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i ; i tfinds the system in a weakened and | vitality after you h i ; 4 SPORTSMAN FINED $100 PAGE 4 GIRL LEAVES CITY HOSPITAL Juvenile Authorities Take Charge of Ruth Morgan Ruth Morgar léyear schoo! girl, who attempted to e her life) Dy cating petsoned candy Tueatay night. was released from the city heepital Thursday afternoon to the Juvenile detention authorities, pend lisposition of her case yehnine sent to the girt, at by Ivan Symonds, her Yakima boy friend, arrived Thurs day at the home of Mra. Mabel Lee, sister of the young girl, who tarned it over to the police without open ing it. The pac ¢ was opened by Dector W. E. Shannon, of the city hospital It contained one-eighth of an ounce of strychnine—enough to kiN $0 people, Tt had been obtained from the Red Cross pharmacy, in Yakima, which employed Symonds. A telegram was received Thursday from young Symonds, addressed to the girl, according to Mrs, Lee Fri day, The message inquired as to her health, and declared that he Was worried about her King coumty has no jurisdiction oWer the samding of the strychnine, | acterding Deputy Prosecutor Johi® D. Curmody. If the fact can be definitely’ established that the poison was spnt thru the mails, the ease will be turned over to the postal authori Ges, . As yet no action has been takn against the Yewler Way pharmacy Breadway and Wester, where the girl bought the paste. According ever, the case will be investigated Sure Mill" rat and roach te Carmody, how CANADA LANDING BIG EUROPEAN CONTRACTS (@pecial by N. BH. A. to The Star) TORONTO, Aprf 4.—Canada has captured orders fbr 000.000 of products each from Rumania and France, and is abort to close similar contracts with Belgium. Raw ma Feerials, foodstuffs omd mamufactared goods all figure tn the contracts, Convicted of robbing the traps, of the King county game commisston Sat Enumclaw, Frank Sapo was fined | $100 Thursday. Deputy Game War \@en William Dunstan, who caught Sapo, says he had seweral fine rain bow trout, and was cleaning them i ’ ' his home, when arrested, 3@ TIRES STOLEN Thirty agtomobdile tires were stolen from the Lewis garmge. =319 Califor pia ave, Thuesday night by thieves, ) who forced orten the garage doors. ‘The police were notified. i fident that when the Le tions f* perfected her tnd: is aswured Ls ’ THE SEATTLE STAR FRIDAY, APRIL 4, Telephone Pole 1919. ‘ Toei This is what happened to Patrolman D. M. Baer’s automobile Thursday ‘night when t e steering gear cramped and the machine rammed a telephone pole at Fifth ave. and Denny way. who were riding with Baer, were rushed to the city hospital. Baer was not badly injured. the body. FREEDOM SURE SAY GEORGIANS Want No One. Mandatory Over Country (Special to The Star by N. FE. A) TIFLIS, Aprits4 Gee 6 con ot Na ndence Georgians who have extablished a government independent of the Rus |sians and are holding tn | Bolaheviki who would overrun their country want | torates: heck the and pass thru into Persia no mandatories of protec “When Lieyd George «and Presi dent Wilson make their League of | Nations, we shall be one of them,” iw the frequently heard statement on! the street. Meantime British Tommies «pend Build Up the System | After “Flu” Attack Get Back Your Strength as Seon as Possible who Ras had the “fin” rundown condition, the nervous sys trrasing disease. This tem all upset, the appetite game, and ° \pervades the entire body. | fuous disease self. ody al fm general good for nothing Meling | cieien wyatem. are effects of this stren- | where. nay bad ‘always leaves its|*imply write to Chief Medical, Ad-| mobilized, hans Hietin so weak and debilitated that | [imr- oS “there is as much danger from its aq In other words, after an at Nothing can equal 8. S. 5. for com plotely restoring your strength and | had thin die | plendid rem the blend, removing) germs, and builds up the pertfies it dimease 8S. &. S. is sold by druggiata every If you wish medical advice, | Swift Laboratory, At @ who will give you such s your case may need with the hange ip and the mixed nationalities of win rise to the strains of the King.* tian sentries face Georgian ont ! posts on the border of Katum and the people rush down to cheer wher over a British troop train passes © people appear cheerful and well fed—quite in contrast to the wuffering everywhere in the Balkan states. Flocks of poultry and droves of pigs are seen all along the line PRESENT “PRINCE CHAP" “The Prince Chap” is the tte of play to be presented by lin high school senior class, Friday and Saturday evenings, April 11 and 12, at the Franklin high school auditorium. WOOD STEAMER TO LEAVE The United States shipping board wood steamer Hockenoff, following adjustment of her boilers and en fines in Seattle, was scheduled to start loading lumber for Poughkeep aie, N. Y., from Tacoma Friday, The trip will be made via the Pa:tama canal LONDON—A_ campaign = against the theatre ticket speculator has been wtarted hers, Chas B. Cochran, who owns a chain of theatres, nounces that the best tickets for shows are only procurable at the tack of the “flu” you need a thor | box office. ough tonic to rebuild the system so! that you can have your old-time | strength and vigor restored LONDON—Claiming that he had | ruined her best frock, by splashing her with mud, Misa Ethel Pike ob- tained $5 damages from Motorist Sidney Hutton tn the Somerset coun ty court. British motorists are ay pealing. LONDON—Maj. Richard = Lieyd George, son of the premier, juat de been appointed, d or of A. B, Brown, McFarlane & val architects and marine er *, of Glasgow, London, and York ree Co. start saving NOW? will be absolutely SAFE! WE HAVE NEVER’. PAID LESS THAN O% ON SAVINGS. TOMORROW—THE LAST DAY All funds left with us tomorrow will earn dividends —— from April Ist and receive THREE MONTHS _ INTEREST on July Ist, 1919. Tiftia and Raturr BY FRANK F. WOLYE Of the American Alliance for Labor not emcape if Hurope ts engulfed. and Democracy have tn America a race revolution and readjust- Do the people of the United States Want peace, prosperity, and a chance for readjustment and social recon struction along lines that will mean progress toward better ife—life more abundantly for all? Everybody wants peace, even thom who made the war an eocaston to aman great wealth. The gréat question of the hour ts: DID THE WAR GO TOO FAR? While some were reaping profits, the great majority of the American people were making severest sacri ficen The great heart of the people beat true. Patriotiam ran high. No ome flinched at the hour the test ame. Lives were Inid on the altar of freedom. Unfaltering devotion Shall It Be Revolution or Reconstruction—Which? | Patrolman J. G. Grobe and Glen Walls, a civilian, | Walls’ face was crushed and Grobe was bruised about ‘States, the Westarn hemisphere, can- 1 would mean the long plunge back into darknens—the abyes of savagery for the human race We fought in the war to protect civilization from the deadly grip of absolution, NOW WE MUST PRO- THCT THAT CIVILIZATION FROM UTTER DESTIUCTION. In the production of food and fibers, of metals and fuel, we must have industrial peace. We must have employment for all. Hvery agrical- |tural resource must be developed to was shown by the great mans of the, people. Now comes the hour for another | as near the ultimate point as pomibie. Every industrial plant producing ma- terials, tools and implements needed at home and abroad should be run to tte fullest capacity Must Be None Jobleas There must be no unemployment. There is no need for It America has the world to feed, to clothe, to pro- tect. Without tla there will be no America. The first step should be employ-| ment of the hundreds of thounnnds of tent. «The world allowed conditions te | workers eagerifor a job. Let us have exist that brought on the war. Warn-|a gob for every octoniog soldier. ingn were unheeded. We went blindly | sake tt A JOB POR EVERY STAR on. little dreamed, surrounded by vast re- nources yet untapped, we felt there | menta was no need for alarm. In the midst of potentialities we) IN THE Smt TCH FLA done without displace It requires adjnetments, and This can In all events.) it may be mecrifices on the part of we should always have plenty of food) the employer who so prondly flew the and plenty of clothing, We had sim-| service flag everybody made ancri- ply to crush autocracy. That war! teen daring the war of destruction. our job. The war waa carried on to a #ue- comful end <Autocracy in middle Europe is a thing of the past future is in the hands of a long-suf- fering people. gonfronta humanity at this hour, The menace of famine and pentl- fence, anarchy and Europe at this hour. THE FIRST DOLLAR is the foundation for real thrift,— why not Leave your money with this institution, where it will not only earn a fair rate of interest, but it DURING THE PAST EIGHTEEN YEARS. EVERY DOLLAR You Leave Here Shares Equitably in the earnings of this Mutual Association, and our funds are invested only in First Mortages on Improved Property. and in City, State and Government Bonds. A. F. ANDERSON President Founded 1901. { Giclee, Resources over Two and ie Half Million Dollars —EE ADOLPH F. LINDEN Vice-President and Treasurer Where Pike Street Crosses Third PUGET SOUND SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION : CORWIN S, SHANK © W. CAMPBELL Vice-President ond Secretary Counsel Hours: 9 a. m. to §. p.m. Saturday: 9 001; 6 8, No one should shrink now at the time of greater peril Start public works everywhere The | Start the movement today. Organize on the “QUOTA PLAN,” and sre that Hat a greater menace | there is work for all. ‘This will mean food for all. Hiring all posible premmre to bear chaos faces on your congressman and your sen- The Uinted gators for the passage of the Lane | i 1, providing farms for soldiers, race between anarchy and civilization, let us win the race. The situation demands quick action and quick readjustment, for full employ- ment and production, or it will be a failure, destruction and death of civ- iNzation. BRISCOE HOME GIVEN $132,000 Pioneer Leaves Money to Local Institutions Leaving a bequest of $132,000 for the Edwin Briscoe boys’ home at Orillia, the will of the late Mrs. Eliz abeth Fons, Seattle pioneer and phil anthropist who died February 15, was filed for probate Thureday The estate was appraised at $142,- 000, of which $96,000 was in per. | sonal ‘property and the remainder in real estate. The Children's Ortho- pedic hospital was the recipient of $2,500, while Catholic institutions thruout the city were left $7,500. Laurence 8. Booth and Michael W. Padden were To Protect Your Guarantee We earnestly request all our former patients having had work done four months or more to call and have their teeth and plates examined, If any of our work Is not satisfactory, we will gladly make over or repair, free of charge. Six qualified lady attendants, We specialize in all diseases of the mouth. Pyorrhea is the cause of systemic stomach trdubles, All work guaranteed 15 years. Reasonable discount to union people. United Painless Dentists INC, Wiltett 3633, 605 Third Ave. Hours: 8:30 A, M. to 6. P. M. Sundays, 9 to 14. Mothers Bring the little fel- low in and have us fit him in a swell Boys’ Suit for Eas- ter. We will surely save you a five-dollar bill. Men’s Suits Fine Hand-Tailored Suits from the very best makers in America, and you ran get the Latest Styles for One-Half. Dress Up for Easter OF BUSINESS!}) Yes, thirty years we have been in the retail busi- ness, and are giving up to enter the wholesale line. Recently we have leased, through the office of F. M. Jordan & Co., the entire loft above our store, for- merly occupied by Frederick & Nelson. But we must dispose of this enormous stock of Men’s and Boys’ Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Furnishings, etc., and | we cannot urge you too strongly t SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 9 A. M. This gigantic sale starts, and we have slashed the price on every article in the store to such a low figure that you be present at | cannot help but supply your present. and future wants for |g dad and the boy. Here you will see your dollar do the ii” work of two. | yourself. Bring | | | | Investigate our prices on Working Clothes. You'll be surprised when you see our prices on Overalls, Work Shirts, ete. Heavy Work Shoes, Values AND SO ALL THROUGH THE STORE ARE WONDERFUL BARGAINS UNION MADE GOODS Are Our Specialty Wa We Will Cesh Your Pay Check PALACE CLOTHING CO. First and Spring St. We invite merchants to come and make their purchases in quantity, as our prices are almost half the present wholesale quotations. But our advice to each every one is to come early. The stock is complete now. This is the time to make your selections—don’t wait till the stock is sold out. We are quoting a few prices on dif- | ferent articles picked at random, but come and see for “ad” with you for reference. qo?9 SOC SOK eA wee St (te to $8.50 Cut to Liberty Bonds Accepted Here is where you save money. Strong, union- made Work Shoes and fine Dress Shoes, in both tan and black, and prices less than half. Come and see for yourself.