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—the last opportunity in this sale to purchase upholstered furniture at such savings! —price reducings average ONE-THIRD less than regular, —several hundred pieces of upholstered furni- ture to select from. $39.75 regular price §45-— aplendid styte finish, en fumed and back apho! ta : “ipecial — for $39.7 wale regular price $58.50 aplendid style eatteo; ox SED actly as pictured, featuring frame, sub stantially made for practica! ap e U. 8. Marsha] Tobey ber fe ona inch F. Moree, hearegd with import | oe “He ia in the county Jail from Montana into Wash-|win appear in the federal court September, was arrested ‘urday. 4 The Motorcycle meeting the requirements of number of buyers. _ The Motorcycle of mechanical simplicity and The ONLY light-weight Motorcycle adopted by the U. S. War Department. The Only Motorcycle in Its Class and Field Write or Phone for Catalogue, ELLIS CYCLE COMPANY Northwest Distributors Main 5431 Seattle, Wash. 1111 Pike St., near Buckley, Thursday, by Deputy war and) Sat 'NURSE MARRIES é ~ WOUNDED HERO |Canadian Tommy Met Her | in British Hospital nued From Page One or + ” lough in preference Lost His Hoart Jerry's luck failed him during the battle of Courceletta. Struck in the shoulder by flying German shrapnel and seriously wounded, he was car ried to the hospital at Contay where Edith Fernee played ber part | in reclaiming the world’s heroes pehow, Jerry wanted to ay hospital always, for jin eyem met lost hie #0! the military (ry many letters from Contay and y in jearried back mesmges of love from | |danger’s front lines, | Sergeant Major Jerry wanted to |wo back to Contay after the battle of Lens, where he again stopped a piece of German shrapnel, but the lambulance driver took him to | Btaples, where in four days he |was operated on 11 times, ‘Two |months in the hospital patehed him |up again and at last came the long |looked-for “biuehty.” The little Red Cross nurse of |Contay hurried to the rest camp Mra. Jerry Nixon, and Jerry returned to the fight Ine, while she went back to |her hero wounded, | Greatest War Baby | After months of separation, Ser geant Major Jerry and Mra, Jerry om England in February, bound for Seattle, She will ver forget-—nor will he |—those days at Contay; days full lof horror and drudgery and ful of love's service. But, there's a new chapter in the romance of war. It's Byng, the greatest war baby of the greatest war, and he bears the name of Canada’s beloved gen: eral, the Byng of Cambria battle. | Jerry won the honor flag for the Lewis county district during the |Pourth Liberty loan drive, as a [campaigner of the World War Vet lerans | And Mra. Jerry's eyes dim ever so little as she presses close the little bundle of life that bears the heroic name of Byng, for she has seen life's misery and has learned to love ite bappiness ASK JUDGE TO CANCEL RATES Kennedy Says Only Legisla- ture Can Boost Tariffs Corporation Counsel Tom Kennedy, who, with U. B. Har- mon, Tacoma city attorney, joined in the review proceedings for a re verml of the tariff increase, grant: ed by the public service commission, returned to Seattle Friday. 2 “We have based our petition on the ground that the fixing of rates |for government operated utilities is a police power granted the states,” he said, “Our contention has been upheld by court decisions in Illinois and South Dakota, and more recent ly In Mississippi. Qn March 24 the United States supreme court also rule@ that the states have this power jndividually. “In = argument, we eet forth the faq that the public service com m: has never been granted @o Judge D. F. Wright, of the Thurs. ton gounty superior court, took the |case under ad manaion ota ‘represented by former Attorney General Tanner and As sistant Attorney General Hance Cle land. Postmaster General Burleson was represented by Otto Rupp. CITY WILL PAY POLICE FARES for Council Monday An ordinance has been prepared }at Councilman Bolton's request to |pay street car fares of policemen while on duty. |to the council Monday. | This is all the action the city | fathers.will take in the matter, it is intimated at city hall, and Supt. Murphine’s order that no free rides will be allowed police and firemen j appears destined to stick. With regard to reports that many | officers spent four or five hours walk ling to and from their beats—miles from heaAquarters—yesterday, they would have found little sympathy around the county-city building. | All other city employes are paying |their fares, and have been right |don't see why the bluecoats should expect this privilege. “Do ‘em good to walk’ said one jcounctiman. “Get ‘em in real good physical shape!’ “They're all too fat!” another wag remarked. |NEW LINE FREIGHTER The Taiho Maru, the first of the Uchida Steamship company's vessels to be put on the Seattle Oriental route, docked in the East waterway late Thursday night. She was in bal- | last, and will be loaded with general jfreight, consisting principally of | steel and cotton. After loading here | she will proceed to Vancouver, where \a large shipment of paper will make jup the rest of her cargo. She will ‘sail in about a week for Yokohama and Kobe. If the real estate ad “reads all right” and seems to you to be prom- ising, don’t let some one else make a prompter investigation and quicker | dectston than you thority te fix government wulity tn) creases, Bolton Has Ordinance Ready | authorize the police department to | It will be presented jalong, #0 it is easy to realize they | TO LOAD FOR JAPAN, THE SEATTLE STAR—FR FIX SAFEGUARD "IN LEAGUE RULE | Monroe Doctrine Recognized by Peace Agents BY CARL D, GROAT eapondent) plenary inference April of the lealied for today port of the « tional labor Ie to develop into a forum for airing » disnativfuction of the amall na y countries not represented in “big four" are known to re st the assumption of supreme au ty by that body 6 » belief was exprested that, de te the fact that formation of t nig four” has resulted In unusual speed peace settle ment, rep: ven of the little powers would © the opportunity to place on record their disapproval of what they regard evasion of their rights. ‘The league of nations commission last night agreed to the Insertion in the covenant of a clause specifical ly recognizing the Monroe doctrine The amendment was prepared fy Col, House. The committee's adop tion of thé Monroe doctrine prove sion was unanimous ‘The “big four" was expected to announce shortly further agreement on important questions in line with Preaident Wilson's 14 points and the armistice terma. | | BRAND KAISER Hun Thugs May Be Tried in | France and Belgium | * Continued From » ‘ Basel i kaiser is regarded ag not feasible, it # not entirely clear whether bis pun ishment wig, rest with a mere moral | indictment™ Aceording to reliable in formation, it is certain steps will be taken to prevent him from ever re gaining his old porition Kaiser's Statas It hax also been intimated that a way would be found to bring him un |der allied control, but by what | moans, outside of a local indictment, it is not made clear, So far as Wi |helm’s moral responsibility for most of Germany's crimes in concerned, there i# not the aliehtest doubt among any of the members of the jcommittes. But the trouble lies in establishing legal evidence before a regular court. Page One Grand Admiral Von Tirpits may be | Lusitania deaths, charged with the for moral! responsibility would in clude not only crimes ordered, but those which might have been pre vented. The reparations bill, while not naming a definite figure, will require an initial payment of $5.000,000,000 within two years, ‘The present financial commission Will receive claims from each nation, and wil) determine the amount which can be collected from Germany, to |mether with apportionment among the claimants, A final report will be made by the commission at the exp ration of the two-year period in which Germany will make the first payment. The various items of damage are understood to have been divided into & serien of “treatios,” the least of | which will be pensions, There is still [some dincussion as to whether the Pension item will be allowed to re. Main, but otherwise the terms are NOt expected to be altered. Plans for Vayment A subdcommittes will report within & few days on the method of estab Mebing guarantees of payment, while & similar committee will report on the constitution of the permanent financial commiraion. While probable apportionments have been a closely guarded necret, it that wih be required to reimburse each nation in full, not only for property damage, but, in some degree, for lost man power, The Mously adopted a manifesto demand: ing that Germany shall pay all the | coats of the war. | $300,000 FIRE LOSS PITTSBURG, Pa, April 11—Fire early today did approximately $200, }000 damage in the downtown busi | news district. »| took Wureburg (140 miles northweat an deliberate | "AS CRIMINAL French senate almost unani-| IDAY, APRIL 11, 1919. IS VANQUISHED, Munich Surrounded; Wurz- burg Is Captured BY FRANK J, TAYLOR (United Press Staff Correspondent) BERLIN, April 10.—(Delayed.) —Wureburg has been captured and Munich entirely sarrounded 7 the deposed sockalist Kovernment, according to advices received here today | After retreating from Nuremburg to Bramberg, Premier Hoffman, of Bavaria, and several of hin minis |ters, are r to ha ooooded ine formidable anti soviet jartny, consisting of soldiers, work |men and students, A large force re- of Munich) from the Bolaheviki, after 4 brief encounter yesterday. Mont of the soviet officials and soldiers are maid to have surrendered. An | other foree has surrounded Munich, completely isolating it The Scheldemann government, which has been temporarily removed to Weimar, was reported today an increasingly opUmiatic rewarding the | situation in Bavar socialist control | Street Fighting The general strike in Saxony and the Ruhr districts ts reported to be crowing, but the government has succeeded in regaining control of the | situation im Magdeburg (oapitel of Saxony) Street fighting in that city resulted in heavy cagualtios. Spartacans stormed an unnamed newnpaper office in Hamburg, but | thelr activities were reported to be Umited, and government foroes were said to greatly outnumber the rad feals in that city ‘The situation tn Berlin is tense. ‘The city is quiet, however, under | the «lege conditions, directed by War Minister Noske, The govern ment has taken special precautions | to protect the Red Gross mievon. | whieh is housed in the American | | embamey | ‘The square in front of that build ing is bristiing with machine guns | and armed motor cars form @ con | rtant patrol, Altho the magional | soviet congrens has develo un mintakably radical tendencies, it am parently does not dare to undertake any violence. PEASANTS FIGHT SERBIAN TROOPS Street Battle Breaks Out in Agram BY EDWARD BING United Press Os | BUDAPEST, April 8—Deo layed.)—Heavy street fighting in Agram, 160 miles southwest of | Vienna, where Serbian troope at | tempted to restore order uring a riot which developed in a pear mass meeting, » Flame dispatch reported today severn! radical agitators were arrested. Hal a cuillion men and women ‘voted in Monday's soviet elections in | Budapest, it was announced today. A new vote was ordered in one din trict, the government charging illo | gal balloting. hundred carloads of American fate arrived here from Treste today, greatly relieving the serious food shortage. The government has issued @ de cree, declaring all cinema theatres, cinema producing companies and | pharmacios public property. | At the invitation of the govern |ment the American and British mis | sions and foreign correspondents | witnessed a parade of the firag and |mecond international red regiments | which’are bouhd to the “front.” | War Minister Poganny has omfered |all former professional officers to re |port for duty in the red army. A socalled “Rumanian red army” is bein gorganized here from citizens speaking the Rumanian language. | prisoners. | rather country elected to remain here than return to thelr own |GRANT SATURDAY AS | YARD HALF-HOLIDAY LOS ANGELES, April 11.~Satur- |day half-holidays hereafter will be | the rule in the Southwestern and Los | Angeles shipbuilding company yards, it wag announced here today. 4 Aliter an attack of the grip |or pneumonia, or even a hard cold, the blood is left thin, watery, and one is said to be anemic, Instead of the blood cells being round, as in dia- gram “A,” they become irreg- ular, as in “B.” When you feel weak, nervous, or the skin breaks out in pimples, eruptions or boils, and you feel “blue” and without any snap or energy, sometimes hands cold and clammy, there is usually a large decrease in the red or white blood cor- puscles and one should build up with some good blood- builder and tonic. You can put iron in your blood and the cells become round and red, losing the ir- regular shape, by taking a THE BLOOD (BY LEB WRRDERT aurrn, u. D.) AFTER INFLUENZA AND HARD WINTER COLDS. good iron tonic, called “Iron- tic,” put up by Dr. Pierce and sold by most druggists.. This “Trontic” is compounded of a }soluble iron, nux and herbal extracts, With this you gain in vim, vigor and vitality. Instead of pale cheeks, tired j}and worn out before the day is half done, after taking “TIrontic’ your cheeks will have color, you will feel strong and vigorous and ready for work. Or if you like a good alter- ative and herbal tonic, such a one can be obtained at any drug store, favorably known for the past fifty years as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. This is made from the wild roots and barks of forest trees and without the use of alcohol, / BAVARIASOVIET | Bad Teeth Have Shortened the — Life of Many a Person A uriter in a recent edition of a prominent magazine makes the state- ment that abscessed teeth were what started the trouble that brought about the death of Col. Theodore Roosevelt. Had these teeth not done their deadly work this writer is of the opinion that this great American might have lived for many years to come. And we have seen prominent peo- ple right here in Seattle who have died as a direct result of infected teeth. All of which goes ment that we have in our ads—that a to prove the state- made many times decayed tooth is one of the most dangerous and de- structive things that a person can have. You ought to have our expert den- tists look over your teeth every few months, whether you feel there is any- DR. L. R. CLARK thing wrong with them or not. We will be very glad to give your teeth a thorough examination at any time and we can quickly tell you if is it will pay you mighty well to have the work done at once. there is anything about them that needs attention. If there You will be conserving your health and avoiding future pain, suffering and expense, by having the trouble attended to at once. Graduate Registered Dentists for Your Service At this office you will have your work done by graduate registered dentists of the highest standing in their profession. Every operator in this office has graduated from the best dental colleges and passed the examination of the state dental board. Every operator in this office has his certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair in plain sight of all. This is proof posi- tive to you that he knows his busirfess thoroughly and knows just how to do your den- tal work the way it ought to be done, We use the best of materials. “""™” Our -prices are the very lowest. All work guaranteed with an ironclad guarantee of satisfac- tion. This is a strictly sanitary office. We have the most up-to-date equipment. PAINLESS ME Age THODS We have brought our system of painless dentistry to such a point of perfection that we are able to perform practically any and all kinds of dental work without hurting the atient a bit. This is a matter of great importance to you. Many people have put off hacia necessary dental work done on account of being afraid of the pain while the work was being done. at | delay no longer. You will ‘ou are amon, this number, we say to you that you need be surpri: and delighted to find how easy it is to have your teeth fixed up under our gentle methods, But for your own sake we earnestly advise that you do not delay this important matter. Better come at once and make arrangements to have a perfect set of teeth, Regal 1405 Third Avenue Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager N. W. Corner Third and Union In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists. Diagonally Across the Strect From the Posteffice. Be Sure to Get to the Right Place, LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES “CHASER” SUSPECT IS ARRESTED BY POLICE More than a dozen girls, who say they have been chased by a strange man, dressed inf woman's clothes, were acheduled to report at the pub- Me safety building Friday afternoon to try and identify a suspect arrest: ed Thursday night by Sergeant J. J. Hoag and Patrolman F. W. Bow: man. They may the man was pur sulng Miss earl Holmes, 1017 Boren ave, when captured. He gave his name as Louis Sinclair, 23, and de- nied the charge. SPOKANE, April 11-—Bank clear. $2,500,629; balances, $532,191. Two Waye of Getting Glasses One {s to let some slick-tongued faker, who advertises “Glasses $2.50,” which he never sells for less than $7.00 to $10.00, and whose fitting is usually about as true as his adver tisement, thereby running the risk of ruining your eyes. Your own experi- ence has been that something for nothing, you buy anything cheap, that's ex- actly what you get. us first. every case we accept, and you will find in the end it is cheaper to deal with those on whom you can depend, 528 Pine STREET. SS, SS LOWEST RATES TO CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES SAN DIEGO 8.8, NOME CITY, SAILING APRIL 15 Good ‘norvice, large outside state. | rooms and unsurpassed meals, Every convenience for passengers, Rates eed full particulars at City Ticket jee THE McCORMICK LINE 100 Cherry St. Phone Hiliett 3496 you can't get and when) Better come to Our reputation is back of CITY GETS BIG CHECK ] HE ESCAPED INFLUENZA City Treasurer Ed L. Terry Thure-| “Last spring I had a terrible cold day received a check for $1,470,562.55 | and gripp: for the city, representing taxes col- | FORE, lected by County Treasurer Gaines. | many hinds af eatin eve a eemmemiel mained clogged with cold. then took Foley's Honey and Tar Com- und, feeling relief from the first, used seven small bottles. It was a sight to seo “the phlegm I, coushed up. T am convinced Foley's Honey and Tar saved me from influenza.” Checks’ coughs colds” croup and whoo! = cough. Sold everywhere. If you vaiue yuur watch, let Haynes repair it. Near Liberty | theatre.—Advertisement. || Washing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff ' | The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it; then you destroy it entirely, To do this, get | about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night, when retir- ing: use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. | Do this tonight, and by morning | mort, if not all, of your dandruff will | be Kone, and three or four more ap- Piications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of ft, no matter how | YOUr eyestrain, much dandruff you may have. | Moderate Prices You will find, too, that all itching | and digging of the scalp will stop at| Goebring Optical Co. once, and your hair will be fluffy, | 424.5 Joshua Green Bldg. lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and| " look and fee! a hundred times better, | You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work.—Adver- tisement. That's what you'll say after our examination for visual de fects and you are wearing a pair of our glasses to relieve The Symonds Shoe Co. Easter Footwear ‘We have some of tho classiest up-to-the-minute Shoes, Oxfords and Pumps to be found anywhere, and at prices you oan afford to pay. A look in our window will convince you of the truth of our statement that we sell good shoes for less, The Symonds Shoe Co. 1516 Third Ave., Between Pike and Pine Sts,