The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 13, 1920, Page 16

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HONOLUL Jan, 12.—Jay L upon at the Bhese plantatic feveen wb Sinwvets tial meeting in October that t leclarat to the number },000 are expected la t (© gO on strike at any mo t € That is the a Gireles here refusal ers tor the bonu the Japs Maintaining rtian in Jap strict silen ur Plante HIS MOTHER-IN-LAW MARKESAN, Wis, dan. 13.— Dr. A. J. Freudenberg, held today * ¢! r on the charge of murdering Mes, [re\sten! Nettie Duffies, his motherindaw, G6 tye ja! exercised a hypnotic influence | by her mother, if necessar ‘over his wife to procure her sup- port in the fight to clear himself ‘of the accusation, it was suggest Dist ed by District Attorney’ Chartes Paul today ‘The main evic eorener’s jury d using Dr, Freudenberg of the given by Mrs. 3 undenberg t Heved the doctor was her méther's death and ta H constantly. She was very a With him and said to him in my[T Presence, ‘If you did anything to fin-|denberg caused his mc , teh my mother, you Detter get her death by injection of a mustard solu-| eee and a do it quick.” tion | ‘ARSENIC IN WHISKY REAPS DEATR TOLL EVERETT, Jan, 13.—(Special) —“Hardtime moonshine” whisky y Hancock ot 1 Be a Red Cre « nurse @ay following a post-mortem that | in his opinion there was much pol-| fonous moonshine being sold by un Scrupulous distillers who. finding the dis Her Dead after Mre. Swanson "He tain of His Suicide fin is such that the arsenic in the| | tin is eaten out and adsorbed by the moonshine The husband had left the house|«ure of suicide Monday just after Swanson appeared. When | when he k Arsenic is a deadly |he returned later in the day he|room of h ium for distinguished ap | after en for her not made in the old-fashioned eeereen. © Saiee OF thd en effort jead woman a her husband, not euicrapsand is copper still but in « tin con- " is being held in tainer which poisoned the prod oun charged with a seibea Se oe DRINKS POISON; have caused the death last week <a se he ta hie? of Mrs, Caroline Swanson. bon vagy Mar nate Sheriff James McColloch said to-|'* * wr zicialrs tome ’ is drank what was left tr |Despondent Man Makes Cer- afternoon himself in the bath home, 6506% Phinney end of it ponus 1 1 will get in oolation, announced the action of nt retained until the a fow refuse t when the ode « to the Japane planter 1 to ace 6 demand that wage December of ents a day te nus rate will start t! only Ong that the same point as now, $84 4 ton n 1 was tho montht 5} & Pundred and continue on Ivar of the bonus, Hitherto, 60) up to a price of 12 cents a pound for per cent of the bonus was paid) raw, Sugar is at 28 cents a pound at re’ month ) the laborer and 60 per’ present, HELD FOR MURDER OF eae Cee, ‘GUN THUG CHASES "GIRLS INTO ALLEY ot his 1d told the One of the boldest of recent I told him it was none Mins McDo: ‘Then he whippe | busines | police: robbery Tuesday highway ly attempts at was frustrated | morning in the downtown dis gun and said, ‘Get Into that alley triet by the sen | girls, whe routed an | thug with lusty sereams for help. In the chase which fob antine :'tae & ty Putrelenn te Ol atrolman Haynes dashed to | one shot was fired at ~ ; ld-be but he [the alleyway in time to see the would.be robber hotfooting dewn | ces | me Jamon st, toward the Hotel Seattle “ange > Bhs M Police Opens Fire and Mins Helen Ce a Haynes sent a bullet after ot er way, we w up citive but it only served to ir q und Third/ecrease the runner's speed. He ave described rounded the corner of James st and by the girls an wea tan mult| Yesler way and was out of sight and a pink shirt od each by| when Haynes arrived at tha an arm as he over them from} Altho a squad police behind thrown into th vuth n “Where are jthe man demanded. GIRL SHOOTS SELF; ANOTHER Is DYING Mins Stuar classmates ont ht. Mi uited In you girls going?*| search for the man, no |him was found of t was melancholy be od her Clapper her having 13.—-Two North! nol girls, muff g from ner shot t within 6 hours, Se reading that Mildred Stuart, 45 had killed her ate difficultion The author tion of a * potnting love College Boys _ Millionaire Snooze While | Thief Gets $1 00 two drinks, he said : 4e Price of copper prohibitive, were |... babii in rcoltnaggh } re bandit” has mad Making their illicit booze in tin Peter 2 Beale nine a Sabine * again atin put the « physical cor After @rinkis strong. pot - > three weeks “The action of the alcohol on the jot the } © pulled him thru. harien H. Foster, 54, made doubly last vinit, he has acquired Bandit Gives | Back Watch | x, 712% EB, Galer st. chauf-! Dolson. I believe that is what t r rhe |@ feur for John Erikson, president of IGiined Mrs, Swanson's death,” eajd |OUP4 his wife dead in the kitchen./ave, and turned on the gas. The oi, ang other valuables were Over |the Nilson & Keles Shipbuilding cor Sherit? MoColioch., ud Stevens was suspected some | body wks found by hin father by the rebber poration, played host to the bandit at} ctr sigty Oar eh on Mi gellar 0 bs ladligecengrobinadbo seared be The burglar is thought to have em | 2th ave. N. and EB. Boston st., early Friend in Jail prev hy 2! ied logon es y = to oe been despondent bo ment, | tered the house by an unlocked beck | Tupeday sheriff back of Bald Mountain ne |inability to secure emp nm He did not go into the upper! spur Post-mortem examination ca\igpione was confiscated and de-| Foster formerly was janitor at i re house, butaeontined | .4 ery case hens bi ahh a Swanson'’s st owed |» o ; iS Se. . ae owes ae pion poset hie activiten to the tower Aoor. “Fhe |) he stepped trom the shadow ot = - men in the house were not Wak’) nearby bush. Search of the chauf T raft thon: MARCHE ARGAIN BASEMENT] A Store Within a Store That is the position of the Bargain Basement. It has its own receiv- ing and ‘stock rooms, and its own force of buyers. It is absolutely separate and distinct from the upstairs departments. Naturally we have our own sources of supply and are in a posi- tion to hear of bargains in the Eastern and Western markets as soon as they are offered. This fact and our ability to pay cash give us the cream of the markets. Here’s Another Shipment of Fine Navy Serge Dresses At $19.75 In Five Fetching Styles For all-round, every-day wear at home or at work the serge dress holds first place in the eyes of women. And since serge dresses are so generally worn, the Bargain Basement makes it its business to supply these dresses at genuine savings, The particular assortment offered Wednesday includes five desirable models—some in coat style with vest and collar of a fabric having the appearance of a rich bro- cade. Others have tucked Georgette vests and the skirt is finished with side panel effects of the serge in bias folds. Belts, cords, narrow sashes, silk military braid, buttons, pin tucks and all-over patterns of twisted braid are among the other trim- mings featured. The size range is from 16 to 40. ened Residents of the fraternity house are well known on the University campus, Several prominent football | players gre numbered on the frater- || nity roster, and most of the men are/ four’n pockets netted the bandit $4 “Give me that mackinaw,” was his next edict Cox complied, but under protent “It's cold, and I need it.” he plead ed The bandit relented and returned Next he inpected Cox's | | jue veterans | | | ens that's all,” said the “mil Ho coke bandit,” as he stepped to the curb, “I've got to be going.” He stepped into his car and drove lai ay OUT BY SLIDES ‘eleaiee Wreak Destruc- | | tion in Alpine District ROME. Jan. 13.—Several villages in the Alpine regions have | wiped out by avplan aes whic . lie been FEAR 589 DROWN In the province of Piedmont, c= | Winans Afrique Sinks After eo Swiss frontier, an avalanche| Gastnered ine Vil Semoate | Springing Leak in Gale amothered the village of Demonte. | tion of the villages of Vernante and | missing today following the wreck of the steamer Afrique, which sank Amone, but said the populations Lémone, weedy: in the Bay of Biscay early yester warned and fled before the| 4), k They were believed to have per h, near Aosta, an| ished Jown the valley at ‘The which was ne house in which) fro: neven pepple were sleeping FIGHTS TO SAVE | — LIQUOR SUPPLY |New York Club Man Has | Three Rooms Full of It | to Dakar, carried 1 ctew of 150. On taining 26 persons, dup. rifle gale Saturday the ang a leak and * course, It was kept aflo at with difficulty until about 3 o'clock yesterday morning when it |sank 60 miles off La Rochelle ODESSA GIVEN Jhave been 5 During ns Se vagh ® was NEW YORK, Jan 13.—William G t, member of If a dozen add director of the Kansas outhern railway words of his in the Lincoln § City has in the Poland Rejects Offer of Bol- sheviki Peace t afe Dy pany filled with precious the value t com | Juors and of many ho tars that he hag|. LONDON, Jan, 18.—Odessa has been evacuated by Gen. Denikin's troops, according to advices to news Daniel L, F uper-| papers here today agent, notif idn't get rid of t January 16, the nt would. peace offer, a from Crac ment Was hi th ling to a dispatch secured a temporary in, nd the me have permanent was heard te itm day by F eral Judge Knox ) Nikolai Joseph | ¥ d transmit the plaintiff, | ter to the supreme executive the Italian gocialivts, thru an envoy who ‘ha oduntey Ary, bot tt landed at Naples, imploring the par a man to sign the pledge,” ty “to abstain from revolutionary | movements,” for which present con |Denver to Welcome ditions offer little likelihood of suc General Pershing] . An upheaval in Ite ent time would be a blow to |[|. DENVER, Colo., Jan, 13.—Denver | the soviet's peace neg planne a warm welcome to} various hostile powers, it was & General John J. Pershing, who will |be the city's guests for several hours! ‘The ancient Kgyptlans began their In opening his argument Auerbach, counsel said: “The Vols act may make can't force }late to ade of former! year at the autumnal equinox, Sept nervice nd December 26 was to th until the time of jand an as8|Willlam the Conqueror. He was | meeting tonlg ee} crowned on January 1, hence the war leader's program, | change. the pres | | | Workers #0 far had reeovered sais | — | bodies, the dispatch said | PARIS, Jan. 13—Five hundred Other dispatches reported destruc-|and eighty-nine persons were’ still “UP BY DENIKIN Poland has rejected the Bolshevik | THE SEATTLE wigs 1890 Established fetes Me Oe of F rocks at $15.00 Dresses of Serge, Silk or Voile in Women’s and Misses’ Sizes Surprisingly low is the price marked on these Dresses— Dresses that you will be glad to own and to wear. Good quality serge in dark blue, black and tan, simple semi-tailored lines. Crepe de chine fashions one model in pleated style. ¢ Colored voile embroidered and combined in tunic effect with white forms another. Several other interesting models to select from. DRESS SECTION, SECOND FLOOR - ra is made on # Wednesday—the last day of the Three-day selling event in the Corset Section but there’s economy in every item offered. OND FLOOR Size lines are somewhat broken— CORSET SHOP. Gowns of Windsor Crepe Dainty Models in Practical Cotton Crepe Known for its durability and for its constantly attractive freshness, Windsor Crepe fashions the undergarments for women of practical dis- crimination. CREPE GOWNS AT $2.95 Patch pockets i, | are featured in | these styles. Blue birds and butterflies are shown in the de- (’ signs. Several styles @are hand em- CREPE GOWNS AT $2.50 Blue birds and apple blossoms, or butterflies in blue are found printed on the background of flesh - tinted) crepe. Shirring, rib-. bons and_ briar, broidered in vest stitching trim\ ‘4 My effects and fin- them. shed with briar stitching. PLAIN GOW AT § Delicate pink winder crepe trimmed with rows of hemstitch- ing—a dainty style for women of daintiness. $2.25 CREPE PAJAMAS $2.95 Gathered ankle ruffles, yoke and patch pockets mark these one-piece pajamas as “different.” LINGERIE SECTION, SECOND FLOOR Special Reductions on Women’s Footwear for the January Clearance Sales Many broken lines of footwear — including women’s kid house shoes, slippers and ox- fords — Martha Wash- ington and other good makes, 50 pairs of Comfort Shoes $4.85 a pair. Women’s Comfort 63 pairs of Strap Oxfords, $3.45 a pair Women's one and two- Flannelette Sacques at n’s one and two: Shoes reduce: * clear- strap, also Glazed Ki $1.50—at $1.95 ca pas aged - i Gxtoada — made with INE BR ' Sugar: oor turned soles, medium FINE FOR Made with turn soles, matclnalf short vamps and com- WEAR MORNING low heels, common sense mon sense heels — at WITH ODD SKIRTS toes and lace style. $3.45 a pair, UPPER MAIN FLOOR Flannelette Sacques— light and dark colors with floral designs. Fitted or belted styles— very trim in appearance. Trimmed with self ma- January Clearance of Golf Shoes at $6.45 FOR MEN AND WOMEN made of light pearl elk leather SIZES Golf Shoes, with terial or satin ribbon brown elk saddle, complete»with calks—reduced for and priced at $1.50 and clearance to $6.45 a pair. $1.95 LOWER MAIN FLOOR ECOND FLOOR Domestic Carpet Sweepers at $2.50 J Have your floors swept clean without making any dust — by using “Domestic” Car- pet Sweepers. Made with good bristles — case in mahogany fin- ish—priced at $2.50. FOURTH FLOOR Calicoes 10c NOT OVER 15 YARDS TO EACTI 22 and 24-inch Cali- coes in lengths and full bolts. Plaids and_ solid colors in dark shades, at 10c a yard Wednesday. THIRD FLOOR

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