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| F “4 RF FEPSsP AERP TATA COE awe STRIKE CALLED (DIVORCED BY ‘BY COUNTY POOR] HUSBAND, SHE _ of the board. "eansed by a letter sent by the com An Economical, Delightful PI ori ———— EASTER Ky #/* FOOTWEAR Hundreds of the very newest styles and so mod- erately priced at the Upstairs Shoe Store that there is no reason to delay making your selection Lady Betty at model, foxing, white top, » patent va strap; hand-t Priced at Patent Button Boots A pleasing design, wit vamp and hee! foxing {rimmed sole, leather Louts hee! Topping of sand, gray or black cloth, At $2. 50 and $2.95 patent vamp, tmpertal rter, hand-turned eel. Moderately ware the biggest values in the $2.50 and $2.95 ‘ Oxfords For Men and Women Comfortable and stylish Ox fords if tan, gunmetal and white nubuck, with rubber sole at $2.95 Men's Patent Boot, made over a medium narrow toe Inst, with black ¢ nr kid top, well sole. Dutton style. At $2.95 Mail Orders Delivered Free by Parcel Post |) — a Lace or OPIN SATLRDAY OSTONNHOE (0. ie SAMPLE HOP NINC| "°° Hi] ND | “Pulte Second Ave at Pike St SLILDING OOR FARM INMATES; ENDS HER LIFE ‘TACOMA, April 2—A strike,} Mrs, Anna Donlan, divorced wite swhich, if successful, would profit|of Police Sergeant W. F. Donian,| Pierce county $50,000, is threaten-|who charged her husband obtained ed today by inmates of the county poor farm. Three men have al- ready quit, and threat of a gener- al walk-out has reached members bis decree through fraud last No- vember and who has been despond ent over her unhappy domestic af- fairs ever since that time, ts dead today, a suicide. Mrs. Donlan, whose petition for }annulment of the divorce 1s stil! pending in superior court, swal-/| The unprecedented strike was missioners to superintendents of ali county institutions, declaring the counts’s wards are better fed than families of the average tax- payer. It was suggested a litt economy would be appreciated. | ‘The letter made no hit with pa-| trons of the poor farm. lets in the home of a friend, Mra E. Taylor, 3 West 62nd st inst evening. | Her cries after she had taken the poison aroused Mrs. Taylor,| who rushed into the kitchen, where she found her friend lying on the Special Linen Finish "°°" Dr. J. T. Costello arrived téo late to be of service ‘ BUSINESS CARDS Printed for $2.25 Per 1,000 PRINTING CO. rth Ave. Main 2623) Says She Didn't Know Donlan’s decree was obtained on allegations of cruelty, unusually | bad temperament and desertion His wife declared she learned of the pending divorce before it got| into court and that her husband| assured her he had already drop, ped proceedings when she spoke to {him concerning the divorce. Later, while he was still living| |with his wife, Donlan tevived di |voree proceedings | She knew nothingabout her hus band’s action, she said, until after SAMPLE | Judge Humphries had granted al ree by default. She immediate ly started proceedings to annul the We are now read decree, Thursday morning she tele. our old customers 4 before. WE SPECIALIZE IN K, ‘10 Fou phoned her attorney and inquired about the annulment proceedings \fand was informed her counsel was ‘preparing a reply to an answer to to serve |lowed a number of bichloride tab | Constable Upper Gets Hold of a Troublesome Prisoner Herbert Landor, a Common Writer Banker Cecil and Judge Person, Jailed by Aylmore. Herbert Landor Justice of the Peace Reeves Ay! we'll carry it to the superior more, a Seattle lawyer, and Con- court |atable Cecil Upper, the banker of Landor is a friend of Jack Lon Mercer island, have on their hands don’s, London visited him three the first offender upon whom, !n/years ago when in Seattle, He jal! the history of the island, the spent several years earlier in his lvengeance of the law has fallen, life in positions in glish unt: And they don't know what to do | Veraities and colleges with him Landor doesn't think much of| The prisoner's name is Herbert Mercer island justice, as peddied Landor, He {s an Englishman, a out by the Witherto purely drna-| writer of fiction, who grubs out a/ mental offictals, Upper and Ayl living on a little garden patch on | more j the island for his wife and three} Neither does Sheriff Hodge, who} | bas made it little children | in businers to help | He has sold several stories to| Landor out of his difficulties. magazines. So has his wife. But) “It's a dirty outrage, mo} not enough to keep the wolf trom | Hodge's comment the door. And so he does odd jobs, } SNAKE CATCHES | ‘ices! whenever he n find them, to help make ends meet | pels Frankly, the Landors are up A restaurant In New Orlea: lagainst ft. a |is the first In the countr y rm plored tain ® serpent as a rat extermina Landor not long ago found an winner of 50 battles, and made him travel four of the fastest rounds | of his life, the swiftest pace of his | life, before the soldier's mighty left | caught the English fiction writer under the jaw and put him to sleep. Laodor at that time weighed 154 and was lean with hunger. “ee Seattle Made Goods Perman, spent a summer fn a very comfortable tent-house a couple of | years ago on a piece of water front . property owned by Cecil Upper, 1622 FOURTH AVE. |the banker-constable, on the west | Will give away with side of the island He left the tent-house every purchase amount- ing to $1.00 or over Beaton, a local newspa frame | when he moved. Landor asked Beaton if he might; jhave it to make a home for his} family. He says Beaton told him he| | might, but that he'd better tell Up-|| A 50-CENT SIZE BOT- per about it first So, says Landor, he tried to see|| TLE OF FURNITURE Upper twice, but missed him, and finally sent a note to the Upper POLISH home, notifying the family of the | situation — Receiving no reply, he took the} This offer good to. house frame. | & morrow and clean-up week The next day, he says, Upper or- during dered him to “put ry stick of that wood back where you got it.” Landor said he * wouldn't . to my house,” says Lan- dor, “and told me | was under arrest, on a charge of petit larceny, and that | should ap- Easter pear at Squire Ayimo court Monday night at o'clock. | thought It was a sort of a hoax—that they prob- ably wanted to get me up be- fore some of Ayimore’s fash lo. le guests and humil me, So, wi Monday night came, | just naturally didn’t go to Aylmore’s house, where the court was to have been held.” It was reported afterward to Landor, he says, that, the pris- oner failing to show up, a bridge party was enjoyed at the Ayimores’ instead. Tuesday a deputy sheriff ar- rest Landor as he was board- Ing his boat at Leschi park for home, and took him to Jal! DRUMMERS’ SAMPLE the proceedings filed by her hus and give you values tha band’s attorney. absolutely matchless Purchases Poison DEFY COMPEBITION A Later in the day, Mrs, Donlan| TIME. COME SEE AND went to the Beach pharmacy, 6401 COMPARE our GOODS and § 22nd ave. N. W., and purchased the| PRICES with 2nd Ave. prices poison with which she ended her You will not be trged to buy life here. TRIMMED HATS $10, The Donlans were married in $15 AND $20 VALUES, NOW June, 1906, in Seattle. They had $1.95, $2.95 « 95. UN. three children, two of whom died TRIMMED SHAPES AS LOW &f Helen B. Donlan, a daughter, 10} months old, is»with AB 49c. Flowers, fancies and Mrs Donlan's | other negvelties, up. mother in Ireland. t last Feb BLACKMAN STANDS FOR §)\T!@ry they lived at 2 King at.| NALITY. Look for his Here 1s his main CINCINNATY, Ohio, April 2 Horacg Williamson, state examiner of chauffeurs, in granting a Heense BLACKMAN to George Thole, 23 years old, a f and dumb auto driver, de P is umb au river, de-| Original Ladies’ Sample Hat Y dcuutiion' ‘Thiks oun Othe tent! Store chauffeurs in Cincinnati, because of the marvelous quality of his skin| that a regular ear would miss.” tht a regular ear would miss, 1207 FIRST AVE. Near University Street. THE CHARGE WAS CON TEMPT OF COURT. We'll try your case,” he told Landor, “somewhere els. And if SECOND AT PINE Aylmore insists upon trying it, STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1915. PAGE 13. Closing Out—the Biggest Clothing the South End Stock in Here’s a sale that keeps a-going from day to day—values keep it up and nothing else. Furthermore, it’s a genuine sale—there is no mistaking the values. Every reduction is a genuine reduction—every price is the lowest price—every price is lower than the same grade of merchandise can be bought for anywhere else. Look at the figures—bring the ad with you, and see how we have kept our public statements. Every Suit Marked | Every Shirt in the | All the.Men’s Un- | Store Reduced 40c $1.50 Fancy Shirts, .35c sting door dpwontaabaaatiy (5 To 85c $1.45 $2.65 $1.35 $2.15 $3.65 * $4.15 Down $12.50 and $15.00 Men's Suits, email : $3.85 $16.00 and $18.00 Men’ eS $4.85 styles $9.65 mvc tom. 819,98 all wool, finest : $16.85 $25.00 Me Suits, style ae... BL9.B5 | $2.00 Heavy Fiennes rge Suite, | Shirts are . $9.65 Every Pair of Trousers Reduced rc ee $1 35 *$2.15)| and Main St. *$2.85 * $3.85 | The famous 8w et-Orr and Keystone Union-made Trousers are all included, Every size up to 50 waist measure. 500 Working Shirts are $1,00 odd olz to lote and broken $15.00 Men's Suits, all wool, finest $1.50 Flannel Shirts $2.00 and $2.50 Slik Striped Shirts $3.50 Flannel Shirts are $3.00 Union-Made Wool Shirts $5.00 Rubber Lined Fianne! Shirts are.. $5.00 Shirts, of U. Army cloth ..... x Trousers 00 Dres Trousers $5.00 and $6 00 Dress Trousers are derwear Reduced $1.95 | 35c | $3.00 Union-Made Union Suits 50c Chalmers Porous Knit Underw 50¢ Derby Ribbed Underwear . 75¢ Merino Underwear he aR ORE | $1.00 Union-Made 45c $1.10 $1.45, $3.35, NOW eoseesecsrcres $2.00 Woo! Suits or Separate Garments. $5.00 Wool Union Suite now.. ee The foregoing lines Include | Cooper's Spring Needie, Winsted, Wright's, B. & L. Union Label | and other famously good makes, both domestic and imported. | Sizes up to 50 waist measure. | Every Pair of Shoes Reduced for Men eesaene $2400 | Ontorde orrnss-nsee 91 65 .... $2.00 Shoes tor Men. DOOD . $3.35 $4.85 $3.65 | $4.00 Oxfords, Black or Tan... W. L. Douglas $4.00 Shoes ... $7.00 High Top Boots for men..... $5.00 Heavy Soled Shoes for ..---e00- Raincoats Rainceate ---- «... 3.09 .... $7.85 Regular $15.00 Raincoats ..... a Money will be cheerfully refunded at any time for any reason. If the store is |, closed up—then at the old store, which we're going to keep—at First South Westerman & Schermer~ | STORE NO. 2—103-107 FIRST AVE. S. Near Corner Yesler Way FACULTY LOOKS |come at the request of the regents jis an unsolved gee ‘BRYAN TO TRY OUT jute grape juice may of Secretary dered by the cabinet officer, route to Washington today gon king between the two juices will be on when reaches table. vich The lrobbing a friend room with them Portland with George Marenco- and Nicholas Jacobs, Greeks. prisoners are charged with 20c Per Bloom Paviowa Pupil to Dance at Society ANOTHER OVER tor, The snake has made good other way to make money. Mercer ! Sho t Moo ihiuna "residents gave a series of |CMtching and killing the rate, | IW a re |boxing entertainments. Landor | Considerable | mystery attends the \ frequently was one of the princ!-| arrival in Seattle today of Dr. Guy pals. | P, Benton, president of the Unt- 1 let them knock me out,” he/ versity of Vermont, who is one of jaays, “at $5 a knockout, to get the half doren educators men- food for my family tioned prominently for the presi- He tells with pride. though, how | dency of the state university. he fought Soldier Dotson of Ft Whether Benton ts here on his Lawton, weighing 195 pounds and own initiative or whether he has question. At noon a luncheon was tendered visitor by the faculty. LOGAN BERRY JUICE April 2.—Loganberry of the celebrated tickle the palate Bryan hereafter juice, or is en SALEM instead A case of loganberry Recently Bryan sampled the Ore- product and found it to his The battle for supremacy from here the consignment by dining the ‘ecretary's BRINGS PRISONERS BACK Sheriff Hodge has re ned from who shared his Lilies Suzanne Sickelmore One of the features of “Stop, Look and Listen,” the vaudeville show to be given at the Moore the: atre April 19 and 20 by a large company of representative society. kirls from Vancouver and Victoria, All Medium Height Vigorous Plants ts hie |B. C., is promised in an exhibition Landor syent the night in the| of classic dancing by little Suzanne bull pen, Wut on Wednesday, as Sickelmore, a clever miss of 13 soon as Sheriff Hodge had heard years : es eee his story, things began to look up, Suzanne is a student of he Walter Allen, an attorney, ke |great Pavlowa, the Russian dane came int ted jer, who has twice delighted Seat Let me® look after your case,” |t audiences, and is reeany re- old or ie a] t fr ‘i a ascet thé feet “1 kaow how vowel Flowers Telegraphed [it'rriien, ‘whore her. training was OH » feos ow how you're ‘ ‘ fixed. augmented under noted teachers | So Landor called up Aylmore, to All Parts of the of those cities. Suzanne's home ts and demanded to know when the in Vancouver. ene. aaeinat bis client nemnt be World Her offering in “Stop, Look and heard ee date, it seems, is now | Listen” will consist of three differ: |wet for the coming Monday night ent Ganon rt pttonnbeam ° . airy e Dy Swan,” ¢ But that isn't all. Allen has| |here by Pavlowa, and “The Invi filed a motion before Myimore for H 0 L L YW | tatio to Suzanne,” an original a change of venue ; : ||| number. | The entertainment, as a whole, is a potpourri of nifty singing and dancing specialties, in which 76 of ® MAIN 1665 two British Columbia cities’ fairest daughters will appear in the lead- ing roles and choruses. A number of mere men will also participate. The show will be given for the benefit of the American hospital in Paris, the Seattle Day nursery, and the unemployed of this city. It is being sponsored by both British Columbia and Seattle so- clety folk. The Canadian management, con- res of Mrs. P. R. Brooks, Mrs. D. McRae, of Vancouver, and John Hope, of Victoria, fs be- sted locally by a committee presenting the Day nursery, the Canadian club and the unemployed. Following the first night per- formance, the visitors will be given a supper dance at the New Washington hotel by Manager J C, Marmaduke. Estimated that 93 per cent of the ocean floor ts devoid of veg etation. | Our new wagons will call on requi Any address between the hours n thoroughly reno- recent fire, and the | at Becana | _ Ste ne Ho enler way, get | ‘LONDON MAKES BOOK FOR BETS ON WAR RESULT LONDON, April 28.—Betting on the outcome of the war fs all the tage in London. Several firms and individuals through Lloyds have posted today the following “book” on the duration of hostilities: That the war will end before May 1, 1915, 3 to 1 against. That the war will end before June 1, 1915, 2 to 1 against. That the war will end before Sept. 1, 1915, even mone: That the war will end be fore . 1, 1915, 10 to 1 on, That the war will end before March 1, 1916, 115 tq.1 on. That Germany will take pas, 25 to 1 against. That Germany will take Warsaw, 5 to 1 in JURY DISAGREES Jury ti Judge Mackintosh’s court failed to reach an agreement Fri- day in the Roy Hemphill grand lars ceny case, Hemphill, a contractor, was accused of misrepresenting the assets of his firm in British Columbia, thereby securing a ship- ment of $7,000 worth of bricks from a Seattle house. with matched bands. Stetsons, Mallory and S. $5, $4, $3, $2 ew Silk Caps at $1.50 and $2.00 Beautiful New Ties at 50c. HOWING the new Pearls, Blues, Greens and Browns and contrast anford a, sa