The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 27, 1920, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR TAYER IS r The Groot Kanetican Home SENTENCED TO PRISON “Yudge Says, “My Asin Friend,” and Hands He- lander Term in Pen Btolcalty today Chartes Helander im the county jail for a body to come and take him to Wak Walla prison, where he must serve : one to 20 years for the killing ‘Sf Charles Johnson, a booties ger. Bust as stoically yesterday Heland Paced Judge J, T. Ronald and re- his sentence. Helander shot to death with a shotgun, fol a drinking party of fishermen @ bowt anchored in the West y. I Like Schook AND Teacher ANO evenv- THING + LESSONS Is acwen ree me! | Love ‘To stvov! . ‘1 OVER BOOZE ULTS IN KILLING ‘The party ran out of tiquor, John gent Helander to get another jug Moonshine, telling him where he find it buried. When Heland: | @id not return promptly with the ff, Johnwwon is said to have gone found Helander and accused him wtealing the jus. fistic battle ensued, tn which He- , & powerful man, standing gix feet tall, was knocked down Johnson “put the boots to him.” INE wp, it is eald, Helander to his shack near by, and got a Johnson shouting @ threat that kill him, the police ong ha age rg 99 IN GRAMMER - 97 W GeograPHy! WY DID You FALL DOWN ‘THAT WAY. in GEOGRAPWY P WHAT MO He MaKe in SINGING ? ow Tr mey Have Sian f em HSQAs3S? - KILLS 2 BANDITS | AND WOUNDS 3D tle With Thugs LO8 ANGELS, Cal, Oct, 27-— | ‘Two bandits were whot and killed, | a third wounded and Motoreyele Of floer J. J. Adler injured in a sensw | tional gun battle between officers and the party of three supposed highwaymen near El Monte early to day Adler and Deputy Sheriff Georke Hamlin gave chase to the trio when they attempted to escape from Ad QW SNS NX SS Sprawied in the back, riddled with birdshet’ A. Fras ‘Other man, but entered a a plea of | ‘Bullty of murder. Yesterday he! _ apiaentnd ‘ SONGWRITERS r ughter. = dear friend,” sald Judge Rom @s the fisherman stood beside his Sos macTunnt tet moons |BFidegroom, Pipe fitter, Writes Unique Will is done for you. I sentence you to M at Walla Walla for one to 20 outa ciseel Marrted in Seattle Tuesday, Kari! Gustaf Nelson, of Bremerton, song/ writer “for pleasure” and pipe fitter} casion, his will, establishing the Nel- son Home for Song Writers, It's on 5.17 acres of Nelson's prop ‘ 8 Paslerty on Hartetine island, Mason county. ‘Th il provides that Nelson’ t Support From People| wccescr in owning the home be |” Is Needed chosen by popular contest, ending December 31, 1920. -wameped Relatives are barred. fal! down in| ‘The winner must be prepared to 25,000 for the “defend his title at all times.” Salle Looks Like 5 Tone Winter or the ‘Finks’ Pennant eed Oct S7—tt's going to be a tough winter on the “finks,” ae coriing to old-timers here, who say t we reach| We balmy days when money flowed in golden streams Into their pockets is passing. “Pink” is the name applied to pro * : . for the Salvation| work When others throw down their n toois, . = ie Powder River men wit un-| “North Clark st, Chicago,” ts the te sell 10,000 tickets for the| Address of most of the “finks* It Was estimated today at least 2,000 of | ~*~ Hi the proceeds of the dance wit! | them are idle here, and it was admit the Army drive to help swell! ted jobs are going to be scarce this 000 fund for construction of| winter. The old-timers assert work- ‘woman's boarding home|ers will be reluctant to strike this @ central sirvice station in Se-| Winter, because at present there are more men than there are jobs. and workingmen will not run the risk of losing out, ¢specially In the winter. Watched Too Any “fink” will tell you that he «| would rather break @ street car Well for Nacolie} tris than be a participant in any the third time within three| other kind of industrial strife. Nacolie Bellu, proprietor of | There's a reason—all the nickels col. | | all ‘soft” drink emporium, at| lected on cars during strikes are di- i King st. is under arrest for vio-| vided between the “fink” motorman of the prohibition law. and conductor, And they ali ser: visited federal prohibition! ble for conductor jobs. It is asking that his place|Chicago “finks” reaped a» ha d against bootlesgers. during the recent Brooklyn Rapid st day police found Bellu selling | Transit strike, Two days later federal of- Be complying with the request to Seattle Passengers at his place, nabbed Bellu for < 2 boven, nag Frisco Vaccinated SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 27.—The/| 387 passengers and 124 members of awe avon, the crew of the Admiral line ISTORY WAS steamer President, which arrived RUDELY CHANGED | Mendy from Vancouver and Seat- tle, were all ashore and free to do Spell gra en ao as they pleased today, but their arms ya Waldort “An. were beginning to itch. iam Before being permitted to tnd was freed of a bookmaki 0S gall Anderson |eaeh one was vaccinated for «mall- |pox because of the discovery of a Be fent to the penitentiary. Aji in single case of the disease aboard Threatened With Prison He Finds He’s Not Guilty: Mareid Chapman had changed his mind, be told Judge J. T. Ronald yoo terday He was chars with burglartsing & room in the Potter hotel, 614 James wt, on September 19, and had plead od “not guilty.” Now he wished to any he war “wullty.” “Very well.” agreed the sudee ‘Mr, Prosecutor, have you anything to may about this young mani” HAS STATE PRISON TERM BEHIND HIM Deputy Prosecutor John D. Car Carmody. “that he served a term tn the Mot tana state prion at Deer Lodge, and Was arrested In Vancouver, BL C., recently for pommessing oarcotica.” “I erntence the prisoner to Wale “Just a moment, ff your bener derstanding with the prosecutor's of- fice that my client would be eent to the reformatory, not the peni tentiary, if he pleaded guilty.” “With whom in the prosecutor's office did you have this understand ing?” inquired Carmody, “I believe i¢ was Mr. Frater,” 01 son rejoined. “But, with euch @ recerd behind him," interposed the court, “I can't send him to the refermaters. Het LOEWs PaLAce AIP ¥ | and Nellie Fuller. 4—Loans fora or where yg Little at a 5—We nev: and mory have to go to the penitentiary.” Moments pamed. Harold sifted his weight onto the other foot. “I've changed my your honor.” “Very weil,” ie it now? he announced. sald bis honor, “What apd it was agreed that he might Jagain change his plea and stand trial for the burglary before a jury. Congress Committee to Inspect Sant Pt. Aviation prospects on Sand point attle November & County comm! sioners antictpate the completion the preliminary work before t sourht, emphasie placed on military and postal ad- vantages, | Rheumatisgr’s Pains Will Soon Begin Their Assaults When RhQ\umatism’s pains renew their grip, as they are bound to do \as soon as the ‘first touch Qf winter ap- proaches, wi you again reach for the Mniment bottle in an effort t& temper the pain, or will you\make an in- telligent effort th get rid of the disease for g@pd and all? Why remain a the liniment when you know t best it can affoyd mere temporary Why not make a d mined effort to b the shackles of Rheu tism by routing germs from your 8%} tem? Physicians have vary opinions about the cause Rheumatism. They are considerable doubt as to tl source of the disease and proper treatment. But thge =~|\is no doubt whatever algut its pains;*and no dispuging |the fact that they are Meal, in many cases even to tl ex- tent of torture. If the disease we fined to the surface might be some logig | peeting relief from i jes by local applicaffons ap- | plied to the surface # But you | will soon learn thaffa disease that can cause so Jnuch pain and suffering is Jeep-seated and has its sourg far below the surface of th@ skin. The pains may be sight at first, that is whq@fe the victim of *vyheumatismgis often de- ceived. con- there in ex- clutech- nges of pain amount to ich, and hence they are not{promptly heed- ed. But t gradually in- crease in sgverity until the disease hasf your entire sys- tem in i relentless grip. The paing that seemed so slight at/ first become in- tensely eré and seem to | mind, again, | are to be observed by & congressional | He does nog feel that the} \first little t | ler, after he had tried to arrest them. | According to the officers, the ban dits first opened fire, injuring Ad the running woting one of thé trio off the running board of the bandit ma | chine. Hamlin pursued the remaining two, bringing them to a stop when he shot the driver of the car dead at the wheel and seriously wounded | the third. \ | The identity of the two dead men, | both of whom were Mexicans, has | not been established. . To Vote Ownership for City of Vilna ERUSSELS, Oct 27—League of nation councilors here have virtually decided on 4 plebiscite to determine whether the city ef Vilna shall be) Polish ow Lithuanian. i For hours ye day the couneli heard representatives of the two na tone Later the councilors met secretly and decided a plebiscite would be the best method of determining the final disporition of the Lithuanian city which hag been eelzed by Polish ir regulars, Two Seattle Portias Admitted to Court Misa Cornelia M. Thiel and Miss Glyde Tucker, Seattle attorneys, were admitted to practice in tly Jeremiah Neterer om of the Uni law school Mins ‘Thiel was several years \ehief clerk In the United States dis trict attorney's office here. Glacier kee trom the Alps bs detiy onaumers in Lyons, France, 1 other cities In Burope. “In not guilty! declared Harold. *= Epes, data. ‘The government's co-operation | ter in eetablinhing the new field ts being | earnestly being | PLANE CE, a .to.43 Will You Hobble - \ Around All Wintet? take delight in your, a. ings. Of course there lytve been cases where some flight re- lief was experiencefZ from the use of linimentsJfand other local applicationg’ but there has never yet m a case \that was actuglly cured by such treatmenf, and tempo- rary relief is#ery far from comforting tafa constant suf- ferer. The only from whid real resul goes deeyfdown into the blood} supply, Znd kills the germs that cagKe the disease. These tiny s multiply by the milliogS and scatter by means | of e blood circulation throgfghout the entire system. | Whfther they attack the mygcles, the joints, limbs or otJer parts of the body, they P still in the blood, and will Pntinue to spread their tor- uring pains until elimi- ated thoroughly from the sible treatment | you can expect ood, S.S.S. is a wonderful blood remedy, and is the logical treatment for rheumatism, because it promptly perme- tes the entire blood supply, d searches out and kills the @isease germs. You can take S®.S. with the antitarise tligt you are not experiment- in@ for this fine old remedy ha@ been in constant use for more than fifty years during whidh time it has been giving spler@jid results. So you owe it to}vourself to take S.S.S. witho delay, and discard | the us@of local remedies that can do ¥ou no good. The trgatment that will give r@l results is the one tha attacks Rheu- matism ‘at its source, and rem@es the germs that causqii. If your cag requires any special advice,\it can be ob- tained without4cost together Officers Fight Running Bat- | United States district court Tuesday |f) is a remedy that} : with valuable literature if you will write today to Chief Med- ical Adviser, 289 ®wift Labor- atory, Atlanta, G WEDNESDAY, OCTORET 27, 1920. SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET aS THE PLACE OF UNUSUAL OPFERINGS FRASER-PATERSON (Go} ff ‘Special Price Basement For Women o ‘oats d uyto $45.00, in straight line, belted and wrappyleffects. Set- Full lined and interlined with in Znd novelty sleeves. ngvelty silk or high luster Venetian. \ Velours, Silvertones, Crystal, Bolivia and: Buedene; bome trimmed with fur. re regularly shown at pane sy Colors: Navy, reindeer, Pekin, brown and bese 2 —Sizes for women, 32 to 46, -—For misses, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Lay ui di 4 y re We xi yf, \\\\ Vy ‘ Nt give. you atch. smoke, able. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) No |

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