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Spring Utilitie will need. The assortment Includes a 10-quart Pall, with cover, 6quart Tea Kettle, The Four Pieces UNIVERSAL POLISHING Garden Tools 4-Tine Forks ......$1.50 Rakes......60¢ to $1.35 Short-Handle Spades $1.25 Hoes from 50¢ to $1.20 - led Shovels, lang BO, 82 and $2.25 Extra handles for all tools —& special at 30 to 40 Watt Lamps, now prices at........ 35e¢ A REAL BLOW TORCH for $2 A practical alcohol Blow Torch that will generate more than 1,200 Fahr. in ten seo onds—just the thing for ¢lectricians, repair s of Genuine Value It’s time to begin thinking of the annual clean- up campaign, the garden, the outdoor sports and all the other spring activities. utility store you will find about everything you You will find reliable merchandise at prices that are satisfyingly reasonable, Housefurnishings at Special Prices 4 pieces of Gray Enamel Ware, a big special at 69¢ Squart Conver Kettle 1t-quart Rolled Rim Dish Pan. Home Appliances in the Electrical Department In our stock you will find a com plete line of Electric Toastere—the BUILT RIGHT Hot Point, American Beauty and PRIC 3HT The Universal, in the highly pol CED RIG ished nickel finish—all equipped with cord attachments, SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ‘The Challenge Electric Toaster tn nickel finish, with cord attachment LAMPS, GRILLS, IRONS AND OTHER APPLIANCES ‘We Make a Specialty of Repair Work NEW PRICES ON ELECTRIC LIGHT BULBS Effective Tomorrow, April Ist @ Watt Lampe, LIME YOUR LAWN A 50-%b. enck of Hydrated Lime will cover 3,000 equare feet of lawn-—-its use will also improve your shrubbery. We deliver any- where in the city, S01b. Sacks for O5¢, FIsHIN' avro and and | BASEBALL yrncenscen SUPPLIES se At Ernst’s big H| But | | | the new price. ........0. Speaker Raps. cira| Young Man Is Made LONDON, March 31.—Speaking on the eubject of “Modern Woman,” Ea ward Cecil, the publicist, declared “girls who score at tennis do not score at housekeeping: girls who play hockey can’t shop.” TRY SULPHUR ON _ ANECZEMA SKIN Costs Little and Overcemes Trouble Almest Over Night WASHINGTON, March Gersecretary of State Henry mats, Tho Fletcher's not yet 60, success. Pa. April 10, 1873. he b Any breaking out of the sktn, even and later admitted to the bar. phur, deciares a noted skin specialist. 46. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt. Because of its germ destroying Prop. | After the Filipino erties, this sulphur preparation in-/rietcher entered tion, soothes and heals the eczema | tne legation to Cuba. He and smooth, It seldom fafls to relieve the tor-| states Ingation there. ment without delay. Sufferers from | skin trouble should obtain a mmal! | secretary to the jar of Mentho-Sulphur from any good druggist and use it like cold cream— + Advertisement, the legation. But he A Chain Store That Offers Unequaled Values These two New Spring Styles were bought in hundred-case lots—a big saving in quantity-buy- ing that is passed down to you, . Popular New Patent Pumps With broad strap and low heel. Sizes 214 to 8. Per $3.95 Brogue Oxfords in brown or black calf; low heel. Sizes 2Y4 to 8; per pr. 31.—Ua- Fletcher, whore appointment as am- bassador to Belgium is announced here, is one of the world’s youngest but most widely experienced diplo filled American diplomatic posts on [three continents with conspicuous Fletcher was born at Green Castle, | He was gradu ated at Chambersburg (Pa) Academy He practiced law till the outbreak Dery, itching eczema, can be quickly | of the Spanish-American war. Then overcome by applying Mentho-Sul | ne served with the Rough Riders un insurrection | the diplomatic | Stantly brings ease from skin irrita- | service, first as #econd secretary of nerved right up and leaves the skin clear) there until 1903, than wont to Peking | an second secretary of the United In 1995 he was diplomatic second American legation in Portugal. After two years he went | back to Peking an first secretary to was ap Envoy to Brussels pointed American charge d'affaires for China. World powers at that time were in & scramble for railway concessions in China. Fletcher impressed the state department at home with the fagacity of his dealings with the wq | J®paneK® and Hritish diplomate, he's}, In 1909 Fletcher became extraor. dinary and miniater plenipotentiary to Chile, Then he was made am- bassador to Chile. His efforts to ai lay South American distrust of ¢ United States again attracted atten- on at home, Tho Fletcher was @ republican, | President Wilson in 1916 appointed him ambaasador to Mexico, Fletcher signed Farly last year President Harding named him as undersecretary state, ot | Thinks Schools Lie, So He Goes to Jail NEW PHILADELPHIA, 0., March |21.—Public schools teach a “lot of les about Humpty Dumpty and such nonsense,” Joel Yoder thought. 80 he kept his children, Fanny, 10, and Albert, 8, at home, Joel's vernion of coincide with Justice John son's. So he went to Jail “The schools teach a lot of junk but they don’t teach the Bibie,” Yo. der still contends. Steven- Luxurions Club for British Air Forces IONDON, March %1—The new [club for the Royal Air Force is ona f the most luxurious in the world. [It has more than 1,600 members TO DARKEN HR APPLY fee TEA A few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur bring back its vigor, | color, gloss and youthfulness, | Common garden sage brewed into @ heavy tea with sulphur added will streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant Just a few applications will prove @ revelation if your hair is fading streaked or gray. Mixing the Sage ff | solntitlating { jmendous enhancement of realty val. jj nothing at all in 18 years, bring such held this post four years, then “1 modern education, however, failed to! THE SEATTLE STAR Toay's debate between Jack Hall and Hal Armstrong, Star writers, on the Erickson measure sees some mighty blows delivered and re ceived. Armstrong tries to show that Scent carfare will enhance real estate values, while Mall says the white man will pay for the dap's street oar ride, Reed ‘om id weep! By Hal Armstrong By Jack Hall | My brilliant opponent has attempt-| Do we Americans want to pay ed to becloud the ineue of thie debate | street car fares for Japs? if we! do we should vote for the Erickson bill, atements to carfare would by the ef ing faltacte that a 3« IU @ perfect proJap propost | | ruin Seattle commercially and indus | thon. . No Jap ean legally own property| anyone who has gone Into the) in th ntate. Iie leanen. Next} is #0 wbeurd that) year Erickson will increase taxes it needs no refutation, But the faciie/On real estate over 30 per cent pen of my adversary might mislead the unwary, #0 T fee! called upon to |explain the real facts of the cane, | In passing, I might say that facts are) omy © «6oonly «weapon, Matched {against a debater who in my superior in every way from the standpoint of lerudition, I have only the unadorned jtruth with which to ward off hin wit, bis rhetorieal jsplendor—hia almost convincing mis statements, ough of this, Let my op ponent deal in personalities, Firm tn the knowledge of the justice of my cause, 1 do not need to stoop te euch tacti | An & matter of fact, the threecent carfare, instead of being & linbility, jan Jack Hall asnerts, would be the |mreatest aaset that a city ever had. LET PUBLIC UTILITY BE PUBLIC UTILITY | What would the negligible increase [in taxes welgh against the tre | Part of that will go to give our jttle brown brother a nice free joar ride, When Mr, Jap gets on the ear, under the Erickson plan, white peo ple will pay 6 cents for bim as | taxes and he pays 3 cents |3 CENTS NOT FOR COST OF RIDE oon tor bond retire. but no part of t of the ride Then, Erickson says, in a few yearm the fare will be cut down to & cent and a little later there will be no farea, Vinel Pree rides for Japm! Next year, if the Drickson bill ix Weered, the Japs will hop on and off care at 3 conta a ride The white man will pay 5 cents every time the Jap takes a «treet car trip. Not onty this, bot the Jap wit! not pay the other tax that all of| um will pay. } Seventy per cent of our pay check fore for food, clothing, fuel and) amusements. When the Erickson plan goex into effect, the stores Will be forced to pass on part of their increased taxes, They get a| chance to add this increase to our} pay check. Hut the Jap doem't epnd any-| thing except for scraps of food and) a pair of overniis, The storekeeper never gets at his pay check, He lives in a shack. The white man in the decent home «ets the extra tax. 80 Brickson proposes to give the Jap a 6 cent fare advantage over the white workingman and en extra advantage in living cont, Truly an admirable scheme! The 3 cents Astor. She will arrive New York April 19, make orem Sg =a gm WHO WANTS RUM? NEW YORK, March %1--H4. ues that would be brought about by & public utility which In every sense 18 @ public utility? Would not the fact that people could ride on street jears for three cents now, and for selling liquor “Any of you | prejudiced against ja stampede Benttioward as has not jRot been seen aince the Klondike days? Of coarse ft would! And this rush could mean but one thing-—seartng realty values and gen- [eral prosperity for everybody in the city. | What une fe It for the peopia to own their own street oars when they have to pay a Meher fi than they did when the system was privately lcontrotied? Put with @ nominal fare—and no fare at all in the offing—the atreet railway system would be a public property in fact, as well as in name. It would be @ great corporation, in which every taxpayer would be a sharcholder—the larger hia property jthe larger big interent, | Does this sound tike rain? box.” out of the court room. The panei of been exhausted and the could not continue. MRS, BILLY HITT WINS A DIVORCE Once Engaged to Wed Duke} Fire Sale Price. of Abruzzi OPERATORS OUT FOR OPEN SHOP ‘Desire Seen as Reason tor Coal Crisis ington and daughter of the late Se tow & divorce from her husband, Willi« K (Billy’) Hitt, eon of former Cor greseman Robert E. | Hitt failed to enter a | seainst the Fresoh verdict. BY J. F. RICHARDSON WASHINGTON, Mareh 1—"“That the present situation in the coal in @astry i the storm center of the ‘open shop’ movement,” is the etate- ment made today to The Star ir | Opportunity can Federation of Labor, and W. J.| James, Washington representative of | the United Mine Workers’ union. | “If the coal operators get away | ‘The third of « series of free leo- tures for Seattle men and women who want to cut loove from un- congenial work and low wages. with their attempted violation of the | clause in the present agreement re-| Eepecially for men who earn lem than $3,000.00 « year, | cided to make a final effort for reconciliation Mr. Hitt, it did not bother him longer. quiring an interstate conference, an ra of agreement violations by em. ployere may be expected by the pub Ne. Other crafts will then be forced | —an the miners are now being forced to suspend work in self defense.” ‘Thin clause in the fourstate agree Ment was inserted at the request of the federal bituminous commision, the love affair. The princtpal reason for the faiiu |tune had dwindled considerably, wi pot able to afford the large “do! expressly to assure a new wagell Friday, at 8:00 P.M. |) wnich the royal house of Italy de agreement for 1922 and to prevent | manded, and in addition to this there |@ ponsible strike. A masterful Giscussion of a || ¥24 Always the question as to wheth- | “We have seen this ‘open shop’ movement coming for two years,” | Lord and James add, “and the miners hav th to the public that the purpose of the operators is to force a coal strike jaa a ‘trial balloon’ to see how far the ‘open shoppers’ dare go tn violat ling agreements before public #enti- ment stops them.” or Miss Elkins would be received weep aes | court on equal terms. Wy | & tropical diseases which heretofo: ODERN BUSINESS COLLEG have baffled medical ekill. il 1613 20 AVE.~ SEATTLE METROPOLITAN (Matiness Wednenday-Saturéay) COMMENCING MONDAY, APRIL 10 First Appearance in the West in Several Years of America’s Foremost Actress THY MOST MAGERLY AWAITED AND woeT DISTINGUISHED ENGAGEMENT OF THE YEAR CHARLES FROHMAN ESENTS ETHEL BARRYMORE —IN— “DECLASSEE” SEAT SALE MONDAY THEATER 10 A. M. | e a |Hunting for Cures FREE TOWN, Sierra laboratory has been set up here |Expensive Banquet Causes Reprimand DURHAM, Eng.—A bill of $365 in. jourred for whinky and cigars at the| [annual banquet caused a row in we | Durham Miners’ association. It was finally decided to reprimand the ban. quet committer. Six Nights ONLY yourself “her”? A dinner at Boldt's will turn the trick In double-quick time, The way the Indies look up at the men who bring ‘em here, you'd want to bring solid with gyorg in a whole flock of ° ’ Tea and Sulphur recipe at home ‘em yourself — it way is to get a bottle of Wyeth’s, of course. Sage and Sulphur Compound at any A es ane 1 Ag nance nd you married . the addition of other ingredients, -” the Mrs, isn't erazy The only absolute protect Wit, aauee, aam aedae hee about being chained forded by a MODERN SAFE DE not sinful, we all de to retain day in the week, POSIT VAULT. our youthful appear and at Experienced attendants and con- tractiveness, By darkening your Bring her in tomor- Venience of location make our vaults hair with Wyeth's Sage and sul Few, & particularly good place to safe. phur Compound, no one can tell, guard your valuables, because it does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge We carry a polley Th ° or eeft brush with Wt ded Gree ete Bl A e National Bank of through your hair, taking one smal! \ 500,000 strand at a time; by morning all i, y INSURANCE Cc after another application or two, jecond Ave. f Se 1 your hair becomes beautifully dark, ». 1414-16 Third Ave, o att e glossy, soft and luxuriant Aaver:| - — Second Avenue and Spring Street | Usement, Latest photograph of Lady m speech that day, go to Balti- more for another speech the next day and will speak in Washington and other cities. COMPAN-EEE, HALT! ward Dinn was on trial today for Counsel for the defense glanced over the jury and said suddenly: jurors who are the Volstead act, step down and out of the } The entire jury solemnly filed talesmen had trial | PARIS, March 31.—Mra. Katherine Biking Hitt, onetime belle of Wash. | ator Elkins, who dnee was engaged Duke of Abruzzi, has obtained Hitt of Ilinots. ‘The third Paris chamber on June 20 inet inmued @ Gecree which made the | divores effective 60 days later, when jemurrer Mra. itt merely testifying that she was not on terms of affection Necessary for married life and that Mr. Hitt refused to renew the con- jugal relations, When his wife de war charged, refused to allow her to re. turn home, asserting be did not care what action she took so long as she Katherine Bikins was the central figure of the famoun international ro- | Mance with the Duke of the Abrumsi| | & decade ago which kept Washington society agog With excitement for sev. eral years and practically drove the Elkins family into seclusion to escape the widespread publicity aroused by of the Abrusei match, it was said | wan that Senator Elkins, whose fo! | for Tropical Ills 1 Leone. March %1—A completely equipped | investigute and find cures for various | a\™ | fire damaged merchandise. | Values to $12.00, Values to $6.00, at Fire Sale Price ........ Values to $6.00, at Fire Sale Price... ....+-... Values to $35.00, at Fire Sale Price...... FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1922. Wind-Up Starts Tomorrow, Saturday BOYS’ SUITS Win tae Pr... $38 MEN’S SHOES $1.98 Values to $400, at Fire Sale Price...... MEN’S SOX Values up to 25e, at Fire Sale Price. .......000s0++ Values te $3.00, at Fire Sale Price. . .28c MEN’S PANTS .98c OVERCOATS $7.85 BLANKETS Formety to $6.00, as Fire fale Price. .... BOYS’ SHOES Valecs to $6.00, at Fire Sale Priece......... Formerty to $3.50, a¢ Fire Sale Price. . 23c FIRE SALE SATURDAY FINAL WINDUP TOMORROW Great Crowds Attend Remarkable Fire Sale. Prices Cut Beyond Recognition — Final 3 || WORK SHIRTS |MEN'S UNIONALLS | Values to $1.50, at Fire Sale Price. The End of the Great Fire Sale at the Red Front is here. Every article in this great stock has been cut to the lowest notch. The insurance companies pad their loss in | full—we got the money—we do not want this smoke and Every bit of it must be sold regardless of cost or worth. Following are but samples of | the great merchandise sacrifice taking place here tomorrow $9.85 c .69c¢ 91c $1.87 MEN'S UNDERW’R) RUBBER PACS Valoes to $1.00, a¢ .51c SALE STARTS TOMORROW AT 9 A.M. COME! ™ ny Exhaustion of th ternal secretion, particularly those glands that pro re to | re | Bandit’s Auto BERLIN, March 21.—Three motor bandits Are Cause of Much of the Ineffidency | Met With Nowadays, According { | the postofft sult Corner Pine Street 1601-1603 First Ave. [ THE WILKES Well Armored operating in Saxony are) “Potash and Perlm ss MATINEE TOMORROW Beginning Sanday Matinee “The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come” Eugene Walters’ Dramatiza- tion of the Most Famous Nevel of John Fox, Jr, WILKES POPULAR PRICES te Well-Known Authority— Dr. Elliott, of Londen glanés of tn-| Thire ave. from | jo charge for con- | Ex-Gov. Physician. —ad- te 20 Cents Per Pound In Bulk Frye’s Pig Pork Sausage On Sale Every Saturday and Wednesday If you wish to practice Real House- hold Economy get in the habit of buy- ing this sausage every week. It’s the cheapest and the finest food on the market. Our sausage is made from only fine young porkers, and the FRYE GUAR- ANTEE stands back of it. For Sale at All of Frye's Markets American Meat Company—519 Third Avenue Ballard Meat Company—5443 Ballard Avenue Bay City Meat Company—1420 First Avenue Central Meat Company — 1420 First Avenue Olympic Meat Company — 1426 First Avenue Western Meat Company—1102 Western Avenue Seattle Market—109 Occidental Avenue Seattle's Own Family Theatre using @ beavily armored autemobile. | NOW PLAYING WEAK GLANDS | a Red Front Clothing Co.