The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 14, 1917, Page 9

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CLOSED MONDAY ON ACCOUNT HOLIDAY Union Labor in America BUCK’S wned RANGES and TERS are made at a factory and sold at a store that recognizes the mod- A “FAIR” ARTICLE from the FACTORY to the HOME Your Old Stove Taken in Exchange SPECIAL NOTICE For the purpose of co-operating with the home- furnisher during the present high cost of living, the following terms on homefurnishings will prevail until $ 50, nothing down, $1.00 week, or $ 4.00 mo. $100, nothing down, $1.25 week, or $ 5.00 mo. $150, $ 5.00 down, $1.75 week, or $ 7.50 mo. $200, $10.00 down, $2.50 week, or $10.00 mo. $250, $12.50 down, $3.00 week, or $12.50 mo. $300, $15.00 down, $3.50 week, or $15.00 mo. We Invite the Accounts of All Reputable and Trustworthy Charge No Interest. Seasonable Articles | | | further notice: Homefurnishers. We Added to Customers’ Accounta. This store the §-hour hours being te preserve The Products of the Highest-Skilled is conducted on bas! business from 9 « m. Saturdays M.A.GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO. SEATT LES POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS Say ‘Prisoner Leads —_ "*4,fountry. @Matrimonial Fakers WILKESBARRE, Pa., Sept. 14— 0 In the arrest here of Walter Zilin- ski, of “somewhere,” the Luzerne “county authorities believe they have * run down the leader of a matrimo- ial confidence game that has been ¥ietimizing women in all sections of is one of the victims. Zilinski, who ts Th |Cudahy and Prince e | Nearly Have Fight Prince Greatest 1 Value FOR THE MONEY A | ‘+ Dundee Suit Made to Order by Union Tailors a duel, break in diplomatic jecurred at a “country Cudahys. duction. about meat; Jack Mstened to ed himself in unmis' tions, but averted. Prices as Low as "515 |in order to does net 15 years. | Gold crown ..... $10 set of teeth There is practically no end to the variety of staple and fancy weaves in our stock of dependable woolens for this season. Come in. #.00k them over. White crowns | Gold fillings . Silver fillin, Platina filling! Gnd wet teeth {nation and advice Moet of our gatiafaction. {he | to jie Or 2 UNIVERs ‘Sppeatss sure Br ng th t place 304 PIKE ST. all concerned were dining. Near the prince's table sat Goodwin and his wife. met the prince and Mrs. Goodwin said she wanted him to know the So the Goodwins took him over and gave him an intro) ame day. ti | LOS ANGELES, Sept. 14, Paul Troubotzkoy, famous sculptor, jand Jack Cudahy are at outs. Ru- mors were rife that there might be but both deny this. relat club, the kable a wi Cut to The} ms oc-| where} | They had Invited to be seated and partake of s porterhouse steak, the prince. who fs a vegetarian, declined, and |began to say unpleasant in fact, things he blamed meat-eating for the present war. prince's | tirade for some time, then express terms were REAL PAINLESS DENTIS TS) introduce our new | (whalebone) plate, which ts the | lightest and strongest plate known, cover the reof of | mouth, {f you have two er three j tooth left in the mouth; guaranteed the | $3.00 $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $8.00 | $5.00 | Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 Exam- emt patronage ts Minmended by our early custom: whose work {a atill giving good ‘Ank our customers whe vp tested our work When coming fi" office, u are in the ith you, - Rate Dentists ry wT. Oa Miss Stella Pettetska, a student, | ® recently j became heir to $1,200. Evidently @ married man,| learned this fact, and his offer of marriage was accepted. Claiming! that he needed $400 to settle a case | for running down a woman with his automobile, be got the money, and| when he got it he disappeared, and| ounce the names of the winners, | the marriage never took place. A war cloud assumed large propor-) open hostilities | | |foot police were | being raided by mobs. throw the STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 14, 1917. |KERENSKY MYTH IS PUNCTURED/ squarely in the face. Latest Picture of Kerensky at Work Kerensky at his desk Hie face shows he KeERENSHS looking Rui sla, and perhaps of the world, rests on his shoulders. BUENOS AIRES SCALPERS SELL LOTTERY SLIPS, BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 14. — The high cost of lottery tickets not having been In the least ameliorated by the | precautions which the govern ment took to prevent grafting | by speculators at the fast fo! Christmas $1,000,000 drawing, fresh plane being consid. ered to end the abuse In fu- ture. Tickets contest sold at the last minute, in | sea, at more than double » value. The public wae So outraged that many agencies had to close thelr doors and drop their iron blinds, and mounted and forced to stand ° guard over them to keep them from The government does not an- tho they themselves usually tell. The excitement is so tremendous that the newspapers announce the numbers which win the various prizes on their bulletin boards, and on the night after the drawing numbers upon. screens, | | to k for the recent $440,000 be pete, Instruments th. oa simple syrup of hot . a Tio el of his faith. He ts a socialist, but adie ear that a al con-|that is no distinction in Russia would be Ukely to cause, and enths of the people are so. Inf la head ation neinen, Weak Kidneys Age You Too Soon No one should suffer constantly at middle age with a lame, aching back, sharp pains and annoying kidney irrey- ularities. But hard work and worry do weaken the kid- neys and bad kidneys load up the blood with irritating uric poisons, There is a tendency towards hardening arteries, heart trouble, rheumatism, gout, gravel, dropsy and Bright’s disease. Don’t let weak kidneys make you old. You should be stro age. Use Doen’s Kidneg Pills. and active right up to real old They are just for weak kidneys, and have done quick, marvelous work for many thousands of cases, all over the wide world. These Are Seattle Cases: Mra, Margaret A. Nowary, 1519 fist ave, 4, nays: “I always felt weak across my, back when I worked @ little too hard sometimes I felt a dull sicken= ing ache all through my loins and hips. At such times I felt rly in every way. 1 would Become dizzy and would have to © and lie down, There would Bo a'nort “of 4 Himmering bets Kidneys acted By ittes tte wiil soon be 84 years old Now. most people have a great deal of ki ney trouble, but I don't I because Doan's Kidney P have cured me of that and the cure bas Inst Doan's occasionally, b | sort of a kidney regulator, and they keep my kidneys in good order.” DOAN my eyes J. Olmstead, 811 , nays: “T know Kidney Pills are and Iam glad to ree ommend them. Some years ago my kidneys were both ering me something awful \ . Ee ANoe, 'e future lizee the welfare of Rus ike election returps in the United} States. ‘Catarrhal Deafness May Be Overcome A Simple, Safe and Reliable Way That Calls for No Ugly Trum Phones or Other in very annoying and uments that be iad that f ible strength ) Take this home water and f tinary granulated sugar. spoonful four times a/ gone the headache My kidneys were weak, and | acted irregularly, My back ached ail the and when I bent sharp lightning-like pains would atch me through my back and I would b 6 awful ly dizzy. I felt all down and depressed. Ds Kidney Pills gave me complete and lasting cure.” KIDNEY PILLS time, over, n * a 0c a Box at All Stores, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Mfg. Chemists PAGE 9 ‘This te another of the series of arth by Charles Edward Russell, staff w of The Star, who has J oat pe ission to the new Kuselan BY CHAS, EDWARD RUSSELL Copyright, 1917 him, The great ques tion seems to be about his health, He |e supposed to between death and a position the “Napoleon | of Russia,” death having the Inside | track and being likelier to win. The universal bel'ef in this “blood and fron” fantasy is one of the most tnteresting examples I have ever known of the possibilt tos of the fake when it takes the form of a pleasing dream. He Is No Dictator Kerensky is about as much a man of “blood and iron” as he is of pumpkin rinds and jimson weeds. He Is about as much a “dictator” of Russia as you are. Nevertheless, since the world {is determined to have him the “man of the hour” tn Russian affairs. ladies and gentlemen, know Mr of Russia. He is about 40, rather well set up, about 5 feet 6 fneoes In height, cl very good head, but you wou id know Instantly it was not the head of an American, because It is #0 much up and down, In- stead of fore and aft. He has rather lightish brown hair, cut short and rising straight from hie head. He has square | shoulders, much grace of bear- ——~| Ing and an excellent poise for his particular Job, which Is oratory. But In private conversation he has something of Grover Cle ind’s habit of not look- ing much at the person with whom he is talking, a trick that, as in Cleveland's case, Produces a certain impression of shyn Except when he gets one of bis extraor feat | eloquence he ts one of the most 7| ieont of men. It is hard to fl him out on any ordinary topte y.| still harder to judge what he really {i thinks about ft unless he gets in ¢| terested and sits up to take notice of his surroundings Not a Conversationalist Then his blue eyes betray But at that he will never prize-winner at conversation, ing too much of a fondness words of one syllable and only few of those. He is an old-time revolutiontat and tasted all the bitterness that | the old regime banded out to men started on him. be a hay for a ade ur | He Ie also an idealist and at the beginning of the revolu- tion was as dreamy as any | He, too, d this notion that | the downfall of autocracy in Russia sounded Gabriel's big horn for the Earthly Paradi There were be no more vie # among men, and, of cour: re to be no more wars lv NIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD HAD ARRIVED ON THE MID. NIGHT TRAIN, Everybody was to love everybody else; the lion was |to le down and the lamb was to jcease to be chops for him. Wanted Others Happy It was a fine, good feeling and one that reflects great credit on the Russian people. They had joy themselves and they wanted all the neighbors to come In and have some. | There were two men tn Ruasta who never for a moment allowed their enthusiasm to distort their] knowledge of the world as it really fs with Germany tn it One was Prince Kropotkin, the| Jold-time philosopher and revolu-| |tionist, whose daring escape from the fortress of Peter and Paul is| one of the most stirring chapters |in the imperishable history of | Russian democracy, and the other | was Placonoff, who first unfurled the red flag of revolution fn the! Nevaky Prospekt, the great thoro- fare of Petrograd These older warriors tn the long dl |fieht continually warned their) | countrymen that so long as Ger |man autocracy remained in the |world unbroken there was no lehance for democracy etther in | Russia or in any other place. | Kerensky Sees Light | I heard Prince Kropotkin speak! on this subject one Sunday after-| |noon in the Norodny Dom, great} peoplo’s palace of Petrograd, and |his logic was lke an avalanche |rushing down o Swiss mountain side, It swept all before it Kropotkin and Placonoff steadily Every day | am asked to tell something about Kerensky, the “dictator,” = the “man of blood and tron,” “ruler of Rui and supp holder of a raft of other tities the foolish or| the reactionary | have made for be running a race: nary flights of| | we have ever shown. ac ougall-fouthwick | SECOND Annual September Assembling and Wholesale Distribution of feriesee| 8,640 MEN'S TIES Having a most conservative value of $10,740.00, to be sold at 45c—65c—$1.65 — AVENUE AND PIKE STREET For A clear saving of $3,204.00 to our patrons on the finest and most beautiful Ties Sale Starts Saturday the total amount of $7,536.00. Extra! Black, plain colors, mixtures and colorful Large, hea 20 dozen novelties. f pure silk; In one half again as much. and weaves in these to s tory savings Our Second prince of Nantucket skippers knew instinctively in advan levery change in wind or weather and had everything ready for it ls Not Near Death But K y is pretty good that sort of thing. The time t council was about to split over t anarchists’ demonstration and w Mamentary maneuvering as ev | was pulled off, the credit for t! scheme, 1 was told, belonged him Tschaidse. As to his health and this dream stuff about the race be- tween death and a Napoleon stunt—I don’t see anything in that. | suppose It may be pos- sible for a man to be very sick and to give every Indication of being very well, but | don’t be- lieve it. Mr. Kerensky, It Ie true, has no ruddy color in his face and Is obviously not a husky. But his eye Ii good, his step is quick insisted that the first duty of the} new democracy In Russia was to} \eive to the other democractes of the world all poselble help in the; life and death struggle against| | autocracy | The revolution was only a few! weeks old when Kerensky came jout of his tran and saw that these men were right. He has not | wavered since from that convic |tion, which has grown steadily among all Russian people who | think He {s a good parliamentarian, | but not so good as " the flent man of Russfa, nor as | Tachata e, the resour chalr man of the national council, Th es in my judgment, have no periors in any parliamentary of the world, T have seen T su body Pachaid se steer the council so swiftly and skillfully around perilous shoals and thru difficult straits that he made all the other presiding offi cers of my acquaintance seem| bunglers. He was like old Hank Haff, the ~ just firm, his voice has the ring of health, his hand grasp is the grip of a man of vigor, and when he Is launched upon one of his amazing speeches, | can assure you the only Impres- sion you get from him Is of power and health. The picture of an invalid wi one foot in the grave and yet do-| oratorical feats, y taking, and {it was, ve a but story, a pipe. Not the other idea, so big a pipe, however, that he will ‘sa Russia,” Nobody will do that b Russia herself, THE LODGE CAFE Fourth Avenue at Westluke Featuring the le Sammie.” High<class En(ertatament and Dancing He saved by as clever a piece of par as much as to Tseratelli and good seems to be chiefly | war song. Pure Silk Crochet and Knitted Ties $1.95 heath Autur vy Ti only. | It’s a Treat to See the Ties at $1.65 HE most wonderful silks dod satins | T we have ever seen, from French, green and reseda, dark and light navy, ne Gates? and Amearieae toetie. delft and gray, heliotrope, lavender, Italian, Swi 5 : , French tans and browns, maroon and Elaborate silks and brocaded flower and black. All of separately colored threads verdure patterns, peacock feathers, woven through and through. crown patterns, conventional, Oriental This may give you some idea of the designs and rare Persian effects. Tie you will often find many At 65c Are Ties as beautiful as any that are usually shown for The maze of lovely colors magnificent matched only by their unequaled value. Holiday Ties---No Such Opportunity Will Again Be Presented ecure unlimited choice of the world’s finest Neckwear reaches at such satisfac- Avenue and Pike Street windows will give you the desire to see our even greater interior displays f ce at h he as gat er ist he | to | ple. the ( the th} of | as ve ut Victoria Outdoes As usual, ever a few Individuals gather, discussion turned to the war. Mayor Todd who is in Seattle today session here Friday at the Arctic, was in the crowd many men have gone to the front from Victoria Vv “Before the war,” “there were in tinguous territory about 80,000 peo- And 14,500 men have gone to | Graduated, Licensed, Registered front—14,500." PHYSICIAN Yonsider that! children numbered 50,000, men 30,000, two men in Victoria has enlisted in the war, A new telephone receiver is so small that it can be inserted tp-the | ear. And Saturday will be the big day. While this may seem like an enormous quantity of Ties, and is So, yet unless you have attended our great sales for men on the opening day you can have no idea of how many customers we have, ané how many i Ties we often sell to a customer. It is a fact that - in former sales we have sold as many as one, two es] and even three dozen to a man, and those who buy from one to six ties are numbered by the thou- sands such hoot and varied shades as hunter's indescribable richness of the silks in these incomparable Ties. At 45c Are Thousands of Ties These are Ties that are worth today within a few per cent of 45c at the lowest wholesale price. Every type of pattern, every color and combinations of colors will be found among them in splendid quality. Ties is this sale ee —Mae| REDUCED RATES TO All Cities! Sends 14,500 to War Front wherever and when- the Los fan Diego. Good service, large outst pri: rooms and unsurpassed meals, a oe as ot paacengers. particulars a t City Ticket Office, of Victoria, B. C., a dele- e to the Pacific Northwest Tour- association, which begins its THE McCORMICK LINE 108 Cherry st. Phene Elliott 3488 Dr. Evans Do you know,” he queried, “how island?” arious estimates were made. the mayor said, Victoria and con- Assuming that of original 80,000, the women and |} i, and the then one out of every 1 & all kinds of work. oF «ibration, etc. I si spec! ention to the treatment Women. ‘My Usual offles fee te $1.00 ‘Cash, ‘medicine included, Houre—10 a.m. to 5 p.m, 7 to 8 p.m; Sundays 11 am. to aa #01 PEOPLES BANK BUILDING Second and Pike, DoYouKnow That the Union Dentists charge less for first-class work than any other dentists in Seattle? Their work is guaranteed for 16 years. Absolutely painless extracting. LADY ATTENDANTS, UNION DENTISTS 805% Pike Street. Over Owl Drug Stora,

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