The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 28, 1919, Page 2

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FREE TOMORROW - ay M EMPRESS UNIVERSAL COMBINATION RANGE Wwe Will give free a handsome, set of vitreour a ing ware, consisting of 13 pieces; value of this practical and sei lo dishes. heeded in every well-fitted kitchen. ie tomorrow and see the EMPRESS RS/\L COMBINATION RANGE peasinaited: three ranges in one! —tot us demonstrate to you this truly — wonderful three-fuel range! —it saves labor—tt saves fuel —ft makes cooking, baking and roasting «real pleas- ure. ——tt ansurea a warm Kkiteh- en in cold weather and a cool kitchen in warm weather. three ranges in one— coal, gas or wood. —no parts to change, noth- ing to remove turn on the gas and the oven equipment auto- matically adjusts iteelf for gaa —turn off the gue and the Mmatically’ adjusts iteeit mat for wood or coal —eclf-starter-for gas — ne matches —eelf-starter for coal wood-—no kindling. —this three-fuel wender conga ta the com: pact (seta in a 40-inch ® most most most ef- UNION IRE St Have You Seen the Late Styles in Bradbury - Garments If you are one of those men who are always on the lookout for the newest style ideas you should make it a point to see the Spring styles in BRADBURY CLOTHES. fare loo! ¢ most stylishly tailored suits and coats that pyyou've seen in a long time. And style isn’t all they have. There’s comfort and long wear in every garment because they’re tailored from dependable mate- rials that keep their shape and give good service every day. == Bradbury Garments At $25 and Upwards ON CREDIT @ distinction all their own in their unusual com- tion of high quality and latest style with lowest c And with the low price goes a privilege that worth while, that of Easy, Dignified Credit. It you well-dressed for a very little. Ask about hen you come in to see BRADBURY CLOTHES. hy 7) AK +N UNION] LERKS B N. BE. A. Staff Correspondent = | With American Army in Siberia The outstanding figure of the A.) 1m. F. in Siberia is Major Samuel I. | | Johnson, provost marshal in a St-| berian village. Johnson ian't his real name, Hoe/ | was born in a tent a few thousand |miles to tho west of Viadivostok, near the Don river. His father was wack chief, Major Sam, as he ta) | called over here, was educated in a Russian militery academy and join Jed the Russian army. While John | eon was a midshipman the training ship put tn at New York. Johnson quarreled with his superior officer over brutality to the men and fin | shed the argument by striking him. |'There was nothing for Major Sam |to do but leave without permission Mixed in Revolution | Within a few days he shipped on & merchantman bound for South America and in Argentine landed Just in time to get in the thick of a He went into the Argen | revolution. a a private shortly be- | Une army fore he was wounded. He received two decorations. After the revolu- tion Major Sam went to Hawai, ‘The monarchy was tumbling. Ma | Jor Sam jotned the American army It was here that the recruiting offi- cer, who could neither pronounce |nor spell his Russian name, substi- tuted Johnson. Rises Rapidly in U. 8. Service Major Johnson's pronounced that he arose to briga-| dier general of the Hawall National commissioned Ly the president. On the outbreak of war with Ger many, he resigned his commission | aa a brigadier general to be @ major jin the regular army. In Honolulu, Major Johnson made and lost a fortune, He was well on | his way to @ second fortune when he gave up his work to enter the overseas forces. One forest fire cost him a million dollars, #0 he shifted | | his interest to plantations, He has shot big game in India, the Straits Settlement and South | Graves, when Major Joboson enter ‘eg the room. | Played Football “How's your é¢ye today? asked the youthful Major Graves banter No rouge, and yet the cheeks are 3 powder, and yet com- tare at which you exclaim; her com- plexion is natural—that is the re- mult that follows the use of Stuart's rk. 0 aifference how spot- ted and disfigured your face may be with pimples or blackheads, you should seek to win back good looks. Stuart's Calcium Wafers clear the skin of pimples and similar erup- tions by thoroughly cleansing it of | impurities. ‘With a pure blood nu- trition, pimples and euch disfigure- And the invigor- laces dead, ow lowing colors of a good complexio: a yoursel this m Tat thousands hate, proved before pasa Get « 60-cent box of Stuart's tum Wi ot 7 druggist to- day. Make your dream of a more beautiful complexion come tru: Mail coupon today for free tri | Package. ~~~ Tree Trial Coupon a S62 Stuart ry rT Send me, ones, by return mu a free rial package of Stuart's Calcium ra ment disa; ir. ated Blood r skin with the | | EEP Luden’s at your bedside. Remove the tickle; purify the breath; refresh the mouth. s~- | Many uses.. “ LUDENS MENTHOL COUGH DROPS GIVE QUICK RELIEF Carter’s Little Liver Pills \fixed government policy. “| ships on the ways, as it were, and | | opponents, however Major Sam, Cossack American, Born in : Siberia, Wins Fame in Yankee Forces 1. Johnson. MAJOR JOHNSON'S CAREER 1. His father was a Cossack chief. 2. Me joined the Ituasian navy, quarreled with e.superior and deserted | 7 the Hawaiian | Pieaded guilty to the in New York. & Shipped to South Ameries ané mized tn a 4 Went to Hawall and Became « brigadier general of the National. & Made a fortune—and lost ft In a 6. Made another in plantations. 7. Hae shot big game world over and holds all records for marks manship and 54 campaign medals, forest fire. &. Wntered regular army ag a major when war broke. 9. Won Carnegio medal when he slid over a precipice and carried a Tine to crew of shipwrecked bark off Honolulu. ingty. Johnson did not reply, but there ‘wan one movement of his hand and an instant inter the cigaret which Major Graves had been smoking was neatly clipped off by a bullet and saved given a Carnegio medal for thin feat. Major Johneon has a son who, at 15, ts exhibiting an inheritance of his father’s adventuresome s«pirit. He walked into his father's office in the seamen. _ en |. pti POLICE OFFICER | Fy RENT He war HIT BY TRUCK Motorcycle Patrolman Elliott Dragged 27 Feet ‘W. A. Blljott, motorcycle police man, ts steadily improving at the| leity hospital, after a crash between hip motorcycle and a Ford delivery truck of the Imperial laundry, driven by T. W. Gaynor, of the Normandie | apartments, at Bixth ave, and Olive! at. Thursday. Gaynor, who was going east on Olive, at @ speed he estimates at 10) miles an hour, declared he could) not account for the accident unless} Blot tried to cut in ahead of him. Elliott was going north on Sixth ave, The truck struck the side of the motoreyels, throwing it over and dragging it a distance of 27 feet Elott was picked up unconscious | and rushed to the city hospital. Motorcycle Policeman W. Dench, who investigated the accident, re port that he believed Elliott had the right of way re’ Elliott first recovered consclous |nens at 9:0 p. m. ‘Thursday for a | short while, and then at intervals all last evening. Gaynor was released on $100 ball | Eitiott is 27 years old and has been on the force since January 17, 1918, Mo is the leading “ace” of the speeder catchers. ” * a: mare i} |CONFESSED BOOTLEGGER GETS UNIQUE SENTENCE | RICHMOND, Mo, March 28,—| ‘Tho most unique sentence and sure- | ly the most severe puntahment short | of life imprisonment ever meted out | fn the Ray county circuit court was | tmposed on Thomas J, Bohannon, | } prominent Richmond citizen, by udge Frank P. Divelbiss, Bohannon was charged with bootlegeing counts. He first and the second was dimninsed, Judge Dtvel- bias tmponed a fine of $1,000 and | n entence of 12 months and | then paroled Bohannon under the following conditions That he, pay all the costs of the | case; | ‘That within 4% hours he quit the confines of the seventh judicial cir- | cult; ‘That he remain in “wet* territory | #0 long as uch territory may be) found within the boundaries of the | United States, and, | ‘That he shall never for any pur- | on two At 42, Major Johnson won the| December and nonchalantly an eturn within the confines of | championship for long distance| nounced, “Hello, Dad, I just thought| Ray, Clay and Carroll counties, swimming in Hawall, covering 26/I'4 come over and spend Christmas Bohannon t# a member of one of miles, He was captain of the cham | with you.” the oldest and best known families | pion football team at 43 and played @ back ponttion. When nine men were stranded in & bark off the coast of Honolulu in ite Influenmm had school in San Francisco and he had shipped as a steward on @ transport bound for Vladivostok. Major John- & typhoon, Major Johnson took a/eon wanted to send him hack as a line, alld down a precipice which the | passenger, but he anid he would tak: couldn't be scaled | the closed instead. Chairman Hurley Would Have U.S. Merchant Marine Placed in Hands of Private Owners) |semsfon of a few of the shipping (United Press Staff Correspondent) | interests which are already waiting | BY ROBERT J. BENDER WASHINGTON, March 28,—The|to government has launched its “feeb ext’ to the country on the question of private ownership, with limited federal supervision, of major wet | Chatrafan Hurley's rfcommenda-| tions in New York last night along marine, were regarded It may be stated! that Hurley's views are personal however, not the announcement of a He believes the merchant marine) built up by the government should; this line, as applied to the war-born | year-old | merchant | here today as a move to round out! public opinion take them over.” | RSC ROMANY'LURE GRIPS LOS ANGELES GIRL IOS ANGELES, March 27—There seems to be a Romany strain in 15- Gertrude Peck, which the | city cannot tame. Ever so often she | runs away from her home, at 1178 | oO E, Jefferson wt, her parents tgld the | When it fades, police yesterday, when they reported | #treaked, Just an application or two her missing again. ‘They said she loves the smell of | APhearance a bundredfold. the earth, the warmth of the sun and | the free, open life in the hills and the be turned over to private concerns | Canyons, and likes to stand by the at prices determined by the world | #*a and watch its motion. tonnage market, with part of the payment deferred and with half of| the ships’ earnings in excess of 6) per cent to go into a public funds, | Ship purchasers would give a mortgage for the unpaid balance, the mortgage to pay 5 per cent, 1 per cent of which would be turned by the government into a merchant marine development fund. Prevent Watered Stock Governmental regulation would be designed to prevent watered stock and assure the use of vessels on trade routes designed to promote the welfare of the United Staten “I believe this is the answer to the government ownership-private ownership discussion,” Hurley said) ecently while discussing the plan. “T believe it wfl appeal both to! democrats and republicana, Tho! time has come when such questions | as this must be decided from the| viewpoint of the greatest number. | This plan rebounds to the benefit | of the American people; at the same time it leaves its development to/ the initiative and skill of American ship operators and still absolutely prevents the watering of stocks.” Despite some evidence that there may be strong opposition in con- gress to selling the merchant ma- ring, Hurfey is planning to £0 ahead with his work of preparing the vessels for sale along the line he has suggested. Experts are now at work in the shipping board compiling data on tonnage costs all over the world to determine what would be a fair sale price for the American vessels. Simtultancously, other experta are at work developing the most ad- vantageous trade rqutes for the ships when they are turned over to private comeerns, “The idea,” Hurley says, “Is to got all of these matters in complet- ed form #o that when the project of turning the vessels over to private concerns culminates, we can put the frething aleep. form of chocolate-coated tab! is pleasant to take, WORSE THIS SPRING Owing to Rundown Condition Caus-| SEvery body uses “Wryeth's Sage ed by the War. Anxiety and worry have a bad effect on the nervous system, and derange the bodily functions, expo | elally digestion and excretion. Who | escaped them during the war? They have made nervousness, paléness, lack of vitality worse this Spring. The very best medicine to take now is Peptiron. It strengthens and tones the nerves, It gives @ good color to the lips and cheeks. It is the great vitalizer, giving healthy activity to all the vital organs, This good medicine, which is a real iron tonic, makes the blood rich in red corpuscles, an abundance of which is indispensable health. to OrG, Lens Specialists Pxpert in detecting errors of a adaptation of 0 Brinder to make the latest nnd and best lenses, It requires @ akili optometrist to uncover all datoct Ghassna wep Goehring Optical Co. Joshua Green Bldg. the boy's perfect It promptly relieves mental and physical exhaustion, creates an appetite, and promotes sweet, re. Peptiron is in the lets, and fn Ray county. ne of ite tonic and laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUI- NINE (Tablets) can be taken bj anyone wi t causing pervous- Deas oF rim §, fn the head. There fe only one “Bromo Quinine.” W. GROVES signature on box SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR ARK te the i wethfaiuess } a" Justre and te hair when faded, strenk- ed oF gray. That beautiful, even shade of| dark, glossy hair can only be had) by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your It makes or mars the face. | turns gray or jof Sage and Sulphur enhances ite | Don't bother to prepare the mix. ture; you can get this famous old recipe improved by the addition of other Ingredients at a small cost, all ready for use. It is called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound. This jean always be depended upon to bring back the natural color and lus- ttre of your hair. and Sulphur Compound now be cause it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has | been applied. You simply dampen |@ sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one emall strand at a time; by morn- ing the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it be- comes beautifully dark and appears glossy and lustrous, Pall of ‘Lik, To ood Vie cay. New York ‘De. Ferdinand King, ‘and Medical Authur, says ISTRY PAINLESS RIGHT PRICED BY EXPERTS You are as- sared of getting the most mod- ern and up to the minute ser- vice in dentistry when you come to this office. We employ only graduate regis- tered dentists, men of the high- est standing in their profession. Each and every operator in this office has his certificate from the state dental F ; roo right on the wall in front of his dental chair, in plain sight of ‘ all. This insures you that your work will ~ be done by a man who knows just how it — ought to be done, to give you lasting sat- — When a denfist‘holds a certificate from the state dental board it is proof positive that he knows his business thoroughly—it is proof that he has gradue ated from a good dental college and then has gone | before the state board and passed a thorough and searching examination before that body as to his knowledge and ability to practice the dental fession. Having successfully passed this examina-- tion, he is given his certificate, and not till then. Remember that we employ only graduate tered dentists at this office so you can’t make any mistake in coming here for your i ae aa area ie me Rg EL let them slide easily into the chan- nels of foreign trade.” Same for Rail Lines In connection with Hurle; plan, a strong sentiment has developed both within and outside congress recently for handling the railroads as private undertakings under mod- erate federal supervision. Hence the reaction of Hurtey’s plans is expected to have an im. | portant bearing on the ultimate dis- position of the railroads and perh: even the wire communicating sys- | tems of the country, now being op- erated by the government Hurley's plan is not without Its Senator Flot- cher, ranking democratic member of the senate commerce committes and late chairman of that committes, is opposed to selling the ships now, expressing the belief that thoy would “eventually got into the.pos- cial and industrial business, Bigseee Serve sive LIQUID ASSETS As @ conservative national bank and membe: Fed r of the eral Reserve System, this bank invests ite depositors’ funds only in short term loans and securities, based on legitimate commer- return depositors’ money on demand, and now, with the redis- counting privilege of the Federal Re merited by their character and the na- ture of their relations with us. First National Bank It haa always been ready to Bank, it is always prepared to customers the accommodation 'y dental Remember this also—this office is here to stay— which time we are proud to say we have built up a reputation:for honest methods and fair, square, deal- ” 2 able thing we possess. x You will find it most distinctly to your advantage” to maintain, because you may be very sure we! aren’t going to take any chances with that repu- We expect to treat you so well when you come here that you will come back to us any time in the that, we are depending on you to recommend us to your friends, and we know mighty well that yourself, ‘ FREE EXAMINATION give your teeth a thorough examination. He will tell you just what is needed to pug your teeth into” You will be surprised to find how small this will be under our low-price system. cad : for the sake of your own health, we urge that you ; do not put it off even another day. DR. L. R. CLARK,, Manager : 1405 Third Avenue. N. W. Corner Third and Unies, Diagonally Across the Street From the Postoffice, Be Sure to Get to the Right Place. BetterBread Pupiisnro By Searne Danmne.Co, GOOD FLOUR, GOOD MILK, good yeast, good sugan, good methods, good bakers and a good planse HOLSUM Bread ~ ARE ALD TO THE GOODe Their quality will make you @ come bac we have been here a great many years now, during - ing, which we now regard as by far the mostivalu- to come to an office which has a reputation ours tation. future that you need dental service. More than won't do that unless you are pleased and sai We invite you to call and let one of our dentists perfect condition and also just what the cost will bes” We shall be pleased to have you call at once, Regal Dental Offices In Every Respect Seattle’s Leading Dentists. LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES, © ‘Wih.Ave. So.at Mam Sk, good selt, good fata, These are reasons why k for more. S For sale by all good grocers,

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