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THE SEATTLE STAR Gen. Allen eae Gen. Allenby Visits | Mother er MAY PROSECUTE. SUGAR DEALERS Legal Action Threat by At- torney General Palmer | DRASTIC DRY LAW _READY FOR SIGNING — | WASHINGTON, Oct, 20.—The law, deomed one of sweeping acts ever passed by congress, was expected ta be sent to the White How ‘today b Attorney: General Pab ler, sing has beem investigating ‘its conaitutionali¢y ‘The plan, it was leurned, is to have Dil} remmin at the White He October 28, whan it bee D feotive, even without President Wil- #6n's signature, Fros) able quar Tors there has bean no hint of a veto. DP) SUnder this law, .on October 28, at the latest, it would bacomo illegal to Manufacture or sell liquor containing Mhore than one-half of 1 per cent al , or any patent med or oth: @ compounds, fit for heverare Poses, containing more of alcohol, P¥iolations aro to be investigated By commissioners of internal revenue Bnd reported to local United States arvere. Commissioners are au to swear out warrants giv Wag them a right to search for liquor arrest the offenders, {The alcoholic liquids not deemed {1 are denatured alcohol medicinal ations, if unfit fbr bevera . which must have the quan ef alcohol contained printed on package; flavoring extracts un: | for beverage use, vinegar and| ved sweet cider To Store Liquer PAElquor manufactured before the goes into effect may remain In States bonded warehouses the alcoholic content reduced to | St. Jamey Square. it within the law. | Altho the viscount had been in ill containing less than one-half | health mince an attack of influenza 2 per cent alcohol may be sold. last yeat:, his death was unexpected, not under the name of Peer, ale|it was jmid. He walked about the| porter. |grounds, as usual Friday, He died where intoxicating drinks in bed Staturday mapraing Bold are to be declared common . and the fines imposed) Wutiam Waldorf Astor, born tn Fest as liens against the prop) New York In 184%, was the son of if the owner had guilty knowl!:| John Jacob Astor Ill He re- Sze of what was going on in hit/nounced his American citizenship When such a place is dis-/im the ‘90s and became a British d, the law provides that an !n-| subject. n may be issued to stop the} sale and prevent remowal of | ‘AUTOS INJURE 7 or delivered to any govern: agency for medicinal, mechan- | Six persons were suffering Monday ‘Or scientific use, or sol to per: {from ‘more or less severe injurtes having permits to purvhase it| sustained in Sunday auto accidents such pu s. | Mea MH. J. Massie and her 4-year- till i bonded wart houses Old son, 224 24th ave. N., were both ‘under the law, on the filiug of a badly cut about face and head. Miss ‘and the obtaining of a permit,| Myrtle Edwards, 4534 44th ave. & as industria) alcohol plants.) W. was hadly bruised, and her ‘The commissioner of internal rev-| brother. Forest Fatwards, sustained a Preser| ptions must be jnade out on a form, supplied by fhe internal | revenue ‘commissioner, with ‘planks }like a eclwek book, the book to be turned ti after all bldnks are wsod for the of ficial records, No prescrip- tion may be filled more than once and druggists must lier a record, of each fale, time, Wiacy, ete Manufucture or sale of tablets or machiner}/ for making ‘Aquor at home | ix prohibited. Advertising of liquor in any wary f# made tf logal. ven the giving off information as to where jit may be obtained is law. breaking, Vehicles used for trans. | porting It) shall be setxed With regard to possession of alco: | holfe drin WASITINGTON, Attorney ¢ Oct, 20.—(United | 1 Palmer to- | | | Prem.) net day threatened prosecutions against | I) beet sugar refiners who ask higher prices than those set by the The prices fixed by the sugar equaliza tion board, revealed, is equalization board. wh Palmer's announcement 10 cents cash lean 2 per cent seaboard basin.” Palmer's warning, which was tele-| graphed to beet sugar refiners thru is, the Act nays possession ~ lout the country, showed that the after Feleuary 1, 1920, shall be 2 | sugar equalization board nd the De prima fagie evifience of intent to} | partment of Justice have been co | violate. | Joperating to get the beet sugar sup-| DIES IN LONDON Palmer, in his tel am to re finers, quoted a telegram which the Heart F ailure Takes Expatri- ated Multimillionaire At The Bon Marche LATEST STYLES IN SUITS FOR WOMEN, MISSES AND OUT SIZES A sale that involves the best suit values of the season—at prices that are uncom- nonly low. They have been divided into three growps. $45 | $55 | $65) Opportunity indeed for you’ to secure a good suit at little™ refiners. This message revealed that the beet sugar factories were falling to sell their products as produced be cause of uncertainty about prices DISCOVER BODY IN GREEN LAKE Arrangements were being made! Monday for the funeral of Harry D. Simona, former employe of Fred-| erick & Nelson, whose body wan re ed from Green Lake Sund | Sim had been missing two weeks Hero of thé British campaign in the Bast, feted upon his return to | While i, and while bis wife was England, Field Marshal Lord Allenby seized the firet opportunity to visit|phoning for a doctor at 2 o'clock | his mother at Felixstow, Eng She had not seen her son for over two | the morning of October 10. Group No. 2 years . left hin home attired only tn cant } A Suits--Special | i Jand trousers, He had not been seen y i | equalization board has also sent to LONDON, Oct. 20.—The body of Viscount Astor (William Waldorf | Astor), {who died of heart disease Saturday, was lying today tn the | home of his son, Waldorf Astor, in Group No. 1 _Suits--Special | } | Scientist. Discovers 80 Entombed Bodie Entombed in everlasting ico near Point Barrow, Alaska, the bodies of 80 Eskimos of prohin- toric days, their huts and imple ments and clothing, have been discovered, according to W. Van Valin, field expert of the University of Pennsylvania, who is in Seattle, after two years of exploration in the Great White What fate overcame the Eskimos} “Tt | RADIUM CURES That radium has actually oul eancer and is today being used as| |the only remedy for that no-called | incurable disease, was the assertion | of startling importance made by Dr Group No. 3 Suits--Special | Altho he is certain that the Faki-| mo village and its people belonged to a prehistoric age, Van Valin would|s Ww. Mowers, radiologist, speaking | net attempt to give the number of! +. s00 men Sunday event the years ice has covered them. Y. M. C. A. Dr. Mowers formerly “All I can say is that these men | way chief surgeon for the Northern | lived years and years ago, and I Pac think thousands of years ago,” Van va “LOST FIVE DAYS which {s seized may be de-/ Preservation Remarkable believe my contribution i is authorized to issue reguli governing industrial alcob to prevent illegal use of alco- and develop the non-beverng industry. Prison Sentence under the dry law are ranging from prison sentence ; according to what section of ie law ts violated. the 18th amendment to the itution goes into effect next , many more provisions of ie law become operative. These in- regulation of physicians, who Prescribe liquor unless they fn active practive and licensed, the physician must belleve it will relief to the patient. Not than one pint may be pre- within 10 days. a | broken hand. This was the result of a collision of cars near the Patterson-MacDonald shipyard, on Marginal way. C. A. Lockwood, 2016 First ave, was knocked down and painfully bruised by an auto driven by C. A. Munson, 711 Third ave, at Warren st. and First ave. Gus Blomstr 12, riding a bicycle on California a was hit by an auto driven by H. F. ‘Weatherby, 4205 Murray ave, and ert about the head and body. CENTRALIA, Oct. 20.—Palmer de Chazzo thought he was shooting at a bear. He wasn't. Instead Roy G. Perry, 19, a railroad brakeman, a member of the hunting party, fell dead. The bullet had passed thru his body. .| Village he uncovered. of antiquity, or how long ago their | village was covered with ice, Van Valin would not venture to aay, after his arrival in Seattle, Sunday, from Nome, Van Valin was unable to find an Eskimo legend which even hinted at the existence of the lceencased In the oldest folk lore of the North, the explorer wus unable to find even a hazy tra- dition which pointed to the village or its inhabitants, White expressing reticence as to details of his discovery, Van Valin asserted that the bodies show the Presence of black hair. Among scientists this assertion will go far to dixprove the “blond Eakimo™ the- ory that the original inhabitants of the Far North probably were Caw | castans. What ‘D’ Ya Think o ” That? Dress Skirts at $4.95 They’re Almost Walking Away WOMEN’S SHOES at | IN— MIXED WOOL PLAIDS and SILK-MIXED POPLIN The Poplin Skirts are deeply embroidered in two handsome designs. They come in three colors, Navy, Taupe and Gray. Thestyle | of the skirts is shown in the | sketch. Two good-looking, dark- colored plaid patterns are shown in the mixed wool skirts. They have button- trimmed cuff hems and sep- arate belts. Sizes 25 to 30. $3.00 $4.00 plain colors and two-toned effects in light and dark gray, and black. All Sizes From 22 to7 AWWW THE $5.00 =a aoe i «tare smart Dress Shoes in patent leather, vici kid and calfskin | | oan" leather, others with cloth tops. High and low-heeled styles “RON MARCHE L__™ Se BASEMENT northern knowledge is unique be- caune of its completeness. The re- markable preservation of the bodies. the intactnens of domestic utensils tools and instruments of bone and stone, as well as the ornaments and clothing of the Inhabitants, con vinces me that my discovery will ex tend knowledge of northern peoples | centuries beyond what it already han gone. “The village was found under three feet of ice. The bodies were not crushed, neither were there any signs of a fight. Whether the in habitants died of pestilence, I do not! know, what to think of it. Pestilence in that region is rare and had giacial| [ice overwhelmed the [their bodies would crushed.” } Son Born in North Van Valin, who was accompanied | by his wife, will leave for the East in @ few days. Most of the spect mens from the prehistoric village al ready have been shipped to the Uni- inhabitants have been |] versity of Pennsylvania, The mpect mens Include skulls, implements and 1 coniee During their stay In the North a son was born to Mr. and | Mra. Van Vala, | ROB GAS STATION Two men who held up and robbed! |H. J. Moineaux in the gasoline sta. tion at Summit ave. and Pine «t., Sun day night and escaped in an auto with $150, continued to elude police|steps Monday to curb the alleged) nar. Monday. One man atayed in the machine while his companion, cover ing Moineaux with a emptied the cash register. neaux lives at 2518 Borer | ave. Alleged Murderer Taken to Portland Captured in Nome, Alaska, after la long chase, Clarence Johnson, al- leged confenged slayed of Mra, Unis Freeman, his benefactress, passed thru Seattle last night en route to Portland, where the crime was| committed last August 15. Johnson | was in custody of Detective John A. Goltz and Robert L. Portland Mra. Freeman had been tnstru- mental in obtaining a parole for Johnson from San Quentin pent- tentiary, where he was serving time for attempting to kill another woman, For a time she gave the jeonvict lodgings in her Portland | home, Jealous, because she spurned his affection, Johnson crushed Mra, | Freeman's head with a lead pipe, according to the alleged confession. He fled from Portland and was finally arrested in Nome. Moi Burglar Collects | Hotel Room Loot There were a few rooms in the Albion hotel, 227 Westlake ave., Mon day, that had not been visited by a |burglar who worked the place for some time, and to good advantage, | Sunday night | Mrs. Mary Foust's room netted him a sackful of loot, including $50 jin notes, a gold ring and other valu ables worth $300, according to her report, Two sults and a pair of gloves were taken from J. D. Morrison's room, and an overcoat and two suits \from A. Baker's. High School Boys Kiss Phone Girls SPOKANE, Oct. 20.—Three high school boys, accused of seizing, hug ging and kissing telephone giris go. ing home from work, were let off in police court after being threatened that the next osculation would draw |the mit. | The European hornet has been aceldentally introduced into the United States and has established itself near New York city, In point of fact, I don't know | revolver, | Phillips, of | | MARSHFTIED, Ore., Oct, 20.—Lost for five days from a party of hunt ers, almont starved and scarcely able to stagger along, Glenn Culver, 19, crawled Into @ ranc headwaters of C ‘today reported rapidly rec | |Brig. Gen. Preston Is Buried Sunday) Funeral services for Brig. Gen. 8t mon M. Preston, civil war veteran and raiifoad builder, who died last Friday at the Hotel Lincoln, were held Sunday at the Bonney. Watson chapel, Rev. W. A. Major, pastor of the Mt. Baker Presbyterian church, lconducted the services. Interment [was made fn Lake View cemetery. | Pallbearers at the funeral were J |B. Howe, L. C. Gitman, Samuel 1 Piles, Judge J. T. Ronald, A. C. Rochester and Dr. L. fon. Daw. |Women Meet Oct. 27 State and federal laws will be din cussed at the midyear assembly of the Women's Legislative Council of Washington when it meets in the auditorium of Frederick & Nelson's |department store here, October 27 and 28. MORPHINE EXPORTED | Federal authorities were taking! export of large quantities of cotic drugs from this port to Japan, from whence, it ix sald, |band is probably smuggled | China. Since July 1, pounds of morphine alone have been shipped to Japan from Seattle and Tacoma One vessel, which sailed from here October 11, carried 14,000 |pounds of crude opium, it is «aid. As Japanese are little addicted to into the use of narcotics the presump-| |tion is that the drugs are smuggled by Japs into China, whose govern- ment closed its doors to all forme of [narcotics several years ago, These alleged smugglers are protected in China by Japanese police, it is al |lexed, ONE DAY OF TOIL MARS HIS RECORD HONOLULU, Oct. 20.—There has been a revival of the native drink, okolehao, a distilled Hquor of great potency, which retails for $2 a quart. Federal officers are arresting ven- dors of okohehao, A native girl, 12 years old, drank some of the stuff, an swam out in a heavy sea and killed a man-eating shark with a jacknife S. S. Victoria in Port With 617 passengers, the steamer Victoria, of the Alaska Steamship Co., arrived here from Nome at 4:30 Jo'clock Sunday afternoon. Cannery workers, 180 in number, who refused to come South on the ship Abner Coburn, were on the Victoria. 1 |had worked at Libbyville |summer, When the cannery closed, they refused to come to Seattle on the Coburn, claiming she was unsea worthy, Mrs, Blanche M, 27, wife of Frederick MeKenna, died Sunday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Frank Porrini, 9040 ‘Third ave, 8. Mrs. McKenna was born in Seattle. Besides her parents and husband, she is survived by a sister, Claudini Porrini, and a |brother, Harold. Arrangements for the funeral have not yet been com- pleted. New York boller plants have their ashes removed from the boilers di- rect to the truck hv « vneumatic sys. cm house near the} Judge G. | BY TON FROM HERE! the contra-| it is reported, 4,000] autumn is in the air. Soft Plaid Blankets $6.50 Plain woolnap blankets—size 66x80— good looking, fine feeling blankets in plaids. All splendid values. | Buy all you need at $6.50 a pair. Nice Plaid Blankets $7.95 You'll never mind the cold a bit with plenty of nice woolnap blankets like these. And they wear wonderfully. Size 66x80 inches, in pink, blue, tan and helio. The Suits at $45.00 Tricotines, serges, velours are the materials." Colors the latest. Ripple, belted and semi-tailored styles. Fur collars and fancy linings. The Suits at $55.00 Tight waist and rippled peplums in the new + effect. Chevrona, serge, mixtures and velours are the cloths. The shades are browns, oxfordsy navy and gray. Smart tailored styles. The Suits at $65.00 Flat front panels with hip fullness to a fasi- ionable degree. Fur-trimmed models that form the mode. The materials are broadcloth, velour, silver- tones and velvets. SECOND FLOOR | Woolly Blankets for Frosty Nights Oh, the joy of warm blankets is appreciated now that the real frost of Wool-mixed- and woolnap blankets from the bedding section will help to make your sleeping hours more cozy. Tan or White Blankets $8.50 You'll not find a better lot of blankets than these at the price. Part wool— plain tan with pink and blue borders, or plain white with pink and blue bor- ders—size 70x80 inches. Wool Blankets $10.00 a Pair Blankets with a large percentage of wool—and will give oceans of wear. Size 66x80 inches, in pink, blue, tan and gray plaids. FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) Veiling Lengths 50c Each | Black, white and colors, one yard long in fine or heavy mesh. IN THE NEW SHOPPING BOOTHS Neckwear in Many Styles, 35c Square organdie collars, Waist sets, Organdie collars with colored ties attached. Fichus; tailored Ascots. with rolling collars, Windsor ties. UPPER MAIN FLOOR = > Roll pique collars. Vestees Marabou Capes $5.00 Natural and black in six-strand circular marabou capes, cord finish. ———— Cut Glass Fididaminiin cin Jardinieres at Uncommonly Low Prices Cut Glass Table Ware, Special, $1.95 Set of 6 EMONSTRATION of “Hoover” uum Sweepers. N y clean, straighten nap and brighten colors—all in one operation, Tall-Footed Water Goblets and Ice Cream or Sherbet Glasses, cut in a pretty rose design. Look very attractive on the table. e cannot make deliv- eries at this price. Brass Jardinieres at $2.35 —Unusual Solid Brass Jardinieres with three ball feet. Inside diameter, 7%, inches; height, 714 inches. Electric Vac- See how they beat, suction FOURTH FLOOR ¢