The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 31, 1918, Page 4

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PAGE 4 TH TAR MTT THURS SDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1918. TORO COTO SOLO TOO wo A Good Piano Is Not Necessarily an Expensive One Of course, we feel that the finest piano is the STEINWAY, but the prices for Steinways, while thoroughly consistent with their high quality, are generally beyond the means of many homes, For this very reason we have devoted much at- tention to a group of medium grade pianos— really famous makes—products of old-estab- lished firms—pianos for which we have been the selling agents for years. In offering such pianos as A. B. CHASE, KRAKAUER, ESTEY, KURTZMANN, EMERSON and STROUD, we can heartily recommend them as ideal for the home or school. The prices of these pianos ure within the reach of nearly everybody. Then we carry the ALDRICH at a lower price—a good dependable piano which will give excellent service. : Then again we have on our floors at all times many “used” Pianos (good reliable makes) which we have taken in part payment for Steinways and Pianolas. These have gone through our shops and have been put in first- class condi! id carry our guarantee. We advise a customer to buy a good “used” piano rather than the new ones offered by some dealers—the prices are the same, but not the quality. your ead gee’ or your need, we will serve you to our best ability so that the transaction will be to our mutual and lasting satisfaction. We gladly arrange convenient payment terms. DLV @PD DP LIPO ID "= Se 0) ) 0 2 y 4 | OSES CSE eS.: YX = oor sound, a name! Persistent Coughs are dangerous. Get prompt relief! from Plans. tops irritation: sooth- | He ts held in the city Jail. ing. Effective and safe for young lieved the Oriental and old. No opiates in How Is Your “Culebra Cut”? The Panama Canal is a clear passageway as far as the Culebra Cut. But Gold Hill has a way of slipping into the cut. And until dredges can clear the channel, the industrial schedule of the world is out of gear. How about your own canal? The intestinal canal is a clear passageway as far as the large intestine. There, if you become constipated, waste matter is allowed to stagnate. It becomes unnaturally dry and undergoes abnormal! fermentation and putrefaction. Germ activity is increased. Your whole system is out of gear. Result, the production of irritating and poisonous substances, which are absorbed into your blood and carried all over your body, liable to pro- duce disease anywhere. The longer such stagnation 1s allowed to exist, the harder it is to clean out the canal 90% of human disease originates in the “Culebra Cut.’* If engineers tried to blast out the slide from Culebra Cut they would have more slides to cope with. If you try to blast out accumulated waste from your Culebra Cut with pills, salts or purges, you will increase your constipation—and next time you will have to take stronger medicine in a larger dose You can’t dredge yeur canal. You can clean it out with Nujol Nujol softens the mass, and supplics the intestinal canal with sufficient moisture to replace dehcient mucus. It causes the obstructive waste matter to pass gently out of your system at a regular hour, absorbing and removing the poisons as it goes Nujol regularity keeps the traffic of your mind and body operating on schedule. You admire the Panama Canal system. Why not safeguard your own? Your druggist has Nujol Warning: NUJOL is sold only in sealed bottles bearing the Nujol Trade Mark Insist on Nujol. You may suffer from substitutes Nujol Laboratories STANDARD OIL CO (NEW JERSEY) 50 Broadway, New York 2 ‘Wet, shivering, just out of Puget | Japanese was ar.) rested at First ave. and Pike st at) 3:30 a. m. by Officer J. I, Pederson. Tt is be. swam ashore from a Japanese ship in the harbor. 9 McDonald, mayor of | Bradley Beach, N. J. is a munitions | % BY ETHEL STARR ne of the dogs at Dr, Geor * eat and dog hospital, 1 Aloha st, bas suffered from the flu }1t is unaccountable, since dogs are }wubject to many of the same Il nesses people are, and these dogs have failed to pay the least atten tion flu mask regulations. True, an Irish setter, belong to Frank Waterhouse, ts convalescing after & several weeks’ illness of pneumonia, and a Chinese Chow Chow, aged one year of W. Caulkins, p ent of the Chi cago, Milwaukee & St, Paul railway |is recovering after an annoying at tack of a disease corresponding to St. Vitus’ dance, In Contagious Ward This poor Chow Chow inhabits the contagious ward and is very much alone, But tho the ra of #kin and nervous disea have laid bare his back, and changed him from 4 frolicsome puppy into a care-worn invalid about ready to cash in his checks, he ts not lacking in spirit and barks as well as the rest of them. He has the advantage of 4 higher altitude, since the contagious ward overlooks the other wards Petite and snobbish is a delicate little fellow called a Pekinese poodle, the property who passes lelsure time in his bed observing those beneath him, His owner is C. D, Stimson of Seattle, and it In believed he is rather anx fous to return home. He's Real American an American dog. Rert Swezea of the Pioneer Print company and is of the Chesapeake bay variety, famed in the art of re trieving, or, in other words, finders of fallen game, This dog can boast of the earliest of American lineage. Many half centuries its ances tors were found on old ship the Chesapeake, referred to in American [Q] | history, All other dogs have prefixes bo |to their names, such as Irish, Ru» sian, German, Scotch, in fact every: | thing but Yiddish, Dr, Yates has been a veterinarian | for 11 years, since graduating from | the Chicago Veterinary college. lexplaining the uses of contraptions reminding one of funnels or stove The Home Treatment for EPILEPSY Those who suffer from this nervous Gisease, accompanied by ite wudde sciousness be glad to Heved by th want the me the Kosine for success of this treatment in has proved it to have un- $2.00. at skep p usual merit Large bottle using, you are not entirely satia- fied, your money will be refund- ed. if, after Booklet «giving complete Gietary, etc. free on request. SWIFT'S PHARMACY ané Pike St. Ave. poo avery trifling cost, If you get from your druggist’s a package of Can- throx and dissolyo a teaspoonful in a cup of hot water. This makes la full cup of shampoo liquid Jenough so it t# easy to apply tt to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. Your shampoo is now ready. Just pour a little at a time on the scalp and hair until both are entirely covered by the daintily perfumed preparation that thoroughly dissolves and removes every bit of dandruff, excess oil and dirt. After rinsing, the hair dries quickly with a fluffiness that jmakes it seem heavier than ft ts, and takes on a rich luster and a softness that makes arranging It a pleasure. LIBERTY BONDS MUNICIPAL AND CORPORATION BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD JOHN E. PRICE & CO. Ninth Floor Hoge Building ‘BETTER THAN CALOMEL | Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are aHarmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the sub- | stitute for calome!—are a mild but sure | laxative, and their effect on the liver is | almost instantaneous. They are the re- | calomel. His efforts to banish it brought | Obs diene little fone phe ir eg t little tablets dothe good that prlneaeey nog but have no bad after effects. don't injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take The dogs are of all nationalities, | lance in une these days | Only one of the hospital inmates is| help Is responsible for this former He belong» to| excellent service being discontinued. He| | ushered me around the dog kennels, | \\ | sult of Dr. Edwards's determination not | ates totreat liver and bowel complaints with | $"s.,!*, —————— For Burning Eczema {plpes, The surgery room looks like | |any physician's surgery room, ‘The | operating table is white and com:| . and the Instruments are i ns of rust or bad care. Meat, cornmeal and oatmeal are | carefully prepared for the dogs’ ncheduled diet, A stove warms the hospital wards each morning and night Like to Quarrel In speaking of the tendency of doga in general to quarrel at odd mo- ment Dr, Yates sald: “Dogs of an age will usually quarrel when placed together Place a small puppy with an older dog, and the puppy will re ceive the best and most tender treat ment possible from the older dog, who feels well versed in the ways of the world, But Jealousy seema to exist between female dogs who have mothered pupples, or male dogs of equal years. Dr. Yates ie now the owner of a splendid bulldog named Poppy, Pop. py pays no special attention to any thing bis master says, and inter rupts him when in the mood with playful barks, If told to behave, | she will reepond with three barks, | which her owner interprets as “1/ won't, I won't, I won't.” | Many of the doge are so high spirited od mischievous they tear great hy in wired fences, atick their heads thra and destroy any thing within reach ‘There are no cata at the hospital now, nor is the eat and dog ambu: | Lack of | | NOVEMBER MAY ~ SEE GERMANY ALONE IN WAR BY J. W. T. MASON United Preas War Expert NEW YORK, Oct. 81—To what extent the crumbling Hapsburg em. | pire is prepared to resist on its own | soll before accepting the demands | of the democratic nations for uncon: | ditional surrender will be made known within a few days. | The withdrawal of the Austro Hungarian armies from all occupied | territory, which hae been ordered by the Vienna government, should permit the dual monarchy to form its Ines afresh along its own frontier by the first of next week, if the high army command follows the frantic directions of the civilian rulers ‘Thereafter what ta left of Austria | Hungary will have definitely aban- | Joned all thought of conguest, and | if it continues the war, it will be fighting solely against terms of un conditional surrender. Falls Apart ‘The ability of the Hapsburg an |mies to prolong the struggle even |for self-defense, is highly doubtful. ‘The disintegrating forces now at work within the empires have ab ready made self-preservation impos midle. Altho Austria-Hungary continues to be thought of as one country; it jis very doubtful whether at this Yoy can enjoy a delightful sham- Vi with very little effort and FA bey 5 the authorities at jenna are the de facto government of the Hapsburg empire, or, indeed, wheth er a Hapsburg empire now existe in anything but name These matters will become clearer when the troops of the dual mon archy are behind their own bound ary after abandoning Poland, Serbia and Italy, If a strong defensive fight can still be made under the Hapaburg banner, the war in South- ern Europe will © to be carried well into the enemy’s territory But if loyalty to the imperial houne has vanished with the defeat of the imperial armies, {t will not be possible for Karl to tnapire his troops to continue the struggte for a vanished sovereignty. In that event, November should see Austria. | Hungary out of the war and many 4 t the world American beet and beans is favor- ite dish among children of Italian sol- diern at relief stations in Italy. For Over 50 Years Di KLINE’S EPILEPTIC Wee 'Y. It is a rational an’ remark D successful treatment for Fi ) = (Falling Sickness) eed bi r. Get oF order on lepsy. Or, RH. KLINE CO., Gray Hair . ss, Philo Way Gens Nowa NAS reasy salves and ointments should | hold of the trouble and quicklycorrect it,| not be applied if good clear skin is Why cure the liver at the expense of the wanted. From any druggist for 35c, or |teeth? Calormel sometimes plays havoc | $1.00 for large size, get a bottle of zemo, withthegums, Sodostrong liquids, It} When applied as directed it effectively | | 's best not to take calomel, but to let Dr, | Femoves eczema,quickly stops itching, Edwards’ Olive Tablets take its place,| and heals skin troubles, also sores, | Most headaches, “dullness” and that | burns, wounds and chafing. It pene- | lazy feeling come from constipation and | trates, cleanses and soothes, Zemo is | adisordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards’ | @ clean, dependable and inexpensive, | Dlive Tablets when you feel “| “and | antiseptic liquid. Try it,as we believe “heavy.” Note how they “clear”clouded | nothing you have ever used is as effect | prain and how they’ ‘keup” th its | ive satisfying. (Oc and 25c a box, ice i ‘The E, W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O, KIDNEYS WEAKENING? «| LOOK OUT! ‘The good housewife of Holland would almost as soon be without food as without her “Real Dutch tainty, until you fall a victim to in-| Drops,” as she quaintly calla GOLD curable disease, | MEDAL Haarlem Of! Capsules, Their Stop your troubles while there 18| uae restores atrength and ie reapon= Don't walt until little pains | gible in a great measure for the me big aches, Don't trifle with y, robust health of the Hol- use, ‘To avoid future wuffert ' | mining begin treatment with GOLD MBDA Haarlem Ol Capsules Take| Do not delay, Go to your druggist ery day wu you|and insist on his supplying you that you are entirely fr from x of GOLD SDAL FE apaules, Ta This well known preparation has and it you a aults, your druggist will Holland for centuries: In 1696 the | gladly refund your money. Look for government of the Netherlands| the 6 GOLD MEDAL on the box ranted a special charter nuthoria-|and accept no other. In sealed ng ite preparation and sale, boxes, three sizes, DOGS LAUGH AT FLUWARAND PEACE [42 Direcr v. REPORTER VISITS THEIR HOSPITAL S/TUJATION AS IT GOES TODAY Both Austria and Turkey are thru, and admit it. Crushed by the allied armies, and torn by internal dissensions, remaining tool begging waiting are peace. rantioally Without for definite conclusion of an armis Austria has officially an unced that her armies are being withdrawn from Ltaly und the Balkans. Allied troops are asnintl greatly hurrying Turkey, it is reported, has pre. pared a note to the allies which practically amounts to uncondi tional wurrender, As evidence of her good faith she suggerts that the dane lan alliéd fleet enter the Dar that allied troops be to supervise demobiliza m of the Turkish armies, at all Turkish violators of civ- 1 warfare, which, according to past performances would in clude practically all military and civil officials, shall be turned over to the allies for trial On top of the Hungarian, CeechoSlovak, Jugo-Slay and Montenegrin situation, has come the report from Vienna that Austria has turned over all civil and military authority in occu pied portions of Poland to the Polieh government at Warsaw. EUROPEAN RAIL LINES ARE CUT BY CZECHS "The Czechs, who seized Prague in a bloodiess revolution, have cut All direct communications be tween Berlin and Vienna, Fiume, Agram and Budapest also are cut off. Marshal Foch's terms for an armistice are reported by the Vonsische Zeitung to have been delivered in Berlin Tuesday. The German armies on the Weet front are still desperately resisting the allied prenwure. ALLIED ARMIES BOOTING AUSTRIANS ON WAY HOME The Austrians on the Italian front, despite Vienna's assur- that they are being awn voluntarily, appar still are resisting as best The Austrian war office admits a complete break thru on the Piave front on both tides of the Montello plateau. The great Austrian bases of Vittorio, Asiago and Oderzo have been captured. COUNT PRISONERS BY TENS OF THOUSANDS Italian, Britiah, French and American troops are attacking ona front of nearly $0 miles can from Axsiago to the Adriatic and have advanced 15 miles beyond the Piave. The latest estimate of Austrian prisoners is 45,000. Gen. Treat's command, which comprises National Army men from Ohio, was reported tn Unit- 4 Press dispatches from the Italian front today to be in com tact with the fleeing Austriang, In the Balkans the Austrians announced they have retired completely from the south bank of the Danube. MEXICANS HOLD MINERS CAPTIVE SIOUX CITY, In, —E. F. Knotts, mine owner, is held for $50, 000 ransom with Z. B. Smith, a min. er, and a Mormon prospector named Tinney, by the Mexican bandit Epi fano Holguian, at Villa Ahumada, Chihuahua, T. H. Knotts, of Des Moines, « brother, was scheduled to arrive at El Paso, Tex. today with the ran som money for Knotts J. D. Knotts, a cousin, of El Paso, gave the first information of Knotw’ capture. Ousts Tenant, Landlord Fined $10 by Gordon Francis M. Kane, lawyer and apartment house owner, and his wife, Ida Kane, were fined $10 each in Judge Gordon's police court Wed nesday, for dragging a tenant out by the heels. Mrs. Emma Edwards, tenant, stat ed that she had agreed to clean the halls of the Kane apartments at 504 B. Republican at. her payment to be free rent. She was to be paid for extra duties, A misunderstand ing developed, during which, Mra. Fadwards alleges, the Kanes told her to get out. Further, Mrs, Edwards alleges, the masculine Kane pulled her out by one leg, while the feminine Kane pushed, Judge Gordon said it was not proper to eject a tenant that way, Four Arrested for Ignoring Mask Edict The police made four arrests in | rapid succession Thursday morning of individuals who were negligent regarding mask regulations, Jasper Kongood, 3%, Austrian jit- ney driver, was arrested at First ave. and Yesler way by Patrolman J. P. Worden, for failure to wear a mask while driving; while Harry Erickson, 20, riveter, and Adolph Mazoka, 36, industrial worker, were arres' at First ave. and Madison st. Police Officer G. W. Wilson for failure to wear masks as jitney passengers. « Ralph Stewart, 17, was arrested on a Second ave. street car for failure to wear a mask, No Coal Famine on Coast This Winter BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 31.—The Pacific const need have no fear of a coal famine this winter, 8. I, Yerkes, assistant director of the distribution division of the fue! Pb g ate 1 administration, At the London hi American Y. M, C. called the Home News ia being print. ed and posted to every army and navy station in Great Britain, The endquarters of the A. & bulletin sheet hews 18 supplied by wirelons RIFT Sr, | | will Keep the Hun aw: ” War Chest Drive i od ie se | John Kt. Mott, chairman of the war) council of the Y. M. C. A., has been | chosen director general of the war | chest campaign that seven national war work organizations will conduct the week of November 11-18, Al war chest of $170,500,000 in expected | to be rained. POLITICAL GUNS BOOMING FAST AND FURIOUSLY WASHINGTON, Oct. 31-—With a) broadaide aguinst President Wilson, fired by former Presidents Taft and Roosevelt today, the political bat | teriew’ now shaking the nation con tinued discharging from coast to| const The senate was expected to open | up again today with further spirited republican assaults on President Wilson's appeal for a democratic , however, hoped to shut | off debate by making the point of no| quorum. There are only a few! senators now in the city | In a staternent today, Secretary of Labor Wilson accused the repub- Means of having harried the adminis tration constantly. They had, he maid, criticised the rnment for) inefficiency at a time when a defi nite reply as to activities would have revealed information of import- ance to the enemy, endangering the lives of American soldiers. FORD GRANTS DEDMAND | OF FOUNDRY WORKERS) WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Finding }for an eight-hour day, time and one half for overtime, and double time for | Sundays and holidays, Henry Ford, of the labor policies board, has h 4 down his judgment as arbitr in the case of the International chinists against the Wheeling Moid and Foundry Co, Wheeling, W. Va Menu uisance—too many re to regret it this afternoon."’ Ever feel that way? Lunch on Borden's Malted Milk. No heaviness—no 5 A pure, nourishing, food-drink. All flavors—all fountains. Bordens MALTED MILK BLAGO DF SALTS CLEANG KIDNEYS if Your Back Is Aching or Bladder Bothers, Drink Lots of Water and Eat Li Meat . When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don’t get seared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate |the entire urinary tract. Keep! your kidneys clean, like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing [them with a mild, harmless salts | | which removes the boty’s urinous | waste and stimulates them to their |normal activity. The function of |the kidneys {s to filter the blood. |In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so wo can readily understand the vital |importance of keeping the kidneys | active. Drink lots of water—you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmactst about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days, and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, | combined with Lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of frritation, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- jure; makes a delightful, effervescent lthia-water drink, which every one should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kid ney trouble and backache. Materials for Your Sewing | ~ Ready - Made MeDougall + fouthwick SECOND AVENUE AND PIKE STREET. Store Hours Thursday 9 to 3 Friday 10 to 3 Closed Saturday For the Home Sewer Dress Goods and Coatings In these days when many of your usual activities are stopped, you may be using your time to advantage in making garments for yourself or for the family. For blouses or undergarments there is a special 40- inch Crepe de Chine in 27 shades and black, at $1.55 yard. A special Imperial Gown Satin comes in 14 attrac- tive shades and two-tones, 36 inches wide, $2.35 yard. Costume Corduroy in shades of taupe, steel gray, brown, tan, beige, Copenhagen, myrtle, bluebird, plum, navy and black is 36 inches wide; $1.45 yard. Coatings of special Plush Velour come in plum, Bur- | gundy, Wilson red, navy, coral, bluebird, tan, myrtle, white and black; 54-inch; $2.95 yard. 54-inch Wool Velour Coatings, $5.00 and $6.00 yard. 541nch Porm-pom Coatings, $7.50 yard. 54-inch.Wool Jerseys, $5.00 yard. 54inch Moleskin Coatings, special $10.00 yard. S4inch Russian Pony Caracul Coatings, $10.00 yard. 44-inch English Costume Velvets, $4.50 yard. —MacDougall-Seuthwick, First Fleer From the Gray Linen Shop If it is underwear that you are making, you will need a supply of Long Cloth. A soft chamois finish with no starch or dressing, comes in medium weight, 36 inches wide. Sold only in pieces of 10 yards, at $2.50 for the piece. Or Outing Flannels for warm nightgowns €nd pajamas come tn stripes, checks, plain colors of pink, blue, gray and all-white. 27- inch flannel, 35 yard. In Dress Ginghams there is a range of plaids in medium and jj color combinations. They make attractive school and house Colors perfectly fast in this 274nch gingham—40c yard. For blouses, for children’s frocks, boys’ suits, aprons or house dreanes there are woven colored suitinga, Some in mat stripes, a few checks and plain fast colors, are all 32 inches wide—60c yard. —MacDougall-Southwich, Basement Bicor. dark dresses. A Smartly Tailored Blouse in heavy crepe de Chine will please your fancy for your street 1 costume. The French cuffs are fastened with pearl links, pearl buttons trim the front, a turn- over collar completes it. The Blouse comes in bisque, navy, white, flesh or rose. $4.95. —MacDeougall Seuthwick, Second Fleer. Dainty Layettes that include a world of bewitching baby things from soft little White Gowns to warm Flannel Blankets have arrived. A 25-piece set is $12.85. One with 81 pieces, $21.95. Another of 48 pieces is $37.13. Duplicates of all pieces in these sets may be purchased separately. Visit our Baby Shop on the Third Floor. —MacDougall-Seuth wick, oo HOSIERY | In Silk, Lisle | or Cotton Women’s Wayne- Knit Cotton Hose with wide gar- ter tops, double heels and toes, are in Cordovan- brown, black and white, at 75e pair. Fine Lisle Hose with rein: | forced heels and toes and elastic tops, come in field gray, golden Ideas for Gift Making In Our Art Needle Department brown, champagne, sand, pink, Dainty Aprons stamped Sn and black, All sizes, 85¢ i 25e. for embroidery are AIT gee Card Table Covers all/ brown, bronze, medium gray. ; white and black with double vinag Bed re embroidery Neeis and toes. All sizes, $2.00. 4 | BOYS' COTTON HOSE—In Dresses of fine lawn for) piack with double heels and toes, babies from 6 months to a/!n sizes 6% to 10%, 50c pair. year, stamped and ready —acbeegan-Sonthota, made, 75c. } Pillow Cases in six dif- ferent designs are stamped for French embroidery, $1.25, It Is Time to Buy Christmas Cards We have a special arrival in attractive folders in panel de signs or novelty cardboard, with engraved greetings, die-stamped and colored. Two for 150. Combina- tions of fine nainsook are also stamped for French embroidery, $1.65. | Lessons are given every day| Other cards and novelty re by our instructor in all branches | membrances on the balcony at of needlework, | the left of our Pike Street en Hi-Southwick, | trance, . , —MacDougall-Seuthwielts

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