The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 21, 1919, Page 5

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Ral Boot Shop Darwin Insists Alien Month-End Specials After going through our stock we find several lines ‘of shoes slightly broken in sizes, and rather than fill advancing factory prices, we intend to discon- in the missing sizes at tinue these lines in our regular Month-End Specials VALUES UP TO $7.50 $4.85 eahogeny Calf Lace Boots. Brown Kid Lace Boots, tops to match. Gunmetal Lace Boots, gray cloth | _ tops. Gray Kid Lace Boots, tops to match, All Black Kid Butten Dark Tan Lace Boots with tan buck tops. Brown match, SEVERAL OTHER STYLES IN EACH GROUP, WITH CUBAN, FRENCH OR MILITARY HEELS MEN’S SHOES, Month-End Specials, Values up to $7.50 $4.85 - Gunmetal Lace Shoes, English toes, with leather or Neolin soles. » Tan Calf Button Shoes, stub toes, tops to match, Neolin Tan = a, Munson last, the shoe for wear and THE HOUSE OF SHORT VAMP EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR BOYDEN’S FAMOUS BE: The man who practices systematic saving lives the Declaration of In- dependence in a praiseworthy, per- sonal fashion. Not only does he add to his own poise and well being but he stren, s the nation by placing his surplus earnings where they can be used judiciously and profitably in the work of the world. Savings Department Open From 6 to 8 Every Saturday Evening The Seattle National Bank Resources $30,000,000 New Spring Oxfords oe oe No Big Profits Asked Dainty Oxfords of all-black kid, slender, trim fitting last, with military heels. Fit close at the ankle. Pair Walking Oxfords of brown Russian calf, on new, shapely last Military heels and high arch, $7 25 cy | Pair THE SYMONDS SHOE Co. 1516 Third Avenue Between Pike and Pine Sts. “ BLANKETS $1.50 Fancy Military genuine feathers, thick materials, with chevrons KIRK’S MILIT. SHOP 1209 FIRST AVENUE Pillows, double- covered VALUES UP TO $9.00 $5.85 All Steel Gray Kid Lace same in contrasting cloth tops. Kid Lace Black Kid Lace Boots in all kid or matching cloth tops. All Havana Brown Lace Boots. H MADE 'Maj. Partridge to | | Ordinary | force. etart from St. Johns, by cable at the Aero Club of Amer fea today. machines leaving Newfoundland tn WAR-SHOCKED Setentiat, |Rtrength and vigor begins immed jately it is taken into the human # showing even standing nerve weaknens are many kinds should be exer | Baitor The March 6 caption, from matter never Star under a you ha * party the written a it aganda In your isue of double column @ communication whore name communication by the party but was part of the prop put out by the Austrian nm enemy lobby, which was work ing to secure the defeat of the Fish gard purse seines, which have sought to have enacted by the islature in an attempt to save the kreat salmon industry of thin state, nome of the species of which have already almost totally exter ted, while others have been ter ribly depleted. As the defeat of the measure has been mplished, were the ques tion an ordinary one, it would be Well to forget it as quickly as pow sible, Yet, we must all know that | this question, instead of dying out ig bound to grow more acute each year It has been the great natur does not as wan who been Boots; pout the Boots, tops to was not raising his voice In protest, | while 1 was Wending every endeavor, thru the medium of the papers which I managed, to prevent this destruction of fish, He aid not teil you that because of my opposition to their methods the big fish inter eats associated themecives with other big interests to purchase the papers which I waa managing fn order to deprive me of the oppor tunity to effectually combat them. on the contrary, he prociaima the set that up until about"« year ago om was an employe of some of the big fiwhing compantes. ‘The communication attempts to SHOES FOR MEN Watch Sea NEW YORK March nouncement of the appointment of Major Partridge, of the royal air official observer for the Royal Aero Club of England, for the in the transatlantic fights N. F., was received Flight 22.—An as Fisheries code stopped the troller from fishing and did not interfere with the fish traps. This statement in mal sly falne. For the first time in the history of the state of Washington it was proposed by a fish commiasioner of this state that no more fish trap licenses be imwucd than were already in existence, and the same proposal was made as re gards puree seines, which have largely come into use within the last six or seven years, and which have proven an even more efficient taker of fish than the fish trap, as they are able to move from place to place, to fish in any depth of water, and to follow the schools of salmon until the last fish is caught. On the other hand, absolutely no limitation was placed on the number of licenses which might be tssued for any other kinds of fishing appli ances, Silver Salmon Weights As investigation by Professors Kincaid and Smith, of the Univer sity of Washington, has revealed the act that silver salmon in particu lar, and other varieties to & more or leas extent, attain by far their larg: est growth in the last five or six months of their life, a proposal was made that fishing off Cape Flattery, the feeding grounds of silver and Chinook salmon, be not started until August 1, ‘This law was to become effective only in case British Columm- acted a similar provision. As regards silver salmon, Profes sors Kincaid and Smith told the legislative committee that in March and April they only weighed from 1% to 2 pounds, while on June 14 they weighed 4% pounds, and on August 14 weighed 9% pounds (or more than double in 60 days), and by |Fat That Shows Major Partridge will inapect all! competition for the London Dally NERVES NEED PHOSPHATE Thing te Strengthen Wot Nerves and noted Trench ve remedy nd ail- foree. phosphate in this According to a the most effect for nervousness, nts due to de a form of erganic nm druggists itro- Phosphate. eribed as a ilar in composition to us naturally found in and, being the ree, ubstance creating tem. There are many reports of aston- ishing results from its use, some remarkable improvement stubborn cases jong Ans there f phosphates, care aed procure the titro- Phosphate. bia @ Watches and Liberty Bonds as security when you need money. Loans taken up from others . and. more money advanced, Soon Disappears Liberal acnounts. Lowent rates. sterinnd You get full amount of loans— that comes and no interest deducted. Ladies’ || stay: ee ta eatin: © burden: c <1 ’ Department. curb upon pleasur , Loans on Diamonds, Watches fat where and Liberty Bonds Empire Mortgage Loan Co. Established 12 Years 201-2-3 White Building. nt shows by rmola Prescription Tab- blets are as ef- fective and harmles# ax the famo from which they take Buy and t Your druggist # ents, or if your pr et to the Marm | Woodward ave., Detroit, lean thus say good-bye Vexercise and fat. A Mother’s Strength | Mother, whose hands rock the cradle, often needs more than ordinary food to help maintain the blood-quality | and strength and to assure adequate nourishment It is as unwise for the mother, as it is | to the child. lace dependence u erous to the child, to om lic stimulation, for stre: is not found in alco! SCOTT'S EMULSION of purest cod liver oil, absolutely free from alcohol, is mother’s true friend, in that it pecicame a two-fold duty. Scott's is tonic-nourishment, particularly fitted olor the trying period of motherhood. OTT’S EMULSION ON BUILDS tHe STRENGTH. r you may Ia Co, B64 lich. “You to dieting, leg: | #, the supreme court of thin «tate | of man-| The} make it appear as tho the propored | Lobby Killed Fish Code’ mature and of 10.2 pounds ive of a greater fish igh only if permitted would weigh ‘opoaal was to | September 6 were weighe average Can any one economic tons April and Ma 1% or 2 pou to go vnUl August ounda? Yet my permit fishing to start on August 1 and even at that time they will only two-thirds mature Yet the writer of The Star artic claims that this is a discrimination that will put the troller out ¢ Instead of putting him out of business we were trying to keep bit in business, Surely no sensible man wants to appear as the advocate of such great economic lons. If the salmon run this year ts large as in 1917, and the prices | continue the same, the value of the |malmon just as they come from the | waters of Puget sound will be in round numbers $10,000,000, 1 pro posed certain laws that would have 1 us to save enough salmon to reproduce the crop, The great fish interests of thin state did not propose that we should have this Lined Up Behing Aliens I wanted American citizens profit by their taking, but the big fish interests lined up behind the Austrians, And to arouse prejudice Jagainst the bill, an attempt was made to say that they favored fish traps, Just as tho every big can nery on Puget sound does not ha , ite interest in ree weines. Does |any sensible man think for a mo | ment that if there is a fish trust it will not avail itself of the most ef fective appliances to be had for the taking of fish? I think I have had | Just one canner say that his can- nery has no direct interest in purse | seine boats, but that they rely exclu sively on purchasing their fish from the individual owne: With the destruction of the sock [eye salmon run the greatest single source of revenue of the Fisheries [department bas been cut off. ‘The | depletion of the other runs means that the revenue of the department will not be sufficient for the next two years to operate more than 40 per cent of the hatcheries of the jatate. This fact was well known to the lobby which assembled in Otym- | | pia to accomplish the defeat of the | proposed code. | The code also contained the pro | Visions of the agreement made with Oregon to enact certain laws to pro tect our Columbia river fishery. The Oregon legislature enacted there laws and adjourned. So we broke our plighted faith with Oregon. The United States government gave the state the opportunity to maintain control of the sockeye | fishery if it would enact certain pro- visions of the treaty agreed on with the Dominion of Canada. These in history of all our resources that it has ible to arouse public sen to the preservatic f until they had either been de or #0 depleted they no lon possessed a commercial aspect; may be that in the state of ngton we shall have to wait unt! such time as our salmon fish ery has been depleted to such an ex that it no longer possesses a mmercial value before we set work of conservation and habilitation ‘The writer of the article asks why it is that Austrian alien enemies are permitted to fish in the waters of this state, and says that if they are | I agn derelict in my duty. He might have better asked that question of the supreme court of the state of Washington, for when I refused to issue Hoonses to Austrian alien ene rm) isxeued a peremptory writ date requiring me to do wo. court, in its opinion, said in sub- stance, that the Austrians were friendly” enemies. Just what & friendly enemy ix I never knew un til IT heard it defined the other day) as “one who hits you with a soft chub.” Wanted Truth Ignored The writer of this letter of course knew this, but as the letter was written in an attempt to influence the legislature attempt was made at writing the truth, In fact the last thing the lobbyists, working at Olympia to defeat the measure, wanted was for the members of the legislature to know the truth The writer then goes into the history of years ago to tell about the destruction of salmon by fish traps. He failed, however, to men thon the fact that at that time he to an they were known to me when I| prepared it Took ‘Em by Threat Yet, the Austrian alien enemies took one branch of the legistature | by the throat and told them they could not even en a law that! would permit the state to support! tte institutions, We ite hatehertes. | Never before in the history of this or apy other American state, do I believe there hax been such a spec tacle. Not only will fishing go for ward for the next two years unre | stricted, but production in the way ot hing fish to keep up the sup. ply can only be about 40 per cent of what it has been for the last nev. eral years. Can there be any doubt in any one's mind as to what will] happen to the fishery of this state? it may Interest the readers of The | Star to know that the largest lobby | ever assembled in Olympia was the one which accomplished the defeat! 2 of the fisheries code. I have letters in my ponsession telling me that the | leaders of the Austrians assessed | the Austrian purse seine fishermen | § $1,000 each for the purpose of mak ing this fight. As there were 426 purse seine licenses issued on Puget | sound in 1917, if this be true, and if this rule applied clear thru, the Aus trian purse seine fishermen alone | must have contributed in the neigh borh of $500,000 to the lobby fund, Add to this the contribution of the cannery and of the other fish ing interests, and one’s imagination staggers at the amount of money which was available to secure the | defeat of the propose Lavish Money Display We do know that they filled the corridors of the capitol with lobb ists, the least paid of which, I und stand, received $100 per week. Wel know they hired attorneys, that they maintained downtown headquarters. | that they brought in boats “taste-| ft stocked, that they established | & press bureau, and that generally there was a more lavish expenditure | of money than has ever been seen in| Olympia. As the fish commissioner | of this state, I could only appeal to| the patriotism and good judgment of | the members of the legislature to pass the law. The other appeal proved by far the more powerful. | The fisheries code, which I drew, | was based on the belief that the fishery of this state belongs to all| the people of the state, and that the greed of no particular set of men should be permitted to destroy it. 1| now appreciate clearly how great a task it is to try to save anything for the state, when your attempts run counter to the selfish interests of others, | Respectfully L. H. DARWIN, State Fish Commissioner. Denies Charges of Girls in Orphanage VALLEJO, Cal, March 21.~-Stout denial is made today by Fred An-| thony, superintendent of the Good Templars’ Orphanage here, of the charges preferred against him by a | number of little girl inmates of the institution. Anthony is being for a preliminary day, following his ar Arrest followed investigation by | authorities of charges made against | Anthony by a girl placed in the home while her father is in France and her mother is earning a living Several other girls under 14 made charges against Anthony, ac to the authorities. GERMANS CONSUMED (Special to The Star by COBLENZ, March 2 soldiers, visiting the 2 asked the keeper why there no elephants, ‘The keeper replied that the Germans pre- ferred to ent them rather than keep them for sightseers N. BE. A) | were embraced in the code im so far || ELEPHANTS IN 200 } Gg American Sunday, April 20, Will Be Easter Sprightly Spring Hats at $7.50 New Second Floor, F marks the passing of Old Man Winter and the entering of the Y th, Spring shine and th desire in Gay colors in m and the am of the many hundreds of models now on dis pit the woman In quest of a w epring at to match the spirit of the day and the The crepe caded RIDAY, March 21st every rt abound thems dren ide Spring mode! is made of faced h georgette and finished with bro- ribbon mers. nketched fine black New Georgette and Crepe de Chine Blouses It $4.96 Men’ s Shirts $1.50 Main Floor Kear a better shirt than there at One Dob found The pattern assert 1 stripes in color combinations @f Sizes 14 to 18, KEK where you ma lar Fifty may not ment includes figures « lavender, tan and black with white. blue, gray, | Belted Spring Style Coats Special Saturday Until Noon MM $14.98 New Second Floor have just received a special pure chase of full belted and front belted Spring Style Coats which we will on special sale Saturday morning, The woman who is desirous of continuing the more conservative coat styles will tind in these a splendid opportunity. The as sortment includes Velours, Poplins and Worsteds in checks 1 plaids and plain colors of gray. tan, clay, Pekin blue, dark rose and navy. Sizes to 44 with the smaller sizes of 34, 36 and 3% predominating. For- merly $19.50 and $24.50. Special Bat until noon, choice ....... aeeceeee $14. Baby's Requiremenis AY be satisfactorily ate tended to in our Ine | fants’ Section, which is com- | pletely stocked with infants” garments of dainty, service. able quality at attractive prices. Slip-on Sweaters, $2.95 and $3.50 | ath Robes, $2.50 and up to.. $12. } } ) 5 ) ) Upper Main Floor DISPLAY of new and distinctive styles that feature hand- . some Soft ‘sole Shoes, a pair. Long Dresses, 95. beaded and em- dup to! broidered models and dainty The blouse sketched but one of styles which are admired for their tucked effects. id the many Knit Bootees, 50; 65¢ and 9B¢ individuality. ar a" nee _ Fs % The color assortment in- cludes white, flesh, gray, sunset and hs in sizes 86 to 46. Exceptional values all, euiaiie Buying Infants’ Vests Wool Bands. on will Head Americans’ Autos| Exporting Company 21 WASHINGTON, March 21—Jap anese business men, more than those of any other foreign power, began this year buying American com mercial automobiles. PORTLAND, | Brig. Gen. Brice P. rected the spruce production division jin the Pacific Northwest during the | war, Ore. March Disque, who i will leave Saturday for New A report to the United States de- | York. ‘of commerce shows that | automobiles: 191 partment 73 American went to Japan in January, the | | next largest purchaser being France, j with 244 cars. France's purchases cost three times as much am those of Japan. Australia bought more American | pleasure cars than any other na-/ tion, purchasing 308, with Argen: | tina second and Japan third, with | 232 and 229 respectively. Total | American exports during Ja juary | were 907 commercial cars and 2,137 | pleagere cars, at respec tive costs of | 3 KIDNEYS NEVER CAUSE BACKACHE |Rub pain, soreness and stiff- ness right out with old “St. Jacobs Liniment” Kidneys cause backache? No! They have no nerves, therefore can / not cause pain. Listen! Your backache is caused by lumbago, sci- -|atica or a strain, and the quickest relief is soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobe Liniment.” Rub it right on the ache or tender spot, and instant. | ly the pain, soreness, stiffness and lameness disappea: Don't ay crippled! Get a smal! trial bottle | of “St. Jacobs Liniment” from your, druggist and limber up. A moment after it is applied you'll wonder what became of the beckache, nck: | atica or lumbago pain. “St. Jacobs Liniment” stops any pain at once. It| is harmless and doesn't burn or dis- color the skin. It's the only application to rub on | a weak, lame or painful back, or for | lumbago, sciatica, neuralgia, rheu-| matism, sprains or a strain. This Scientific Bank for Savings which x always paid depositors CASH IN GOLD the financial flurries of 1907-17, nev- er requiring a notice of withdrawal, now an- nounces its new Pocket Dime Savings Banks There's one waiting for you. Call and get it en Saturday Even- in its own st valuable its ZN FOR SAVINGS Gen. were |honorably discharged, will head the export and import American International corporation. The object of the corporation is to | build up trade relations between the! | United States and foreign nations. Disque, who recently was branch of the 75c Gilman Lunch Box, Special The Gilman Lunch Box is made of black fiber, which is very strong and durable. This 1 box has a metal insert which can be 15c “Skat” Hand Soap at 10c Skat Hand Soap quickly removes grease and dirt, It is the ideal soap for mechanics to use. : price 15c. Special at ....... Keen Kutter Garden Tools For quality ‘and temper they have no equal. Keen Kutter Shovels or Spades at ......$2.25 Keen Kutter Spading Fork SR $2.25 Keen Kutter Hoe. .$1.25 Keen Kutter Bow Rake rer rears | Ladies’ 3-Piece Garden Set, Special at $1.98 This set is made of good steel and consists of a _ shovel, hoe and rake. Special at... ++. $1.98 ~ 40-Watt Mazda Lamps at 35¢_ By using Packard © Mazda Lamps you get — the very best of light at 1-3 the cost of | using the carbon lamps; 40-watt Mazda Lamps for 35¢ Just Arrived, a Big Shipment of ee Ouija Boards If there is anything you wish to know just ask the Ouija Board and you will get your answer. On sale in the Toy Dept.

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