The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1920, Page 4

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A Favorable Purchase Brings This Exceptional Offer WOMAN SLAIN; MAN ARRESTED He Denies Knowledge of Fatal Shooting RAWLINS, Wyo., Oct. 15.-—-Gates Phillips waa being held here today | | for alleged connection with the death of Mrs. Carl Knapp, whose body was found early yerterday on the floor of their home by the woman's husband, She had been shot six umes The woman came to Rawlins sev eral months ago with Phillips, Lat er she married Knapp. Phillips has denied any knowledge of the shoot Ing. police stated. . Hit by Actos QR This Year | Hfireo Shilhara, 404% Sixth ave, in in the elty hospital Wednesday with « fractured leg aa the result of having been struck late Tuee day night by a machine driven by J. F. Clark, Renton, at Fourth ave. and Washington at. Clark |) explained to the police that the Jap walked into the path of the automobile. Hit by Autos 400 This Year Piste Olson, 6, living at 1122 N. Pedestrians Pedestrians S4th at.. was bruised when struck Tuesday by an automobile driven at Woodland Park ave. and N, Sth ot Hit by Autos || This Year ave. &. was knocked down and bruised by an automebile driven Fourth ave. and Columbia st. Tuceday by ¢ KB. Nelson, 134 N. 76th at. Pedestrians Mre. John J. Shea, 8066 42nd by an unidentified driver at Pedestrians THE SEATTLE STAR ‘Red Fire Sways Men!’ * * ‘Women Less Emotional’! a4 CHARMEUSE AND SATIN FROCKS at $24.50 Distinguished for their excellent quality and smart styling, with trimming details attractive and varied. Choice of Brown, Navy and Black , Two Models Sketched From This Group ese e ise Tentared ts 8 group: representing = special CREPE METEOR, GEORGETTE AND METEOR SATIN AND TRICOTINE DRESSES fs at $68.50 Dresses that embody every distinct phase of frock fashions and trimming details in all desirable colors and combinations. bd ” says Miss Esther S. Ogden,| committee of the women's bu-| reau of the democratic national committee in New York. Women want the facta in pol , while men can easily be! moved by an emotional appeal, she declares, BY MABEL ABBOTT “Women cannot be got at by red NEW YORK, Oct. 12.—mash!/ fire and bras bands. =~ they are simply eating up our literature, We} Another theory scrapped by the firat | -o 8 ‘send it out fast enough. The} presidential campaign that has had Printed word ls going te play a more! to get down to hard facts about fem-| influential part in this campaign inine political paychology. * | than in any before, because of this) “We are finding out by experience trait on the part of the new voters. that men, not women, are the emo- Where « man will shove a campaign onal sex.” ays Mise Esther 8. Og- folder off his 4 into the waste den, resident vice-chairman of the| basket without opening ft, a woman | Women’s bureau of the national! will stop and read i thre and think | democratic commitien about it” Among Jail Arrivals: Guests Travel Light; And They Like Light Reading; Police Gazette Art Appreciated Bore men upon breaking nto Seat Ue jaile do it elaborately—that Hit by Autos This Year, 50] While running to catch a street car, Charlee Cannatd, $603 Dallas ave. was knocked down by an automobile driven by A. B. Robin- son, $00 Western ave, at 1th ave. 8. and Cloverdale st. Tues day. Cannard was bruised about the legs and body. Debate Carlyon Bill Before Muny League More than 50 Municipal leaguers! heard, Tuesday afternoon, a debate on the Cartyon road bill, between H. Shields, Beattie auto denier, who advocated its passage, and John Lawrence, former president of the Washington State Good Roads asre- ciation, who is opposing the measure. ‘The debate was held as the feature @f the weekly luncheon of the league at Meve's cafeteria, Belgian to Lecture on ‘Post-War Europe’ | ‘The first of a series of lectures on! SECOND AT PINE Neu atism’s Pains Belgian commission now studying American conditions in this country, before the Sphinx ctub of the Uni- versity of Washington, in Bagiey hall, on the campus, at 7:20 p. m. Wednemia: Dr. De Man fought thruont the war with the Belgian army, and was an aerial observer over the German lines for 11 months, He was at LAttle tn the way of rending ma | torial te brought into the city Jail, as| they carry a complete toilet equip ment—while others seom to pay lit-|‘P* Prisoher seldom lingers long| Ue attention to the little trinkets| enough to have time to reed. Oc-| and novelties of life and go to the) casionaly some radical literature ts| hoos gow clean. | found on the long-haired type of | Of course, conditions sometimes | prisoner, who has a hunch be ought | | Play important minor motifs in the| to own the Countycity bidg. and/ | Sreat winter pastime of jall-breaking.| slayor Caldwell ought to be out| | were compelled to report they miss Will Soon Begin But You Do Much to : Head Them Off So many le dread to the fadi summer, for those afflicted with Rheu- itism it means that the ort they have enjoyed ng the warm season is o give way to the pains of this disease of Are you quite sure that pu have ever treated your ? Doubtless you have d remedies by the score cause the pains are always ing in severity and a source of constant suf- ing. But just here is here you e your mis- as others have done by thousands. Just because your Rheuma- 4 eauses so much pain and ‘ort you feel that the way to treat the dis- is to endeavor to get rid its pains. So you rush the liniment bottle and to rub and rub in a tic effort to relieve your ‘ering. And at times, pos- sibly, you get some slight But did you ever know of ever ridding them- of this painful disease ch suffering is not con- d to the surface of the ism in an intelligent | 4 skin, and carnot be success- fully treated by local reme- dies. You have but to look around you at the numerous helpless victims of Rheuma- tism to confirm this state- ment. Ask any of them and they will tell you that no matter how much liniment they use, each season again finds them in the grip of the disease. Do you want to have the same experience? Or are you willing to take advantage of a treatment that has been suc- cessfully used by many vic- tims? Many cases of Rheumatism are due to a tiny germ in the blood, which multiplies by the million and carries its pains to different parts of the body. Such cases must be treated through the blood, and the disease germs eradicated be- fore the disease can be con- juered. This is why S.S.S. the fine old blood remedy has given such satisfactory results in the treatment of Rheuma- tism. It is such a thorough blood cleanser that it removes all’ foreign substance from the circulation thus clearing it of the germs that cause the disease. You must first remove from your blood the that cause your heumatism before you can be free of its pains. Begin taking S.S.S. today —you can get it at any drug store. And if you wish any special instructions about your own case, our trained physician will take pleasure in giving you any desired in- formation. Write fully to Chief Medical Adviser, 281 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Georgia. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS tached to Kerensky’s Russian ,army | | for some months as a member of the Beigian commission, Funeral for Pioneer Druggist Thursday Funeral services will be held here tomorrow at 2 p. m. for P. EB. Fisher, who died here Monday. Services will be at the Bileitz undertaking parlors and will be conducted by the Odd Fel-| lows. He will be buried in Washell!| cemetery. He was a Seattle pioneer druggist and is survived by @ daugh-| ter and brother, Mra, Joseph and A.| M. Fisher. He was a member of} lodge No. 7, 1. O. 0. F., for 30 years. “Life Too Long”; He Dies at 103) PORTLAND, Oct. 19.—Life has! been too long; I want to go.” Charles Callahan made that state-| ment three weeks ago at the county | poor farm, on the day he was 103) years old. To prove he meant what he said— that he wanted to die—Callahan went to bed and refused to eat. He died yesterday. Night Riders Fire Cotton Warehouses NEW YORK, Oct. 13.Value of cotton gins, warehouses, compresses and cotton destroyed in Texas by “fire of mysterious origin” following night riders’ warnings reached $1,- 125,000, offictals estimated today. Since Monday morning five gina have been d: 4 or destroyed. Breaks His Arm in Mills at Ballard Richar1 Webb, 46, is in Seattle General hospital Weduesday with a fractured arm as the result of having it caught in a revolving chain at the Seattle Cedar Lumber Co. mil, in Ballard, Webb lives at 617 23rd ave.. He Toted Gat; Now He’s Behind Bars Louis Lan, 38, had a loaded gun in his possession when police officers searched him at 17th ave, 8. W. and W. Spokane st. That is why he ta in the clty jail Wednesday on an open charge. He is said to have served time for grand larceny. Big Cricket Game Is Staged by Grandpaps LONDON, Eng, Oct, 14.--A vet erans’ cricket match was staged at Wycombe, in which the combined agen of one team were 686 years and the other team 794 years. IF Bates, 94, acted ag scores, A pickpocket often ts caught in the | sweeping the streets | act of dipping his digets and the cop,| Police Sgt. Doe Keefe, being a if he be rough, will often times re great reader, takes all of this for fuse to allow the prisoner time to| himself. pack. | Dave Morgan, @ jallor something | A high class man, such as an ef-| up at the county jail, declared that! ficient yers or @ bigtown stick up, about 99 per cent of the prisoners| always travels light. He figures the! Jona he has in his pomneasion when he smacks into @ bull, the lease chance there is of identifying him. NOTHING BUT THEIR SWEET DISPOSITIONS | So the big guns haven't anything but their usual swoet dispositions when they say “present” to the deak sergeant. Their pockets are as am- ty am the inside of zero The common souses and the count- leas other birds,,who take advantage of the free rooms in the local jail, have weird and wild layouts in their jeans, Everything from bottled ja-| mica ginger and worn out snuff to shoe strings and antiquated beer | checks are thrown over the desk | couldn't read. Morgan must have} been joking, for one prisoner had a| volume of “Polloe Practice and Pro- | cedure.” He Informed Morgan that he hoped to become a policeman after completing bis sentence and was studying. | The funny pages are popular. | Smart Set, Snappy Stories, Munsey | | and the Railroad magazine are great favorites with the boys. Those con-| templating long terms at Walla Walla even Yave been known to start | & Saturday Evening Post serial The Police Gazette is liked for tte! art, especially the reproductions of beautiful and shapely burlesque | comediennes. INFANTRY LEADS ‘IN ENLISTMENTS | “Backbone of the Army”| Most Popular Here | | | ‘The infantry, the “t army,” is proving the | branch of the serv for m n | ing up for the army during October judging by results shown the first kbone of the wt popular | 11 days of the month. During this | time the local station, Mutual Life building, set a new record of 88 men an average of eight per day |ereater majority choosing the in \fantry. The engineers, particularly the Eighth at Fort Bliss, | "Washington's Own,” regiment, Texan, in running a close second TOURISTS BEAT | mounfed, NEW R. R. RATES |In Montana Old Fares Still! } in Force! | | | wd | HELENA, Mont., Oct. 12.—Recaune |of the action of the Montana State | Fudiroad comminsion in refusing to increase passenger fares within the state to the level set by the inter | state commerce commision. thro travelers are finding a way to “beat” | | the railroads. | | ‘Thrifty passengers are buying thetr | | tlekets to the first town within Mon. | | tana's borders, There they hop off | and quickly purchase another ticket to the last town in Montana on their | route, and there they rebuy to their | | destination. ‘The railroads have ap: | | pealed to the interstate commerce But while the contro. versy between the railroads and the state commiasion waxes hot, the travelers are reaping full benefit of | the differesiBe in rates commiasion Portland Chief Obliging, But Hada Hard Job PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 12.—Chief of Police Jenkins now wonders what) next they'll ask of him. Jenkins’ latest task was a stunner. A proupective bridegroom, a farmer, | couldn't leave hin work to come to} Portland to meet his mailorder flancee, no he asked the chief of po lice to do the honors. That wouldn't have been so bad. but thin in the only deseription the would-be groom sent to Jenkins: “Bhe is heavy set and wears @ black dreas and black hat.” The farmer informed the chief he had advertised for a wife, started a courtship by mail, won the consent of lonesome miss in another state, land, He had promined to meet her. But & fellow couldn't desert his crops at a crucial moment, so wouldn't Chief Jenkins pieAse greet the bride- tobe, and direct ber to the farmers ranch? Jenkins tnstructed bis union-sta- tion cops to do the best they could They intercepted all the women they saw coming from the trains wearing black hats and dreases, if they were at all Inclined to be heavy set. ‘There were so many who answer. ed to the “deacription” that they ed the right one Bureau of Missing WEDNESDAY, OCTORER 1, ‘Thre. FFRASER- SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Special Price Basement —The merchandise of the Special Price Base- ment is all of special lot purchases which are bought far below regular prices and sold quickly at prices correspondingly less. 35 Hats at $2.50 —Trimmed in a variety of attractive styles. —Included in the assortment are patent leather effects and velvet and patent combinations, in turban, sailor and modified poke bonnet shapes. A Special Lot of 60 High-Grade Coats Presenting Unusual Values at $29.50 —The prevailing prices on coats of this quality are $35.00 to $45.00. —Materials: Velours in plain and silvertone mixtures. —Linings: a pape Ma in good quality novelty silks. —tTrimmings: Large collars of Sealine fur. —Colors: Navy, Brown, Rein- deer, Pekin, Taupe. —Sizes for women and misses, 16 to 46. ; 255 Morning Dresses In Three Price Groups —Dresses which would regularly be $3.50 and $4.00 at [ana she was due to arrive in a $2.29 —Dresses which would regularly be $4.50 to $6.00 at $3.95 —Dresses which would regularly be $6.50 to $9.00 at $4.95 —Attractive models of Pereales and Amoskeag Chambrays in a variety of colors—plain, checked, striped and plaid effects. Made with three- quarter or full length sleeves, belts sashes, roll and shaw! collars, vestees and trimmings of organdie, pique and pear! buttons, Relatives Seeking information that will ex- Pedite closing up the estate of his uncle, Earl Thompson, 615 ment West st, Syracuse, N. Y, writen to the Chamber of Commerce that he) wishes to locate . Mra. Gertrude Price, whose last known address was 151 11 , Seattle. Convict Esca pes | to See Children | WHEELING, W. Va, Oct. 12.—! Declaring he could not resist the} temptation to see his children, Oda | Miller, escaped convict, returned to) the Moundsville penitentiary to serve his time, Ho was a trusty before he escaped. He has five months to serve of a twoyear sen tence. He's the first escaped pris- | oner to ever return voluntarily and | his punishment will be light. | ‘The high cost of fuel has led Japan to develop immense waterpower. when Frank DuCett casts his wicked eye over the bundle and slaps down his weight on the big, red blotter. Not infrequently bank rolls, rang- ing from @ street car token to @ roll of green, topping @ four figure alti. | tuge, are discovered in the shake down. Hop, too, peculiarly in often! found on the stranger. This is al-| ways hidden in secret pockets and| necessitates clever searching to un-| 4 earth it, 100 Vacancies in K Signal Corp School! ‘Word has been received at the lo- cal army recruiting station, Mutual lAfe building, that the are about 100 vacancies in the signal corps school at Camp Alfred Vail, N. J. for classes starting about November 16, Either telegraphy, telephony, radio or meteorology courses may be selected by applicants. Falls From Wagon; . Lights on His Head Falling from a wagon at First ave. and Blanchard st., while stealing a ride, William MoGee, 10, 1294 Galer st, sustained painful head injuries, and was admitted to the city hos. pital Tuesday. His condition is not serious. Princeton-Harvard Debaters May Come Daniel Websters from Princeton will meet with Patrick Henrys of the University of Washington during | the Christmas holidays, ac ording to tentative plans announced ‘Tuesday by the local debaters. The Tiger team has invited the Washington men to forensic battie here, and the invitation haa been accepted. effort will also be made to bring | ANNA Harvard, debaters here STM eo Sa hy Pay More _ for an Imitation? The CaloriC Is the Original and Costs Less Come in and let us show you this wonder- ful furnace and quote you our prices. Or call Elliott 4126 and our repre- sentative will call. Over 100,000 in Use PIPELESS FURNACE ™. REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS Test of usE YOUR CREDIT 'T'Ss GOOD dining room tables Some beautiful solid oak Dining Tables, speciai— A wonderful baker with an 18- inch oven; six-hole polished top; full nickel trimmings; special— steel beds Heavy con- structed Steel Beda ° hairs Solid oak Dining Chairs, with leather seats; eo RNITURE G. 619 PINE ST. Tu In orddr to introduce our new (whalebon: hi end strongest Plate Knows, covers very inthe vor the het oe ‘he s oH ww, = LF eed off the cob; guarane w jaranteed for 18 yeara nave i wdralng ane "Get teeth same day. Mosamination and advice Call and See Samples of Our Plate and Bridge Werk. We Stand the ‘Time. Bring this of with you. Open Sundays From © te 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS : reasion taken tm the free.

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