The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 28, 1919, Page 3

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)

THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1919. |ROOSEVELT’S FRIENDS THUG ATTACKS [SEATTLE VETERAN THEATRE jars satan" eee| venom DIES IN HOSPITAL|| Wire Briefs : a daughterdnlaw, Mr. 2nd vr) teat ee vom “op SATURDAY RRINGS vit amu oe tinued to flock | Tes tay to th the Detectives Scour South Part) irredorick A. Hoffman, 611 17th ave, | Vile Pistill ' punt, j © funeral w re held od.) MeRtOes made off w 8 oS cece Rtg fmt nt Details will be an-| POSTON, Oct. 28.—Dr. R. K. Smith Store Hours From 9 A. M. to 5 ery policeman and detective on | nounced late declares sugar is a poison because Great § nounced later leclar ugar ’ tb f oti oS ee ES gee ng, Bath Towels _ Unusual Values who attempted to attack Mra, M Catarrh Hereafter it will be “extra” and “pa You will find that you can secure Towels of STRENGTH AFTER i a ver | Of The Stomach ||: fn ty ition superior quality and lasting goodness at a lower price at this store than you expect. Is Dangerous {| HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 28 el the searchers to speed to that j (| elder You will be interested in the following good {| Hight barrels of wine, several of hard Utah Woman Tells How She point The man, who was deseribed ' numbers: ‘Satistactory Terms Always in an undertakers 10 drunks and three law vic ‘Hlators were gathered in by the police ‘lin a raid on a “quiet” little party. Recovered Health by the Shiny clad, was mot foamed 4 According to Mra. Larson's report |! SPOKANE, Wash. When a speed Use of Dr. Williams’ to the pe she was awakened ‘Treat. |cop overhauled A, G. Warren, War Pink Pills early Te y morning to find a - ‘Tren said, “I'm & specialist and I'm masked man in her room. The man |hurrying to a call.” He was, Be yyed her, but her sereama for ‘ |fore he was fined $20 for speeding ¢ » to Jump thru a win : |it developed he was a tire doctor “I was one of the victims of the In fluenza epidemic last fall says Mra. Sarah C. Rhodes, of No. OL Thi teenth street, Ogden, Utah. "The ss A ps te gag as eae am © used up my strength ehter o ae nat n¢ lobby of the Ridpath ho soapy that, I. was proatz ’ m: ave 3h. Wee ne o o tel, Ma Wibe, frote 9 soln tie tae an tr an 1 would, o t regain ab burglar early ‘Tues A 6 wife om whom he hi my health, I was losir ht all the time and my ner shat Bath Towels at 59c Each Heavy ribbed bleached Turk- ish Bath Towels, size 20x40 inches; an excellent value com siderably under regular price. tay morning I'l kill you if you scream,” the burglar warned her. Mine Appleton | e » that 1 trembled tant! . | tered so t ! creamed her loudest. The burglar | 4” and it ed as though I should ou: . ¢ T i 6 back jumped thru ndow and escaped r é Oi ts pieces, There rus a thre] Ped thru a window and ewcaped. | unter Uhh ie fabs te both in. Jail Bath Towels bing sensation in the pit o 5 SOLDIERS’ SCHOOL | Shem al . at 7Se Each Without An é A Extra size, extra weight and xtra value is represented in 4 souk’ seg wan TO OPEN HERE SOON) satiiet ma hese white bleached Turkish Operation coulkin't sleep well and was becom Knights af Columbus will start a | the firet sign of a dew Bath Towels, size 23x46 inches, Wonderful Healing of Rupture ing melancholy and depressed. 1 didn't have strength enough to leave my bed tocational and educational school for| In eatarrh of the stomach « “My husband brought hor ils tere coon acces (ee of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills new J. Gorman, in charge vined me to give the remedy cae eae tet How a New Jersey Man Got Rid of a Severe, Obstinate, Right In- guinal Hernia Without the Slightest Trouble fA glans of hot ean comfortably r Huck Towels at 35c Each Imported Hemstitched Huck Towels in a soft, serviceable weave in assorted jacquard bor- ders; size 17x33 inches. Huck Towels at 65c Each Very large size hemstitched fuck Towels of an especially serviceable quality. Fancy Bath Towels are shown in a large variety of designs and colors—also intro | ducing new Towel Sets, having wash cloths to match towels; — priced 45¢ to $1.50 cach, THE NEW Patent Heater distributes heat evenly and thoroughly to every part of the room. R The new Patent is one = of our most reliable Yat Heaters, carefully con- Aieoey structed to give maxi- mum results on a mini- ‘ mum of fuel. The Patent Heater is | eid’ that ‘may be in| | and sweeten its foo | te | know what they will do. | Wn A useful booklet, “Building Up the| the murder last June of W, H. Me | I followed his advice and a week The schooh will be f later my health began to improve. x-sorvice mer’ are eligib! ne Blood," will be sent’free by the Dr,| Nutt, wealthy broker of this city be otutna tes by wearing Ed G | Vi'llams Medicine Co.. Sehnectady,' Marie Jewell MeDonald and her ais Reto tet wh hisiens M berg Rupture Support. We | rae) N. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr.|ter, Fay McDonald Wilkinson, and * mita Pullen,” 8. well-known ‘arpenter at free trial Ro prove Ne superior= Williams’ Pink Pills or you can or-|their brother, 1 but get it in therpure ’ | | brought back from California Sun up and gained strength rapidly from) kK. of C. club house, Harvard ave yg gal eae nay prepared for this : could see him at his work, particu that time on. My nerves becameland Union st stronger too and now I can sleep larly when he handles heavy timber, jumps and climbs around like a ['inact Snproted and I feet ke «| ALLEGED SLAYERS lwh different p n. I recommend Dr MOVED TO SPOKANE ’ youth, you would scarcely imagine that he had formerly been afflicted Williams’ k Pile highly for I SPOKANE, Oct. 24.—Charged with with a rupture. r In a little while I was able to get| ther infor:nation ean be obtained at ‘orm (powder or tablets), | Manasquan, New Jer If you A. LUNDBERG Co. r E the New Economic Six MERICAN inventive genius has triumphed ease and freedom from road- shock of a car of 142 inch Willys Corporation. The Electric Auto-Lite has been Ruptured in Right Pide again. Efficiency has cut dollar after dollar from the cost of production. A series of typically American for- ward steps have made this possible and have thereby greatly increased the buy- ing power of the average man's automobile dollar. Here is a remarkable automobile, maderate in cost, light in weight, easy to handle, remarkably safe and economic; yet a smart classy car, posessing all of the easy-riding qualities of a big, luxurious, heavy car, a Six with Pride of Owner- ship stamped all over it. Naturally the question is, “How is this possible?” And theansweris: ““Rad- ically New, but thor- oughly tested and proven Principles of Construc- tion—and Quanity Pro- duction. A new type of three point Cantilever Spring Suspen- sion gives this 112-inch wheel-base car the rolling wheel-base. The wheels also hug the road-bed, avoid side-slip, and lunging ahead. placed on over 1,400,000 automobiles and is easily the leading starting and lighting equipment of today. New Process Gears are standard with most ofthe great manufacturers of automo- bile, trucks and tractors— making the Willys Company one of the great leaders in the Gear Cutting industry. The Willys-Light, although a new unit of the business, booked orders for 20,000 sets of farm and house lighting systems during the month of August alone. The chassis is a marvel of simplicity and lightnegs. Weight is approximately 2100 pounds. Lightness, combined with new efficien- cies developed in the engine, get big results from gasoline, averaging 17 to 20 miles per gallon during the 200,000 miles of testing. Quality is inbuilt—over two years of testing demon- Strated it. The factories of these units—at Toledo, O., Syra- cuse and Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—together with other controlled and closely allied industries, will supply prac- tically everything needed for the new Six that is not produced in the parent plant itself. The plant, where the new six will be built, is as won- derful as the Six itself, and occupies close to two million square feet of floor space. Every modern and new de- vice is employed to save labor, increase accuracy, and reduce manufacturing costs—the result is big pro- duction—400 to 500 com- pleted Sixes per day. Anyone desiring further information about the plans , and the car program of the * Willys Corporation should write for our booklet. The new Six is the fourth great industry to be added to the enterprises of the Willys Corporation 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, New York N. B.— This is one of a series of advertisements to acquaint the public, automobile trade and buyers of motor cars in general with the present scope and important plans of the Willys Corporation At an early age, Eugene Pullen as an express driver, He handled allroad baggage. One day after de- vering a heavy trunk on an upper loor he felt a pain in the right roin, The suffering Increased and t was not long before the young} nan noticed the swelling The doctor told young Pullen that 1 was ruptured and that he must ither wear a truss throughout life| or submit to a drastic operation, All surgeons know that hernia opera- tions, with anaesthetics, etc, are langerous; they may end fatally. reover, it is a well established that many rupture fons are not successful; the bowel soon breaks through the sewed-up open-{ and protrudes worse than ever.| Afraid of Operation Like most others, Mr, Pullen de- lined to take the risks of an opera ion; the expense and loss of time ad to be considered, too. Hoping} e might get a little better encour- gement, he went to another physi- jan who, to his sprrow, gave him!| ven leas hope, It was ed out to the young man that unless the ipture’ were perfectly held all the ime or the surgeon's knife success- Cully used, he might expect an in-| rease or doubling in the rupture with further complications, or the \readed strangulated hernia which ills #0 many ruptured people. Victim of Trusses The victim bought a truss, a hard, pringlike affair, the best he could et. It tortured him. He tried an- yther—still no relief. He was com- pelled to give up his express busi- sess. The hard tasks of ordinary men were forbidden him. He became an insurance agent, in which posi-|~ tion he did not need to do bodily work, For six years Mr. Pullen dragged around, using various trusses, hard, elastic, ete, with never any content ment. One day his mother told him something she had just found out It was a simple and easy thing for| him to do. He lost no time, Discarded His Truss Relief came at once; he almost for- got that he had any A ward came a cure—a complete ing—and, although years ha passed and Mr. Pullen is an ene carpenter, working on build- climbing over roofs, lifting lumber and such like, he is abso- lutely fgee from the old hernia, He knows he is completely, lastingly {cured. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble—e rt and contentment from the v outset, | He is a strong, c rful-minded man. | Valuable Information Free | ‘The valuable information which |Mrs, Pullen read in a newspaper many years ago and gave to her son, together with further important htacts, will be sent free to any reader of this who writes to Eugene Pullen, 791-F Marcellus aven Manasquan, N. J., enclosing a stamp | for reply. Mention the kind of rup- ture you have, whether on right or left side and what you have, already done in your effort to cure it, A legion of cases of all kinds of rup- economical because it consumes all the gases in fuel, and its inverted conical base deflects the heat toward the floor, warming the coldest part of the room first. When you buy a nev Patent Heater definit« assurance goes with it— that it will do all we claim for it. There is a size to meet your requirements. Grote-Rankin—Pike and Fifth—Grote-Rankin | Murder Hearing Is Set for Wednesday Embroid:ry and ral } Preliminary hearing on the com- plaint of first degree murder filed against Edward Kienstra, attorney, will be held in police court Wednes- day morning. Kienstra is charged with shooting and killing John Ci- coria, Italian politician, October 14, when Cicoria came to his office, The defense has subpoenaed 22 |character witnesses. Kienstra is at liberty on $12,000 bail. Eemstitching, Picot Edging Buttons Covered Button Holes Made Knife and Accordion Plaiting G. J. BAUER & CO. Tailors’ and Dressmakers’ Supplies 13171319 Fourth Ave, Seattle “I Think that Crescent Baking Powder Is Fine’ Sweet, wholesome, fluffy baking. ture in men and women, including inguinal (groin), femoral, naval, | scrotal, ete,, have been reported com- pletely healed, Age seems to make no difference, Crescent produces light, The above statement was made by a user of Crescent Baking Powder in a letter of request for our Cook Book. “I always worried to get things in to the oven,” she writes, “as soon ag possible before the raise of the pow: der was over, But with Crescent I find this is not necessary. Another good thing in favor of your Baking Powder is that I use only about half as much as other baking powders, and by buying the 5-pound tin for one dollar I save 25 cents on every dollar's worth I purchase, and I find it keeps as good as ever, I think that Crescent Baking Powder is fine!” Your grocer can supply you, Crescent Baking Powder

Other pages from this issue: