The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1917, Page 4

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omen or Middle Age lany distressing Ailments experienced y them are Alleviated by Lydia E. inkham’s Vegetable Compound. Here is Proof by Women who Know. TNT Lowell, Mass.—“For,the last three years T have T been troubled with the Change of Life and the bad feelings common at that time. I was in a very ner. yous condition, with headaches and pain a good deal of the time so I was unfit to do my work. A friend asked me to try Lydia EK. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound, which T did, and it has helped moe in | every way. I am not nearly so nervous, no head ache or pain. I must say that Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound is the best remedy any aick } woman can take.”—Mrs, Manoanst QuINN, Rear 259 Worthen St., Lowell, Mass. Her Friends to Take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Remedics, Haven, Conn.—“ When I was 45 I had tho Change of Life ‘@ trouble all women have. At first it didn’t bother me a while I got bearing down pains. I called in doctors who to try different things but they did not cure my pains. One husband came home and said, * Why don’t you try Lydia E. Ys Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash?’ Well, I got took about 10 bottles of Vegetable Compound and could Mi ing my heal! I also used Lydia E. Pinkham's Wash and it has done me a great deal of good. Any one my house who suffers from female troubles or Change of A them to take the Pinkham remedies. There are about 20 who think the world of them.” — Mrs, Fronexom Iseiia, bh Haven, Conn, You are Invited to Write for Free Advice. medicine has been so successful In relieving woman’! as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. may receive freeand helpful advice by writing the Lydia Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received by women only and held in strict confidence, | D INTERNED EXPULSION OF Leopold, arrested in Tacoma her 7 on a charge of be-| Slacker, has been ordered to the internment camp, at ‘ g . Utah, according to Fecelved late Tuesday by diss worewiee TQ BE APPEALED according to Information m Attorney General Gregory, ar-| from Dresden, Germany, in; He is an |. W. W. and has a of aliases. | Dr. Sidney Strong, pastor of Queen Anne Congregational chureh, will not contest the action of the Municipal league, whose members voted, 73 to 21, Tuesday, to expel him from membership because of his ac- tivities In peace organizations prediction of his daughter, Dr. Anna Loulse Strong, member of the school board, Wednesday. “Father will take no unfriendly A-seTpR | on more speed and rush-/ @ barricade of lumber, D. 1324 First ave., driving from Issaquah to Seattle, being held up by assailants on st. and Beacon ave., iy night, after a shot was fir-| the windshield. There were) passengers in ~~ | attitude toward any one in this U 4 5 town,” Dr. Strong sa “He has ps 4 not attempted to follow such a “ course at any time toward those who do not view things as he does.” Rev. Strong will return to Seat tle in about ten days, Dr. Strong |, said. y COCOA Notified by Wire Austin E. hs, at the league Meeting Tues: sald that Rev Strong had been notified by tele gram two days ago of the con } templated action of expelling him The matter was first presented to the board a week ago, and re. ns, scientifically lended, skilfully ferred to committee sted, and with the George H. Walker, who present of fat removed, ed the resolution to bar Rey Strong from membership. that, “In times like these | comes a parting of the wa: James A. Haight immediately de. clared that it was a violation of the by-laws to expel a member witho a hearing. It was then voted to 27, to suspend the rules and take action. - Walker sald that ft was not hon orable, after war had been de clared, to openly debate the ques } tion of war, but only to debate on how {t could be won a d toan extremely powder by a strictly Process, no being used, finished product _ containing no added mineral matter. AND IT HAS A DELICIOUS BLAVOR Trade-mark on every | l >mica Lo Mecipes sent free pew Made only by WALTER BAKER & CO. Led. DORCHESTER MASS. n the rear?” he asked. Henry Blackwell, of the Vv. customs offices, seconded the Walker resolution. C. J. France, while affirming his stand y the government in the war, and W. as wholehearte behind G. Johnson, spoke in favor of a more detailed hearing before tak AL} ing a vote J They wer ae JABEZ NELSON DEAD; | FUNERAL THURSDAY Jabez Nelson, well known news- jDaper man and Associated Pres correspondent in Seattle for a | Score of years, has passed on to the Great Beyond EVERY MOTHER | li® died Tuesday afternoon at i} ie -rovidence osp EVERY DAUGHTER) |iico1 trancrimon naz caned. nates | Williams, a new gave nearly a q hopes it m ’ r assoctate, art of blood, with ve the life of his EEDS IRON AT TIMES | beloved friend, but fate was inalst “ jent and Nelson, sunken into un- put strength into her nerwes} | oonycioueneus, never revived He was 54, and had been in Seat- tle since 1888 except for a short jtime during the Spanish-American war, when he was stationed in New York city and the West Indies jas a War correspondent, and in |Kaneas City, with the Associated Press. Nelson leaves a half sister, Mra. |McAdam, his only living relative. | His fufferal will be held Thursday at 4 p. m. from Bonney-Watson’s, under the direction of the Press club, | UNITARIANS CONFER “The Relations of a Minister to His Church,” discussed by Ernest |J. Bowden, of Victoria, and ©. J | Smith, of Seattle, will be on the | Program Wednesday for the North | Pacific conference of the Unitarian jehurch, which opened at the Unt versity Uuitarlan church here Tuesday, inttioeertilmanen “IT regret this action, but we are| jing our boys to the front to P —_ re ve shot and shell from the P3 Booklet of choice kaiser. Are we going to allow them| to be shot In the back by pactfidts| 8.| , Way the wind is blowing, NAVAL REVOLT IN GERMANY IS HARDLY ENDED Ny United Press Leased Wire AMSTERDAM, Oct. 10-—-A revolutionary plot In the Ger- man navy similar to that which broke out In the Russian Baltic fleet recently was disclosed by Admiral Von Capeile, minister of marine, in a speech before the reichstag, The admiral frankly stated that It was “un- fortunately a sad fact that the Russian revolution turned he heads of some persons in our navy.” Von Cappelle declared that the plot had been suppressed and claimed that socialist members of the refchstag were involved. Plotters Punished Von Cappelle sald some of the plotters “had suffered a deserved penalty.” “It is unfortunately a sad fact,” the minister of marine asserted, hat the Russian revolution has turned the heads of some persons in our navy, inculeating revolution ary ideas and in the insensate plan to nominate representatives on “all ships who would cause the crews to disobey orders and par- alyze our feet, thus forcing peace. Involves Reichstag Members “The principal agitators con- ferred with independent retchstag members, Including Members Delt- man, Haase and Voghter, obtaining their approval. ‘lL cannot reveal events tn the navy, Some suffered a deserved penalty, Rumors now in circulation are immeasurably |exackerated The combative force of the navy Was not threatened for a single moment.” subsequent Germany’s Allies to Ask Peace Showdown By United Presse Leased Wire ROME, Oct. 10.—Bulgaria, Tur key and possibly Austria, will pre sent an ultimatum to Germany }soon, demanding that she take ldefinite steps toward bringing the war to an end, according to re ports here. The ultimatum, said, will be presented collectively or on the occasion of! th eting of the separately forthcoming me ‘SOCIALISTS DENY | PART IN REVOLT BY JOHN GRANDENS | BERLIN, via London, Oct. 10.— |Radical reichstag members today 'turiously denied complicity in the Inaval revolutionary plot revealed by Admiral Von Capelle in a jsion of the reichstag. Dr. David, one of the socialist leaders, insisted upon his belief that none of his fellow party mem be guilty and” demanded they be hi Haase, Ditt mann and Vo; © socialists accused by elle, followed nee denying « The three ad mitted o with sailors but sald no plang such as those stated by Von Capelle had been |submitted to them Von Capelle sald the revolt “Jus tif st measures, even the death penalty.” BRITISH HAN UP 5 VICTORIES _ IN SUCCESSIOIN BY WM. PHILIP SIMMS WITH THE BRITISH AR MIES IN FLANDERS, Oct. 10. —A merciful, all-enveloping mud today blotted out, for the most part, the horrors of a boggy battlefield originally carpeted with German dead. In five days in the Flemish | bogs, since July 31, the Ger. mans have been driven back an average of a mile for each bat | tle. | From information obtained prior to the attack, coupled with what my own eyes saw and my ears heard, | am ina | | position to say that the objec | tives in every one of these five battles were won according to it ta} rs of the central empires at/ | schedule | The most desperate battle tactics) jof Crown Prince Rupprecht have} been complete failure in stem-| ming the British assault. Not only! are the Germans steadily retiring] from the most important positions| in Flanders, but their casualties, on] nservative estima per cent » attacking hell hole today held shat tered dead. Inside concrete bloc |houses one invariably fotind dozens) i by! ot the me proximate of corpses—many of them kille le » when the shells them P led to penetrate | ted Ger “pill boxes”| | were often completels blown out of |the wet earth, their crews scatter ed and plowed into the slimy, slip yery ground. The whole battle field, over which the British achiev ed their victory was piled with lit |tered heaps of rifles, human bodies, impediments—all sorts of material) }—all slowly oozing thru the mud] today. | The fact ns were that so few German captured by Field Mar. al Haig is attributed to the Ger |man habit of hurriedly yeusine| their guns to the rear the moment |it 1s certain that a British advance} has started | Germans clean their front} The |lines of field pieces the instant] |the battle starts, sending horses! galloping to the rear with them | They use only high velocity guns jand some of the biggest howitzers |during these British attacks, and \these blz guns are kept well to the rei They continue hammering! | Incessantl The war is not over, and the |Germans can take a lot of beating yet, but the five advances ac 1 with the comple urrying out of all plans for each, show which STAR—WEDNESDAY, OCT. 10, 1917. 2 BODIES AT MORGUE! At the public morgue, the body} of A. G. Bryant, dock worker, who! tied Tuesday morning aw the re sult of a fall from a pile of boxes, | is awaiting Inatructions from relw tives in the Bast Funeral arrangements will be| German counter attacks push: lof the Searpe, we carried out suc: | pleas, The government contended made for Stephen Bunker, 67, who] ed British advanced troops |cosnful raids | Seattle completed vind gh terogar Foat it wae optional with the court ied of heart failure Tuesday night,| back a short distance on a “There was heavy rain today.” are Cae whether or not their pleas might while making bis rounds ae wateh-| front of 2,000 yarde south of man at the Northwestern Junk Co,,| as soon as his son arrives from| Amertean lake, where he ta with the draft army ave you lost your Make-Believe? MARK vaaoe 4 #5 » Three ways to know , where to be sure of amount and Artcraft motior pictures 0 By tering these ~~ Dy soning the trademarks < the Ry seeing them flashed on the screen inside the BRITISH LOSE the Yyreo Staden raliway, Fletd Marshal Haig reported today. | “In neighborhood several enemy coun-'ners in front of the forward wheels. ‘PAGE 6 —— tences pronounced by Judge ter attacks during the evening BILLINGSLEYS" <p Pie 7 Neterer. were all repulsed,” the commander Attorney William Bell of Seattle in-chief ‘reported oe © argued for the Billingsleys railway, our adyanced troops were They were convicted on charges pushed back for a short distance f violating Interstate liquor #ht lov 2,000-yard front.” phd agro 9 jover a 2,000-yard ment laws, after pleading guilty “Northeast of Broodacinde, other prior to the recent conspiracy By United Press Leased Wire GAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 10-— repulsed ‘south counter attacks were with lows,” Hale continued trials in Seattle, but hold that they LONDON, Oct. 10.—Powerful us, Attorney Clay ‘Allen from | were denied to later reverse their ae the application be reversed. , error filed by Fred 4 Billingsley, who a ing to keep out of jail on Show plows of recent Invention y pr 1 vile or led run- The civil war cost the Unitéd the Ypres-Staden railway |for automobiles are on sled | gir ees soe PO APOGEE Te CPt eS mre Se ee ON Come on—let’s go! We'll see a picture-play—and a good one. We don’t even know the title of it—we don’t happen to care this time. We do know a theatre that advertises under the Paramount and Artcraft trademarks—and we know that means ‘famous stars * superbly directed. in clean motion pictures.” r Pictures “FAMOUS STARS, SUPERBLY DIRECTED, IN CLEAN MOTION PICTORES” What an illusive thing it is you are paying for and giving your time to! Phantoms dissolving to nothing at all when the light snaps off. Is it? It's nature, sunshine, laughter, love, life! What do you really see as you sit there in your chair unconscious of others in their other chairs all round you ? Not the illuminated screen, not the beam of brilliance from the camera up above —no, not the moving lights and shadows of the photograph itself—not the picture at all, but the story the picture tells. You live it. For that one hour or two you live a different soul—likely in a different land, quite possibly a thousand years ago. Maybe you half realize after a while that your tongue is y. Sometimes your eyes grow moist—with sympathy or mirth, no matter. Youdon’t know it. You've lost yourself—and good riddance for a bit. You are living the romance that makes this work-a-day world well worth while after all. You are adventuring, struggling, over-coming, avenging, forgiving, laughing hating, loving. : se * * And when the story ends, you walk out into the blazing real world—but you are for quite a while a good deal younger and a sight more human! That's you, isn’t it? There are fifteen million others just like you in that one thing? But there are twenty million others who are missing it, and this message is not to you at all, but to them. “_* * Of course you want to see Paramount and Artcraft Ss tures—the best the motion picture art affords. ‘aramount pictures give you the motion picture in all its varied forms—great feature plays, and stars, master comedies, weekly magazines and travel pictures. Art- craft pictures give you the feature play developed to its apex—-famous stars of screen and stage in pictures worthy of their talents. If it happens that the theatre around the corner has not yet gotten around to showing Paramount and Artcraft pictures—it will, if you ask for them. Because the motion pictures bearing those famous trademarks Paramount and Artcraft—are now available for every good motion picture theatre in the land. They are produced for you—see them —- ; FAMOUS PLAYERS ~ LASKY CORPORATION Atl » rw roar fom Wr ADOLPIL ZUNOR Prvs JESSE L LASKY the Prws CECI B DE MILLE Direct NEW YORK. = f There's a theatre in YOUR neighborhood showing Paramount and Artcraft Pictures. SEE THEM TONIGHT Tt ist OG) Was

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