The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 16, 1920, Page 2

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156 sars /@JXJ the homefurnisher! +] EXTRA SPECIAL! —trunks, suit cases, bags: factory samples —we have purchased of high-grade lugg: —10 high-grade bags and kits, all genuine leather; smooth and walrus grain; black and brown; $45— to $50— values; choice, = SEATTLE ~~ nm his confusion, Stafford said, he * to shout out the window into ‘the street. Fils first thought was to) the police, “4 calling police headquarters, W. office. Beeks mid he had ots Ro one in the corridor or on ws jourres stairs who aroused bis suspicions. © Within 20 minutes affer the rob- had fled, a squad of police mo- ycle men and detectives arrived Phey questioned Stafford closely. He ' comfused and could give but } meager description of the two men. He nor Beeks was able to tell with exactness how much money had stolen. ‘The office force had re- on duty until 230 a. m., they and had taken the usual precau | | 'DR.CALDWELL’ SYRUP PEPSIN LAXATIVE PERFECT “BETTER _ DEAD “file isa burden when the body ‘teracked with pain. Everythin; “worries and the victim become: GOLD MEDAL robe and box trunks, s j n bags; all high-grade merchandise and in R perfect condition; one of each. Zohn W. ¢ Amuageen, Magnus J. Wildroses $37.50 dress trunk, %, size, sale price. . $55— dress trunk, full size, sale price. $25— dress trunk, full size, sale price. $75— wardrobe trunk, sale price... . $115— wardrobe trunk, sale price $95— wardrobe trunk, sale price.... $125— wardrobe trunk, sale price. . $55— wardrobe trunk, sale price...... $195— wardrobe trunk, sale price..... .... to the street.” ;amee about locking up after the chief deputy collector, em |tnar $240 in gold, that had been put| p, metae ts and downhearted. service, to a factory sample line age, including ward- uit cases and hand w M —14 high-grade genuine with or to lock and catches, without straps; $2 $26— values; ch Starts BANDITS «= One monty was pr: away mated approximately missing. ‘They enti $20,000 was Close inspection of the eafe showed jin an envelope and placed with the|s had been overlooked in the jrobbers’ haste. The silver compart-| > ment, where stacks of dollars and smaller coin wer Ota, M, "705% King at, bo: Pelagall, I. 210 teth ive 2007 M Lund. nm Cart A Skoglund, Hilda C. Seatt! leather sult cases, with Ogata, Yonetara, strong reinforced leather Igerii, Tama, & covers, fitted with heavy papoott, Leedham, Mary, 67, _WEDNESD Kiwanis of 91 new mem BIRTHS Ca 337 10th isging ACK, TL Hight ion, BL Vy or H.W. 8 Name and Address oF . Olat A tr Dagny, ohn W. Quige, Seattle TF Seattle freon Honrictta LW De Reatt Pau Cy Ivie, Clarence W rds, Edna Bh, m, I « nh, Heasia, Seattle ker, Anni tnon, Wal attle attela. Ina, Se yde, Charles rn, Oma 1, Tet Swanson, Erhard a Blair, Martha A. fair DEATHS [bbings, Bdward, 47 . 4331 Laton Ward, i6 mit ave. nme, « Yige A., 66, 2223 W DIVORCES GRANTED Arvold, Gunla, from Lawrence | OVERLOOK GoLD © he was hanging up the receiver, AND SILVER CACHE 5 letos, May, from Frank. mis, Sarah G,. Sudie, from John a, well Louls. homas, Y aatmanter an 27 47th & Wy b Pine at, boy ARRIAGE LICENSES | Age a "0 BELIEVE SHIP le ty “live M, Vancouver, B 1Tth & 2 18th b 11 monthe, a ave, San Jaun nt, 2 days, 1117 20th & ie W, 69, 38th BW. and it, Richard F, 60, 306 Sum-| the from Lester O. Ruth McKinley, from Crom- Ki, from Clifford. : haw, 1 m crom nae 4 ments to the nerves and eciatica uf. poncer, Mugen Ann from Thomas G.|terers will be interested in the ox Minnie, from Benjamin F. oncealed, was not ss opened by Stafford and its contents was intact, | Beeks and Stafford gave it aa their Jopinion that the men must have en tered the office with the crowd at a late hour Monday night and con cenled themselves in a room adjoin ing the tax collector's office, or in a clothes closet In the latter room. When Deputy Collector Jones ar rived, half an hour later, he at once discovered the loss of his property| and money contained in his purse He had put the purse in rency compartment The purse contained, according to! Jones, a 4%-karat diamond ring, val-| | wed at $1,700, and a diamond atic | pin with three diamond studs, all ap at about $2,000, together with he cur in currency, and a check for ousand dollars. 24 bers left behind. This, the McNamee, Motorcycle Policeman E. B, Oakes and Patroiman O Buskirk, unable to get @ mtisfactory description of the men from Staff ord, called in a police stenographer tg take the cashier's statement at more leisure. Stafford could not compose him-|” self. He was asked two questions,|" police report shows that he calle: headquarters at 7:50, At 11 a m. Internal Revenue Cot lector David J. Williams arrived from Tacoma and called a confer-| ence of employes, federal secret ser vice agents and detectives. 10's in stacks of $500, and $2 in of $1,000, | Seattle Man May tion with his former wife, apparent-| the central emergency hospital Ask for “HILL’S' FIVE MILLION PEOPLE’ a USED IT LAST YEAR HILL'S CASCARA QUININE “a sail. frrmetaley Sard s genuine ‘in in 4 fails. ficial Detectives W. A. Fuller and M. J.| wonday vont L Van) tendent a | of public utilitjes: FOR NEW PLAN After two houry conference behind closed doors with the city Mayor Hugh Caldwell announced at noon Tuesday that an ordinance would be immedi. ately drafted to place the mu- nicipal street railways under the direction of one man, responsible couneil, to the mayor, At @ special council meeting to be | finally act, after bi . Was the summar Thomas F f public utilities. Murphine had hande lhow long he had been sentiopeana|. The mayor's letter the office and what time the follows: past on | “On takin | pli Maid he began work in sl . en we |1919, and the robbery took place — : ag . | minu same was ‘_ ; fore he relinquished his do now eld probably Wednesday, the ordi-| of ™ © rexorted to to give nance will be introd and be con-| me re ay my daughter ad-| sidered for passage Monday Dr. Williams’ Pink box and in a Mayor Hugh M. Caldwetl’s first of. |‘ nzurated | '¥ 11K Murphine as superin 4 his resigna- to Murphine| @ I find that you th Mayor and tb m just duties yur resignation specifies that it is ‘to take éffect as soon aa your uc cessor can be appointed and qualify.’ I desire to take steps immediately to reorgahize the public utilities de-| partment and this, in my opin | ‘The stolen money was wrapped in| Will not be facilitated by your Hf ~ |bundies, $5 bills in bundies of $250,|tM¥Ine In office ax superintendent | Had you waited | ja few hours and filed your resigna Bet. |tion with me, it could have been in| |euch form as would have relieved mo jof the necessity of Live After Shot °°" °" removing Ap it is, in carrying out +4 my plan, it becomes necessary to re. SAN FRANCISCO, March 16—Cal- move you a superintendent of pu vin Gilmer, of Seattle, who shot him- lic utilities and I jself Saturday night over the heart, remove you as superinte following an attempt at reconecilia- public utilities, effective this date. “I am this day filing with the city ly is recovering, it was sald today at council a copy of this letter contain jing my reasons for your removal.” of lent BK. D. O'Brien, assistant superin lent of public utilities, was tion. Plans will be worked out, it is un-’ rstood, with the co-operation of the ty council, whereby the street rail “ay department will be placed in superintendent, sho will be nominally under the wu. pertntendent of public utilities, but who will be directly responsible to the mayor. Under the present system the wu- rintendent of public utilities ts arge of a gene mporarily in charge. Mayor ( Cherry's Style Shop, over Pig'n oll indicated a desire to have D. W.| Whistle, 2nd Ave. between Madison | enderson, superintendent of trans-|and Spring vortation, placed in charge of oper nt — Mficlo head of the street railway urtment L, N, Notbohm, general utility in- Superintendent qed hip resignation to |, aig department’ chief Monday. stigator under curphine, hat one you AN THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1920. WORKERS DIE IN |YANKS ON RHINE [5° Ase Killed.in BERLIN BATTLE WAITING ORDERS In Bitter Clash With Teuton! Congress to Decide Whether Auto Revolutionists 1 BERLIN, March 16.—Clashes 4 between revolutionists and work ors have occurred in various Mayor Cald-| parts of Bertin, expeckilly in in honor| Schoenberg and Wilmersdorf. many wounded, and the suburbs yesterday as the re} wult of clashes between citizens revolutionary soldiers A umber of persons were killed and many |turned machine guns on the crowds Y aft |General Von Luttewits's headquar Potadam square. Later a mob a soldiers in the suburbs with cammaltios n both mice Pour persor wounded when soldiers a bomb had been thrown at oY al “| NOW RESCUED In Distress #1 New YORK, March 16-—The was be tow the coastw Vaarli reported by! mahip t the of a an bark and 11 new had another n aboard was « SLIATICA PAINS HAVE VANISHED Relation is neuralgia of the sciatic) ough tt is often called aci-| nation. Pain is the invart-| able symptom, its location followir «| course of the a nerve, In some canes the pain is knifetike. sharp. gor shooting, In others it is dull afd’ aching. = is an unfailing warning m is under ouries nour ishment to the nerves, but If it Be: comes thin the nerves fail to enough food. There ts need at sw times for a tonic that will enable the blood to carry the missing ele a dh. |pertence of Mr. J. H. Shamel, who lives on Route No. 2, Cherryvale, Kanmas. Mr. Shamel says “I suffered from sciatica for years until the pain finally became so} severe th ‘ould hardly endure tt I was confined to my bed for two] months and had to be propped up, for I couldn't lie The pair was chiefly In hough my whole body seemed to be affected The pain was so sharp at times that| it seemed as though a knife was be. | ing run into me. Often the pain} would shift from oné hip to the| other. “Iwas under treatment for a lone time but nothing seemed to benefit me Li did not help and I ame so bad that injections da t tter. 1] « the until the] and Thy ot been | ectatica I atror ow uffer frorr © Dr. William: val Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold ll druggists or w | | ‘Your Bu ying Power “°\) Is Unlimited Here as A NEW gleasure tn shoppitig awaits you at Cherry's, Hore ight In a display of beautiful you may de spring fashions, knowing that there Is noth- ing 80 charming, nothing so luxurious, but you may pom it ff you wish. For Cherry's terms, | extended freely to every honorable person, make ft pec sible for anyone, no matter how slender their income, to enjoy practically unlimited buying power. “I Won't Fight!” Said the Copperhead | “GOOD!” Said Abraham Lincoln WHY? & tro. Fifteen have been killed and [vse Severe fighting occurred in Berlin tion. and tary affairs paring a resolution calling © tary the exact statum diers on G tween “many, the troops as he neon fit © mation resolution rust prep involve the Many mombers of congress declare American troops should be sent into etion only in case a renewal of the H world war ts threatened. They urge | Hit by Autos vick clarification of the status ot!| This Year he peace ‘| Liner Mohawk With 185 Is) x | Am Ipate, be ratified t March 1 n killed and 200 Vifty person wounded in reichewehr. troops at Dre n Vossiche he communiats, the di They Will Be Used | A the uilding, and BY HERBERT W. WALKER | altiew fe n the relohs WASII N, March 16.—Con-|wehr troops atttempted to recapture gress may take stepe 0 determine | 't Whether the 16,000 United Btaten | eerie eeeencurred at Laipals, | ya now in Germany are to bel weimar and Ge the dispatoh od aguinst the revolutioniats in the | mid levent allied leaders order such ac At Hamburg, Baltic troops, sup | ng the revolutionists, were re | port re the city 0 the Hert ported entre Chairman Kahn, of the house mille! )o1s yy m. 6, today is pre to ifform ec Baker r of American sol man soil state of war exiating be-| bereer, former mit and Ger-| under President Hebe use the| rested by the rev of finance been ar der the the United Staten president can but some con- Eressional leaders, it is understood,| PAIS, March 16 The Neve Zu want it made plain that no auch ae-| Mich Zeitung publishes @ Stuttgart tion should be taken by the president |dispateh quoting stay Hauer, wntll « enn has pi {an authort-|former German chancellor, as de claring the ultimatum of the Kapp Ber peace pre n welz power in ed violation of cause of re of fighting in| nANY, of wing in rmany from eng to act war other power © Americans in The forces of the ere to see that the nany or powers are terms of the) R. A. McLean, R. F. D. No. 7, 1 for Injuries at the waa tre treaty are carried out, but the tal Monday afternoon ricans are there 0 see that been struck by @ © torts of the armistice are n it re ed the corner jolated, If the Germans refuse t and Pine st. M carry out the peace terms, the an told the police the driver of reneh and British troops might act.|] the truck evideatly did not know t the Americans should not part of the accident, because he kept this country bas not reaty, on going. 'NO COMPROMISE EBERT CABINET IN GERMAN WAR Is Reached Revolt Forces FRANKFORT, March 16— | STUTTGART March 16 | Denial that the new and old | ipng y Ae: | t have open ake indieiien lations was received from both factions by ere y government the Frankfort Zeitung here to | Berlir wan decided day on t of the ¢ A dixpatch from Stuttgart maid ft inet. All men © pre “ that reports of | ¢ ¥ r, min WINK of the strong, healt who are prominent and you will find that they usus and energy—the kind th with iron. Iron ts red-blood food- into the veins of men and roses fnto the blood and ds the weakened ¢ into the who their blood fil doing things ee and helps to in system. rur orp: and health ywroducts it ix easily assimilated, ¢ black nor upset the stomach trength and endurance of weak It is dispensed by all good druggists. 4 Iron often IS YOUR HEALTH AS GOOD YOU WOULD LIKE TO HAVE IT? Do you feel full of pep all the time — ready to troubles of each day as they come? Are you glad to face difficulties and do you get Do you face each day with an ever renewed of trying situations? enthusiasm? Ifyou do all these things you are indeed fortunate. But on the other hand possibly you don’t feel ag well as you ought s, trifling or otherwise, which does not seem to respond to: ordinary treatment the way it ought to. If you have, there is a distinct possibility that it may be caused by an ab- to feel. You may have some illne scessed tooth or teeth. It is only in recent years that men of science have discovered just how far-reaching may be the effects of abscesse' know that many diseases to which the human being is heir are caused directly by these vicious little poison breeders. R-H-E-U-M-A-T has been a diagnosis which in years gone by has of sins. Did a person have pains or swelling or joints or muscles, it has been called “rheumatism’ The unfortunaté victim has then been dosed with and medicines and in most eases temporary relief only has been af- forded. Science now knows that this pain, swelling and inflammation comes in many cases from poison generated in some part of the anatomy. . Abscessed teeth are one of the most prolific producers of this poison, Tiny pus sacs gather around the roots of the infected .tooth. These pus sacs send a continuous stream of poison into the system. As is to be expected this poison eventually picks out the weakest spot it can find and proceeds to gather there. Then the pain, swelling and inflammation’ mentioned above are pretty nearly sure to follow. How much good do you suppose can be done by taking medicine for this condition? It is al- most a foregone conclusion that no permanent relief .will be experienced by the victim till the real foundation of the trouble is reached. This means that the diseased tooth must either be taken out entirely or else put in a healthy condition. Modern dentistry as practiced at this, and other high-class dental offices, has indeed been a boon to suffering humanity. Take care of your teeth—guard them jealously. Not only rheumatism, but many other dis- eases come from bad teeth. For instance— . Throat troubles Eye troubles Stomach troubles Nervous disorders Ear troubles And even severe tlisorders of the spine itself are now positively known to often be caused by the deadly poisons distilled by diseased teeth. Are you going to continue tovtake chances with the most precious thing you possess—after you know the facts? meet the trials and t a real pleasure out d teeth. They now -S-M covered a multitude inflammation in the ’ and let at that. all sorts of nostrums If so we must tell you that we believe you are making a serious mistake. . We offer you the services and advice of grad- uate registered expert dentists. They will be glad to advise with you at any time and give you the benefit of what they know about teeth. And remember that every -one of them has spent years of hard study under competent in- structors learning what there is to know about human teeth. . And every one of our operators has passed a thoro searching examination before the state board of dental examiners and has proved hts fitness to practice, and knowledge of, the dental profession. Every operator in this’ office has his certifi- cate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair in plain sight of all. Our prices are right— Our materials are the very best— We guarantee all our work— This is a strictly sanitary office— We have a sincere desire to please and satisfy you— . We believe we are doing you a real service when we fix your teeth. FREE EXAMINATION You are cordially invitéd to call—one of our expert dentists will gladly give your teeth a thoro examination and tell you just what it will cost you to have them put into perfect condition, if examination shows that work is necessary. This examination and estimate won't cost you a cent nor put you under any obligation to have work done unless you want it. But we urge you earnestly to give this import- ant matter consideration and do it right away. —aoe ne Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager 1405 Third Avenue In Every Respect Seattle’s Leading Dentists Diagonally Across the Street From the Postoffice. LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES h N. W. Corner Third and Union Be Sure to Get to the Right Place pier IS IN SESSION tas forts aida i ine | Both Sides Deny Agreement Cuts Communication With with * ided to punish maximum tion despite received y possess remarkable force, vim t simply brim over when the blood is filled it helps put strength and energy the cheeks of women. Nuxated reating new blood cells strengthens til renewed led with strength giving fron and nervous, ung quickly be- ke the offler tnorganie} ure the teeth, make them) ingreases the ate people in two weeks’ time

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