The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 20, 1919, Page 5

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EATTLE STAR—-MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1919. “GRANDMOTHER” OF RUSSIAN | STORE HOURS: 9 TO 6 DAILY CREDIT W = EXTEND CREDIT ona basis that enables you to pay weekly or monthly without cramping or inconven- ience. All trustworthy persons are cordially invited to open an account. BUCK’S First in the Hearts of the American Housewtves. Made We haye them for coal, wood or gas. The master prod- uct of the highest- skilled union stove mechanics in the world. Range illustrated is the fa- mous Buck’s three-fuel model —<coal, wood or gas—chang- ing from one fuel to the er in a jiffy, and requir- ing but the one oven. YOUR OLD RANGE TAKEN AS FIRST PAYMENT You Save From $10 to $20 When You Buy a Buck’s Range MA GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO. t JME FURNISHERS | 1514-1520 Second, Between Pike and Pine Mme. Catherine Breshovskaya, ‘ontinued From P ‘age One » “x | C * om noon as Kerensky took control, fol lowing ty abdication of the czar She was with the government unt she, too, fee We of political at fe evident isheviki are that hold nothing her countries of the talks guardediy in BR but that abe b not the ones to and that their good for t earth Interest Bolsheviks Destroy she declared, “that a great difference Russia The Ye ¢ constructive t build RETURNED OFF WEDS Maj. Robert Perey Smith, former Seattle physician, who was married! to Ethel Knapp Smith, a Seattle girl Saturday, will return to Camp Lewis , ‘ after a brief honeymoon. His mar riage followed his return from France, where he was prychiatrint MACK SENNETT'S Saree Baneeerr} for the 91st divixion. Ho was former. Biggest Comedy Get a small bottle of Danderine at | {OF the Yin’ Avision. Male beard ae , jany drug store for a few cents, pour aoe im tH EY ’ le iittie inte your hand and rub we | ™*tca! examiners into the scalp with the finger tips | ’ By morning most, if not all, of thin| Swine growery’ conference, to pro-| lecture You W awful acurf will have disappeared. |mote hog industry in Washington N Fe Loh # Two or three applications will de |opengd Monday. under auspices of tation, no education, no factories, no ores Sores stroy every Dit of dandruff; stop|state development bureau, Chamber | work in the mines from which to | scalp itching and falling hair. | of Commerce. get coal. The shops are quite emp: The Admiral Watson, wrecked in Northern waters, scheduled to arrive in Seattle under her own steam, fol lowing repairs The ean Asheviki canr Starting Next Saturday at Russia fs in ndition, Russia ix future, no Much may happen, b am hopeful that right will con: lieve, too, that the future ca, an well as the other the world, depends upon thetr conception of democracy “In Fussia there is no transpor one The Sealed Bids Will Be Received on the Following Equipment from January 15, 1919, up to 11 A. M. Febrv ary 15, 1919 DONKEY RAILROAD TRUCKS and ENGINES EQUIPMENT AUTOMOBILES Logging, Hoisting and Loading Trucks Willamette, Tacoma, Packards, 1% to 5-Ton Smith & Watson, Standards, 1% to 6-Ton Washington and Darts, 1%-Ton Denbys, 2-Ton other makes. Seldens, 2-Ton Velies, 144-Ton Sizes ranging from Uniteds, 1%-Ton 6%-in. x 10-in. Gramm-Bernsteins, 2'4-Ton to 13-in. x 14-in. A. C. Electric Motors 440-volt, 3-phase, 60-cycle, 2 to 75 H. P., with or without starters | Also OTHER MACHINERY and EQUIPMENT FOR SALE | For Terms, Full Information and Descriptive Catalogue of Equipment, Address All Inquiries to the SALES BOARD United States Spruce Production Corporation Yeon Building, Portland, Oregon Tons Tons Tons 7 Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons Tons . Relayer . New .. . Relayer ib. Relayer Federals, 3-Ton Locomotives Garfords, 314-Ton Geared and Rod, 36 to 70-Ton, bas £7 New Yorks, Baldwins, ‘ Automobiles feislers, Climax, ete, Cadillacs, Seven-Passenger Dodges, I Fords, Five-Passenger Logging Trucks Connected and disconnected, 60,000 to 80,000 capacity. ive-Passenger nation, | they | REVOLT VISITING IN SEATTLE | famous Russian revolutionist, stands in the center, her secretary, Michael Kroshkin, at her right, ty. All seems dark, and yet all [those who love Russia and believe in her future must not quit trying to save her.” | Madame Breshkovekaya’s life bas wen bleak x the cold mountain land | steppes ranges of her native 43 Years in Prison |_Her 75 yeare have been f with trouble and crowned by su Forty-three of these have been | spent in Kussian prison camps and | in exite. | | Tm On aristocrat sympa | thized with her father's serfs. At » workings” of the estate were n book to her | 16 was w informed. T peare. Voltaire. Diderot, Poushkin, were her inspira tion. She devoured history, philoso phy, sociology and natural and po| litical science, When 19 years old,| she attended secret classes, strictly | forbidden by the Russian govern-| | ment to women Rapidly she gained power to fight for the freedom of the masses—ac-| | quired wisdom to be used to liberate| |her father’s serfy and the down-| | trodden peasantry, oppressed for centuries. Active revolutionary movements constituted her tife from the age of when she became identified with “the commune” at Kiev She started the overthrow of the czars regime, when she traveled thru Russia as a revolutionary mis sionary in 1874, sowing the spark of freedom in the breasts of the peas-| | ants. she At well Shak: read and! ot Roxneau, | she works Arrested in 1875 | Government investigation against} | her immediately proceeded | | In 187 Jehin, in F |held for three y TRIAL, and wentenced to five y hard labor in the Siberian salt in 1878. With other exiles, an esoape from t near the Arctic circle, Apple mountains, distant, suffe innumerable and terrible hardships, and was recap | tured, and taken to Kara, where she |} was imprisoned for three ye | From Kara, Selinginsk, on the Chinese 1,000 miles distant, held for ber of years, and th beria her original But in the five years o she kindled the revolution y fa that was to sweep holas and th aristocracy from power et the oppor ine moment Pardoned in 1896 ‘odolia, t tempted | zin camp, d into the nearly 600 miles urs taken to} frontier, | she was + num nw After three months spe b vit ing friends ar juaintance Madame sgain start ed rev und An or¢ sued This tr and jin 1904, to the United States, where sho raised, by tireless efforts, a $10,000 fund to carry on the revo: |tutionary movement in Russia | She was arrested on her return, in | 1908, spent two years in the Fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, awaiting trial, then was sentenced to life Breshkovskaya lutionary propaganda, her arrest was | evaded capture | overnment act of was tol Madame | | the arch the provisic |reatore the shkovskaya rensky, the Ru her in Petrograd in the imperial suite. She went hiding when thrown imperial g¢ 1917, the first government freedom of Alexander fan le with a rec Ke ed | pt HIGHLAND SHEEP DOG | AIDS ALLIED VICTORY rhe of erful Jan peak 1 1A th the of animal courage sheep dog. A part of the Bri line eut off by enemy barrage: A mes was intrusted to the dog. It ran nearly two in ten minutes, under and | brought reinforcement war was re enemy fir will Lewis main event of the sol to be staged at the | Anderson, local sailor Shuster, Camp Harry meet Harry star, in’ th diers’ sm camp Tuesday, One ftundred Pairs of Curtains Special Juesday Upper Main Moor v7) Curtains in white and with atitched borders, ot inner wit Priced for d NOKEN lines and odd lots vim and Marquinetts cream borders to match $2.75 Curtains $3.00 Curtains $3.25 Curtains $3.00 Curtains $3.75 Curtains $4.00 Curtains "4 76 Curtains Girls’ Union Suits Reduced Upper Main Floor chal y's Knit Seetion t OR Tuesday's nell ing t Wor Underwear Non-+#hrinking W t substantial « F ell Girl Union #uits ing price he cotton and wool mixed, in gray with high neck, sleeves and ankle length draw se ts are of and are Tuesday a mu 14 and 16 yearn. at $1.75, & sult nen 12 priced @omen's J0c Handkerchiefs 5c Main Floor, Rear, N account of slight defects O on the borders we will nell 00 Handkerch white centers and colored bor ders, formerly sold ut 10¢, Tue day, choice HERMAN WHITAKER, | OAKLAND AUTHOR, DIES IN NEW YORK « NEW YORK, Jan Herman Whitaker, the author, whose home was in Onkland, Cal., died here early today of cancer of the stomach. 20. OAKLAND, Jan. 20. — Herman Whitaker, the Oakland author, who| died today in New York, recently re-| turned from Paris, where he went to report the war as a representative of the Oakland Tribune. Whitaker wrote among th being story of Guatemala r and “Over the Border.” He recently | published “Fighting the German Shark." He spent considerable time with the American fleet. Surviving Whitaker are his wife and two daughters, living here many “The Pl “The WILHELM DIDN’T INTEND TO LQSE HIS OWN MONEY| AMSTERDAM, Jhn. Holland was not invaded like be- Belgium, cause it had been made a depositary for private funds of both the kaiser and the Aust emperor, the Haagsche Post tevealed today The newspaper said that $5,000,000 of Wiihelm’s and $25,000,000 of Franz de s funds were transferred from jon to Duteh banks in ly, 1914, STOMACH UPGET? Pape’s Diapepsin at once ends Dyspepsia, acidi indigestion. Your stom and you fee you have meals hit back! id, ga & or of indige it never mind tion pain or Eat nd Don't A tablet of Pap tay upset! D immediately idity and stomach dist Pape’s Diapepsir urest, quickest stomach the world. ‘The drug store all the reli y cost very Don’t Sacrifice Your Liberty Bonds BLANKETS 9120 Kirk’s Military Shop 1209 FIRST AVE. | Bulga: The Rhodes Co. Main F ned foot, wit A KI r incl Sky-biue, Mere muda, New Gold, ¢ inal, Sizes 8% te but ne onda y } ~ Store Hours—9 A. M. to 5 P. mM. | Women's Silk Boot Hose Juesday 49c a Pair Emerale y Greer t each of one hundred and fifty rma) loor H snwembled 4 color range Vir Vox, Grape and Car. Formerly 4 Group of Suits | Choice $19.75 New Second Floor sem|{-tailored oplins favored suitin esian Green, Brown, Black and Oxford Sizes 16 to 44; al Suit 46%; one Suit Suit in size 60% $29.50 and $34.7 and other Navy 0 one Tuesday were Gra in size 48%, and Former Choice Trimmed Hats, Tuesday $3.9 New Second Floor J EVENTY-FIVE Silk Velvet fancy ostrich novelties, flo for this sale on Tuesday Brown are included. $10.00 and $12.50. Reduced for Tuesday. and Plush Hat» trimmed with re and ribbons, are assembled Colors of Navy, Taupe, Black The former prices were $5.00, $7.50, Choice at. ... @hite Voile Blouses Tuesday at $1.25 Upper Main Floor EVERAL broken lines gathered here and there from regular stock make up this assortment of one hum dred I large roll collar. laces apd embroidery every style. Formerly fo Blouses est of the kaiser ne t fer was made by Prince ¢ of Schaumburg-Lippe, the aiser's late brother-in-law, who re-| 1914 to at the re turned from London on July 1 in time for the kaiser to pre; attack France and E LONDON, Jan. 20—The Bulgarian cabinet has resigned, a Sofia dispatch announced today. Premier Malinoff, leader of the pacifist faction in Bulgaria, became head of the cabinet shortly after the an armistice was signed. HERE IS ONE THING THAT The style variety includes round and high neck models, trimmed with Sizes 36 to 46, but not each size in 5. Special for Tuesday, choice ENVER MADE MILLIONS IN TURK FOOD CORNER (Special to The Star by N. EB. A) PARIS, Jan. 20.—Enver Pasha, af one time head of the Turkish gov- ernment, and now in the Caucasns fomenting trouble, 1s reported to have made millions. He had a hand in practically all the profiteering on. The former food controller, now in prison, and who was appointed by Enver, cornered all available sup- plies, and immediately raised prices 1,000 per cent, with the consent of the gevernment. IS ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE Rheumatism Has Never Been Cured by Liniments or Lo- tions, and Never Will Be You never knew of Rheumatism —that most painful source of suffer ing—being cured by liniments, tions or other external applications. And you will never see anything but temporary relief afforded by such makeshifts But why be satisfied with te rary relief from the pangs of ps which are sure to return with in creased severity, when there js per manent relief within your reach? Science has proven that Rheuma tism is a disordered condition of the blood. How then, can satisfactory results be expected from any treat ment that does not reach the the seat of the trouble, and rid the © system of the cause of the disease? S. S. 8. is one blood remedy that has for more than fifty years been giving relief to even the most age | gravated and stubborn cases Rheumatism. It cleanses and purk fies the blood by routing out all © tra of disease. The experience of others who have taken 8, S. Sig” will convince you that it will promptly reach your case. You cam, obtain this valuable remedy at any drug store A valuable book on Rheumatism’ and its treatment, together with ex« pert medical advice about your own. individual case, will be sent abso lutely free. Write today to Medical Department, Swift Specific Co! 431 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. 2-Ply Arcade Roofing $3.00 Roll Special for $2.49 This materials and is sanded on one side. tains 108 square feet and and cement for laying. the roll Hotpoint Electric Iron Price A Hotpoint Elec- tric Iron always gives excellent satisfaction. With the new improve- ments they are better than ever The late model Hotpoint Irons have the ney style cord with the spring joint, which prevents the wire f They also have a thumb rest and an attached HOTPOINT IRON, PRICE 2-ply Arcade Roofing is made of high-grade Each roll con- comes complete with nails Regular price $3.00. Special, s $7.00 rom getting out of order, and. Genuine Rayo Lamp Chimneys 19c yo ger AMD UNIOM STREET.

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