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AP LANDLORD EVICTS WOMAN ‘WHO CAN'T PAY INCREASED RENT other Flat Broken Into, Tho Rent Is Paid | ! Mrs. Fannte Singer and her mily of three growing chil , Whom she has been left in the world to support educate, are homeless to vy. Mrs. A. Finberg, another) int in the Eleanora apart- ts, 115 18th ave., is suf- ng from nervous collapse. | @eputy sheriffs, carrying out Provisions of a court order is MI by Supe’ A. W, Frater it of g Jap land & Sb . moved Mre turn ut in her absence y, then broke into Mrs. Fin: | ‘Apartment with a hatohet and she was pht the matte * 20 days ago, when she was with a court notice to get out she was unable she was ur ‘home. she said, find an. ih the case of Mare re, her! d © tired raise Mrs. Fannie Singer ng. Not knowing Mrs. F : —" * \. J. Stark, J. D.| don't like it, Some of the other | throw me out women In the house have offered and Ed Hughes—we their busin er, ther knocked walter , Dr and told he X hung up the receiver nd turned to}and pay $4 J. She did not | his task | ‘This was the price demanded The « ties say she| “He told me to throw her out.” be! by the Jap for a threeroom, un- and tied it in the | said. furnished apartment that former Band rolled a bureau againat the] ‘The janitor was prevailed upon to} main in the} » the street allow the furniture t blows of | basement instead of | into the | “WE RUN THIS PLACE and forced ar rance, Mre E Sereamed and fainted. The pay the rent nning this 5 ot for fun. They've out, and if they 4 white woman. Id be $32—no winter price. 1, and would not entered while a crowd of tenants, mostly women, rushed the halts, Ono turned in a fire} ) in the excitement | "RE MOVED | move—t n SHE PROTESTS “! ms ‘our ‘months ago the Jap bought m Finberr’s furniture was moved . ° " Moe NR neler while she wailed her pro | r new m anage| that husband had “paid As the last chair was being from the rooms, Finber, fed and stopped proceedings. that he had paid, th the jani' J they the furnit . | ¢ ; Mrs. Singer's apart romank the wn at Second ave, and Main st., | sp found a sobbing 18-year-old | where a familiar figure to ai . Jennie, at home. She te bd | wh t pers there, was Mra |, — her mother's circumstances | Ringer oblivious of what was going court ee Peedi yr) leg | Lutz went to the telephone. | on at her home 1 1 hunted woman ix a widow, 53 | Her “paper station” ix across the another 5 14,” he sald, supposedly | *treet from the Japanese Commere Tar sae . had been we riche up until two ) weeks ago and NOTHING MORE SAID ad beer unable to find any employ: papa, 39 DAYS AGO Mrs as ger nays abe went to the ctreumatan ould afford After this, said until 20 days ago, when she was served with ing ele." she ce about sir s, no me ced jomi’s lawyer, |bank in the Furuya biock, which § hay oye lowned by a wealthy Japanese im I can't pay more. porter and exporter. | “My furniture is ted up. “DIDN'T THINK THE JAP | “I have no home to take my fam WOULD THROW ME OUT" ly to. “Lt didn’t think the “Jap wou "What can IT do? Wire Briefs. | NORTH BAY, Ont.—Inquest start- led to probe deaths of 15 in C. P. RR wreck. | WASHINGTON. — Offictal says aliens rounded up can be de- - FOR INDIGESTION 5, two minutes ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS After JoTo. Taking JoTo. STOMACHS MADE NEW IN TWO MINUTES. Chas. Burton, Frank} agents, on trial, charged| having 1 ir OLYMPIA.—Governot appoints Ralph Stacy member bank guaranty fund board. BOSTON.—New England shivers tn | 30 below weather. ‘ ‘The quickness of Ite action will convince those who are “meet in doubt that JO-TO isthe most wonderful remedy for In- i they have ever tried, TACOMA.—Dr. D. M. Angus found guilty illegal sale of drugs. NEW YORK American churches have gained 3,000,000 members since 1916. WALLA WALLA.—Washouts on| railways have again isolated Walla Walla. Sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Company Swift & Co., Druggists CHICAGO.—Shifting winds have} lreleased ship Sydney O. Neff, caught ip THE PAS, an—J. F. Eagan, trapper, lost in blizzard, killed by his| | ame and finh| warden consider new legislation f | here . | SPOKANE.—More than thousand] tries in annual poultry show here TACOMA Half-mititon profit] | | made by municipal light and water| business. ‘OST men of ambition hope to have a little business of their own some day. Such men are building up strong savings accounts against the day when they will enter the business world on their own capital. TACOMA Portion brick wall | Moose temple, erected 1988, falls to | street, WALLA WALLA—State sheriffs jon to be held here February F | DENVER Officials frown on | plans of ar beet men to demahd higher p | | SAN NCISCO—Gen. Hunter] e Seattle ations an ii uuenine Gri siee a at rane Dawe Resources Over Thirty Million Dollars. Second Avenue at Columbia, | | | | t AUMBUS, — Fire destroys. five puildings in heart of business section 0x8, $500,000 B. U. WATT WAS ELECTED) e Ger ater |chairman o! THE SEATTLE STAR—TUMSUAX, JANUAKY 27, fas Bail was named vice chairman and Carl ‘Bush second vice chair. | man. | In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which {# the lightest strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaran- in * Why teed 15 years. EXAMINATION Stomach (heartburn), Belching, fr aut work wasrentees for and Pap teeth same ot ” ad with you 12 for Working Veople \OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS on an ‘ex ot, Opporiic Kruscr-Vaiersom Co, | Vellingham, Wash, ( Pronounced Bol- ae, a SS ‘7° Best Apples . you cneyy eat an apple | every day, A Discussion by H. G. Bohlke, President Washington State Horticultural Association As practically every resident of the Pacific Northwest knows, this particular section of the globe’s surface yields the world’s finest apples. In our mountain valleys —particularly the Wenatchee valley, the soil is a rich vol- canic loam, the water is cold and clear, the nights are cool and the days warm—a combination of favorable qualities that makes the meat of our apples finer, the juice richer, the flavor more, tempting, the aroma more inviting and the color more pleasing. Nowhere else are such apples found. Because the world’s finest apples are raised here is the reason I am an orchardist and grow apples. I believe - in, and find pleasure in, producing for the world a su- perior fruit. For twelve years I have grown prize quality apples—and during those years, though I have found great joy in my work, I have experienced a constant re- gret, viz,: that the pick of the apple crop should go east - the near-culls and over-ripe fruit to our own mar- et. According to my theory, the home market should re- ceive first consideration—be favored with the choicest apples our orchards grow. In years past I have not been strong enough financially to do independent marketing —I have had to turn my crop over to the market-making organizations.- Now I no longer need to pay tribute to them. My orchard is one of the largest in the Pacific Northwest; and I am able to market my apples inde- pendently—free of dictatorship. My long-cherished dream of supplying the home folk with the superior qual- ity fruit our Eastern cousins have received from our- world famous orchards, ,can now be realized. Through the co-operation of the good grocers and fruit dealers of Seattle, the public, through calling for Bohlke brand Apples, can now obtain the finest apples the world knows. They are rich and juicy—firm yet tender. They are as different from the juiceless, pithy kind you have heretofore known as night from day. I urge that you make their acquaintance. Come to know the kind of ap- ples that your Eastern friends enjoy. Buy a box—they are cheaper that way; and they are so good and so health- ful that the more any family eats, the better their health is sure to be. But make no mistake — only _ under the ee brand can these select, superior apples be ob- tained. , BOHLKE FRUIT COMPANY, Phone Main 1787. 1124 Western, Avenue, Seattle