The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 2, 1920, Page 8

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THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, Underwear Specially Priced Medium and Heavy Weight 2-Piece Underwear Broken Lines Regular $2.00 Values. Spe- cial per garment... . $1.15 Broken lines, but in all sizes Values to $3.50. Special garment... 91.65 garment... Fine All Wool, and Silk and Wool Broken Lines. Values to Union Suit Special Natural Gray 2 op og ae and Heavy Weights, $3.00 and 50 values, e. it. spe Be ciees. $2.35 MERINO SOX in Oxford Gray. Regular 50c values. —See Special Window Display— Store Hours: 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. EDITOR'S NOTE—How long can the Soviet governmen the sixth and last article by Ranso that faces the Bolshevik, regime) I went to see Kerensky, the com innar of finance, I found him in llyinska #t., in the Chinese town. | I began by telling him that I did not |belleve they meant to pay the loans. He laughed and gave mo pregisely the answer I had expected: ot course we hope there will be a rev olution tn other countries, in which jase they will repudiate their debts jand forgive us ours, But if that doos jnot happen we know very well that |we shall have to pay, and we are prepared to pay, and shall be able to pay, in concessions, in raw material which they need more than they | | need old.” Then, being myself neither an| economist nor a theoretical socialist, | 1 put before him what had been said | to me in Stockholm by an English |man who was both one and the oth er; namely, that, being isolated from Buropean finanes, the Soviet govern ment of Russia was bound to come to an end on economic and financial | grounds alone He maid: “That would certainly be no, If rising prices, rising wages, were |to mean indefinitely increased de mands on the printing machines for paper money, But, while we are at present forced to print more and more money, another process is at work which, In the long run, will bring this state of things to an end Just as in our dealings with other | countries we exchange goods Instead lof paying In money, so within our jown frontiers money ts ceasing to be the nole medium of exchange. Grad-| ually the workmen coming to re © in other forme | Houses, for example, lhting and heating are only a be-| «inning. These things being state! | Monopolies, the task of supplying the} workinan's needs without the use of |money is confaratively eany: |The chief difficulty is, of course, }food supplies, which depend on jour ability to keep up an ex-| change of goods with the villages. If! we can supply the villages with man-| ufactured goods, they will supply us with food. You ean fairly may that our ruin or salvation depends on a [race between the decreasing value of money (with the consequent need for | printing notes in ever greater quanti | hold out, t me, he tells of the “Race with F lost a chance of doing a good turn to an American, and with his level headedn tical wenne be-| | | the Soviet, altho, as he said ment people stopped attack: | the Bolsheviks, He went! into the occupied provinces during | the German evacuation of them, to buy arms and ammunitions from the German soldiers, Prices, he said, ran low, You could buy rifles for a mark each, field guns for 150 marks, | and a field wireless station for 500 He had then been made commandant | of Petrograd, altho there had been | some talk of setting him to reorgan:, ize transport ked jong he| thought the government could | plied: “We can afford her year for the sake! jon to stave of the revolu BOKN IN SUBWAY NEW, YORK, Jan. 2—Hophia An-| drews ‘Alvaxer arrived just a few) hours behind Infant 1920, ‘The first light she saw wae artificial and in the subway, where an ambulance} physician pronounced her a healthy eight pound baby MRS. ROSA HARRIS GAINS 30 POUNDS BY TAKING TANLAC Was So Rundown Could) Hardly Get About—Is Well and Strong Now “I have not only gained thirty pounds in weight, but 1 am enjoying so much better health than | have| in years. I fool just like a new per non,” maid Mra. Kona 5. 444 Twenty. #ixth avenue North, Se attle, Wash, recently. Continuing,| she maid | “For three years I suffered no! much from stomach trouble and had become #o badly run down that I had given up hope of ever getting any | better. My appetite waa extremely | Y Harris, | SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET The January Clearance Sales Now in Progress Offering noteworthy values in different departments thru- out the store. Handsome Brussels In the Men’s Section Night Robes —Of good heavy outing flannel, made up with flat collar and trimmed with white braid. Priced at $1.65. —Of a lighter weight outing flannel, ane up with military collar. Priced 50. Shawknit Cashmere Hose —These are of a wool mixture, in black, cordovan and dark Oxford gray. Priced at 75c a pair. Shawknit Silk Plate:Hose —Fine, durable, sightly hose, in green, cordovan, gray and black. Priced 75c a pair. Rugs At Special Prices —In the Oriental and conventional pat- terns now highest in favor, In effective color combinations. —$42.50 9 ft. by 12 ft. Brussels Rugs, special at $36.50. —$39.00 9 ft. by 12 special at $33.50. —~$35.00 8 ft. 3 in. by 10 ft. 6 in, Brus- sels Rugs, special at $30.00. ——-$30.00 9 ft. by 9 ft. Brussels Rugs, special at $25.00. ft. Brussels Rugs, Rugs, Fourth Floor. New Fiber Rugs Specially Priced for Saturday —A new line of fiber rugs. All new color effects, with plain centers and fancy borders. —$21.00 9 ft. by 12 ft. Fiber Rugs, special at $17.50. —$20.00 8 ft. 3 in. Rugs, special at $16. —$15.50 6 ft. by 9 ft. cial at $11.50. ~The Men's Section, First Floor. gud Dr. J. W. Edmunds y 10 ft. 6 in. Fiber RIS ~—Proper Glasses for Imperfect Vision. On the Balcony. Fiber Rugs, spe- Rugs, Fourth Floor. Girls’ Coats In the January Clearance Sale ties) and our growing ability to do| peor, and I had to force down every | | without money altogether. That is,|mouthful,l ate, and most of the ime of course, @ broad view, and you|! could not even retain this, I would Must not for a moment suppose that | become wo badly nauseated. The least | we expect to do without money in| little thing I ate would sour, gam! the immediate future. I am merely | Ould form and prem against my showing you the two opposing ten-|!UnEs so badly it was all I could do |dencies on which our economic fate|t© get my breath, and 1 would have | | depends.” such Intense cramping pains tn my stomach they would nearly kill me. (I! Prof. Pokrovaky told me a good|! Was also badly constipated and had | deal about the organization of the|t take some sort of laxative mont |[! comminsariat of public education, as |®¥ery day. My kidneys bothered me | | Lunacharsky, the actual head of it,/® #Teat deal and I nuffered with Was away in Petrograd. |paina secrom the small of my back, |) The schools are dixided into two|@"4. In fact, had pains all through ng Telaaer—one for children from 7 to/™Y bedy nearly all the time. My STEAL JAIL WHISKY 12 years old, and one for those aged | "84 ached s0 bad nearly all the from 13 to 17. A million roubles has | UM I thought It would burst wide At $29.50, $19.75 and $15.00 —All of the Girls’ Coats in our misses’ depart- ment are included im this clearance, at reduc- tions most important to those interested in de- sirable coats much underpriced. Misses’ Department, Third Floor. Tailored Ready Co. 401-403 Pike Street |bootleggers have been augmenting their supply of marketable goods by making systematic raids at might on captured whisky In the county jail here. {deen assigned to feeding children in jthe schools, and those who mowt need them, are. supplied with clothes and footgear. ‘There aro many | classes for workingmen The Soviet government has earned | the gratitude of many Russians who dialike it for everything else it has done by the resolute way in which it has brought the Russian classics | open, and at times I would become #0 dizzy I would have to grab hold of something to keep from falling. | and [ would feel just like I was go- ing to faint, and black spots would | dance before my eyes. 1 was #0 ner vous the least little thing would up-| net me, and at night I was so rest lene I could get but little sleep, as I would roll and tons from one mide of | Women’s Apperel of the Wanted Styles That Is Specially Priced DEMONSTRATING most emphatically that Women’s Apparel can be exceedingly good looking and still be low in price. Here you will find only those styles approved by Dame Fash- ion and selected by us to suit the needs of the women of this vicinity—models that you will admire and can easily possess because of ‘Credit Gladly’’ Suits, Dresses, Coats, Furs, Millinery, Blouses Men— For the New Year EW YEAR'S time is dress up time—it’s the season when men’s thoughts turn to the “Eastern,” for we have an unfailing record of meeting the tastes of refined fashion adher- ents with— “Bradbury” Suits and Overcoats 1332-84 Second Ave. the bed to the other all night long. | and in the morning I would feel so! out of print and unobtainable have| tired and exhausted it was all I |p, been reprinted from the stereotypes | could do to get out of bed. 1 lont | and set afloat again at most reason-| weight so rapidly I soon became so) able prices weak I could not do my housework, | Among the other experts on the | it being all I could do to get about! subject of the Soviet’s educational | at all | work I consulted two friends, a little| “I had seen eo much about the! |boy, Glyeb (who wturdily calls him-| good Tanlac was doing others, and, self cadet, the three of his «isters| too, as many of my friends had I west: in Soviet Institutions), and an |prained it #o highly, I decided to try | lold and very wine porter. jit. Well, as I had given up all hope | Glyeb says that during the winter | of ever finding anything that would! they had no heating, so that they sat |help me, you can imagine my sur) in school in their coats, and only eat | prise when I began to get better ax) | for a very short time, because of the| soon as I had taken only a few doses! into the bookshops. Books that were | ub / S -PATERSON CO. . SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Special Price Basement 200 Hats at $2.50 New Shipment, Just Received —Smart velvet and satin hats, mid-winter | great cold. He told me, however, that | ithey gave him a good dinner there every day, and that lessons would be | all right as soon as the weather got warmer. He showed me a pair of felt boots which had been given him at the school, The old porter sum. | med up the similar experience of hin | sons, “You,” he anid, “they go there. | sing the Marseiliaine twice thru, have dinner and come home.” I then took | these expert criticiama to Pokroveky who said, “It is perfectly true. We have not enough transport to feed {the armies, let alone bringing food and warmth for ourselves “And if, under these conditions, we forced children to «go thru all their | jleasons we should have corpses to teach, not children. But by making them come for their meals we do two |things: keep them alive, and keep | | them in the habit of coming, #o that | when warm weather comes we can do better.” I left Moscow with the two Ameri of Tanlac. My appetite improved] until it was soon better thar it had| ever been, and nothing I ate give me a particle of trouble afterward. 1 continued taking it until T was soon | rid of all my troubles, I am never! bothered with pains in my stomach | or back, and, in fact, never have a| pain of any kind. headache or those more, and have regained my strength until [ can do all my life, and I expect to praise it as long an I live.” Tantac tn gold In Seattle by Bartel! I never have the dizzy epells any | Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a special Tanlac represen: | tative—Advertisement Peel Off the Old Skin; Bring Out the New You know that beneath that mud ty, over-red or ble you have a skin and White. If ye m this more beautiful akin exp: view Instead of the horri u now behold in your styles and colorings. In black, brown, navy blue, red and the two-tone combinations, with attractive touches of gold trimmings. —Turbans, chin chins, sailors and a variety of other smart shapes. On Sale Saturday Special Lots of Coats At Great Reductions 39 High Grade Coats Reduced to cana, Messrs. Bullitt and Steffens, ad come to Moscow some days previously, and traveled up in the train with Bill Shatov, the command lant of Petrograd, who is not a Bol shevik, but a fervent admirer of | Prince Kropotkin, for the distribu tion of w works in Russia he| Repeat this daily until all t has probably done as much as any | od man. Shatov was an emigre in New| York, returned to Russia, brought | think law and order into the chaos of the | ,ROM pot rer “ Potrograd-Moscow railway, wie ‘ ” ° with the skin itself, OBSTINATE COUGHS When resistance is lowered and you come down with a cold that runs into an obstinate cough, your trouble is more than surface deep. You need SCOTS EMULSION an easily absorbed tonic-nutrient, mixed with your blood to nourish and enable you to get a fresh hold on strength. For nearly fifty years Scott’s: has been helping break up colds by building up strength. Try It! et eet etive avade of cod-jiver of! used in Scott's Emaleion is the famous | le in Norway and refined in our own American It is @ guarantee of purity and palatability unsurpassed, n ‘ Ocott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 19-19 never $35.00 3eautiful coats of silvertone, tinsel- done, polo cloth, velours and _ seal plushes. Lined thruout with rich novelty and plain silks. All season- able shades. Some have large fur collars. 44 Coats Reduced to $25.00 —The season's popular style models, warm winter coats of velours and silvertones. Some lined thruout; others to the waist. Many fur- trimmed coats in the let. Sizes for women and misses. 34 Coats Reduced to $15.00 ~—Representing remarkable values in smart, durable coats at a very low price. Velours, plushes, heather mix- tures, and a few short coats of baby lamb, comprise the lot. An attractive range of styles—a good range of sizes—a wide variety of desirable colors. The January Clearance Sale of Suits and Dresses at $15.00 Now in Progress —Presenting remarkable. opportunities ¢ for savings on desirable garments,

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