The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 6, 1925, Page 2

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PAGE 3 MORE COPS FOR! Mother’s Heart Broken SUMMER as Son Goes to Priso BY NADINE J. ROBBINS nN as taken from the Everet ) t-riddied bodies He in th © Seattle, The Pollock home, 2424 Mayor Wants to Inorease | morcuc, « motners te broken | Summit ave, Is wad and lonely w rn h seh er, tu her f Force for Convention psheiphlcaded Pe at laune aed eit a bandh andeuft the daylight Lehief to hide the @rief, to ¢ With tt declaratt that wo t y the t f nd mot Police will be appointed during t Friday morning James Pe teamster, has spent convention week J ' Leas than a year ago the ¢ t part of his life in working cially in the traff o ent body of Everett 1 his children @ducationa Mayor Edwin J ary struck because John ¥ tages | members of the afety cor i to pla the hig Mrs, Catherine Johnson, sister of mittee yesterday att team. T the same | George Jones, the other ¢ man week ron! held near the Fobes school north He told committee m that jail « of of Everett. She watched her brother if the c c w 1 no t ex: it h f v r leay her home and, when sh aw tra policem: would i up and bed him agnin, his body was being car emergency point n San Lt and his b Juny ed into the front yard by two other self, He said r o mak ud nen. The smile w © from hi appointment An emergent Mr Pr k had ped for much |} his eyes were ele and b ul was according to the laws of the| of nex x son, t yesterda ed his clothing from a bullet city. charter. without b& allowed to talk to her, | hole in his back. “Beattie is probably the only city of its size which has leas police j ste men than firemen,” he said, “We have about §50 police to. approxim BIG ROSE SHOW HERE'S MORE ABOL ately 650 firemen, The policemen \ ; eight hours each, while the mem - TAR y PAGE ONE i bers of the fire department only JUNE | 7 1 § STARTS ON PAGE ONE ; work in two shifts. There are al — ; ways twice aa ma firemen on the : aid to be the driver pf the car, was 4 job, as there are poticemen, and it} Large Entry List In for) Sit‘ pr the arives pe ihe mar. Nis is not fair to expect the police to ibi bullet emerging under the left arm patrol the city as efficiently as Annual Exhibit pit The othe George Jones, a la they should when thelr numbers a a borer in Everett, was # squarely are so inadequate.” or two days, June 17 and 18, the] th. pack Worley is an expert The mayor's declaration followed | University of W paton armory | ia rksman a discussion by members of the| Will be a mass of roses. The annual} yi 7. pollock, one of the slain traffic committee of ways to pre-|*Xhibition of the Seattle Rose so hea? a lone orissinal record Yent accidents when the city wilt|clety will Id at this time with the police. Beginning in 1916 be filled with tourists and visitors| Members of the committee report) |... sted four times for bur to the Knights Templar convention |t#at they have just closed another nee for saws to and other similar affuirs, j Week of busy: preparations, and they prisoners, 1 ped from A motion was carried to tho ef-|Promise that this year's w will Mafia: rathersatory ini 1018 dock’ thas a; lobby will created |be the biggest and best affair ever yew =a ae y y served time in ‘oma for for the purpose of influencing held a short thas. city, council to make the necessary) Many acceptances have heen re John Pollock, the man in jail in appointments. A committee will be) Celved from officers of other flower) o)oi. ios w wood record in Ever appointed to present the question to/Organizations in the Pacific North.| Seattle, has 4 . | ett, and on the basis of it and the ‘The lst of entries tncludes tea | #lbi ewhich he hax established ts be | e lst of clud ny jroses, pernetianas hybrid perpetu- | Yeved by police to be not implicated the council at its next west, and some oven from California according to the vote. meeting, ‘The morning | ball and football for "Everett high o! 7 w ye that of June 17 will be the last time that | ss coland for St. Martic’s college, entries may be submitted. Outoftown judges will be W. E.| #ear Tacoma IS SHELVED Sherbrooke, Kirkland; Dr, William | DePuy, Tacoma; Roland Gamwell, : | Bellingham, and F. Fyfesmith, Von) Burns to Death in pis |couver, B | Saving His Effects Because Be | PORTLAND, June 6 | § END «=: back Into a burning hotel to get somo of his personal effects, Wisconsin Governor Balks .on Mobilization | Tee { MADISON, Wis, June ¢—The| Joseph Jefferson, about 38, lost hin Wisconsin national guard will not | | Ri T life last night at Linnton, the cor- participate in National Defense day | oner learned today exercises scheduled for July 4, Gov. | : [Fire swent thru an old four. John J. Blaine advised President story frame building t housed Coolidge in a-communication ais] VOlunteers, Naval Forces) avout two dozen mill workers. Jett patched to the White House today. | eraon was on the front porch when Stop Chinese Trouble “It is the opinion of the gove Ho + of Wisconsin that at a time when al valuables, but the people of the civilized nations| SHANGHAI Mob rioting of the world are demanding reduction | has cease Andrew Charles, an India a of armaments, both on land and on| Firm action of the volunteer de-| dent, thought the proprietress of the sea, it is inadvisable for the Ameri. | fense force, gieaned from all able-! place, a 74-year-old woman, was in can government, thru propaganda| bodied men of the foreign quarter,|the building. He rushed Into the 3 and demonstration, to stimulate a na-jand backed by Britieh and| fire and was trapped and burned, tional military movement,” the Bad-} ger executive stated. managed to escape by sliding & rope from an upper win- and backed by British and American | but naval detachments, has put an end | down to organized trouble, tho there are} dow. still some individual attacks upon} foreigners, principally British and | Japanese. | injured when he jumped from window. a ‘AUTOS PAY HIGH soots| Gas and License raxeal Assailants Captured Soon After by Police Robbed of all his worldly More Miss Liberty Entries Are Wanted There are only two weeks left in which to find Seattle's seven pret ‘except a suit of underciothes, V. R.| ; | tient girls, Frederick J. Wettrick, Ferris, Merchants Hotel, woke up| [Otal Huge Sum in State | chairman of the Mies Liberty Amer in his room Friday night. Three | —— Hican Legion contest, is issuing ap strangers, wham he had invited into his room, had set upon him, knocked Collections from motor vehicle 1l-| {censes and gasoline taxes for the peals for more entries. Misa Liberty and her court will him unconscious and stripped him, first five months of the year in| ba feted for a week at a series of Soon after, the robbers, G. Sow-| King county are $45,641.70 in excess! parties being planned by the com ers, 21; Clarenee Williams, 18, andj of those made during the entire | mittee Barney Gray, 23. were taken at Sec-{ year of 1924, it was announced at All contestants should send no ond ave. S. and Washington st..! the county treasurer's office yeater-| black and while photograph with | with their arms full of clothing. The collections total $1,271,-| their entry coupons. Officers Montgomery, McNamee | . while those of last year were ~ < = and Perry arrested them. | 287.95. | king county | contribution swelly the total for the state collec tions for the first half, which are almost equal to thdse of the entire year of 1934, it Staite Treasurer W. HERE’S MORE ABOUT HART STARTS ON PAGE ONE Gecin Murder Trial | Will Start Monday CHICAGO, June 6.—Actual taking | of testimony in the Shepherd ‘“yerm more have been temporarily accepted | and both sides expressed the bellet that the jury will be completed by | Monday noon. | William D. Shepherd, on trial on! entire last year. Mr: former governor, in asking for the wee | alleged division of foes, Was acting u Olla Ls Greve he A bese eg ity as represents the charge of murdering his ward, Dies After Illness| court's precision _ Billy McClintock, to secure the lat-| Mrs. Olla Lilllan Greve, 47, wifo ot EXPECTED BY LAWYER ter’s estate, said he hoped the trial) A. A. Greve, died Friday morning at; Judge Teats' memorandum decis- would be short, as he suffered in-|the Seattle General hospital after aj) lon covering elght pages recited tensely from the hot weather. It isjlingering iliness. She was formerly| that the law on the matter of cor. belleved the actual trial will last a|a dancing teacher in this city. ruption of public officials prohibits month. She is survived by her husband, a|sking of a gratuity in considera- daughter, Pansy, night nurse at the|tlon of some act the official would Children’s Orthopedic hospital, and a} Ot would not perform. ‘The logal tle Public library, which was located |son, Albert O. Greve, also of Seattic.| meaning of bribe means that a in the Beacon Hull pharmacy, 2017| The body is at the Butterworth | public official shall perform or not Mth ave. S, has been moved with|mortuary. No funeral arrangements | Perform some act in the interest the pharmacy to 3227 Beacon ave. have been made. | ot the party who pays the bribe, = = ——' the court declared. TIME IS ALWAYS AN | IMPORTANT FACTOR governor; it doe# not assert that a *“NO TIME Branch station No. 15 of the Seat- | fee was asked, but alleges that tho bank officials were asked to ndd to their fee | Hart did anything to earn a fee. HERE’S MORE ABO! PILOT STARTS ON PAGE ON IS WASTED. ALL COOKING IS DONE {dead from his drop of 4,500 feot. Hubbard was removed from the QUICKER AND BETTER was salvaged by the yacht. "Tontno and towed, completely submerged, to jthe beach, It was impossible to get it above water last night to determine the extent of damage, Hubbard, who has been conducting some secret experimenta for the navy department, took the plane from the Puget Sound airway hangar at Madi- son park and climbed until he was but @ tiny speck to the watchers on on the Kitkland ferry and in small Boats, Suddenly the plane tumbled in a |tail spin, Something was wrong with the motor, for tho flyer could not right the plane, The machine fell, spinning like a top until it was 1,600 feet above the Inke. The spec: tators heard a sharp report and saw the plane cease spinning and drop straight down into the lake, nose first, striking the water with @ terrific Impact and sending up an immense sheet of spray, The Bocing speedboat M879 voached the wreck first to find Hubbard alive and only slightly in jured, This was Hubbard’y ytirst acoldent since he begin making test flights with {he seaplane more than a month ago, WHEN DONE WITH GAS IN COOKING WITH GAS TEM- PERATURES ARE ALWAYS COR- RECT AND PERFECT RESULTS ASSURED WITH THE LORAIN OVEN HEAT - CONTROLLED CLARK JEWEL OR RELIABLE GAS RANGE. ® Sold on Easy Payment Plan, Seattle Lighting Company. 1308 Fourth Asse, MAin-6767. A, Sven Gustas, another resident, waa | 5 lattle, yesterday. State collections murder’ triak may start Manday.| ®'t!*, a : Seargeats Jup to May 31 were $4,445,9 ments to prove that a crime had been | Pimhe lurore béve bess sworn, three! pared’ with | $4,475,196 for committed. He contended that the It doesn’t set forth that | irs sate reponse THE SEATTLE STAR CREW IS GUEST OF AD CLUB s Are Presented With Lucky Pennies Rower 70 More Heat Deaths Swells Total to 200 New York Leads List With 25 Fatalities." (*.." J gto 6|, SANTIAGO, Chile, Jun SATURDAY, JUNE 410 ATTACK RIFFS|PLANT STORMED New Spanish Offensive to pani ortensve to BY STRIKERGY ar _,./Chile Nitrate Workers Are i r in Control of Works s001- luck r Vashingtos 4 i , r e plent pag diorama dyer ert itctmen in Past ours ; vr . Bea | de ' oe b, whose guests the crew wa = ee mand three : . the regular weekly luncheon of (By United Press mometer at $7 at 10.0 : , - ware , othe the club Friday noe run most intense June heat wave 4 by the Un ae ia . Coxswain Wuthenow, Captain Max | n the anr ts the weather : owing Joes of life in iA Grodetla't diz f . " 1 Al Ulbrickson of the first | bureau con » take ‘ol ¢ ir een a8 @ 1 an I boat responded to.% vation and jlife, with n 70 deaths reported 24 hours in rer a ep ek. rs presented with “good luck’ |!" the East and Middle Wost during | “lt tape : pe of the vintage of 1797 by |e past 24 bh bese al might be glad to take a more « , s Tuite D, Charbasall, “A racing at Laie.” Pree. Teporial anew: thet |" Rineeere part in the campa guinet t wrediede py ‘ ed oars and “Huskie”. blankets and pen. ™ore than 200 persons have lost thelr) Detroit, 6 Riffia wie " t 4 G * nants Were used ay decorations (n the |!!¥e" due to the heat during the t |. Chicago, 4 Alhucemas bay Hen on the 1 a clea of atic Spanish ballroom of Olympic |X days Mone 5 ranean, north of Ajdir, when : Hotel, Many members of the Uni.) New York, with 25 lives lost dur.| Wilmingt distance to the scene of the France s: versity Advertising club attended, |!2# the past 24 hours, faced the) Washington Rifflan operations 1s not far, . The principal apeaker,, Prot, wWil-|ProsDect of more casuaitien with thel Cleveland, 2) Milk Company L¢“gs fred Eldred, school of business ad . ministration, U of W., addressed the ' | $100 in Bold Rob y club on the "“Poniibilities of ’ Co. Two bandits aped with a $100 Marketing and Advertising } 5 | loot after holding up and robbing of Washington Products.” | Misa’ cashier of the al Nedj Ronett! solos were given by 2106 Dexter ave. “* THRU SEATTLE RATES REDUCE Low Fares in Effect for Templar Convention Announced on Thursday The star will publish the suggested oneday tours Wednesday plu will be read and judge prise Monday t of the Keattle ut of fe ‘Thur a a r the te winners will A reduction y the round trip effect by of fares, will California Kaights convention July 28 to 31, ac announcement yent The reduced rate from all stations tr zona and Nevada on wale July 2: return limit, put rail on into the lines is being held by nh with the ater Irizen for the efficient method of visiting the im. in effeet portant and play California, Ari-| grounds of the city are as follows: Tickets will be) First prize, a season pass to the to 20, with the finai | Columbia, where Reginald Denny in playing in “I'll Show You Town"; second, $5.00; third, $2.60; fourth, five tickets to the Columbia Here im your show lyour knowledge of Seattle by map- |ping out travelog for summer tourtets convention gucets whone sightseeing time Is limited. Plan your tour, using street cars and public conveyances; see that Quit Trains for Sake of Beach Girls ; Imagine yourself one of the many jthousand summer tourists and con [sider which of the attractions and | points of Interest would appeal to jyou. Arrange them in order and time the entire trip one dhy ure may 0 Templar } in annt Colun joint to best and mont day will be beauty spots August § | chance to HOLLYWOOD, Wearing Cal, June nted pajamas on latest Hollywood hand- ea is the the beact accessible enaation r a Swann other cupy be the nd ed noted fad to- | oF atudio beauties the ne week the y | Shriners, eduled to board castbound trains, cancelled jthetr reservations and flocked to BANKERS CLOSE }the new mode. | eomasioamen ‘The pajamas of vivid hue, bana | Officers Elected at Final Session of Conclave nd beach Kasped at di me the wero painted and cublistic in effect, wer | worn as lounging sults on the sand. | | They are of silk texture, of course, | |and buttoned In front. j | Underneath, for actual swimming, |the stars the usual abbre vinted bathing sults, one-plece and i tght fitting. Tho last meeting of the annual bankers’ convention was held at The bla Olympic Hotel this morning. A dis | [cussion was taken up about the work of th legislature in regard to the Ho Tyg eo regulations and activities of the say ings and loan associations of the | | state, | | Election of officers for the coming | your will be held before the ctone of et the meeting today. Senior Council to Investi-| Justice D. Murphy, of the supreme jcourt of British Colu la, spoke on gate Inter-Class Scrap [tee war and methods of guarding — against another in the future at the Senior council investigations have! Convention dinner last: night. Other in |*peakera were Dr. A. H, Upton, presi of {dent of the University of Idaho, and |Dean H. T. Lewis, of the University f Washington. jbeen started, which may ‘result punishment of ringleaders men who ducked and kidnag Ithe the university sophomores, in t inter- class strife at the closing of the} ® Moving Up assembly Thursday! night | | According reahmen, th affair started when the sophomores | tried to fire thelr bonfire before | |the beginning of the frosh cap burn: | jing. They were driven off succeas- | fully | Later in the evening, several score {freshmen searched some of the fi |ternity houses for sophomore mien, | | Phillip Liveiy and Joe Olmstead to the Main Street Alfred Coolidge, banker, Colfax, parading in the lobby at The Olympic. 8S. H. Crotin. ger, banker, of Roy, seeing the bright lights on urth ave. Elmer Dablin, banker, of Selah, of | Watching the merry throng at were taken, and after an hour's Second and Pike. F. A. Fech- struggle, were thrown into the frosh| ter, banker, of Yakima, standing jpond, Jamex Beck and Walter) {ny the sun at Fourth and Sen- Patrie had the numerals aint jed on thelr faces in indelible ink. | George F. Christense banker, of Stevenson, discussing The affair lasted until dawn,| the fxsues with a friend in the when Rueben Carison, president of| lobby. Cecil Carter, banker, of |the sophomore class, with elght| Iriday Harbor, — distributing other sophomores, arrived home| smiles around the convention after being dumped out on the high-} hall. Frank Carpenter, banker, way near Bothell. of Cle Elum, dodging traffic at Fourth and Union, R. Biglow, banker, of Colfax, telling a good story to three cronies, Dan Crowley, banker, of San Fran- ciseo, looking lonesome in the midst of plenty. Gailor Adams, banker, of Hoquiam, displaying his new spring suit on Second ave. 8S. W. Brown, banker, of of Auburn, distributing a glad The affair is the first [strife that has taken place | year interclass | this | Pastor Completes Nine Years’ Service! Celebrating the beginning of his ninth year as pastor of the Ballard) | | | | } Presbyterian church, the Rev. Honor hand among the brethren, J. D. L, Wilhelm will conduct special ae Carlett, banker, of Toppenish, making merry with the bell {oes at the church tomorrow. | Tho subject of his morning service | will be “A Speed Fiend of Ancient | | Daya.” In the evening he will talk! boys in tho lobby. Girl Scouts Leave on “The Contribution of Little Boy Blue,” | ‘She Rev. Mr. Wilhelm has been a| OM Week-End Jaunt rewident of tle for 28 years,| More than 30 Girl Scouts, under the care of Mra, Since llving in Seattle he has pr Hubbard and Mrs, ticed law and s for 10 years editor ot “The Cc 1 magazine ‘devoted | Weekend at Alllas camp, on Lake to boosting the Northwest, Sammamish, Tho purpose of tho trip Is to get practical experience in leamping. ‘They will pay particular attention to such things as fire building, camp cooking and camp Continuance Granted in Alien Land Trial cisitcn. Given until next Friday to plead, The trip will be made in automo: when they appeared before Presid. | biles donated by Seattle business ing Judge J. T. Ronald yesterday,, mon, This is the first of a series of CW. MeGonigle, Algona Marshal, / trips whieh will be made this sum: and.16 Japanese co-defendants wero ener by Girl Scouts, chafged with conspiracy to. violate | i tho state anti-alien tand law, ‘Tho | continuance was requested bh Av Jumps Off 300-Foot tornoys A, J, Falknor and M, Sick Man rf Found | man and graduate of Northwestern university, chose to commit a dra Lying Beside Road initic suicide when he sprang. trom Found jt and lying beslde the ® 800-foot preciplee at Ik Rock rond between Kent and Auburn near here to the Willamette river Wriday night, Arthur Lewis Hell, a below. trangent, was brought to Seattle; After lis disappearance, the first | by Mr. and Mra, L. Lund, 4067|clew, of his whereabouts developed Boll wt, Tacoma, when his automobile was found Hell in now in the elty hospital,| near the top of the bluff, Harbor where he was given medical atten-} police then dragged the river and tion, found hls body, A. Y. Baker, left today to spend the | soe 4 entatiy: th an advertisement for ai hgh ‘oe eee Precipice to Death Cuticura Soap and Qintment and : | PORTLAND, Ore. June 6~ purchased some, In je few days I ‘Ralph Waldo Biden, advertising | |got relief, and after jusing three FROM CAR Winners in Star’s Contest Escapes From Auto Going | Superior Court Asked to! 35 Miles an Hour Leaping from the ear in which he 1 to the jai) forger made ence afternoon. was in the custody of Detective Herbert, who reco; on the automobile he driving an one wanted by the polic Ho stopped the car and command being his Lounpected Fri i Heense 4 jthe man, who gave his name as Ku gene Day, to drive to headquarters After seemingly complying with Herbert's command, the prisoner, who waa driving the car, jumped | lout when it was going 35 miles an the hour. Ry the time Herbert had taken the | wheel and prevented the machine jerashing into pedestrians, the pris. | loner had escaped. | TO COLLEGE Alaska School Receives Big Appropriation Y Rae $50,000 Northern college Alaska Agricul! ‘hool of Mine ng to Prentc who arrived | An appropriation given to the most world, the n the tural college and at Fairbanks, accord! E. Charles here yeat ' | The money. will be spent for |lumber for an addition to the col-| |lege, electrical supplies and furnt-| | ture. Ernest N, Paddy, a former mem- r of the University of Washing ton faculty, has been elected dean jot the college. GUNS COMING! Two big German guns, secured by Rainler-Noble ost, American Le-| gion, will just make connections | j with the Fourth of July celebration | at Woodland park, according to no. tice of their shipment on the steam. | er Lewis Luckenbach, received by the past, from Raritan arsenal, New | Jersey | The guns left New York Wednes day night, on the deck of the ship, | hich is due to arrive in Seattle on | July 2 or 3. Arrangements to un-| |load them promptly and transport | them to Woodland park will be | made by Ralnier-Noble post, which | will turn them over to the city as | permanent war trophies, with ap-| propriate ceremonies, as part of the} public Fourth of July celebration at the. park | Death Race Is Won | | by Woman’s Fiancee A race with death was won by T.| R. MeNally, office manager of the Todd Dry Docks, Inc., when he raced from Los Angeles, where he was at- tending the Shrine conclave, to the bedside of his fiancee, Miss Grace Weaver, who died at the Seattle Gen- jeral hospital Friday afternoon. Mo- | Nally arrived in Seattle Friday morn. ing. | The news of Miss Weaver's {Illness wus wired to McNally Tuesday, and he started north by train immedi ately, Miss Weaver was a domestic science teacher in West Seattle high school, She is survived by her father, the Rev. J. W. Weaver, her mother, and a brother, Donald, Bunnell, be: |Ask for Expedition | to Hunt Lost Fliers OSLO, June 6.—The Aeronautic so- clety wants the aid of the MacMil- jan Arctic expedition in the search for tho Amundsen-Elisworth Polar flyers. At a meeting with famous exports, including Captain Sverdrup, Arctic explorer, the society decided that the Spitzbergen area must be thoroly combed by the Norwegian relief hunters and that seal hunters’ aid} must also bo enlisted “Mr. Harry Goble-|_ Tells How Cutties Healed Eruptions ‘My back began to itch and burn and @ rash of amall pimples broke out across my shoulders. The pimples were hard and red and scaled over, and would break and scale over again, They itched and burned causing me to scratch until my back was covered with sore eruptions. The eruptions were so sore that when I lay down I could not get a bit of aleep, “ff read cakes of Soap and onb and a half boxes of Ointment I healed (Signed) Harry Goble} Lexington, Nebr., July 5, 1924. ‘There fregrant emollients aro@ll you need for all toilet purposes, Soap to cle and purify, Oint. ment to soothe and hkal, Talcum to powder and@weeten| arnrtaale "sel } a Lavorate eum tbe, Bold sta ach ean $80,000 GIVEN 22 PARKED, | beside the police car and stopped | next to the patrol box. a Dimick, IN COURT the cash reg { they had. taken the money. from Settle Claims | the 4 ulked. ‘out. Superior court sult to settle claims six heirs and relieve the execu of the $2,000,000. estate of John llins, former mayor of Seattle, and ot ploneer hotel man, who died April 1903, was filed Frid on. The nuit t* brought by Angie B,| Phe box Collins, the widow, John I lina, | ig blue son, and KR. L. Hodgon as executors | s and trustees against Mrs. Collins,| Opal jar John and Edna Collins Rubm and inside ¥ ‘d and Catherine Collins, other | children and Emma Collins Downey, | Mra, Collins’ step-daughter, as heirs. | They bave been unable to agree on | their respective shares of the estate, | it in alleged. The properties involved include the | Occidental block and the Seat tel building. The executors’ Be sure to get real Resinol expired in 1913 when Catherine be-| 4f you want to get rid of eczema, }came 18 years old. It has been con-| pimples, or other distressing skin eruption, you will accept no ** sub- stitute’ for Resinol. Preparations similar in name or appearance ar just the same as Resinol. Although a few unscrupulous deal- ers may offer them as or for Res- inol, they are often crudely made, of little healing power, and some may even be dangerous to Buy in the original d/ue pas ho- | ment by the heirs as to their share of the estate a os | | | Police Run In Prisoner in Record Time never sold in HELPED THROUGH THROUGH CHANGE OF LIFE Vegetable Compound dur« ing this Critical Time Balti: Md. —‘‘T too! Pinkham’s 4 Vegetable ponent m Resinol i police patro} x con-| yesterday | of driving fternoon hile drun| Tho patrol) had backed to a cor ner police box on First ave. and Yesler way to get a prisoner, when Rockyhill drove up on the sidewalk Fast police service aided Rockyhill to the jail when Patrolman A. J. Hill hurried him into the wagon and started him on his way to the station in record time. Lost Doctor Found | With Memory Gone) After being lost several days, Dr. | 63, retired physician, | was found Friday in the lobby of | the Y, M. C, A. His discovery fol lowed a report that the missing doc- | tor had been seen near the public the newspapers library Ps "jof the Vegetable Dr. Ector ts said to have suffered Compound and fter taking a bottle I felt better. I On ee hietl did not stop with one bottle, but took ® was taken | it through the whole critical time and D e oe as! ‘ tically a well woman. I vi CHURCH TO BE DEDICATE! | we hea ab Tices bealthowes The Queen Anne Baptist church, | was worriéd about them. I got the at First ave. N, and Crockett st.,| Vegetable Compound for them and it will be dedicated with formal open-| helped them, and after they married ing services tomorrow. The dedica-| it also hel tion will take place at 3 p. m, with | babies, services conducted by Dr. J. Wat | icine for all complaints of women, son, secretary of the Washington} and I recommend it to all.’’"—Mrs. L. Baptist convention. | Grxcricn, 1375 N. Gilmor St., Balti- -———-— | more, Maryland. Al Clark, bell captain of the But-| The Vegetable Compound is a de- ler hotel, will be married to Miss| pendable medicine for women of mid« Bernice Lavelle, of Seattle, at noon | dle age. Letit relieve you of nervous- June 15, A wedding diner will be| ness, that feeling of strain and those served for them at the Butter hotel| annoying hot flashes so common at cafe, from a mental shock which resulted in loss of identity o his home, by police This is a great and good med- this time. It lessens 'the dang of Constipation— Pure milk chocolate combined with Post’s Bran Flakes— that’s Post’s Bran Chocolate. Crisp and delicious—a genu- inehealthconfection!Children prefer it to ordinary candy. The bran tends to prevent the danger of constipation. ped them in bearing their” 0 SSS eee 2 gee aan orem eaten aoe acct CHOCOLATE | San ounce of Syesa, B: AN.

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