The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 14, 1919, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

an attractive pre-holiday show for the little folk! —girls, attractive way —in the Doll House —on the Main Floor. we have arranged a perfectly wonderful Doll Show in a specially —come and enjoy this delightful display! WELCOME! . 1 is a Dittle “Cutie in dress; pare. ter doll dr rimmed cap; nok jong; S®e. POLL, NO. 3 ia ‘an pictured. 11 inehes to unbreakable; unbreakable NO. 2 is a Relginn charac. a white with it in an unbreakable in neat stripe ng, SOe, a large showing « y Siatete dolls akable hatr. prices $10.00, —poll, NO. 5 | eap to mately 12 =DOLL NO. 6 ix a curled) when Ss, 8, 85.50, all sizes, short and movable heads. inches lon; Lt-tneh ret: nice dress# with he acting dolly for baby; 45¢. DOTA. NO. T le n jong white dress real “Thal removable cap bboned teething ring, open mouth DOLL NO. § is a dear little “Baby of? in long white dress, trimmed sp and underakirt; HOLL NO. ® akable; Se, OLA, ace; mmed figured d No, Carl Gustatson, chauffeur, 1823% Broadway, is a lucky person, Gustafson hauled six passangers to 14th ave. S. and Dearborn st. early ‘Tuesday morning. After they had alighted and paid their fares, Gustaf- gon reached for his purse. It was Missing. It contained $710. An ar- gument followed. Gustafson accused his late. passengers of robbing him: A policeman arrived. ‘The officer began a search of the) car. The money was found wadded | in a bracket holding the tail light on the rear of the machine. The six passengers were released. Gustaf. son went on his way rejoicing. A pretty girl i» usually more orna- Mental than useful. ie on" in white cap and dross; NBe. Lette “Detahe un- 1@ has unbreakab: attractive! ress; Oe. Says: Dead Wife: Was Ads THE SEATTLE STAR—TUES \ a —~ This is the debeting teane of the Lincuin b migration tothe UL S, next Priday merning « “Resolved, That Mamgollan ti penigration to the From left to right--Hareld |Beach, Wikna Plerce, Richard Eckman and in room 2% } Lincoln High jchool Students Will Debate Mc »ngolian Immigration Problem on Friday DAY, OCTOBER 14, 1919. om ( am oat that will thresh out the question of Mongolian im 8. The subject of the debate The debaters pletured abov denmcttc Biel, The bays are ten: are: port. ing the affirmative of the epics and the winds will Lenadaad the negativ: MILUER\CALMLY Seattle Man Invents RELATES STORY dioted to: Ne Narcotics | Continued From P Page One | One | ee Tt searching cucciae a the body from a row 1 boat,” says Fill, “His launch was tied up at the shore. Miller formerty) owned the launch, but sold it. He) borrewed the launch to make the/| trip, he said, | “Miller told us, while we were dragging, that hin wife had protested against proceeding to the sanitarium. | He declared that while they were in the: launeh she admitted having al | ready gone there for treatment, and} insisted that if she went back again, she would be compelled to remain there for six weeks.” The lake is 200 feet deep where the | body was lost, the police said, so the dragging finally was abandoned, Called Up Coroner | The troubles of Miner and his wite | were known to George Miller, and it was to effect a reconciliation that he) i entertained the former deputy sher. iff'and his wife last Saturday night. | Tt was while Walter Miller and his ‘wife were at the automobile dealer's i ywent to San Francisco, where hel ror the purchase \ Sttvemtele' Sees at 301-111 South 11th St FOR LOST CHILD Gypsies and Rejected Suitor Are Two Mystery Clues BY HAROLD D. JACOBS {United Press Staff Correspondent.) HAMMONTON, N. J., Oct. 14 Even the skiex wept today for little “Billie” Dansey, and a cold autumn| rain drenched the dense wood that swallowed him when he toddied awny from his home here last Wednesday. Billie's mother, Mra, Hereules Dan. sey, arose today from another night of sleeplessness and fear, With white, drawn. face and dark-rtmmed) eyes, she went mechanically about; her dally tasks, a prayer for the} safety of her baby constantly upon her lips. The father, hiding his grief as beat) he could beneath an outward stol- cism, sought to comfort her with words of hope, which he only half! believed himself. His fears were di- vided between the baby and its mother, for Mrs. Dansey haa reached | the breaking point. Tireless searchers, clad in boots and oil skins, continued their quest today, undeterred by the chilling rain or the equally chilling failure that has so far confronted them, For the most part they had abandoned the belief that Biilie may have been jatesinvtip President om October 6. | district, home thut Mra. Miller informed him that Walter Miller had accused her of being a drug addict, Mrs, Miller denied’ the accusation and offered to; f° to @ sanitarium fn Kirkland to} provethe truth of her words. ¢ ta Miller, his domestic troubles began soon after his mar- riage to Mra. Miller seven years ago. Three years before that Mra Miller | wan divorced from Mayor Raker, of/front in shipbuilding, but is rnpidly Portiand, whom she had married in|asuming a place of importance tn 1895, after her graduation as ajthe development ef our vust rail- trained nurse from the Good Samar-|road systems, tan hospital, in Portland Mra Miller was the daughter of Mr. and|pertinacity of” a local man is Ukety Mea F. M. Blair, of Bugene, Or.,| to do much freer the raiirond industry oneer residents of Oregon. A nis-jof the United States. ter, Mra Mark Hogarty, survives. Thomas J. Fvatrell is @ Seattle Mrs. Miller, man and a cenBictor of 28 years’ Ft Print Expert experience in alway service, many years of Sabor, Miller has lived a great part of! innumerable Nia 1f6 in Seattle. He went to schoo! | perfected here, apd. later entered commercialland uncouples, automatically, the photography with Awahel Curtis, un-| steam, air, signmi and electric con- der the firm name of Curtis & Miller.| nection between cars. This inven The firm was dissolved three yearsiticon in now well beyond the experi ago. Two years ago Miller became! mental stage, hitving recently beer photographer and finger print expert] adopted by the S. Railroad Ad for the sheriff's office. Ho left the! ministration at Washington, D. C. employ of the county a year ago and) The company Js now negotiating of a large fictor was employed as photographer forlin one of the grat railroad centers & San Francisco newspaper. | which will enable them to manu Miller returned to Seattle ‘on the! racture the couplers an @ vast scale.| ‘|'They expect to Rave thelr plant in| full. operation withMm dour months Thomas J. Putadl is a quiet and very unassuming: gentieman, con vineed of the great future for his expense and (tyeriments, he has Mrs. Miller arrived here last Wednes- day. Mrs. Miller visited matrons and deputy sheriffs at the county jail last Friday night. and aid that. Miller | aescem Wis alison pe 2] invention, keen aa advancing the Senttle for the mame purpose. [plane for ite marexfacture and its| jeventual applicattm to all United Mysterious Telegram | States and Canadian systems. One puzaling angle in the case de-| H. G, Loop, a well-known man, veloped Tuesday when Chief Warren) in charge of the Western office ba said that the police had received &/ 1595.26 the L. C. Smith building. mysterious telegram from San Fran-) On August 21, 1029, the first train cisco saying that Miller was on the|on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad way to Seattle aboard the §&. & | was equipped with the Futrell au Governor with a consignment of tomatic safety coupler. Trains Nos, Nquor and would arrive October 7./37 and 3%, runntag between Balti “T sent Investigator Ludwig Frank | more. and Washington daily, are meet the boat,” Chief Warren) permanently fitted with this coupler. sald. “We found Miller, but TO! Phe trial trip for tiris system proved quor. Miller called on me a day OF | nove of a success than was antici so later and I showed him the tele: | pated by its most ardent advocate. gram. It was confusing, and we)” he connections of the automatic concluded that someone had at-| ouriorn are made as follows: Cars tempted to frame up on Miller at! are coupled and uncoupled in the that time” usual manner. The headpieces, or The Millers had lived at 2503. 34th | nating members of the Futrell ave. &., but ha@ rented’ their home| coupier are suspended directly un- furnished, some. time ago. lderneath the present drawbar According to neighbors, it was ler a are autor jell ced common knowledge that Mins. Mer eee in a sere ncaa at ery et ae neighbor of | *PTine pressure and guide members the Millers in the Mount Baker Park |°xtending on each side of the op: wns called in by Miller to|Poring head; the guides are pro- \nerve an hie attorney. Later Millers |Vided with slots for the purpose of| mother, 522 ist ave., asked Attorney |°nsasing locking bars, when con | aw, Westen ten t her son,|‘uits come in contact, making a, alter lo represent he positive air-tight Joint’ while cars are merely figure-|are coupled, The’ Futrell automatic heads in the business, coupler connects the steam, air, sig- to | swallowed up in one of the bottom- less swamps near his home. The few clues that have been un- earthed point to a kidnaping plot, and the posses are following this biind scent. One belief was that he had been. kidnaped by a band of gypsies or a wang of bandits, this clue having been supported by the finding of men’s tracks and part of a loaf of un. 4. h BINVON Free Examination BEST "ers GLASSES ‘aut i. face rors eee By: are, the an oy acre ie ‘Suamine joa tree, page op- Unless absoluiely necessary, BINYON OPTICAL CO. 2190 PIROF ave. ‘Between Spring and Sencen Jum Gem oft, bread in an old shack in the woods. near the boy's home, The other theory was that the baby was stolen by a rejected suitor of Mrs. Stella Danzy, the child's mother. A detective left for Pitts burg today to find this man. The Danzys moved here from Pittsburg three months ago. The boy's. father said today that when he and Mrs. Danzy were married, four years ago, Mother! Watch Child’ s Tomgue! “California Syrup of Figs” For a Child’s Liver and Bowels Mother! Say “California,” then you will & suitor whom she had refused, threatened revenge. Within little more than a year the American Red Cross jumped from a membership of 600,000 to more than 30,000,009, get genuine “California Syrup of Figs.” Full directions for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue- coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. Children love this delicious laxative, The inventive genius and solid Atter| w & coupler which couples | Automatic Coupler Thormss J. Futrell, Seattle Inventor, in Center Seattic ia not oly forging to the nal, electric lght and telephone) ines on trains without men going between the cars to make these con- nections. Under the present meth- od, where the rubber hose is used, it ts necessary for a man to go be- tween the cars to couple and un- couple the steam, air and signal The Futrell coupler does away with |this dangerous labor ax all five con-| | nections are made automatically and} upled in the same manner, jthereby eliminating the danger to the men engaged = thle were i\Boy Scouts | Search for Missing Man Altho the north end of the city) has been combed since last Friday by | friends of Harry D. Simons, aided by [deputy sheriffs with bloodhounds, he [haw not been located. Simons disappeared from his jhome, 6219 Fifth ave, N. W., carly Priday morning, while his wife was [telephoning for a doctor. Simons had been suffering from high blood | | pressure and had compiained of feel ing i. He wae known to be averse to medical treatment. Ballard Boy Scouts, led by Scoutmaster C. E Wil: | lagna, joined in the search Monday. A reward of $100 is offered for |nowledge of his whereabouts. | * Menorah Society Meets on Campus | The firet meeting of the Menorah |society, the organization to which all members of the Jewish faith Attending the University of Wash- | ington are eligible to attend, will jbe held Tuesday night tn the Y. | M. CG. A. on the campus. Officers will Iny before the body a tenta- tive program for the ensuing year at the initial meeting Tuesday. GREEN EYEBROWS — LATEST IN PARIS' PARIS, Oct. I4-—-Paint as a sub- stitute for stockings is not finding |popularity among French beauties because managers of theatres and other public resorts refuse admit- | tance to women who are thus econ- jomizing, but a number of smartly. {clad women have recently appeared with their eyebrows colored a bright {ereen, pink or yellows (Advertisement) Unusual Values Make Cherry Credit Doubly Interesting | | CHERRY CHAT The convenient terms upon which one may buy at Cherry's are not alone responsible for the great popular- ity of this store among both men and women, Its popularity is rather to be found in a com- bination of many good foatures—first of all in VALUES, and in STYLES, not to forget the spirit of friend, accommodation which seems to animate the whole institution, Cherry’s chain stores, with thelr uss facilities for and keepin; in constant touch wit! the t developments hiondom, are al- a little’ in the in styles, and as that has always been their polley, it will be no different In Soattlo, Opening Will be about the L7th, in rooms 206-7 Rialto Bidg., 1015 Second ave, Take clevater— Advertisement, \WEDNESDAY Honest, Skillful Dentistry PART NO. 2 4 DISEASED TEETH A CAUSE OF ILLNESS tiesue that is alive pulp tissue in ecmoune St Is fivwt meeag 7 The reason that bacteria do not live on p which caures pain rary for germs to start ah inflammation in She delicate death, When the pulp dies the beeteria live or dead tieeue and down the center of the root, or of the root where the live Finally they reach the small opening in the end of the root nery entered the tooth Mere. they pase o of the tooth into the tineve roots of all teeth. le constant molatened with ™ The fiua, whion ts brought there by the blood, ix food for the tinmue. he lymph ie aap food for the germs, and if they are the variety of germs commen in ail mouths, they en named streptococcus veridans, and they now make their home quietly outside of the tooth og 4 the end of the root and faire a large family Nouba nee tried to furnish a protection for our bodies against constantly graduc@ly work thee way pulp hew been where tite blood veseis ang srrounds the which «# a fluid called lymph we bacteria, and bs fighting them by means of the white cells in the blood. These guardians of the body are able to digest great number» of bacteria. However, if the bacteria do not cause a disturbance in the twdy it is lmrd for the guardians to find them, and thle partieular kind of germ whieh Lives on the end of the root e a tooth in not very warlike amt does not cause enough distarbaner to attract white cella, Having located in a desirable place the bae live aaletly on the lymph, or food, and manufacture a poles whieh curses the bone near the end of the roots to j and draw away from them, making a hollow in the bone which i* filled with a soft, dineagag) tineue Z ‘This in am very common condition in many mouths, ii quietly that the péople who have this kind of infection oe news in the tooth, : There is no pus present in thié type—in fact an X-Ray Pleture is he only means we howe of @ixcovering such an infection, and the absorbed hollow in the bone shows quite plainly - the X-Ray picture An X-Ray machine ip found in every good dentist's office, becayse am X-Ray picture s@e'4 only way to loeate these very dangerous infections. Investigate my most complete X-Ray department, with an expert radiographer tn cherws, which is indispensable to my complete diagnoris of serious cases PART NO. 3 OF THIS ARTICLE WILL APPEAR NEXT TUESDAY IS THIS PAPER — Examination and Estimate Free FREE X-RAY DEPARTMENT I use the X-ray to locate hidden ‘mouth troubles and as an aid to my diagnosia. This service is free to my patients and the bacteria work so slowly and » not coneci@us of any pain or DIAGNOSTICIAN My 21 years of successful practice in den- tletry especially —— me as an expert in correctly diagnosing cases. ODONTIA—PAL LESS “EXTRACTI NG Heidbrink -OxyKen, also Novocain, ad- ministered foi ‘ainicss Ex tions. | PYORRHEA. TREATED ‘ I ruccessfully treat and check Pyorrhes the use of my Intelligent and heroie of treatments. ‘Gop INLAY “RESTORATION list in Gold foley Restorations nystem of Bridge Restoraties without Gold Crowns, ORAL HYGIENE Department of Prophytaxia Teeth cleanest Preventive measure Against tooth decay and gum disease FILLIN s Gold, Synthetic, Porcelain and the best Sil- ver Fillings guaranteed BRIDGE RESTORATION WORK Carved and Cast Gold Crowns and Steele Porcelain Replaceable Natural Molded Teeth. SCIENTIFIC RESTORATION OF LOST TEETH WITHOUT GOLD CROWNS ALL WORK GUARANTEED AND PRACTICALLY PAINLESS DR. H. T. HARVEY — (Ex President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners) 504-512 EITEL BUILDING ae ‘PROSTHETIC “DENTISTRY Cast Aluminum and Vulcanite Genuine Trubyte Teeth used. Plates by an expert. I fit you where other dem tints fail. DOCK CREW WON'T Find Gardner Dead! Hold Funeral of ‘William Morris, 40, 2 gardener em- LOAD HORSEFLESH | rat fF essa bovmce LIVERPOOL, Oct. 14—~A crew of |ave. N., wan found dead at th dock laborers went on strike when | residence Monday afternoon. ordered to load a cargo of horsefiesh| Death occurred from naturat|in a fall at Salt Lake consigned to Belgium. They insisted| causes, it was declared at the}transcontinental air dei that the meat was unfit to handle| morgue where the bedy was exam- full military escort for and refused a bonus to do the work.| ined Morris has been living at 332/ the regular army this Weatlake ave. He is said to have|the funeral procession 4 A woman never thinks that a man relatives in Canada and New Zea-|Presidio to the national thinks she talks too much. land. Eastern flyers who here in the past two the ceremony. Two Arrests for Asotin Bank ¥ PORTLAND, Ore, Qct. M4 are today holding in cu HERE gees BIG DAYS Alma Rubens “Diane of the Green Van” FROM THE WELL KNOWN NOVEL AND ALSO Fatty Arbuckle ft J, eT HRATE| i Sy LSI hn 5 Hh NOW PLAYING qi immttlnt SECOND A BIG WEEK DON’T MISS IT! NAZIMOVA In her own version of Maude Fulten’s celebrated stage success “THE BRAT” ’ GUTERSON’S AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA CELLO SOLO hel ve ‘| ij | r, D ULE mea Ra eatees

Other pages from this issue: