The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 18, 1920, Page 9

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RPHEUM |!) |B ANH SURRENDER SPLITS U.S. CABINET Daniels Protests Palmer’s Backdown) to Southern Pacific THIRD - AND - MADISON HERE’S THE GREATEST BARGAIN IN THE AMUSEMENT LINE EVER—NOW UNTIL FRIDAY NIGHT The WINSOME WIDOWS’ A pretty and surprising spe- cialty, with silky robes and— everything Pay ae “SHE LOVES AND LIES” Two hours of laughs, giggles and roars with those four clever comedians— OLE-ABE-SLIVERS-TONEY Forced Out NO PLACE TO GO BUILDING COMING DOWN $40,000 Worth of Pongrpi, Pins an Payer Pane Must Be Sold at Once, Regardless of Cost Building Coming Down We must get out, and no place to go. We cannot move these pianos and Phonographs. We Must Sell Them and Do It Quick and NOW Prices Will Make Them Go As we cannot store our goods and move them again we must sell. Every family in Seattle is able to get a Piano, Player Piano or Phonograph if you act quick. Savings of Hundreds of Dollars Every tenant in this half block has been notified. We must give up possession—there are no “ifs” about it. ath vy bes to Suit Open Evenings During Sale New Pianos... New Pianos New Pianos . $650 $600 $550 | $1,000 Player Pianos, now $900 Player Pianos, now.. $800 Player Pianos, now $500 New Pianos $700 Player Pianos, now $450 New Pianos . $650 Player Pianos, now. These Are All Pianos and Player Pianos of Famous Baldwin Makes 20%, LESS——Phonographs, All New——20% LESS Used Victors, Columbias, Edisons at Small Prices $160 | $600 Used Pianos, as $390 $140 50 Used Pianos, $360 . $120 | $500 Used Pianos, 8335 B8O | $450 Used Pianos, 300 B65 | $400 Used Pianos, 250 Slightly used Pianos, Ludwig, Hamilton, Howard— ‘many more. quick! Come now! Open evenings during sale. C. C. BENDER CO. 1529 Fourth Ave., Between Pine and Pike on Fourth Remember the Address: Third Door South of Pine ‘on Fourth Open Evenings Come Evenings $200 Phonographs $175 Phonographs $150 Phonographs $100 Phonographs $90 Phonographs... new new new new new as Kurtzman, Brinkerhof, Act THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1920. BY HARRY B. HUNT | WASHINGTON, Feb, 18. |Decision by Attorney General Palmer to surrender the pub- Hlie’s fight to regain title to | 160,000 acres of oil lands, |patented by the Southern Pa- leifie railroad, already has | been protested by at least one member of the cabinet and| threatens to develop a split lin the president's official ‘family that may have far- leaching results. | At the department of fustice to- day it was stated that two letters! the} lprotesting against dropping jgovernment’s cases had been re jcetved from Secretary Daniels of} the navy, and that Daniels has had fat least one personal conference |with Palmer, at which he declared |his belief that the attorney general, |instead of meekly accepting the ad-| lverse opinion of Judge Blednoe, of |the federal district court of Califor |nia, should use every power at hin command to carry the case thru upreme court for decision. POSSIBLE, LS DANIELS | At the office of Frank K. Nebe | kock, assistant attorney general tn charge of public land cases, It was [stated, in the absence of Attorney General Palmer from Washington, that Palmer had told Daniels it was imponnible to appeal the suit because Judge Bledsoe's rullngn lett | the department with no Irgal han die by which the case could be car ried up. Daniels, however, not having «| legal mind, could not be made to understand how—if there was originally any justification for the government's action—those ques | tions could not be brought up for | review and decision by the exoreme | court. Daniels made it very clear, was said, both in his letters a Palmer and in his personal confer ence, that he believed the attor ney general was putting the depart ment of justice and the adminis | tration in a bad light by surrender ing the sult. He tolt Palmer that he might be absolutely right, that there might be no ground on which the case could be taken to the #u-| preme court, but that it would be much petter for the attorney gen eral to leave that decision to the court and not to attempt to speak for the court by making it himself. | ATTORNEY GENERAL'S DUTY TO PRESS SUIT In other words, he told Palmer that it was his duty as attorney general to press the mult to the limit and to leave the court to de- cide whether or not an appeal was Ponaible. Daniels’ particular tnterest tn the case arises from the fact that th tract in question includes some 1 000 acres of land included in the Daval oll reserves, which private of] interests have been trying for years to break into. His concern in the present in stance, however, is twofold, as he not only believes government rights in these lands are being surrendered before the fight ts really 1 “LU” IS INFECTIOUS A Disease Eastly Spread Through Close Association It in the form of minute germs from the coughs or sneeses of people who in tages with othe v ° exposure — thin may be difficult, almost Impossible. But we can ql keep our blood full of vitality and enable it to resist the attacks of disease germs, by taking Hood's Sarsaparilia, the pre-eminent -purifier th Dutder. and healt alds digestion and taste good.” After influenza or any other blood. | poisoning, prostrating dinease, it in| remarkable how it p va | 1 Hood * H ul jing the bow Cocoanut Oil Makes a Splendid Shampoo i If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what you wash it with Most soaps and prepared shampoos | contain too much alkali. This dries | the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful. Mulsified cocoanut oll shampoo (which is pure and en tirely greaseless), is much better than anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't possibly in. jure the hair. Simply moisten your hair with water and rub it In. One or two teaspoontuls will make an abund ance of rich, creamy lather, and cleannes the hair and scalp thorough ly. The lather rinses out easily, and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oll. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get Mulsified cocoanut of! shampoo at most any drug store. It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last everyone in the fam ily for months. Gastell Og Shu After you eat~always take EATONIC CFOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloat- pos Gassy Feeling. Stops food souring, ile an stomach miseries. ppstite. Keeps stomach Sweet and strong. increases Vitality and Pep EATONIC is the best reinedy. Tens of thou- sande wonderfully benefited, Only costea cent | ook goitively suarentesd refund Geto bie Five Metall Bartell Drug Stores, Btorea, | incapaoitated. Irveob Are on Their Way }from Vladivostok to Manila on the |Million Cases of that by the very act of surrender the attomey general is putting the j¢ administration tn * The lands in question one of the richest fields States undeveloped ol! remaining in the United Their value has been esti | mated at $600,000,000. ‘That they | © recognized as tremendously val aanets of the Southern Pa-| is proven by the fact that on the day following Judge Wedaoo's | decision Southern Pacific stock ad: | vanced 10 to 14:pointa on Wall at or an immediate increase in paper value of from $42,000,000 to $50,000, 000, Palmer's decision to drop the case without an appeal to the su preme court makes that increase | good WILSON'S TLI COMPLICATES SPLIT The prosident's flIness and his} Inability te check up tn detail on} decisions of his department heads has contributed to the threatened | public mplit: between Daniels and | mer over this matter. Had the! President been well, Palmer and| Daniels undoubtedly would have threshed out their different views | before him, and he himself would have determined what course should | be followed That was the course pursued | when Daniels, former Attorney! General Gregory and Secretary of | Interior Lane developed radical dif. | ferences over the provisionn of the | off leasing bill, With the president | however, there in| now No mediating force between op: | posing views in the cabinet, and} the present difference in so deep | rooted that there in no kéeping it Monger under cover. 1,800 YANKEES LEAVE SIBERIA to Manila WASHINGTON, Feb. 18.—About 1,800 officers and men of the ist in fantry regiment salied last Sunday from Viadivostok for Manila on the transport Crook, Gen. Graves, com: tmander of the American forces in Si beria, cabled the war department to- day. This in the second largest move ment of American troops out of Si. beria, SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 18.—The 1,800 officers and men being taken transport Crook will about “wind up” our forces in Siberia, tt wan eid at headquarters of the tranapart ser. vice here. These men will not be brought to this continent, but will disembark at Manila, where they were stationed before going to Siberia. Wire Briefs BREMERTON —The stockholders of Navy Yard hotel raising $20,000 to retain enterprise. DALLAS.Senator Joseph W. Bailey says he will run for gover- nor of Texas, ABERDEEN.—Forged checks of nearly $1,000 discovered in Hoquiam jand Aberdeen. PORTLAND.—Three freight cars derailed in tunnel near Brandt. WHITE BLUFFS.—Ranchers vote irrigation district of 60,000 acres, BREMERTON.—Six destroyers have arrived at yards to take on stores BELLINGHAM.—Two men fight [revolver duel with four officers at | wood ptpe factory. PORTLAND.--E. F. 34, son of Mra. P. A. Bunderstorm, Seattle, in dead here of influenza MELBOURNE.—David Li explorer, discovers new agricultural land in Northern Australia PASSAIC, N. J.—John Fromberger electrical engineer, shoots baby son nd self after wifo dies of influenza. Suliderstorm. Typhus in Poland WARSAW, Jan. 18-—4By Mail) One million ‘ of typhus are now raging in Poland and the Baltic prov inces, according to a survey just completed by the American Red Cross commission here, ‘The cause of the great epidemic is believed to be the lack of adequate delousing facilities, Poland, for ex- ample, is receiving hundreds of thou sands of Russian refugees, most of whom are covered with vermin and filth that carries the typhus germ, The Poli government has set up de. lousing «tations and is trying to de louse the refugees, but the authorities estimate that 85 per cent of the in coming masses have managed to es- cape the delousing stations. Nature Plays Trick on Jacob Schuster Jacob Schuster, 56, 1 nt at 807 N. 42d st., let Nature take its course. | Dry squad officers arrested him Tuesday when they sampled his ap-| ple juice, He was released on $100 bail. Say | Military Academy Measure Is Passed WASHINGTON, Feb. 18. The house has passed the military acad emy bill carrying an appropriation of $2, 41, 000. Home Distiller in Bad With U. S. being fined $100 and sen days in the city jail for having a still in his house on Spo kane st om Petrovich, Austrian, was turned over to federal authors. ties Tuesday for further prosecution, After tenced to 16 jor the ranking cabinet officer to as-| | questions |was so large it ‘|nothing but Tanlac for nothing else PLAN CHECK ON U. S. PRESIDENT’ Vice President Would Get Power in Illness of Pres. BY HERBERT W. WALKBPR (United Press Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON, Feb, 18—A cot atitut dment giving con gress and the supreme court joint power to authorize the vice president |sume the duties of president during a disability of the chief executive, n prepared by Representative 8. D, Fess, Ohio, for introduction in the house today Feus would have the constitution | amended so that congress might by urrent resolution declare that | the president in unable to serve, after & finding of the facta by the supreme court In case congress was not in new sion when the president became dis abled the Fess amendment would give the vice president power to call it into special session for the pur pone of determining whether the chief executive is able to function. | HOOVER STATES | HIS POLICIES Says He Is in Favor of Treaty Ratification NEW YORK, Feb. 18—Horbert Hoover made known his attitude on | |weveral national and international | in & speech before the American Institute of Mining and/ Metallurgical Engineers, of which | he was un pusly elected presi: | |dent. He declared for | Prompt ratification of the peace | treaty. Establishment of a federal budget | ayntem | Right of empfyes to bargain col-| lectively | Retention of a large merchant | fleet to protect American overseas | commerce Regarding reture of the railways| to private control, Hoover said it) “places predominate private opera-| tion upon its final trial” Hl Hoover maid there was little dan-| ger of radicaliam ever controlling | this country because of the large farmer population. Policemen’s Ball Danced in Cellar The crowd at the Policemen’s ball! at the Masonic temple Tuesday night was necessary to open up the banquet hall in the base- ment to handle the overflow Mayor and Mra Fitegerald and Chief and Mra. Joel F. Warren led the grand march. Long after mid night the last patrolman shook his last shake. | . Chinese Arrested With Opium Cargo Two tins of opium, valued at i led to the arrest of Lee Sing, 24. Chinese waiter, as he stepped from the gangplank of the steamer Prin. coms Adelaide at Pier 1 Tuesday night. Federal officers are expected to charge him with smuggling nar cotica, Thieves Take Tools; Paving Job Halted! Thieves stole 250 feet of hose and A number of shovels Tnesday from a paving job at 36th ave. 8. and Mount Baker bivd., making it necessary for the laborers to loaf until new tools were obtained. “fT PUT ME ON MY FEET AGAIN,” STATES ELLIS Lond Standing _ Indigestion Gone and He Eats Any- thing Since Taking Tanlac “My present good health ts due to ever helped me, and I have been try-| ing for years to get relief,” said Tom | Ellis, 1991 Jefferson avenue, Ta coma, Wash., a longshoreman, while | telling of his experiences with Tan da | r years and years,” continued Mr, Ellis, “I have suffered from stomach trouble and indigestion. 1 had no appetite and the little I did} manage to eat would sour, gas would | form and puff me all up and press against my lungs until I could hard ly get my breath. I was constipated, suffered a gre a) | with headache and at time woul get #o dizzy I would have to grab hold of something to keep from fall ing. My kidneys bothered me a lot and T had a throbbing pain across the small of my back all the time. This pain hurt me #o at night I could get but little sleep, and in the mornings I felt simply terrible. Then, too, I had rheumatism so bad in my hips and legs I could searcely get about I had lost considerable weight and felt so tired and wornout all the time and was just in such bad shape every way it was all I could do to drag myself to work, and life had about become a burden to me. “I had heard so mahy men with whom I work praising Tanlac I de- cided to try it, and it began to help me right from the start, and today after taking five bottles I feel just like a new man, I have a splendid appetite and can eat anything 1 want without a sign of indigestion afterward, I am never troubled with gas or shortness of breath, am not constipated and have not had a headache or become dizzy since I started taking Tanlac. My kidneys are in good condition, the pain has all gone out of my back and the rheumatism has just about left me entirely. I have gained several pounds in weight, sleep well and when morning comes always get up feeling like tackling a big day's work, which I can do with the greatest ease, In fact, Tanlac has put me back on my feet so I am enjoying good health, and fam only too glad to say a good word for it.” Tanlac is sold in Seattlo by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di- rection of a special Tanlac represer: tative.—Advertisement, . -PXTIERSON Co. SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Practical Values Thursday Of advantage to those who wish to prac economy in buying. tice careful A, Low-Priced “Eppo” A Petticoat of Attractive ee and Excellent Wearing Quality, of the Well ippo” is an investment in petticoat satisfaction. E Recognized Eppo Make )ppo petticoats are of uniformly superior fit and tailoring and quality of material, whether they be of satin, taffeta, jersey or heatherbloom. All Eppos open on the side front with the fullness across the back, held by elastic of exceptional durability. This Low-Priced Model Heatherbloom top with taffeta flounce. This model comes with changeable flounces. Priced at $4.95. ‘The same model in extra size, at $5.75 each. Practical Values in Women’s Shoes High Lace Boots $9.85 —Women’s Black and Brown Kid Lace Boots, made on medium slender vamp, plain toe, welt sotes and leather Louis heels. Priced at $9.85 a. pair. Boots’ for Comfort $8.00 ~ Women's Button and Lace Boots, made by Grover, especially styled for comfort. Made with cloth tops, welt and turn sole and medium low heels. Sizes 3 to 8. Priced at $8.00 a pair. —-Shoe Department, Second Floor. Hose in black silver, beaver, sizes, at $1.25 Three paits for $1.00. —Women’s Mercerized Lisle Hose, in black, white, cordovan, medium gy’ay, in all desirable shades —Petticoats, Third Floor, Women’s Stockings Of Dependable Qualities for Every-Day Service —Women’s medium-weight Cotton and white. All sizes. navy and champagne. All sizes, at 50c, 65¢ and 75c a pair. —Women’s Fiber Silk Hose in ‘black, white, navy, cordovan and gray. All a pair. —Hostery, First Floor, Silks, Velvets and Woolens At Prices of Unusual Advantage ie Buyers Who Would Practice Careful Buying in Materials of Staple Dependability —Some pieces secured in special purchases, other pieces reduced for clearance, and others purchased before recent advances but delayed until now in shipment. Each piece represents a value of note, Velour Coating ~Three pieces heavy Silvertone Velour Coat ing. In brown, mahogany, purple; 54 inches wide. Priced at $4.95 a yard. street wear | Plaid | | —Tweed Plaid Skirtings One width is sufficient for a skirt. 66 inches wide, priced at $4.95 a yard. Skirtings for golf, sports and Broadcloth Black Taffeta —foft Chiffon Finish Black ‘Taffeta. Five pleces in the lot. Very specially priced at $1.85 a yard. 36 inches wide. | Suiting and Dress low price. forest green, taupe, Velvet Corduroy —Twelve pieces of Velvet Corduroy now so popular. rose, fawn, taupe, malolet, old rose, white, plum and black. 32 inch —Dres: In African brown, tailor blue, wide, Goods Section, First Floor, — Broadcloth at a specially Colors are African brown, navy blue, gray and fawn. 50 inches wide, at $3.50 a yard. Copenhagen, priced at $1.75 a yard, The Eldredge Machine —Post women know that much may be saved by mak their gowns at home, and better satisfaction in the garments made to suit the individual is assured. And the Eldredge Two- Spool is the time and iabor saving sewing machine, makes home sewing easier and more pleasant. machine sewing from two ordinary spools of thread which It is the only direct. — It works rapidly and makes a smooth, dependable stitch. —In spite of the superior quality, priced very reasonably, with sma’ the Eldredge machine is — i payments arranged tor” if desired. * Your old machine will be taken as part payment. — Adjustable Dress Forms +o --A Dress Form in the home where sewing is done insures perfection in the fit of the garments, and ease in “fittings.” | ~-We will make a lining to fit any form free of charge. figure and adjust it to the —Home dressmaking is pleasant, practical and ccompettent when the National Dress Form and Ek dredge Two-Spool Sewing Machine are used. —Second Floor. Special Price Basement An Extraordinary Special Purchase of 138 Women’s and Misses’ Coats On Sale Thursday at $9. 75 A Price So Low That It Has No Relation Manufacturing Cost Even to —For autoing and boat trips Coats such as these are worn throughout the year in this climate, and many of the lighter weight Coats will be suitable and comfort- able throughout the summer for the cooler evenings in the parks and at the beaches. The Coats are made of velours, kerseys, silvertones and mixtures, in belted, semi-belted and loose-back styles. others unlined. There are coats with large collars of plush, cloth, as well as coats with collars of self material. Some are full lined, others semi-lined, and kit coney and beaver —The range of colors includes navy, brown, burgundy, taupe, green, tan, gray and heather mixtures. —The size range is complete, in sizes 16 to 46. New Spring Hats at $7.50 —50 smart New Straw Hats, with the voguish touches of beads, ribbons, yarns, flowers and novelty ornaments. These are exceptional values — hats which would sell regularly as high as $15.00. Thursday Apron Special 300 Bungalow Aprons, Special $1.75 —Percale Bungalow Aprons, in both light and dark grounds, in stripes, checks, small figures and broken plaids, Round, square and V-neck styles. Open front and side front models, all well made, neatly trimmed and finished with broad belts and pockets. SES PS STERN TE TN

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