The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 13, 1919, Page 2

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thie store's trade mark, signifying most Uberal service and fairest pricings, fs known tn thousands of Seattle homes and througheat the Nortwheat! service tothe hometurnisher, solid mahogany $35 — 48-inch libr table: extra special $16.85— see window display— iy light Imperfection ts on the top, library table cov ¢ this unusual un- ine is samples © tables will give as an offer you jee as any other tabl game price savings! which you would have ¢ full price regular $25— | —three atylea to select from h solid ma- Cy window, yo $16.85 will be sold from the window, the ‘one you select will be sent home to you; no exchanges or returns at this special price. James Griffiths, local ship! 2 pan, has returned from a ‘weeks’ business trip in San DIES FIRSTDAY BACK AT WORK John Leck, ing Medicine dropped dead of heart failure at the + Sarsa- Skinner & Eddy plant Wednesday, e'ele Ss parila |, st Say, be, returned to work . | since the strike of January 21. The the BI |body waa taken to the county {morgue. Leck lived at 921 26th lave. 8. We Are Taking Our Boys Back ‘This bank is taking back all of its men who are from military service and desire return to us. We believe that their army and training has made them better bank men. They will be better prepared than ever to give prompt and accurate service to our custom- ers. They will be glad to greet their old friends here. First National Bank WILLIAM AVERSHAM MAX INE ELLIOTT IN P.C.CARTONY COMEDY LADY ALGY” NNN Prices Nights, $2.50 to 75c Wed. Mat., $2.00 to 50c Plus War Tax IREATEST CO-STARS 56, shipyard worker, | | WORKERS MUST VALERA PLEADS - SHARE PROFIT, | IRELAND CAUSE. | BORAH STATES TO AMERICANS, | BY L. ©, MARTIN | | (United Staff Col | * tontinued From Page One| Prews pondent.) s GTO M en mu WASHINGTON farch lens of the world’s goods than Ming American workers must be given @/jand, when nothing but the prinel share in the industries they help] ples of justice are at stake reate and maintain—a share not| These doubters may be right, they measured in wages, Senator Borah, | ™*y be wrong 1 do - t a to) know 1 do know that if thin tw e n of th renate labor cae one |aue should unhappily an the | committees, declared today | doubters are obviously satiefied it Borah was discussing labor legis | will be, then the cynie ean feel that lation to be presented at the coming p more he has been justfied, and wion of congress, The funda-|the simple And trusting obviously imponed upon, Then, indeed, there | 1 thing, “the first thing which |wiit have been deception | must be done,” said Borah, “is the | Finger of Seorn formulation of a definite govern: | P | Honest people everywhere will mental labor policy, This we have! joint the finger of scorn and Indi never hi (nation at these statesmen. They | “We have met exigencies as tiey | will have a right to ask have arisen, by juggling wages,| Whe now is that impartial raising them here, lowering them Justice that knows no favorites | which recently you spoke so much | there, when it was possible. We! lncutr Where. now in thin new | have never gone at the problem in 4 | Order, and these handsome founda Wee sonny to solve ie tiona of lating peace? Were all “Cooperation must be the key! these beautiful professions of yours stone of any real working out On ®/inat simple and grand, ee sound, economic basin of the rela | tuned to the eternal verities of our tions of capital and the workers. | souls wakening in them a symp Co-operation must be the thought be-| thetic reaponse that we could Rot | hind a government labor policy siuather-—isite. (hic Winukibal : aie “Cooperation, of course, is impor dot chine: eben paranla sible unless both of thore who are tO) rio woven to « y ust co-operate have an interest in the business or industry. It must be an| Ate you, after all, only as were interest on the part of the workers, ‘e fest? Was thie war only as were other ware? Was it for your that goes beyond mere wages ‘Workers must have an actual|PURY ambitions that humanity has share in industry which will give | ¢mdured the horrors of the past = them the incentive to cooperate, | Year®, and the entail of sorrows they make them eager to do #0, because | MSV bequeathed tg the future I do not know whether the states }auch co-operation means their own) welfare.” |men at Paris will/ prove worthy of | the trust, or whether thy will be} } great enough to grasp the oppor Wants $2,000 for —finity ‘hat ‘requires notte to im Car Deal Review '¥0'° '. 3rd found firmly, now.) those relations between peoples on a Thomas Murphine, basis worthy of our commen human of public utilities, sent a communi superintendent cation to the city council Thursday of Mi asking for $2,000 to be spent in em One Hource of Hope a ploying accountants and auditors to| But it is surely a source of hope [review the property of the traction |t0 know that at Paris there is one lcompany when it is taken over by|™man, at least, who apparently real the city izes his guty and who can sccom- ‘The request will go before the ape-| Plish what he will if he only remains clal traction committee of the city |#teadfartly determined and true. The council, headed by William Hickman | Machiavelles may scoff at him, but Moore he ought fo know Ahat be has t HAIR REMEDY lead straight on and that reapect- Mak: ‘Home » Better portion of mankind, the piain people. spokesman he has |been and whose hearts he has won, io at = "A ir Remedy Than You You Can Buy |will be ready to march with him to Gray streaked or faded hair is not the realization of their common only unbecoming, but unnecessary | dream Why should he hesitate to see that) You can darken it without using « dye America’s alma be accomplished? Were those aima not stated unequiv-| “Any one can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, ocaily from the start? Is the cause| wn worthy that triumph is in |sight? Are thone who oppose it now] jews the enemies of that cause than; |that will darken gray hair, and|those who make it soft and glossy To a hal |oppore it? pint of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a amall box of Barbo Com |pound and % ounce of glycerine. | able whose now Why should any of the statesmen) lin Paris even eck to oppose Prent| |dent Wilson in having the cause of | These ingredients can be bought at/ justice upheld? Have their state any drug store at very little cost, Or | ments not been almost as explicit the drugmist will put it up for you.lay his? Have they not vied with Apply to the hair twice — week until the desired shade is obtained. will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It is not « dye, it does not color the most dell- cate scalp; is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off.” Brown Your Hair With “Brownatone” Give the Natural Beauty of Your Face a Chance. one another in prociaiming that the rights of the weak are no lees worthy than the rights of the strong? How can any of them claim the priv- Hege of condoning wrongs? Should they attempt to do #0, President Wilson should boldly save them from themselves. Wrong is no leas wrong because it happens to be one of their own number that is guilty of it. “If President Wilson should by any chance prove too weak for his ‘trust, he will have ail the lens excuse, because luckily America is strong enough not to allow herself! to be cheated, She, at any rate, has| nO need to tremble when the Hritish | on growls his tntimid warnings to! those who might disturb him at hin prey | Faith in Wilson I cannot believe that the president will be weak or will allow himself qo be deterred from cutting away a vicious cancer at the of the new world order by the conven‘ional | diplomatic niceties that belonged to| SEND FOR TRIAL PACKAGR oman knows that a pretty beauty when framed core re Not so disfiguring as faded hair. It is unfair to your ehil- dren and husband, and moat of allithe order which,the blood of millions ll le aaa was shed to destroy Duty of Irishmen But whether Ireland be heard or| not—whether the statesmen at Paris| stand forth ds the most conspicuous failures in history or not—the duty | of Irishmen and the duty of all lov- ers of liberty is clear. That duty jis to see that oversight cannot be pleaded as an excuse. England tries to bind and gag Ire. land, to throw her into obscurity as of a dungeon. It is our duty to support all who lend a hand at loos ening her, We must strike at least | to let in the purifying light to show| Ireland as she is struggling ever lagninst the slavery in which Eng land would confine her, fighting thru| centuries, maintaining in blood and| |tears communion with all who fight for liberty everywhere—battling for lit as she ever is with the foe upor her own hearth at home. Ireland seeks nothing from Eng land but the removal of England's intertering hand. Her only demand “I's So Easy Now Have Bi own life in her own way with no| limitations except those imposed by the necessity of respecting the equal rights of other peoples. De Valera Must Have Passports to Enter America| WASHINGTON, March 13.—Im | migration officthis today stated that |Edward De Valera, fugitive sinn | | Fein president, woyld be admitted to | the United States only if he presents satisfactory passports. ewsary under the war “Brownaton will tint. your streaked, faded or bleached hair to any shade of rich, soft brown, or Blonsy black if preferred, and take earn off your looks. rownatone” cannot be detected, will not rub or wash off, is odorless and grearelons. Absolutely Harmicas ‘This safe and harmless prepa tion is used and indorsed by thi ands of women in business and in society, Apply, it yourself with comb or }brush, The results will delight you. Guaranteed safe and free from lead, sulphur, silver, mercury, xine, ani- line or coal tar products. t for switches sa for growing hair Two colors ht to Mediu Brown” and trown to Black Two nizes, I5c and $1.15 ing druggiat Get the genuine. ‘Trial Package Free This t# nec: | restrictions, they stated. kK Sinn in leaders in Ireland told If you write at once, Mail the cou-! Ralph Couch, United Pi pon it 0 o 1 | o nee Bon. with i to pay postage and correspondent, who. interviewed De rial peskage of * 4 | Valera, in hiding there, that De Val valuable booklet on care of the hair.|era intended to flee to the United Mention shade desired when writing or purchasing roo trial bottie | States, and that he might be here as in fot to be had at dealers, but only by} #00n a8 his interview appeared in mall from us, | print. | It was the purpose of the Sinn MAIL THIS COUPON NOW Feiners, they sald, to smuggle De The Kenton Pharmacal Co., 443 Coppin Bldg,, Covington, Ky, Incloned find 10'cents (to cover postage and packing), package of Brownatone. ( Light to Medium Brown or (J Dark Brown to Black. Mark with X shade wanted and mail with your full name and one, ‘alera out of In country nd@ and into this for trial RELIEF ‘BOTTLE STOLEN A milk bottle, used to collect pen nies for milk for Belgian babies, containing 12, was stolen from 109 Columbia st, Wednesday, say the 1 | | THe SEATTLE chat banatel MARCH 13, 1919. ANOTHER STRIKE. | LOOMS NEAR, SAY LABOR MEN Closing Out the Schlossmacher Stock of Fine Woolens In the assortment of Schlossmacher woolens which we are closing out (we bought the complete stock of 500 pat- terns) are many suit and overcoat patterns that regularly sold for $115. There is not a cloth in the whole stock un- der $85. We are now offering these, a// at one price— Andrew Mulligan Walker, Metal Tra uncll lead orm, told the Centra Labor counel! Wednesday night that anoth strike dx pending in the shipyar Unloxs employers cense their alleged discrimination againat active union Mulligan declared that efforts ar under way to make Beattle an “open shop” town. Metal Trades workers of A en Are again out on strike an the result! |of efforts to handpick the workers who returned, following the «hip yard strike, ageording to ligan Men who reteived $4.64 in Seattle shipyards before the strike are now being pald $4.16 in many cases, it One yard is refusing work to all men who are not eitizens, it was am nerted, "These men were all right to make profits from during the war when we needed every pounible worker,” said one speaker | oe 3 Says Ireland Will Fight for F. reedom jean citizenship his followers credit the fact that he was not with 14 othera*after the Dublin riots in 1916. Ho in wtill in hin 308. He jeame into prominer in nnection with the Gaelic languag He is o profersors of n Anyway, Paderowski in playing to large audionces w= “wttn"K "S| WOMEN RULE IN SERBIA? | “NYET,” SHOUTS ZBAIKOFF BY PEGGY HUL (%. B.A. Staff Correspo VALDIVOSTOK, March 13 Nikiffrovich Zbaikoff, after plenty of experience with woman suffrage, and after having careful: ly observed the work of three wom. en who were elected to the Khaba rovak municipal duma, js about as enthusiastic over woman suffrage as he would be over having his ears cut off by a lawn mower 1 was mayor of Zbaikoff tl driven out by the Bolshevikt When the mayor was asked for an opinion on woman as an ad ministrator, he rolled his exprossive brown eyes toward the ceiling and dent.) Ivan having jelutehed his luxuriant beard with both hands. A flood of Russian poured from his lips. When the mayor finally stopped, the inter preter sighed deeply and let me have hia version of it. Woman's place,” interpreted the interpreter, “woman's place is the |home, They are amiable, they are | kind, they are good. I love women |They are the salt of the earth What would we be without them? PARIS ‘RUBBERNECK BUSSES DO IMMENSE BUSINESS WHILE PEACE CONGRESS IS ON March 13 wagons patronty lers of the American. Canadian, Australian and English armies—time their jaunts #0 as to be in the Quai d'Orsay just about the time the peace conference open: each day PARIS sight-seeing mostly by #0 a There's a line of them, the other chief sight the sight er outbawling At first the neers THIN, NERVOUS PEOPLE NEED BITRO-PHOSPHATE in the freedom and right to live her | ‘What It Is and How It Increases Weight, Strength and Nerve ’ Force in Two Weeks’ Time in Many: Instances | SHOULD BE PRESCRIBED BY EVERY DOCTOR, AND USED IN EVERY HOSPITAL Says Editor of “Phy: ‘Take plain bitro-phosphate, is the advice of physicians to thin, delicate nervous p: who lack vin, energy and nerve foree, and there seema to be ample proof of the efficacy of this preparation to warrant the rec- ndation, Moreover, if we Judge parations and being ady making thi ing arms, 1 pincing ugly the soft curved lin President of Sinn Fein, wiated for president of free Ireland, He has a Bpanish name, but he was born in New York and his father came from Cuba Mexico. His mother was| Irtah To the possibility of Amer executed | Spellers on | each spiel | $69 The Stone-The-Tailor ideas on Spring styles are at your service, and the Stone-The-Tailor high standard of work- manship goes into every garment we sell. Can you imagine a more favorable opportunity to get a good Spring suit or overcoat at a substantial saving? . We want all you men who know the pleasure that comes from wearing the right kind of clothes to call and examine the remarkable values which this occasion offers. Stone the Tailor 1206-1208 Second Avenue (Adjoining Savoy Hotel) Established 1900 No beer, no work. beers, no work. |AWARDS TO BE_ | GIVEN OUT BY | Five or siz Colds Cause Grip and Infleense LAXATIVE BROM TEN, Nothing! Whére would we be with RED CROSS SOON guide tempts te 1 ININE > Not 1 B the: Women of King and Kitsap coun- | uy, one “Bromo Quinine” FL WwW. out them? Nowhere! But are they ing | GROVES aignature'on the box” a0 cusential to our municipal govern.| es, who are desirous of sécuring —_ ‘box: ment? Not so that you could notice |the certificates and badges to be by the award commission of | it! And if everybody should drive | fiver up in a drosky and ask you, you lthe Red Cross, showing the scope! may ink him that I don't care |of their activities during the war,! WILKES t= ILKES Fives if women never vote again.” must send in their questionaires on/ Fifth and Pine At this juncture the mayor inter. |r before March 31. None will be} NOW PLA’ ° rds of Rus. sccepted after that date, pares 0 Soy Femnee een A public meeting to present the [gy MAT. SAT. sian “He say," remarked the interpret. |&¥ards will be held ag soon after | er! “that when they get into a cor-|March 31 as possible THE COMEDY YOU'LL ner, they step all over themselves. | — ENJOY They aren't there in a pinch.”| HOLD VICTORY DINNER . | “A STITCH (Neodiess to say, I was using an American interpreter) “And how old are the three mem-/| pers of the duma?” I asked. All three of them were about 25 / years old. “Maybe,” I suggested, A “victory” dinner, in honor of | Frances P. Parker, national corre | sponding secretary of the Women's | Christian Temperance union, was [held at the Plymouth Congregational | churel Wednesday night. IN TIME” “you would | | Nights, B05. find them more capable if they | ~ Bk were a bit older—"* | clawing at his beard. Mate. GRACE HUFF ‘Nyet!” shouted the mayor, nyet¢ I didn’t argue with him. You} 1 being the mean-ounding Rbesian|can't argue thru an interpreter. | "ime War | and { equivalent for no |And I couldn't have argued with! TVAs See Or maybe,” I ventured, were younger——" Nyet declared “if they Ivan Nikifirovich Zbaikoff even tho |he had spoken English fluently, He mayor, | knew his three women too well. the ‘Cure Your Rupture Like 1 Cured Mine” O14 Sea Captain Cured His Own Rup- phers and movie operators clustered | whether it's President Wilson or around the door to the foreign of-|Clemenceau or Lioyd George or one Outside the big gates there's | °F the others that's approaching. Bs | Smal boys know them all always a large crowd of curious. | sight. They stand at attention, like flee. obody ever tires of watching the |poilus of the future, and salute| ‘ure After Doctors Said “Oper- men go in, taking pictures of | gravely. ate or Death.” them, and waiting for them to come! And always some woman rushes| ™ eet nee wer _ Free | ie ain Collings sailed the seas Jou up at the last minute and claims| ror thany yeares then he cuseined ‘The splelers watch the limousines | breathlessly: “Are they all in yet? las they arrive. They've become so/Oh, what a pity! And I so wanted lexpert they can tell two blocks away |to see Clemencea: mustaches: bad double rupture thag soon fore him to not only remain ashore, but kept him bedridden for y e tried doctor after doctor, and after truss. No results, Finally he was | assured t he must either submit to a dangerous and abhorrent opera- tion or die, He did neither. He cured himself instead. doctor and used in every hospital to increase strength and nerve force and to enrich ood.” | |" Joseph D, H n, former visit- ling specialist orth Fastern Dis- | |pensatory, says: “Let those who are weak, thin, nervous, anaemic or run- down take a natura adulterated heuer ance such as and you will soon see Jishing results in the nerve energy, strength of body and mind and power of endurance, Ritro-Phosphate is made entirely | of the organic phosphate compound referred to in the National Standard Dispensatory as being an excellent tonic and nervine and a prepara tion which hai recently quired considerable reputation in the treat- Prepaid, to any rupture ment of neurasthenia. The standard | iN tilt out the below of excellence, strength and purity of Tut vend it right away— Captain Collings made a study of himself, of his condition, and at last he was rewarded by the finding of * the method that so quickly made him a well, strong, vigorous and happy man. Anyone can use the same method; It's simple, easy, safe and inexpen sive, Every ruptured person in th world should have the ¢ nc lings book, telling all about how he cured himself, and how anyone may | follow the same treatment in their own home without any trouble. ‘The book and medicine are FREE. They sicians’ Who's Who.” the body cells with necessary phosphoric food elements, bitro-| Phosphate quickly produces a wel- come transformation in the appear- ance; the Increase in weight fre- quently being astonishing. Clinical testa made in St. Cather: ‘s hospital, N, Y. C, showed that nts gained in weight 23 and tively, through the this Organic phos- th patients claim they have strong and well for the re. the beauty, there are sands of men and n who k ita ‘substan yond question, | mew—before you put down this paper, é rease in weight also car- Ritro-Phosphate tablet is FREE RUPTURE HOOK AND feel their ¢ hinness and we thinness. sare usually | a with it a general improvement the health, Nervousness, sleep- ty manufactured. in_ strict. accordance REMEDY COUPON due to starved ner need mor phat tained in modern foods, claim the is nothing that will sup- ply thia deficiency #o well as the or- ganic phosphate k namong drug- pas! an bitro- ppnoapn which is nexpensive, and ia sold by anost all druggists under a guarantee of sat- fafaction or money back, By feeding the nerves directly and by supplying Our bodies than ja con Physicians with the U. S Pharm requirements, — Hitro- W. A. Collings (Ine,), Ox Bac! Watertown, N'Y, Please send mo your Rupture Remedy and Book with out any obligation on my part whatever, Name .. Address nearly always accompany thinness, soon disappear, dull eye become bright and pale cheeks glo’ with the bloom of perfect health, Physicians and hospitals overy- where are now recognizing ite mer- ita by its use in ever increasing Quantities, Frederick Kelle, M, D. k | Physicias tro-Phos- by every awh ay phate thoule be prescribe

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