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aa er ramet a at ee No Now—the beauty picture supreme—the first of the Strand’s gorgeous superspectacles— AVEO Y eC and hey wrote elampses of ibe 2. - One of the finest photoplays of all times. STRAND ORCHESTRA Under S. K. Wineland, Playing the Grand Selec- tien From “Cavalleria Rasticana” SAN FRANCISCO, April ROGERS | BAKING POWDER S NOT CONTAIN ALUM ; MATINEES Loge seata.. oabenh, AFTER ¢ P. ». Lower floor and lower balcony baicoay (All prices Include tax) JAY WALKERS IN FRISCO ARE _ FINED BY CURBSTONE COURT 20— rbstone justice bids fair to put/ yen end to jaywalking on down town streets. Police Judge Owens ts the presid- | ing Solomon of the strangest tribunal }in America and according to the jodge his eyrtem is working. With a table borrowed from a department store and a chair im |provised from a soap box, Judge Owens hears the plaints of thom caught cutting corners to cross a busy street Judge Thomas Graham wan the first man pinched by traffic officers and haled before Judge Owens, who! was holding court out on the curb. | “But I must be in court in 10 minutes,” argued the “prisoner” ijartat. They let him go but they , fined the president of the City Ad felab and several actors Fails to Get His | Little Girl Back SPOKANE, Wash, April 20. | Leonard Dingman some time ago gave away bis baby daughter Ruth to a railroad conductor and his wife. Now Dingman wants the incompetent at the ume of adoption. The judge ruled against him. Hold Hearing on Teacher Salaries 1 How much salary should Seattle school teachers receive? Th school board wants to have the benefit of public opinion. Ansopen hear ing will be conducted Tuesday night at 8 p. m. in the board's | office, Central building. Public in ' wited. Seattle’s Popular Dentists We Insure All Our Dental Work Every patient of the PIONEER DENTISTS is guaranteed that their dental work is insured to the extent that if anything is wrong, come back and we will make good. Satisfaction is guaran- teed. Years of experience and effort upon our part has made our system of dentistry perfect. guaranteed 15 years. Crowns, $5 All work Plates, $10 Bridgework, $5 In making our ANCHOR PLATES we use a special process form a inconve whereby the plates thereby eliminating ANCHOR PLATES are bein, WE HAVE AN EASY PAY COME APPEAL TO YOU, PLAIN, in place mouth today certain grip and they stay nience and of the g used by hundreds of people sorences PLAN WHICH WILL IN AND WE WILL EX- Convenient office hours—9 a, m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 10 a. m tol p. m. Pioneer Dentists, Inc. DR. DANFORD,, President. 95 YESLER WAY, Southwest Corner First Ave. and Yesler Way baby back, alleging he was mentally | DAY, APRIL 20, 1920. GEORGIA CASTS Billy and Janet in Love! PRIMARY VOTE: Palmer Makes Race on Wil-| son Policies RY HAROLD D. NEW YORK, April JACOBS rie into tb A Nebraska b nts wherein 1 esulted in align me vote may be terpreted by some as endorse repudiation of President stand on the peace treaty a of natio In Georgia, Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer has conducted bi campaign for the presidential nation almost wholly on the of the Wilson Government and has de ed himeelf in sympathy with nt's attitude toward the | nant Opposing Pat Senator Hoke & ik ment or Wilaor nd leagu br are the forces of pith, Thomas Hard forme and The Watson 0 receive @ fairly written in” vote, This was the first state in which McAdoo re fused to allow his name on a prt mary ballot Georgian has 28 delegates to the na tional convention. BLAME “RAMPS” FOR HIGH COST England Is Howling Over | Prices of “Profiteers” | LONDON April Member of the Britizh parliament charge that} the high prices of men's clothing and) of women's serge and merino dresses | are plain cases of “ramp.” “Ramp” is F ish slang for our |word profiteering It ts pointed out that the govern ment will have monopolistic o of the world’s beat wool supply until | June 90 next. Also that it expects) to have on hand year about 630,000 which is about one-quarter world’s beat ann clip It has been ted that owing to buying u controlled prices and selling for civilian pur poses at market prices or something near it, the British vernment has made a profit of $300,000,000 ‘The next step is in the wale middlemen of the merino “t prepared and cleaned woo! war profit used to be about 1 per pound. Now it is claimed it is as much as 50 cents In some cases. ‘The spinner’s profit on the worsted yarn jumped from 2 to 6 cents per pound to 26 to §6 cents The cloth manufacturer t# charg ing from four to atx times his pre war price and his profit t# in even greater ratio. Indigo serge weigh ing 20 ounces to the yard and made of merino wob! sold here tn 1914 for $1.40 per yard. The manufacturers now get $7.50 to $8.75 per yard for some of it. It is contendedy here that govern ment control of wool! has not contrib. uted in any measure to the high prices of clothing In America. If all |the wool had been free of control and sold in the open auction market, the demand would atitl have been so keen that American bidders would have |been forced to pay very high prices. Exported woolen cloths have in creased fourfold in price compared with 1913. Furthermore, it is sus pected that a very great amount of this cloth is going to Germany. 20. at the end of this of wool, of the} bales by the The pre About third of the entire popula tion of the world speaks the Chinese language or its allied dialecta. | Digestion! Keep your stomach sweet —relieve dyspepsia and indi- gestion and their resultant acidity by using, after meals, Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets They sapply the alkaline effect just as the stomach does when in th. ‘Thus you may eat whatever you like best without fear of indigestion. Sold by almont bvery drugei U.S. and Canada at S0c a jeame a public jin | guardian |wure he understood {ts | picture All- Day Billy, who loves Janet, and proves. It all sucker w Ruder, four-golng-on-five, who lives a hop, skip and a jump from the home of Janet Wallace, aged 5, had the cher. Janet wanted a “torn” at ft Galant Billy allowed her several ‘turna” until it was all gone That was last year, ‘There was a winter of overshoes and coats mufflera. Romance hubernated.. > . ‘Then came spring and tts harbin. ger, the allday sucker, appeared in | the candyshop window began with an all-day! It's sucker time again, and while >» about the Wallace back Suckers Start It! Janet, who"loves Billy, as this rows fren} Janet pursue ty and friendship. their sticky “Billy likes me better’n his alr.! gun or his white agate,” declared Janet. “Don't you, Billy?" “Retter’n my firemen’s hat, even,” | stoutly averred Billy. | "We're in lover he added dra matically, and Janet blushed. The photographer asked proof. Billy was willing—nay, anxious! “Hub? be urged Janet. “Huh?” “Everybody's looking,” she pro- tented. But | with ded her bobbed “Uh-huh.” Bily bas a winning way women, and finally ahe nod head and said, RICH INDIAN HERMIT IS SPENDING HIS LAST DAYS TOSSING KNIVES BY MABEL ABBOTT ! PAWHUSKA, Okla, April 20.— This is the second chapter of the! story of John Stink, Osage Indian. ‘The first chapter has been told far beyond the borders of the nation”—how old John many years ago was carried out of his house to die, according to the custom of the| Oxages when one of their number nears his end; and how he was pro nounced dead; and how he was bur ied ynder a pile of stones; and he he came to; got out and was du a ghost by his tribesmen; and he he w thereafter an outeast, an In yout a tribe, dead to his own le tho still in the “Onage nw superstitious p* | flesh. The second chapter— John Stink was lonely after he had “died.” So he spent much of his time in Pawhuska, which, tho it ia the capital of the Osage nation, is |a white man’s town John made friends with some dogs at were as lonely ld other dogs, until in a short n had a tribe of 17 dogs of ponsible combination of breeds went with him wherever he went; they slept curled up with him in the doorways of stores; they for, aged and bemged for food, as he did In short, John and his dogs soon be nuisance. | So the town marshal notified him But John as he, and these keep his dogs off the streets he made the mistake of telling person instead of telling his who would have inter od the message to him and made thority pre John didn't under Jor didn't want to, and didn’t ea UNIFORM BAKING The good cook appre clates how much of her success depends upon uniformity. Our bakery goods are uniform—al ways the same; bread that is sweet and flaky, cake and pies that have a real true flavor, dell cious and satisfying. WAITING TO SERVE YOU 918 Second Ava, 1414 Third Ave, Madison Market, Sec- ond and Madison, Pacific Market, 810 Pike Street. the town dogn anyway Imly on their ac whoop what thought of his and they went customed and noisy rounds. Whereupon the marshal took a shot at the multitude and hit one of the dogs—a little white ane. A girl who knew saw the occurrence tells John wel and the story. “John never said a word,” she oped and picked up nd carried it out of town and about a mile up the ¢ “Then he put it down on a big flat atone and tried to do something for it; but nothing could be done. He sat there watching it until it died. ‘Jobn And on he got up and said Stink is thru with white man,’ he hy never come to town John lives under two blankets stretched between trees beside the flat stone where he watched one of his last 17 friends die. He ts thru with the white man, his awn people long ago were thru with him, and most of his dogs are dead now | His guardian sends him a basket | of food two or three times a week. | The government agency sends him his share of the Orage ail money, and he is a rich mae | But he stands all day on the flat stone and practices throwing knives: He can kill a bird on the wing with a knife. _|to twidd ‘Famous Wash Heals Skin D. D. D., the sta rt : von reset be, 400 and $1.00, BAKTELL'S DRUG STORES COMING SATURDAY— WONDERFUL NAZIMOVA “THE HEART OF A CHILD” A living romance that will reach the hearts of all. Waldorf Hotel Seventh and Pike Rooms and apartments at very reasonable rates. Chauncey Wright's Restaurant in connection. PAGE 3 SATISVACTORY TERMS ALWAYS tHe GROTE-RANKINCO. OTTO F. KEGEL, President l PIKE ST. anv FIFTH AVF Twenty-Five of the BEST WILTON RUGS Have Prices Reduced HESE fine Wilton the stock cannot be replenished again this season. They are highly desirable in every way, however, for they are all rugs of the finest quality. No. 11511—Royal in dark blue ground, duced to No, 9919—Royal Wilton, an Ispahan ground and rose, | No. terns of rose, green, reduced to ground, reduced to. . No, 9923—Royal Wiltén, CHICAGO, April 20.—Mr. Hi Rent, landiord-pirate and undesirable citi wen, gnashes hia teeth with impotent rage when he strolls to the foot of Berteau ave, and gazes up and down the Chicago river's north branch, Here are happy, eare-free people, comfortably housed, who can afford profiteering landlords, They pay no rent. And they pay no taxee—be “ause they have no city lots, Just ordinary folk—who live in houseboats moored to the river bank Water tax of $3.4 year lets them out They own their own homes—house- boats ranging in price, house and fur nishings, from $100 to $800. Grocery, tee and milk wagons make Wilton, Chinese design in gold and rose coloring, No, 11801—Seamless Wilton, size 9x12, in taupe ground with a Chinese lily design in blue, yellow and bla size 9x12, pattern with blue and sage col- orings in the figures, reduced to... 11504—Royal Wilton, size 9x12, with a blue ground with Persian pat- cream, brown and No. 9918—Royal Wilton, size 9x12, of a very beautiful design in black, rose and blue colorings on a light brown a very fine Persian pattern and very attractive colorings, reduced to CHICAGOANS FIND A WAY TO | DODGE HIGH COST OF HOMES) heir fingers derisively xt | | Rugs represent drop patterns — Rugs of which No. 4851—Two Worsted Wiltons, size 9x12, in rose colored ground with at- tractive designs, reduced to $122.50 No. 4850—Two Worsted Wiltons, size 9x12, in very handsome colorings, with small designs of blue and taupe, reduced to No, 28A020—Karaghuesian Shah Abbas Wilton, size 9x12, in a jaspe ground with blue, rose, tan and black fig- ures, reduced to. Lakewood, Dozar and Trewan Wool Wilton Rugs, size 9x12, in a splendid assortment of colors, are reduced to, each...... -~--. ---.- . $78.00 and $92.50 Lakewood and Trewan Wool Wil- ton Rugs, size 8-3x10-6, in very desirable colors and patterns, are reduced to, each.. size 9x12, reduced $132.00 $132.00 in a tan $145.00 $145.00 size 9x12, in |!n & four-room houseboat “bange- are “We moved onto the river a couple of years ago, on account of my deliveries at thé door. Pianos and/| health,” said Mrs, Fugate. “Now phonographs provide music. If the | that rents have soared, we're here to family gets bored with the location, | Stay for a while. For the first time father just hauls in the ropes and !” our lives, we've been able to put drifts down the river money in the bank. I want to stay” Oscar Pugate, city fireman, is one | Ul we have saved $10,000." of those who have solved the rent| NSA RAE te, He and his wife and son, France had expended for recom and Jimmy's s 4 Shep, live |Struction of destroyed indi we plants up to September 20 000,000, and naz rebuilt 2,038 MOTHERS } ‘RIEND jlometers of railways out of 2,245 ae kilometer jestroyed, 657 bridges out date | | of 1,160, 700 kilometers of canals aut of 1,075. Out of 1,800,000 hectares af land rendered useless by war, 400,008 jare now under cultivation and 200, 000 additional have been cleared of projectiles Se RTH Children Children Effective Wednesday, Milk prices will be as follows: Retail price, quart... Wholesale price, quart. . Wholesale price, pint Milk in bulk (3-gallon cans)... Present Conditions Force Increase in Price of Milk , April 21st, Mayflower -13c -10c Sec $1.11 in Europe are dying for want of milk. There it is unobtainable at any price. Milk is by far the cheapest food obtainable to- day and it is absolutely essential for the growth of the child and the well being of adults, of Seattle and surrounding territory can and should enjoy all the milk they care to drink, Mothers who have once used May- flower Milk insist on it—knowing its quality and purity: flower Milk from your Save delivery costs by getting May- grocer, who keeps it fresh and sweet on ice. The ‘est Yaad tells * Absolutely Fireproof. May ower Dair Sust Honest Milks