci deputies were t him up 1 for help. ‘The two killed when they at:| tempted to arrest Webb, Webb ran jand f re pursued He was! d to a granary, where he took | nd which led to his death. } BAKERY ROBBED After robbing Sallee Brothers’ bakery, 4200 Fremont ave., at 8:30] p.m. Friday, the burglar remained n the bakery until a Phinney ave street car came along. He then ran out and mounted the car with $50 from the cash register | Earl Salles, one of the propri tors, was in the shop when the| burglar entered lee was com manded’ to put up his hands, then face @ wall and remain there with his mouth cloned. Sallee complied | Motorcycle officers were notified | and every inbound car was stopped, | but no trace of the burglar could ive found SUGARS ON WAY SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 11.—A} shipment of 2200 bage of sugar for distribution in Seattle left San Fran cinco Friday by steamahip. Another ship will safl from this port next Tuesday with a cargo of sugar con. signed to Tacoma, Spokane and other cities in Washington, The sugar shipment for Seattle should be in the hands of retailers by next Monday morning. DRYS WIN VOTE: WASHINGTON, Oct 11—The house by @ vote of 231 to 70 nent to the President yexterday for his alg |nature the prohibition enforcement bill, Efforts were made by the wets cha the courts of record could iasue war-| rants to search homes and other buildings for intoxicating liquors, Dut thie wna defeated #2 to 114 TOTS ARE DYING CHICAGO, Oct. 11—Shirley and Edna Luikart, whose mother pois: | oned them because she desired to be | free for a life on the stage, fought valiantly against the poison today, Edna had made a slight gain, her| nurse reported. Shirley's condition | remained unchanged. There is little | |hope that elther of the little girls | will recover. The mother ts tn jaf. “REDS” SLAY 19 HELSINGFORS, Finland, Oct. 11 Nineteen persons charged with be ing implicated in a counter revolu tionary plot have been executed in Moscow by the Bolsheviki, accord: | ing to dispatches fron Petrograd. A state of war has been pro claimed in Moscow and more than 700 persons are under arrest, mys| the Petrograd report. LITTLE “IRON RULERS” TO BE EXTRADITED PARIS, Oct. 11.—The French gov ernment is demanding extradition of | Gens. von Heinrich and von Grae-| enitz who, as governors of Lille, en-| forced an “iron rule" which made! slaves of the people. FRANCE RETURNING | TO BREAD CARDS| PARIS, Oct. 11.—-Due to unfore-| seen aity in obtaining enough ‘or the country, the French government has decided to reintro-| duce bread cards after the general | elections. wheat | | TO CONTINUE PASSPORTS wg LONDON, Oct. 11.-The war over, but the British passport sys term is lik to be continued for years to come. The purpose will be to keep undesirables out of British territory ADER IS NOW MAYOR | STER, England, Oct. 11 ‘The Manchester city council has unanimously elected Alderman Tom Fox, leader of the Labor party in the counctl, to be the next mayor of the city. He will be the first labor mayor Manchester has had LABOR LE. MANCH Many a fellow fishes all day and tehes nothing but visionary mack erel. STIFF NECK, LUMBAGO Aches and Pains of Rheumatism Sometimes Almost Unbearable. | | ‘There are weather conditions| that make rheumatiam worse, hey are not the same in the ¢ of all persons. Some victims of this disease suffer more in dry warm weather than in moist cold weather. but all suffer more or less all the time. | ‘The cause of rheumati#m is an lexcess of uric acid in the blood, laffecting the muscles and joints, Hence the blood must have atten- tion for permanent results in the |treatment of this disease. H 8 Sarsaparilia has given entire satisfaction in thousands of cases, Do not fail to give it a trial. If a laxative is needed, take Hood's Pills—they don't gripe, | thanks or in any |of the heroic ser | Jout the above coup SEAT £ LE §S T AR MOTHER JUMPS NAB TWO STILLS | Mic t+ Sooner 9) AYER OF TWO EARLE Eugene Walf€rs “PAY YOUR DEBT T SALVATION LASSIES MY THANKS To W. H. Klepper, Chairman, Elks-Salvation Army Committee, 407 Collins Bldg., Seattle. Enclosed find $.... my contribution to the Salvation Army for the ‘building in Seattle of a working girl’s home and working man’s hotel and headquarters building. Signed . PU ccccaw eh asiecs sans cece Have you extended a vote of|spent in Seattle. Half of the quota her manner signi: | for a working girls’ home, one fied your appreciation and gratitude | of the mos' ary institutions in ice of the Salva | the city. The other half will build tion Army in France? By filling|/a hotel, where clean beds will be 1 attached to| furnished “down-and-outers.” your donation, you can pay your| —— —— debt HIBERNIANS WILL DANCE Unless Seattle stages a gigantic eleventh-hour offering, the Salva Army campaign is scheduled to be} continued over next week, regardless of the official closing hour—next Monday evening Seattle raised $100,000 in a few PASTORS WANT MONEY days to entertain the fleet; why| CHICAGO, Oct. 11.—Sermons may Seattle offered the modest] cost more per capita. A Methodist quota of $250,000 for the Salvation] lay electoral college here today ad- Army, the Elks committee is asking?| vocated a minimum salary of $1,5000 Every cent of this quota will be| for pastes] ec Hibernians will ¢ WwW. Oo. W. hall everal special features are promised lby John Moore, chairman, @ a dance In turday evening. | | | | | ise Like Town He Knew as Seattle 8. F. Hoskinson, Seattle pioneer, has returned to the city after twenty years’ absence, “Spent all day try- Hoskinson, My gracious, crowded.” ling to find someone I knew,” said “and never found a one. but the streets are Hippodrome Fifth at University DANCING SONG REVIEWS MOTION PICTUE WE MUSIC YOU DANCE VERY NIGHT —also— The Best School of Danc- ing Instruction in the city is maintained in connection. Beginners’ classes Monday's at 7 p. m. KILLED BY TRAIN Attempting to steal a ride on a Northern Pacific freight train near Auburn late Friday afternoon, Tony Giass, 44, laborer, slipped and was crushed to death beneath the wheels. The body is being held at the Scott undertaking establishment at Auburn jlass, who was man, lived in Kittitas coun | No more itching Resinol Wherever the itching, and whateve | stopit atonce, And if the trouble which |it away. Try it yourself and see. sample, write Dept. 11N, Resinol, Baltimore. & r now that I iiSe the cause, Resino! Ointment wil! usaally causes the itching is not due to some serious internal disorder, this soothing, healing application seldom fails to cleat Resinoi Ointment le sold by all druggists, Fer tree _— ,

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