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MRED” ROOSTER " WRECKS WAGON He Eats Dynamite Caps and Blows Up on Road ALAMO, April 11--A dozen pullewr the hind end of his wagon and a pair of horses rapidly separated here fol lowing an explosion of a Buff Coohin rooster, while Henry Parsons, local | farmer |driving to market | He loaded the fowls into his wagon |and started to drive to town, The | wagon struck @ rut. A loud explo |sion was heard. Partiona of chick Jens and splinters littered the road Parsons was hurled from hin neat His team ran away, kicking loone from the wreckage ‘fter running over half 4 mile. ‘The only explanation for the explo: sion offered is the theory that the Huff Cochin rooster ewallowed some fulminate of mercury caps used by | Parsons to detonate dynamite which he used for blasting. These explod ed by the shock of the wagon going over the bump. and owner of the goods, was THE TABLE SAUCE that stands first and far above all competition is It makes second cuts | | more like firs: and adds | to the enjoyment of | every meal. _ LEAsPERRINS TH8 omy joe + hasbeen the leading table sauce for generations. GAS", ° in the Stomach | Sour Stomach (heartburn), Belching. Swelling and Full Feeling, 90 fre |quently complained of after meals | relieved in Two Minutes. Almost In jstant relief from Pains in the Stom- leach caused by undigested food. SENT FREE ON 30 DAYS’ For Your Own Sake and Your City’s Will They STAY Good Looking? r After all, that is the big clothes question, and a it is surprising how few men ask it. Of course, ry Clothes’ for Men look good when you : them, look just a little better than most clothes, dm fact. But here’s the difference — Bradbury es really do stay good looking. The new styles will please you, and the prices are you would expect for such materials. BUSINESS MEN LIKE OUR CREDIT PLAN It's just a common sense business arrangement to allow to pay as it suits you—a little at a time. Come and ata Bradbury Suit TRIAL Bend ¢c postage, name and ad @rens, plainly written, and we will send you on approval our stomach preparation, Jo-to, for 30 days, at which time you are to send us $1.00 lor return the unused portion if not | perfectly satisfied. Address: Bellingham Chemical Announces Season’s Opening of Crystal Pool Saturday 2 P. M. April 12, °19. America’s finest Salt Water Natatorium invites the public to its 1919 opening. The mammoth building has been redecorated and renovated, new machinery installed, improving the already excellent sanitation equipment. The management feel justified in making the assertion that Crystal Pool of 1919 is the most sanitary indoor pool in America. Having secured the services of Donald J. Vickers as swimming instructor, we feel assured of the success in this department. OPEN DAILY THURSDAY SUNDAY 2 P. M. 12 Noon to 2 P. M. 10 A. M. 10:30 P. M. meee inotrections 10:30 P. M. Telephone Elliott 1896. Our Physical Department For Business Men AUSTIN & SALT Physical Directors Crystal Pool Building Telephone Elliott 4598 THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1919. BY A, M, SIMONS Chairman Committee Sent to Buropo | turies. by President Wilson to Study Labor Sitaation Are high wages, short hours and andicaps in the race organized for international markets? Moet em | ployers think they are. Our compet itors buy cheaper labor is the frat argumentative bombproof of retreat j ing Bourbon employers. Rut the @ugout has a tin roof and {# demol inhed by the first shell full of tact that hita it If labor lives decently industry must die nationally i# the logieal con clusion of those who plead for low pay. It is labor's greed that mangling the goose with the golden product is the charge against those whose foolish selfishnens in suppored to be destroying their own jobs This problem is critical at this in stant Nations are standing at the tape ready for the word that starts the mad race for markets, If rais ing wages, reducing hours and in- | creasing taxes for education, housing and social welfare will handicap our | industrial entry then we must wait) unui other nations catch up with our | labor standards before making fur: ther advances. ‘This line of argument sounds too plaustble to be true. It rounds just like common sense, and every accu rate ncientific observer knows that | cornmon sense and ordinary observa en are almost always wrong Comic opera ix more reliable than common sense On the authority of | Gilbert & S@iivan, “Things are seb dom what they seem,” The world i# not flat, The does not revolve around us, Space is not empty, The hills are not eter nal. Most stare are larger than the) earth. Because common Kens | proved the reverse of all these tate | ments knowledge blundered and hu- sun MAN SLEEPS THREE MONTHS AND NOT AWAKE Y Dr, Teverty A. Tucker wae first to dim | cover “sleeping sickness” In A | A of the disease man of & committee of the Virginian state board of health to seek the cause cure. DR. BEVERLY A. TUCKER (In an interview with A. EB. Geldhof, N. E. A, Staff Correspondent) The “sleeping sickness,” which Is| now epidemic tn various parts of this country, is not the sleeping sickness caused by the bite of a fly which ts common tn Africa. It is known to physicians as “cephalites lethargica.” and to give it a popular name I have called it “epidemic somnolence.” It was known in the 17th and 1th centuries, and in 1895 was reported in all countries of Europe and one © two places in the United States, | | OF BRONL Tells How She Was Made} Well by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. Brookiyn, N. Y.-—“For one year 1) was miserable from @ displacement, | irr Merde gall general run-| down condition | with headaches | and pains in my | aide. My sister) induced me to/ try Lydia E Pinkham's Vego- table Compound. I found it helped moe very much ejand sach a _ | splendid tonic that I am ree ommending it to any woman who | has similar troubles."—Mra, Erste G. Lewrs, 30 Vernon Ave. Brook- lyn, N. Y. Snch conditions as Mrs, Lewis suffered from may be caused by a fall or @ general weakened run- down condition of the system, and the most successful remedy to re store strength to muscles and tissue and bring about a normal healthy condition—has proved to be this famous root and herb medicine, Lydia BK Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound. If you have disturbing symptoms you do not undorstand, write Lydia Pinkham Medicine Co. Lynn, Masa. The result of their forty years experience is at your service. Racing for the World Market |rule the world market | consultations. man progress was delayed for cen If we look cloner and use the in atruments of accurate investigation it le plain that cheap labor will never Those mar kets now, and in all times past, are barred to hunger-weakened, worked, ignorant populations and at over the merey of the best fed, housed taught and amused workers. More than half the human race lives in . India and Pussla There, the heat natural | the rh lowest the Wongest hours, tho most subservient resources, wages, workers. Yet with all the rest of the world crushed with war, no one feared that the war exenpt among these nations would seize interna. tional markets, ‘The industrial yol low peril will not put flesh upon its ghost until wages, hours, education and organization of labor in Asia ap proach western standards. The rating of nations in the race for markets ix directly proportioned to the standard of living of their lw borers. It iw Great Britain that threatens to oube » the world, because Picture Hats and ‘‘Mickey’’ For FASTER This event, no doubt, is a charming sur- prise to you—and so it is intended. We have rushed through a handsome cok lection of the new modish Easter styles— and here they are. They represent all that is smartest. she is preparing to pay higher wages, work shorter hours, build better homes and schools and provide means to une the minds of her work ers in the management of industry. Unies American capitalists develop suMcient Intelligence to grant «mb lar conditions, or unless American workers develop wufficient #trength to compel this higher standard, this nation will be driven from the mar kets of the world Low wages at home are as effec Uve tn restricting markets as high tariffs abroad, Ch labor moans expensive production These are ne the facts have taught, whatever deceptive appear ances common sense “nay seem to have presented. Buy Your J EASTER HAT TOMORROW “‘Mickey’”’ ET, SAYS DOCTOR Tt waa not heard of here again un til eight cases were reported from Camp Lee, Va. a few weeks when the fact struck me that I should notion seven cases of extreme sicepinems, accompanied by high tem peratures, in my Own practice and I recognized that it was an unknown disease and had spoken to my friends about it I reported the casos to the state board of health, of which I am a member, and because I was the first to report them I was made chairman of a committes to investigate the disease. Soon six more cases were reported, making @ total of 13, four of which are in Richmond and the rest in other parte of Virginia and North Capolina. Then came re ports of several cases in Chicago THREE MONTHS 15 LONGEST SLEEP The periods of somnolence very In our shortent case the patient slept for three days, and in the longest case he has been sleeping for three months, and {s still asleep. The condition is, in reality, not Mcep, but a puzaling sort of coma The patient can be aroused as you would waken some one from sleep. The bowels function normally. The patient remains absolutely quiet tn position; when awakened he wears &® blank expression, takes little inter. est in anything, and says little, Some patients take food naturally, others have to be forcibly fed with liquids, I have one patient who is aroused regularly three times a day, sits up in bed and eats, and relapses Into unconaciournens. There is no pain, except some headache and nausea. The temper- ature does not exceed 102.2. Pulse is not affected. There is no toxic condition, as in other cases, which produces uncon sciousness, Respiration is normal. There are no symptoms of any na ture, except an increased rigidity of the muscles and a partial paralysis of the face and head. I have found nO evidences of infantile paralysis, There ia no coughing off eneezing. I have examined the spinal fuid in all cases and have found that it haa been under increased preseure. This and the fact that the cranial nerves are affected have led me to be Neve that the disease is caused by an affection of the base of the brain. Whether it is caused by a germ we do not know yet. Our present labor atory findings, taken from examina- JUST A WEEK ‘ TILL EASTER BASEMENT DEPARTMENT was one fatal case | in Chicago, and I have heard of one) fatal case in South America. But it js an extremely inconvenient and | obnoxious disease, and it may disable | the patient takes nourishment and | the patient for months. It comes on his body continues to function. | gradually, and leaves just as gradu-) various parts of the country, where | understand there the influenza epidemic was most se. | rious, I regard the “epidemic of somnolence” ax a recrudescence of the influenza epidemic, 1 do not re ward it an @ fata) disease, because Reasonable. 237 Epler Bik. S13 Second Ave. Phone Main 2551 An Important Message Shoe Bu — ers i This popular model, shown in patent leather and dark tan calfskin, turn or welt soles, leather or covered French heels, Regularly priced at Conforming with our custom of offering ap propriate specials for the Easter season, we call your attention to many wonderful values in Women's Pumps and Oxfords, and white Shoes at very inviting prices that will remain in force until Easter Day, ‘The ever-popular Tailored Oxfords come in dark or light tan, also in patent leather, Cuban heels, Regularly priced at 50. tions of the blood and the spinal $ fluid, have shown no germ. ¢ hae Special price ts ane 5.85 Special price is, $5 85 made X-ray examinations of the deseeeecoces eeveeee sseeeroees o head, which also showed nothing. None of our cases has communicated the disease to any other persm. I believe, however, that the disease can be commanicat- ed by direct contact thru the nose and mouth, I do not consider it con- tagious. | I think the disease will appear tn Would You Sacrifice Your Soul to Save Your Husband That’s WHY I WOULD ? ® Soft Dull Kid Opera Pump, turn soles, covered French heels; same in dark tan, also in patent leather, welt soles, leather French heels, Regu- larly priced at $7.50. $5 85 . ° Special price ih... ..ccceseeceeveee Girls’ Lace Oxfords Mahogany, tan leather Oxfords, Sizes 11% to 2 .... «....$3.35 Sizes 2% to 7 .... .....83.85 OMAHA, April 11.—Mies Gertrude | Beaty, 28 yeare old, offered $1,000 in| bills to Dr. Willard Quigley if he would kill her without pain. He refused the money she display- ed, told her to return later and when she came back to his office she was arrested. ye La Mahogany Tan Pumps, welt soles, Cuban heels; same in light tan or patent leather. Regu- larly priced at $7.50. a2 $5.85 Special price 1....secceeeeseses Men’s Shoes Men, ‘come in and look at our spectals at $6.85 and $7.85, You will find them more than worth the price, or patent We have many new Mahogany Tan Lace Boots, Cuban | Models on display in heels; same tn matching cloth tops; our windows— regularly priced at $4.85 see them! $6.50, Special price is NOT MARRY Coming to the 416 Pike _We have had no deaths, altho 1! ally. | |