The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 5, 1920, Page 5

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r, ili ih The Crib You Promised Baby Is Greatly Reduced 4 8: ote now mothers will wait no longer to pur- chase the Crib for the “little darling,” for we = is) ojojojofojofofofojojojo| offer these attractive Baby Beds at a price that means an important saving. = The “Bob” Crib a Is of white enameled metal, with springs and drop sides. Mike Wustration Reduced from $17.00 to ... $12.00 “ ” * The “Pet” Crib Has drop sides and Vernis Martin finish, value at the original price of $14.00. a The “Harry” Crib Is similar to the above cribs but higher: Vernis Martin fin ish, drop aides and steel springs. Regular $19, now $13.50 Children’s High Chairs ‘They are here in a wide variety, and priced at popular fig uree—-$3.75, $4.50, $5.50 and up to $13.50. We are showing a very useful model, with sanitary enameled tray GENEROUS CREDIT TERMS ALWAYS Formerty WoodhouseGrunbaum Furniture Co, Inc, GRUNBAUY and le a good NOW. canes $10.50 |Warns Against Income tax returns must be I) filed on or before March 15, 1919, reons wait until ys to fle: some will be tate in getting their re- turns in owing to the rush and Will be penalized. Pile early. See GRANT L. MILLER Income Tax Fupert and Accountant, Formerly Deputy Collector of In- 1 135 Ni Block, Seattie, Main 2525, makes ity of advising and as- taxpayers in these mat- |nald Modre, who shot | Warns against the perils of vice. Chloroform Horse his horse Tobey wae didn’t want the animal He Boece eecntninnttcae icine jojojojojoo) mat SEnseene naee == IS DYING Perils of Vice LONDON, March 5.—In a@ letter “from the grave to fathers,” Regt himself, Master’s Request SCOTTDALE, Pa, March 5.-—Ty the terms of James Morrison's wil! chioroformed in | 3 Extra Good Tool Specials For SATURD 2 $1.00 Atkins Coping Saws, Special at 69c $2.25 14-Inch Stillson Pattern Wrench at $1.49 Beatty Hand Axes, Special at $1.49 These Beatty Hand Axes are of excellent quality. Your i} choice of No. 1, 2, 3 or 4 \ sizes, special at $1.49. Grass Seeds ond tes Onion Sets, per qt... 20¢ Blue Grass, per Ib... .45¢ Lime and pe ea 1-Ib. White Clover, per Ib. 80¢ can . . B5¢ A one-pound can of lime and sulphur makes 5 gal- lons of spray. Puritan Lime, 5-pound package at 35¢. 45c Glass Butter Jar at 29c Special for Saturday—A one-pound Glass Butter Jar with a fit-in cover, a big value at 20¢. iSkisansers Extra Special—Peet Bros.’ Creme Oil Toilet Soap, Special 4 Bars for 29c Creme Oil Toilet Soap is made of pure olive and cocoanut oils which are recognized as nature’s best cleansers. Spe- cial, 4 bars for 20¢. $2.25 KIDDIE KAR Special At $1.69 Kiddie Kars are the ideal wheel toy for small children. We are of- fering the No. 2 size special for Sat- urday at $1.69. AW EWE AND = “The Store for Useful Articles” | "ADRIATIC STEW PIECE BY PIECE Dodsland, Sask., Gobbling Druid After Bitter Fight DODSLAND, Sask. March 5. The town of Druid im dying. Dads land is gobbling it up, brick by brick and timber after timber. For years these towns, a mile and a balf apart, have waged a vicious duel Dodsland in on the Grand Trunk Pacific railway and Druid is on the Canadian Pacific | railway, The two railways crow between the towns. The C. P. KB refused to make a stop at Dots | land because it stopped at Druid. Dodsianders suggested that the two towns rebuild themaeives at the rafiway crossing, where both railways would make stope: Druid lana refused. There was bitter argument for years. “Very well,” said Dodstand folk finally, “It's @ fight to the fifish.” Dodaland rohanta clubbed to gether and started the purchase of Druid piecemeal. They bought a building here and a house there and they are hauling them to Dodala Before spring there won't be| enough of Druid to make it pay for any railroad to maintain a station. Plan Mass Meeting to Boost Hoover Hoover for President league com mittes met in Herman W. Rose’ of fice, 720 Smith bullding, Friday after, noon, and out! plans for a parti meet week. Judge ¢ mod A member of thin committes, declined to serve, on the grounds that “judi cial participation in polftics was out of accord with the spirit of the con stitution.” Police Aid Search for ex-Service Man| Friends of Thomas Sealand. 38. a and an ex-service man ted the have a5th ave. §. last $50 when last appeared from 4419 |Monday. He had | seen. REDWOOD hugh, San Francisco, lreward for thieves who |iquor and wines. CITY.—W. M. Fits offers $1,000 got $30,000 BY VALENTINE M | Bacilli of Influenza Magnified over | 6,000 Times. } os Jalap, Then surround yourself with hot wi and sold in every drug store as Dr TENTH AVENUE WILL BE PAVED Northeast Highway Will Tap Bothell Road One of the most tmportant project» on the calendar of the council mrects amd sewers committee for the pres ent year, the Improvement of Tenth ave, N by erading and paving, was ordered Tuesday afternoon. It is planned to make Tenth ave N. EK. an arterial highway, connect nishing a paved roadway for the ter ritory to and from the districts north And east of Beattie. ‘The work is covered by two resota tions, one for grading at entimated cont of $47.7 i$ and the other for paving, at an estimated cet of $165, | 71620. An extra appropriation of $50,000 will be made from the gen eral fund, to cover the co#t of the extra width of pavement, due to the | tact that it le to be an arterial high: | way 'Deep Snow Forces Arctic Birds South | HARTFORD, Conn., March 5 | Deep snows and an unusually severe | winter in the Arctic regions are be lieved to have caused the migration [to this state of thousands of birds seldom seen in thin latitude. Last December the same phenom- ena was observed and noted in New Hampshire and Maine by John Bur- roughs, the celebrated ne ‘alist and bird student. Burroughs attributed the cause to unusual pnditions in Greenland and Labrador and pre dicted a severe winter to follow ‘That he was right in his contention is now borne out here in Connecticut not only by the arrival af these | strange birds, but by weeks of zero | weather and heavy snowstorms The Arctic birds include varietics Jot snow buntings, grosbeeks, shrikes | and woodpeckers. Can’t Understand Absence of Girl Police continued the search Friday for Dorothy Norton, 16, who disap peared from her home at 2353 Fair | view ave, Tuesday evening. The girl left without any money or personal belongings. Her parents are at a | Jona to explain her motive for leay | ing. OTT PIERCE, M. D Influenm is produced by a bacil. lus or germ coming chiefly from discharges from the nose, throat and lungs of the person who coughs, sneezes, or spite, The person at tacked feels chilly, develops a high temperature — usually accompanied by headache and “ache all over"—as it is usually described. If you have the above symptoms get an possible, after a hot Take as quickly foot-bath mustard ra purgative, such ae one m up of May-apple, leaves of’ aloe, root of Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. ater bottles, It is a fact mentioned ing with the Bothel! road and fur-| | into bed SAYS MEXICO INFLUENZA GERMS. AND U.S. 0. K. Bonillas Declares Relations Better Than Ever BY DON E. CHAMBERLAIN WASHINGTON, March 5 Rela tions | between Mexico and = the United States are better now than ever before in the history of the two countries, Mexican Ambasnador Ignacio Bontllas declared in an in. terview today Honilas ascribed this t two things: “First, Mexico has succeeded tn practically eliminating tte banditry, and, pecond, the American people have taken @ more moderate atti tude toward Mexico,” he aid. “I view the situation as having reached a point of better under. standing and feeling between the peoples of beth countries.” Bonitiaa, who in mentioned an a candidate for the Mexican presi dency at the July elections, will confer with President Carranza on the future relations between hin country and the United States, He will also conmult with his political advisers on his chances at the com ing election and make a decision as to whether he will run. “I am taking back a favorable report on the relations between my country and the United States,” he maid. “They never were better. “With the exception of the ban- dits controtied by Pancho Villa, Pe laez and Felix Diaz, the Mexican government has the bandit situa. tion well in hand and I expect to seo the complete pacification of Mexico by the time the elections are held.” What Bonfllan regards an the moderate tone of the American prems toward recent events on the Mexican border is taken by him ams an indication that the “inter. ventionists have shot their bolt.” “I believe we now have reached & satisfactory understanding of one another,” he said. During the ambassador's ab- fence from the United States, Sal vador Diego Fernandez, minister plenipotentiary, will act as charge affaires. Population Gain Li ted i in Census arch 6.—Census cod the follow Joliet, M1, reveport, ston, N. ¥., 26,884. Increase since 1910: Joliet, 3, 7 per cent; Mun 2 per cent; Anderson, , or 32.4 per cent; Lexington, or 18.3 per cent; Shreveport, . or 66.6 per cent. Decrease: Kingston, N. ¥., cent. No Trace Is Found of Legion Veteran All efforts on the part of the police 21, who of the have failed e was k. 24 persons, or 1 per m Co, Monday, Bagnall announced bank to cash typewriter. or heard of him since, ‘The missing man was a member of the Elmer J. Noble post of the Amer- ican Legion, which ts aiding the po: lice in the search. He served more leave for Mexico City thin week to This ‘Dickey Bird ft an unfinished letter in his | Nothing haa been ie The displays of jaunty flower trimmed | Spring Millinery models express a refinement that charac terizes them as exceptional and authentic examples at $7.50 and $10.00, —Second Floor, She Rhodes Co. Pictorial Review and McCall Patterns 20 Smart Top Coats Special Saturday Until Noon At $38.75 Second Floor, Ey for a Saturday morning sale the ready= to-wear section has as jj sembled from the regular. stock these Top Coats with Collars of Fur and Self Material They are made of fine Wool Polo Cloth, Silver- tone, Velour, Bolivia Cloth and Diagonal Coatings, in brown, tan, blue and heather mixtures. With plain and fancy silk lin- ings, novelty pockets and narrow belts. Sizes 16 to | 40. Formerly $55.00, $59.50, $65.00 and $75.00. Special Saturday until noon, choice at $38.75. BLOUSES | Of Sheer Loveliness | At $1.50 to $12.50 Upper Main Floor, HE new Tailored Blouses of dainty French voiles, sheer batiste, madras and linens, dotted Swiss and organdie, display exquisite specimens of refined day-time styles that will be much admired by dis- tinctive femininity. High and low neck models in | white, flesh, beige, rose and Copenhagen blue are | beautiful with tucks and hemstitching of pronounced \; simplicity, | Sizes 36 to 44 { at a London auction, the Price on record paid for a book, Optometrist and Mfi med |Pays $76,000 for | Two-Ounce "Book| SPOKANE, March 5.—-Wil Frie NEW YORK, March 5.—America by, shoe clerk, saw and heard a/has come into possession of one of feathered songster on the limb of his | the choicest Uteragy treasures in the budding apple tree, “I don’t think it English speaking world—a musty twa sign of spring,” aayn Frisby, “My | first edition of Shakespeare's “Venus only reason for mentioning ft is that | and Adonis," over 300 years old. The the bird was warbling the opening |tiny, two-ounce volume was pur- bars of ‘Poor Butterfly.’ chased by H. Huntington for $76,000 The Modes for Spring Are Here to Greet You Warbles Threat) I* a charming array of Suits, Coats, Dresses, etc., that women just love to possess, and do, since the Eastern has made purchasing so easy by means of dignified credit terms. New Arrivals Include Polo Coats and Sports Skirts They are certain to be very popular because they have such a strong appeal to stylish dressers. Why not be among those who are first to wear the latest ? “Credit Gladly” When you choose from the new Spring showing you may have credit terms arranged to suit your convenience. Isn’t this the logical way to pur- chase? Men Want the New Bradbury Styles They know these famous Suits and Coats by their past reputation and are anxious to select the new models. Come in and see what's what for the coming season, by physicians of the largest experience that the effort on the part of | than two years in the navy. nature to throw off the poisons results sometimes in inflammation of the Taliforn a ‘Secret Service Man Dies OAKLAND, Cal., March 6.—Harry M. Moffett, chief of the secret serv- ice for California and Nevada, is dead here. He died from intestinal trouble after having been weakened by Influenza, | Moffitt had established an enviable record during 25 years of service for the government. He formerly was & newspaper man. . kidneys. It is therefore very important to assist nature In eliminating skin and kidneys. Not only should this be carefully attended to by the sick, but by the A new kidney remedy called This “Anuric” the toxins (poisons) from the body thru the bowels, person who wishes to ward off an attack “Anuric” (anthuric) can be obtained of the druggist. flushes the bladder and kidneys and throw» off the poisons (toxins), and should be taken with hot water or hot lemonade, Clear the nose Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It is, thin, with some good antiseptic spray or of course, unnecessary for mo to emphasize keep strong and A metallic projectile, * and observe the three C’ neither germ nor “TF healthy, fear BPOKAN Clean skin, Clean bowels, Clean nose and mouth and you have half won]apparently machine made, crashed 4 batte down into yard of O, De Camp, jar-| j the bat \. ting the home,

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