The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 18, 1919, Page 15

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War Hayward Says: “There is a great time of peace coming. It will be the millennium for which so many have looked, and for which so few are pre- pared.” Millennium Brings peace to the righteous and destruc- tion to the wicked. “Hayward Knows the Prophecies” and will tell the exact truth about this most interesting subject— FRIDAY NIGHT, JULY 18. The Hayward Tabemacle Fourth and Blanchard Streets. Auspices Seventh Day Adventist Churches. Saturday Night: “HEAVEN” N DOMINGO SEES BIG FORTUNE IN OIL (Special to The Star by N. E. A.) SAN JUAN, July 18.—Santo Do oe is hopeful of striking rich oil osits. Prospecting has shown presence of oil under the island, — lack of proper machinery has ‘Made profitable operation of the Now that the war d and grafting speculators is o longer to be toleratde. MP COST $250,000; SALE PRICE IS $4,400 (Special to The Star by N. E. A.) BAN JUAN, July 18.—Four army at Camp Las Casas, said have cost the war department a quarter of a million dollars, have sold for $4,400. Purchasers must ove the buildings within a lim- time and level the sites. Con- foundations will have to be m up with explosives. San Juan take over the sewerage and iter system installed, else it will } sold to the highest bidder to be out. This cost another half dollars. {Ito MARKED ; cr, ‘Though its chances were quite slim. She gave it to the areeon, 4] ‘And the grocer to h rk hem went to the dentint a ork. As we could save her more. THE FLORENCE UPSTAIRS STORE Week Oliver Morosco PRESENTS Carrillo IN A SNAPPY FUN AND FASHION SHOW BY FRED. ERIC AND FANNY HATTON “Lombardi Ltd.” —WITH— Grace Valentine And the Original New York Cast SEATS NOW Nights: 50c to $2.00 Mat, a (Best Seats): $1.00 +) The down on the strangest honeymoon | A BRIDE IN RAGING RUSSIA BY VALENTINA JAKOVLEFF Light-Opera Star of the Kreevoje Zerralo, Petrograd | FROM ALT, | Copyright, | prise | What a scene for | was the thought th | tarily to my mind, Thru a rift in low-hanging clouds stared the face of the moon—a blood red moon. Its beams fell on a field erimson-splashed, across which secur ried dark patches of uniformed men seeking every shelter, In answer to a flash of lightning and thunder from the skies, a bluish streak shot suddenly skyward and burst. The whole earth seemed in ® roar, T shivered and pressed closer to the side of the uniformed man in the big gray automobile. My hus. band! This was our wedding trip. blood-red moon was looking t came involun: that any actress ever had. Weird Honeymoon A honeymoon on -the battlefield! The big gray car, its engine muf. fled, stopped with a shudder before a@ dugout. Out of the dark night rushed a group of darker figures. the rear of the car, selzed the cases that wero piled at the back, and dart ed away, vanishing again Into the shadowy ground. The gray car's nose swung east ward and sped off into the night Twenty miles behind the lines we came to a tiny hut. Thru the single window poured a flood of orange Nght. Within, I felt safe, warm, alive again, and in touch with my dreams. This one room I had pa pered with my own hands, I had serubbed and painted the bow floor. This was my Castle in Spain- thie hut on the lonely Russian steppe. With a hurried kiss my husband eft me and sped away, Wins in Career T stood at the window and mused over the vast gulf between human plans and the decrees of fate. Five weeks before, I had terminated my engagement at the Kreevoje Zerralo, the great Petrograd playhouse, fee! ing that at last my career as an actress was within my grasp and the world at my feet. My life’s am- bition seemed to have been attained, tho IT was but 18 years old. Every night for six months I had been applauded, cheered, showered with flowers. The rules of the house forbade the retaining of any artist for longer than six months; but six months was enough. I had con- quered, and knew it. TI planned to go to Kiev and rest for a time on/ my mother's estate. alone. husband of a day—Alexis E. Jakov- leff, architect and major in the Fourth automobile engineers. Thought Her Child I had won him across the foot- lights. In a sprightly lightopera I had sung the role of a 12-year-old girl, Major Jakovieff had begged to| be presented. When friends granted his resquest, he urged that I return immediately to my mother. | “A child like you should not ap-| pear in a public theatre,” he urged. | “You cannot be more than 14 years | ola” I told him I was 18, and that my career meant everything to me. At the end of two weeks I became Madame Jakovieff. From the porch of my mother’s home in Kiev we watched the sunset and talked of the gathering clouds of war. It) looked as tho our Russia would be attacked by Germany and Austria. At 6 o’clock on the morning after HEARTS a peal of} ‘They surrounded us, crowded about) And to Kiev I had gone—but not | With me went my lover and} lcame to him in a highly | she is pepular. our arrival, I arose in reply to al loud banging at the door. A servant! handed me a telegram for my hus: band, marked, “Urgent.” | It contained his mobilization orders, That day he started for Petrograd to join his regiment. Trains as Nurse One of my glories on the stage | was an abundance of curly black | hair. As soon as Alexis had left me, | I went to a barber shop. My plan) was made up; I would be a wa | gin, THY SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1919. nurse. I left the shop with my hair cropped close and the tears running from my eyes. My lovely curls! They were in a neatly rolled package under my arm, The second act of my Russian drama was about to be- Today those curls are somewhere in war-torn Russia, They are guard- ed by an army of memories of my youth and the brilliant career that had seemed within my grasp, (To Be Continued) THREATENTO LYNCH DOCTOR Medford Angered at Report- ed Attack on Girl MEDFORD, Ore., July 18.—When Dr. Edward De Reymonte is given a| hearing this afternoon on the charge that he attacked a young woman school teacher who went to his office | for treatment, special guards will be stationed in the courtroom, The doctor maintains the girl nervous state and insisted on remaining in his office for treatment until an early-morning hour. The girl's reputation is good, and Citizens have talked of lynching the doctor. OLYMPIA, July 18.—A man giv- ing the name of Dr. Edward De Rey- monte, who said he was a former British army officer and a medical | specialist, came here last year to es: tablish a practice, but Ie within a few .weeks. His landlord's wife left on the same train, presumably to take a boat for China, Dr. street in the uniform of a high Brit ish officer, but queries to the British army headquarters, in Vancouver, B. C., brought word that “no such man has ever been in the British service.” Easy Street's sunny side isn't paved with good intentions. and family—is a boat boats. best ever. Tacoma and Leave Colman Dock at 7 and 9 p. m., returning from Including Colman Dock will all enjoy the invigorating breeze on the water and a trip to one of Tacoma’s Take the 9 o'clock boat, arriving in Tacoma at 10:30; then out to Point Defiance Park for | lunch, and come back on one of the afternoon Everybody will say the trip was the tunning time, one hour and 30 minutes—just long enough, ROUND TRIP FARE $1.00 Puget Sound Navigation Co. i| He Got 1 His : Share| | 9— Reymonte appeared on the | STORE NEWS The Market Blouse Shop, a new establishment, has opened at Pike st. The new store t rooms occupied for the last by the John Crose barber shop. The | store will carry blouses and silk un- derwear, with the largest stock this side of Chicago. The manager an. nounced Seattle people will now be able to buy the latest New York styles at Siscsicioons —w | An Inexpensive Trip Sunday One that you will all enjoy—for the wife trip to Tacoma. You parks, STEAMERS Washington 11 Tac a, m, and at 1, 3, 5, 7 ma on the same hours. War Tax Main 3993 lugs he's doubly joyous. | TURTLE HAD PINCH | near | the Every youngster’s happy to get a ll chunk of ice, and when one a plece the size that this sm gets one He's shar |ing in the distribution by the mayor's jfree ice New York—a poor of the metrop committee in Godsend to the olis. OF T. N. T. ON SELF?’ DUNBAR, Pa., July 18.-Ben and Charles Beals were painfully injured here by the explosion of a turtle around which they had built a fire to make it move, The boys rushed to their dee! home, ing that soon after they built fire the explosion occurred and that their injuries were caused by | bits of the turtle’s shell, LONDON, July 18,—In th a duck owned by R. Lardner laid two eggs, each weighing 9% ounces, | and also a monster shell-less one, JOHN E. POSTMASTERS QUIT; This town has lost its postoffice be- cause no one will be postmaster with out having two or three other jobs Tr small salary of the position, postoffice department will not “outside Mather, postoffice ¢ fice for good road station thre — Announcing the Opening of THE MARINE BANK OF SEATTLE Monday, July 21, 1919 HE MARINE BANK been organized and will be con- ducted on the principle of constructive and conservative bank- ing along progressive lines. It will open its doors on Monday, July 21st, with the definite purpose of providing financial service of genuine business worth in the following branches: COMMERCIAL, SAVINGS, COLLECTIONS, EXCHANGE AND FOREIGN DEPARTMENTS Your business may require the service of one department, the advice of another, or the aid of all. You are assured of prompt, courteous personal service, rendered with the confidence that comes from perfect understanding and knowledge, and the desire on the part of the bank and its officers to develop with its cus- tomers its capacity and opportunity to serve. THE MARINE BANK invites checking and commercial accounts, large and small, and the accounts of firms and corpora- tions which may desire credit, based upon assets and earning capacity of the business and the character and ability of personnel. The savings department has been carefully organized to handle promptly, efficiently and simply the savings accounts of its customers, from the smallest to the largest, paying interest semi-annually. ‘In the Service of Commerce and The foreign department of THE MARINE BANK has been established to furnish complete banking facilities for importers, exporters, manufacturers, merchants, banks and bankers transact- ing business in the Orient and on the Pacific. This bank takes pleasure and pride in calling the attention of its patrons to its strong representative directorate, comprising some of the foremost and substantial citizens of the community and state, who are also leaders in everything pertaining to the welfare and progress of our commonwealth. These names are a guaranty of all that constitutes vigilance, stability and honorable dealing in banking. The directors and officers of THE MARINE BANK invite the co-operation and patronage of their friends on the basis of efficient service, absolute safety, and their unbroken record of conservative, successful management of the enterprises with which they have been: identified in the past. THE MARINE BANK is at your service. Ze (Z ZZ CAPITAL $20000000. . DIRECTORS PRICE Jone Price & Co. 1 SS SURPLUS $ 50,000.00) co fo) bh esiden WATE OFFICERS F ealdent. President. S. Will: President. Ralph 3 Loomis, Cashier, Warren W. Zinsmaster, Ass’t Cash. Nortiwestern Fruit Exchange. jeattle Chamber of Commerce Vice ‘President, and Treasurer, Seattle Hardware Co. John BE. Price & Co. THE MARINE BA F_SEATTLE SECOND mane CORNER-COLUMBIA. STRE ET ANDREW PR Vice Presid: | CHICAGO CAR MEN SALARY TOO SMALL} VOTING ON STRIKE BRAGGVILLE, Mass., 18. CHICAGO, July 18.—Fifteen thou sand stre and elevated em- ployes we ng a striking vote MISTAKES BIG MAN |GIRLS TALK OF BOYS FOR SLEEPING Cow) CLOTHES AND IL! CONNELLSVILLE, Pa., July LONDON, July 18.—The average In the gloom the sirl worker has only three topics of | shaadi tenis conversation — her blouses, “ ‘ples oo he | Boys” and her bodily ailments, ag | se © | cording to Miss Synge, of the Arche thought on the track | bishops’ Committee for Industrial Re stopped | Workers. S$! ys she knows this Iking to the ob-|is so from actual experience, ‘ed a man weigh- ton ian Seamer 09 pounds who was! Thoughts travel fast, tracks, people's thoughts never July 18, gathering of a freight & Ohio was a cow en on the 1 in their demands for an what 7 cent in wages, the men operating both elevated and sur e lines in Chica and suburbs were to d le whether they will tie a the city’s transportation. ney say they live on’ the} and the allow | work.” Acting Postmaster upon instructions from the partment, closed the of cannot some distance ahead. the train and, ject, he ing more than discov but some travel far, Braggville lost its freight and rail-| months ago. Never ji the alm ige a pat that g nt medicine by with it SUNDAY, JULY 20 HOOD “CANAL This is the most fascinating cruise on the Sound. A daylight trip to Union City, at the head of this rugged inland wonder country. Dairy lunch at city prices. Remember ! The Seattle National Bank is head- quarters for the buying and selling of Liberty Bonds. Whether your bonds are large or small, we'll at- tend to your wishes with courtesy and dispatch. Brooks’ Whangdoodle Entertainers and Jazz Orchestra Will Furnish Music All Day Ss. 8. WHATCOM Leaves COLMAN DOCK [rip Fare _ $1.50 Children, 5 to 12, Savings Department open every Saturday evening from 6 to 8 for your convenience, @ Including War Tax Liberty Bonds bought and sold at market prices, The Seattle National Bank Resources $30,000,000 PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION CO MAINS993 COLMAN DOCK:

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