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ee - "THESE two candidates for the school board can give honest representa- tion to all classes. They are men of the progressive, clean-cut, Ameri- can type. Tuesday is election day. Vote—and be sure to vote against hurling school affairs into petty class politics. Vote for Santmyer and Walker. Tides in Seattle On the Issue of ‘Americanism There Can Be No Compromise SATURDAY ! SUNDAY CEN NOV. NOV 0 Viest Low Tide Virst Lew Tide ries” win, Tae i am ret the! Wiest High Tid iti x Mia, Tide | Vira. aah “ride Late Edition * econ Lew Tide Second Low Tide $6.00 to $9.00 Bintored a Second Clase Mattor May 3, 1499, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Warn, wi wy the Act of Congress March 4, 1879 NO. 236, unda n) warmer y itheasterly winds LEEPING SICKNESS! O CASES REPORTED IN SEATTL iT seems | Operators Carranza (NO CAUSE FOR ALARM, ToME || Will Open Hopes for | ==". CoalMines US Break sna Bons tigaeg i mse ordered Saturday by ‘Dr. H. M. Read, city health poli | Tube is shout to retire | Kansas, Illinois and Ohio Are night night; fre SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, NOVEMBE R 29, 1919. Weather Fore: = Intervention Would Prevent sound ot ring said cases of the baffling disease had been! idea, that should iagi .. reported to his office since November 15. “godly tigre sary | Ready to Start Digging Internal Trouble Dur Strict measures are necessary, Dr. Read said, to prevent — league | Operations ing Election | Spreading the malady which, after investigation, he has con- the ng gedg 4: bon | ~ _— cluded is communicable from one person to another. ‘ Mie fas around a igntea |WOLUNTEERS GIVE AID THE SITUATION IS TENSE| Only two deaths have occurred, he said, out of the 30 | Ns / cases reported during the last fortnight. Cultures obtained ie exbert ae See, | MAMILD SDUX 36s. er. $s WASHINGTON, D. ©. Nov. (from the blood of the patient are being used in the health having successfully | Supplies and equipment raheem 29.—{United Press.)-—Carranza ts department laboratory in the public safety building to de er. ; \pemed te the Pitewure (kanees) deliberately trying to provoke an velop, if possible, a cure. fat rates are low, and the | coal fields today attempt at intervention by the IS IT INFANTILE PARALYSIS? Jiver spoon With nearly 4,000 recrults enlisted, United States to ent Mexico ; ; a anal ecl Bfptclggy Be beng bor or ile teak te’ ca seve. Dr. Read said he had come to the conclusion that a from ing sickness,” so called, or “lethargic encephalitis,” ly 1) weeks. ready to leave for the mining dis- » in the belief today of of infantile paralysis of group No. 2. nels means, rein trict, army tents, blanke heavy ya nice doe in the cellar | clothing, movable kitchens and fetal in clowe touch with the | “Group No. 2, he explained, is the spinal cord and base of! , the brain. The effect of an attack on this group, he said, me of empty tin cans on equipment were being shipped from The Mexican president apparently Camp Funston. Fort Leavenworth, nd from the quartermaster depot thinks that if he can ineite the 18 that the patient is left in a state of coma from which he | United States to the point of making can be aroused to consciousness and which does not neces- at St. Louls, under orders issued last & hostile demonstration of military | sarily affect the brain so far as thinking, hearing and speaks night by Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, commander of the Central depart- ls maa Jor naval forces against him, his| | poltical rivals will forget their ing are concerned. 3 ipdiged EE: Vacaen “ides mn el grievances and rally to him, threat.| All cases will be isolated, but not quarantined, Dr. Read. 0 ion will tatt-to-materialize | Said. As treatment, he advises use of the “anterior poli- enter the Southeastern Kansas coal he willbe abio.to-cling.to his | omyelitis” serum. This serum is used in treating infanti fields Monday morning, Gov. Alien ! sverarine 30 tons tthe aw office until the presidential elec- ysis tions. paral is. : No Cause for Alarm averaging 20 tons to the carload, will The Mexican situation today seem be the output from 15 steam shovels and 1,000 men at work in the strip | mines, experts estimated. more and | Special trains were to carry the the nights get | first volunteers to the coal mines late jed to be more complicated and full| The germ causing sleeping sick- lof menace than at any time since |ness, the doctor said, may be carried the Villa raid on Columbus. It ad of the sick room by persons Symptoms of | two phases: other than the patient and, tho the | s | today. 1—James Wallace, American, was|carrier himself may not be affected, 1S ala ly time a hunk of coal ne ~ pe | murdered by a Carranza soldier last the germ may attack some one with dark cellar CLEVELAND. Ohio, Nov. 29.— Symptoms of the sleeping sick- ness include lethargy or drowsi- ness, slight, sometimes unnotice- able paralysis of the eyes and face, and fever. The beginning of the disease ix usually slow and insidious, with mod@gate fever, red throat and: rapid pulse, Bye. palsies are the most dis tinctive symptoma A typical case begins with head- ache, some fever, |assitude, drowsiness, dimness of vision and, perhaps, nausea. The patient may be able to walk during a large part of his sick- ness. In fact, he may continue about his business without know- ing he is sick. ted eparing | Wednesday and evidently bis slayer whom the carrier comes in contact. time a rat [Operators were repor om ~ Ihas. not been arrested. For this reason, isolation was deemed the pantry, and [today to reopen the Poy ” 2—W. ©. Jenkins, American con-|a necessary precaution " rattles a blind, | the Ohio district agg Ferry sular agent at Puebla, is still held| “Thege is no cause for alarm,” Dr. | iy time loose board rite on tish aavertiommanta Jin Jail there in defiance of this gov- | Read declared. “The disease has not. he maternal elbow starts pon greedy vol perry toigee and for his re|yet become epidemic, and, because it ig father in the short ribs. Ah was taken in hand two weeks ago, loying 15,000 al ” JOHN! §=Wake up! | in eastern Ohio, emp nd Punishment probably wil! not. {11 be opened Monday, and all bee: ay aie ene in the house! | men, wi ir. Read togk measures agains’ up, and weaves | miners returning will be given the F * wi the disease Immediately upon his re gets up. }14 per cent increase in wages rec expected to send to Carranza a de-|t t ih rs Brey Pees a bangs his shin into the “uel inistrator mand for punishment of Wallace's ‘urn from the conference at Ne' wtf ow, and rakes his ommended by Ten: Atm bi ne ome Eo jleans of the American Health associ: | | Garfiel a 07 Di oe teoketand, and ihe | Similar action ‘e expected from Unless Cartihisn makes ation. Sleeping. sickness was dis a ree ond tors in the rest of the Ohio ter. factory amends in the Wallac SOS SS te CORES «rare shadows from the cel eperansts * ton 40 to be the consensus of opinion of} exhausted flashlight, |Titory. Union leaders refui physicians from Boston, New York [commit themselves, but pees and other Eastern medical centers, | they will not encourage acceptance of he said, that it was a form of infan- any offer unless it is first sanctioned tile paralysis,-and should be treated yp ver a yn | by the national officers, o as such, tho it was admitted by the! ‘More we ire to ca In the meantime, the fuel shortage of the Carranza administration with congress that it was unknown how| of householders is growing more acute. Cleveland | | drawn and Mexico treated as an in: |), etep the @letass | ee | burglar will ever intrude wider next week a proposal! } ternational outlaw emt kersing, | 7 SOR ca by declaring sete | bi tl is hing Seattle, it was Dr.| to conserve fuel by declaring light-|—— fa — ans we iat on: one 1 yo> leave 4 1 sat | ! | 1 armed mete. gery is not) Read's first official act to issue "Tyne Cons Now in less nights, an curtailing produc | in prospect Severn e of relations, | circular letter to all physicians of the ie light on; and if you have Sends Warning ai: Crash Down isawever; Would probably secsetiage| Ge atta ceencs Riverton Hospital , The state department today was Us. and q kins cases, there is reason to be- lieve the state department will recommend to President Wilson that | diplomatic relations with the south- ern republic be severed, recognition lt poh, why, dawt bother about | to" of nomessential industries 'Coal Operators tl Many plants have already decreased . F a strengthening of the border) ‘The letter informed doctors that} One man and one woman, afflicted e soite a burg. |Droduction. and several notified the -Conferring Here Against Bombs in Incline, Hit Auto guard |they would be required from that | With sleeping sickness, are under the i to invite a burg fuel committee that they verged on Announcing they iptended to work g A West Sehttle street car, carry. | i t . The attitude of the state depart-|date to report within 24 hours all| cate of Dr, Fi Xmas Packets ing a trailer“full of shipyard work:| 01° i ors, slid’ ack down "the inelin derick J. Nichols, at complete shutdown. was learned, is that the cases of sleeping sickness or appar-| Riverton, Dr. G. H. T. Sparling. eee out and adopt some policy by which 8 ia.) Nov, 29.—Po “ Jenkins case in itself is not one de-| ent cas county health officer, said Saturda; OUT one house in 5,000 ° . the tie-up of coal mines in this sta ATLANTA, Ga ing to the clevated treatlc at First Tin oh + % ” . > . drastic e response was physicians ° man and wo! en gets. bursiarizea: | Lllinois Plans may be broken, the Washington Coal | lice Chief Beavers, ax gecretary of ae "Wonen a mantiing particularly drastic action,| |The response was from physicians| The man and woman are not #3 ose other 4,999 are the To Reo n Mine: Operators’ association went into con-|] the International Association of ay morning anit :ores but that added to previously accu-| in che city only, no cases being re- | lated. y were first stricken a permanent abiding pe a s erase here Saturda Chiefs of Police, today mailed cir mulated grievances, it strains the re. | ported outside ttle. week ago. Since that time, for 20 a aie su “lations between the two countries to Does It Follow Flu? a etc Bae Palmer escaped injury, but his ma- | the critical stage, ‘The Wallace mur-| Dr. Kenelm Winslow, " Seattle] {1 Semicome baa sf chine was badly damaged, No one | “r serves to aggravate. this situ-| physicians in an article on the dis. |! with the “flu. ations ease in a Fecent issue of Northwest | “The disease is supposed to be the culars to all police heads in the United States and Canada, warn ing infernal machines which th jan federation of rty is suspected . SAG! Nov. 29. An attempt places who get CHICAGO, Nov * jon't yw hat the program eiane pel sack | to reopen Illinois, 370 soft coal mines| | “T don’t know w nd to chase a chunk | Will be made by operators Monday, final place it wag learned here today po gpm Aer In the meantime, reports from Mid will be, but developments may be expected,” said N. D. Moore, spokes man for the opers on the street cars was injured. ony ‘who suffered for nother increase of 25 cents per | the communist p Begodt slained to the police that| Wallace was shot last Wednesday | Medicine, says that severe cases are | Csult of one of the cells of the Etec anything in Western points showed the coal ac. been allowed by the fair | of planning to send out In Christ: }) 0° Ot erated pone late na noid at Potrero del Liano, and, ording | apt to result unfavorably within a ae bree. jgr ord beats Dr. Spar- ‘ore deadly thanawneeze |*hortage assuming serious propor) | ommittee on British Columbia || mas packages when the car fret began to alide. to the state department's advices, the |few weeks, but death may suddenty | "PE sre “ait ho sbechite rena shin, the writer is | tions sek iw expected to bring |! shipped here, following an in | murder was unwarranted. A mule| occur after months. Glacoveres. It generale teen y to form a defensive alliance oe ee bt . alt indwstrion se in the wholesale price ‘de- | Congressmen Are Wallace was riding was said to have; “The dise writes Dr. Wins | cefictsd about atx wants Oe rein ‘the local Burgiars’ union, and |* = jot dn = gee ‘ording to oper-|manded by Canadian operators Loses Suitca e rs shied at a machine gun, overturning | low, “is thought to follow influenza, | SONS Umvite a conference from the |reduiring coal, | Containin Stock! Returning to Work |: Hace was shot instantly by | but this is often not the case, Tred ini dee ¥ nag ators, 4 | * ontaini 4 WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov, 29. | the ican federal soldier who has ment is still subjudice. The prog y to respectfully ad MAY CUT OFF CARS Operators Posting 4, 8: Stillwagon, freah from Com" Congreaumen began arriving here to. NOt yet been arrested, according to/nosis is very uncertain, as cases Navy 3, Army Oat. s union that there is noth rx CITY. Wo 29,—The > tralia, came to Seattle to see the |) 7" : a ‘) the department vary so greatly in intensity and in- our Bease worth stealing Bc gi sorb canpany an Notice of New Pay sights Friday night an cia “thee fen on e. . volvement, Youth and middle 4 -End of First Half — baby, and somehow | nounced today that unless more coal| WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 29 His steps led him to th SD vecthy trom, thei fees -coketiouen: " Ss jappear most susceptible, especially | POLO W YORK, ever been a recog |i released to them by tonight, street |Formal notice of an average wage| terior of a cider joint. Mr. Sti eee oe thom have heen Discredit Report debilitated subjects. Nov, 29.—Uncle Sam's future defend: medium. car service must be discontinued. |advance of 14 per cent to all miners| wagon found difficulty in handling cvrceuiy sounding out public enti Of M B ttl It is the consensus of physicians ers on the land and sea battled here Te fo earthly use in @ [phe company has 20 cars of coal in ning to work, was posted today | his nd at the same time COn-| mont with regard to the | treaty exican MATTIE that sleeping sickness is not a this afternoon in their annual gride ever troubling to jimmy local yards, but railroads refuse to |s ntrances of coal mines thruout) duct the proper attention towards! 114 other legislation. Nov. 28. rollary of anish influenza, Dr. | iron contest in a downpour of rain. imto our domicile. The | release it ntral competitive field, com-| his suitcase, So he ¢ ked the case Hitchoock, administration | R en fighting | Read said. | Despite the weather, close to 35,000 thing in the way | prising Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and] with the proprietor, he claims the treaty fight, was due | in » City between forces led) Isolation of the germ of sle spectators sat in the stands, Cov- hhe would discover is a @ half of coal and half a “$15 wood tho it would be waste ef Western Pennsylvania,, according to| Saturday morning he returr | vr mill for his suit proprietor told him} 1 0 | from N e and] Hitch, knew ka today by Obregon and Carranga | sickness has not yet been 1k, thru his secretary, to-| troops and that Carranza had fled | complished, according to Read asked for an appointment with | Were discredited at the Mexican em r the most powerful micros ered by umbrellas and improvised in protectors they stood and heered the teams unmindful of the advices her Posting of the notices was the first move in the plan to wear down th No time like the Present, agree t 1 | seale ° the proposed new wage | c athing about the missing luggage. | ent Wilson bassy here today, The embassy has | the,germ has remained such a mys- ing rain, « ‘we are willing to establish a id strike, a policy decided upon by gov The suitcase contained 10 shares been in touch with the capital since | tery as the germ which precipitates first half ended with the score: ‘peale, and if the union will No place like Se- | ernment officials, following refusal) of stock of the Western Rolling Mill! Signs with the addition “and the time when the fighting was sup-|croup, smallpox and measies. | Army 0, Navy 3 fo put our house on the | of miners in joint conference here to $100 in cash and some daughter” can be seen in Londen al-| posed to have occurred and its dis-| Sleeping sickness is prevalent in| ‘The Navy is coached by Gil Dobie, attle, | ‘we will agree to subscribe sum per week or per _which, even on the basis a week, would be in of what the ‘most en- and discriminating and burglar could hope to #al | most as often as the olden “and| investigating son" partnerships PONTO THE PURP SUDDENLY ATTAINS NATIONAL RECOGNITION atches did not mention any clash. | more epidemic form in the East than | formerly of the University of Wash: report was believed false. [here ington at Seattle. No paper like The Star— So obey that impulse and advertise in the paper with the largest daily circulation in the Northwest. START TODAY Also the winners in this week’s rhyme con- Burglars’ union gives us ard to tack to our front ¥, showing that this is a fair and not broachable by Of the profession. anything be fairer than And now Ponto, the purp, is to be-{hecat, suddenly reappeared in. the;away from home." 1 national here, with | | the animal act, someone gets up from | who they are and what they do, or do| the buttons before, but having no ine / pie-|bowom. of his family, thus upsetting! Which, indeed, ix the case. And his seat and silently leaves the| not, stand for. signia to put on them, considered it ture emblazoned on the coatofarms | completely the plans of conniving of-|now comes the great denauement, | theatre, it is altogether probable th It is named for Jack London, be-| useless at the time. of a great humanitarian society, and | ficials who planned to railroad Ponto | proving, once and for all, that “every he ix a Jack London clubber. For |cause that famous author wrote| Now, however, Ponto has solved his name and the history of his un-|into eternity on the fiimay assump-|dog ha» his day.” that ix their purpose—to walk out of | “Michael, Brother of Jerry.” the|the problem. | Ponto's scampish just imprisonment, his cruel sentence | tion that Tom had been murdered or Mrs. Ricaby is none other than. any that shows an animal) story lly mis-|countenance, as it appeared in ‘The to death, and his final reprieve and and that Ponto, the purp, was the t ™ tary of the Jack London is the aim of and t Star the day of his arrest for a cat vindication will be written large in| slayer club of Seattle, And the Jack I of a dog that was the club to) treated by a brutal train y member of every theatre- | cause the society is particularly in-|murder that was never committed | to Ro test. are ennotihced jn the archives and handed down fro Mrs, Sanford Bertrand Ricaby, 1410 don club ix an organization so exten audience a membs {terested in dog welfare. It is one of |(tho some say ought to have been pe the s sified rd tlabts generation to generation until, in the|Seneea e#t., who has taken a keen sive that it is nation-wide, whose As yet the London club has no/the few societies in the country | committed), Is to be reproduced on e Clas ed Sec’ far away eons of the future, th 0 Tax Dodgers Sasron, C., Nov. 29, $600,000 000. will be forced m income tax dodgers in 1920 by government, according to 1] staternent issued today by , comminsioner of in interest in the case of Ponto from silent members ar work: insignia, It a membership i world shall become pure and there! the very outset, has come to the fore |ing, for the betterment of humanity this city which includes Mrs. H.-A xhall be no more cruelties heaped| with the timely suggestion that it\and purps: M. Bonnar, Mrs, Erastus Brainard, upon well-meaning, tho erring young) should be remembered that the purp| Wherever there is a theatre that Mrs. Lois W. Dryden and Mrs, Theo In spite of this, the society has|Mrs. Ricaby, “and we shall be proud puppy dogs who, but a few days ago was in # exhibits an animal act, there is also, dore Haller, jr., but it has no official quired, or is going to acquire,|to have his rogueish but honest eyes Honest Ponto, be it understood, |fair way to cross the Great Diylde,| very probably, a member of the J button that members can wear prom: | forthwith, enough money to buy aj looking out from our buttons upon a has found @ host of friends since Mr,| branded as a criminal, “had lly London club, Sometimes. there are|inently displayed on their breast to lot of buttons to distribute among|world we are trying to make mero” Tom Mariah, the county-city building | do nothing more serious than run| more than one. And when, during silently inform theatrical magnates|members. They would have procured | humanitarian” fa which demand from mem! sno initi-| the buttons of the Jack London clubs ation fee and no dues, which makes |all over America, t especially easy to belong to. “He is a kind, fond animal,” said Are you there? Try again next week. Particulars on classi- fied page.