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DUCKWORTH DRAFTED | | IN RED LABOR GANG “Volunteer” Workers Complain of| ' Treatment; Editor Lands in Prison BY J. HERBERT DUCKWORTH) “The matority of the workers (Copyright, 1920, by N. EB. A) nly becaure they were com REVAL, Bs! June §.—Ry | Personal oxy I know what order from Moscow ran foreed labor mea m workers, men workers, sol-| T was caught unawares in a the Red army, peasant cith | rable citizens: La at | the usual May | n spite of wnteer” labor gang at Pskov I May OOS yrway of t mero. Members t professional ng pening Qnd red flags, were pas y of the! galled: “Come down w eeting in the market square, | An American, the hotel secretary st { In Pskov, made a speech eu) v teer labor p heard he was . RUSSIANS WERF TO “CELEBRATE WITH WORK” In jthe station mmisear Antonoff sarid that the wor celebrat EDITOR'S TRUTH TELLING yard, © were Strikes, but th from the capitalistic yoke, would Celebrate with work He sent 500 men Yards, where we wor @arrying ties and rails. The women ‘Went to decorate the graves of men Who had died for the revolution At first the work was taken as @ joke. Then grumbling and slacking began. The women and girls requrned, and we all march ed to the trade union house, where we got meal tickets. Commissar Heicka, formerly of Providence, Rhode Island, now an of ficial of the soviet transport depart ment, said to me: “Comrade Duckworth, the citizens ) tell me you have done a good day's Work and have earned a workers meal. Here is a ticket.” to the Chornaya FP We were fed t liday for the is not divided by a Chi nese wall from Moscow or the rest Russian socialist federated Phe reporters’ gang worked one toad of atx wee ~ Cy 4 CASHES HIS TICKET FOR HORSE MEAT SOUP oviet kitchen for a pint of horse meat soup, half a pound of bread and some porridge. ‘The next day the Bolshevik Pskov newspaper said TH DEMTST YOU SHOULD GO TO Everything Depends on How Your Teeth Are Treated— Poor Dental Work Is Dear at Any Price. Practiced by Painless Proc- tor, the Best in Every Respect. Unless you are already satisfied with one dentist, and cannot be rea @oned with in behalf of another You cannot do better than the offices of Painless Proctor, Northeast corner First Ave. and Pike St. Seattle, and see sam- Pies of this BEAUTIFUL work in crowns, bridgework and artificial wets of teeth. Each crown is made by the two-piece system (first get ting the band and then soldering ‘on a the cusp) This is the approved visit fists throughout the world used by so many offices. oration of the natural contour of the lips and cheeks, which gives haturalness in expression. ‘The proprictor of this office has een in the practice of-dentistry in Beattle for 18 years, and numbers @atisfied patients by the hundreds. All work guaranteed. extraction of teeth assured. . Your teeth are a pat of your anatomy and great care should be used in your selection of a dentist <1 solicit your patronage on a basis @f gentle and courteous treatment and moderate fees. PAINLESS PROCTOR (Bterting Dentistry) N. E. Cor. First Ave. and Pike St Opposite Public Market. Phone ain 4965 G Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted. Broken Lenses Duplicated | Look the World } Square in the Face | Blinking and squint- i ing are caused by weak- ness or strain. We can relieve these conditions —perhaps cure them. Consult us today. Efficiency in many tasks is largely measured by cor. rect vision. Moderate Prices YERSOL EY ee PTICAL CO. I rushed over and cashed it at the , | STERLING DENTISTRY, as|* method of all really high class den. | 7 much [| S superior to the ready-made crowns Tn artificial teeth we aim at res Painless | -|says in a letter received by the bu SSS) | 10:1 tosay. When lant heard of five nd sentenced t sf nment. DOESN'T KNOW OWN IDENTITY | Appeals to Officers to Help Find Himself Police of all Northwest citien were searching Tuesday to find a clue to | the identity of the man confined in |the Mount Vernon Jail who has lost | his memory The man cannot remember his| name or residence, nor did he fur. nish any possible clue as to who he was in his ramb w tifled local He appea Stevenson in Mount | Monday and appeaird to the sheriff | Vernon to ald him find himeeif. He wore |a bat purchased at Hatton-Oliver’s Seattle, | The lost mam ts about 40 years old. dressed in a dark suit. The mark E-X.2 is stamped on |A knife marked with t ifford Brolin, Preston, Wash., was nd in one of his pockets. He bes he found it, | | | Bureau of Missing Relatives A letter wag received by the bu reau today from H. McLeod, of Lang: | | ley. Wash., who wishes to get in| | touch with C. R. Smart or Reatrice| Smart, formerly of Delta and Silver Lake, Wash. eee For years ri s of FL W. Mo Fadden, formerly of Luverne, Minn., | {have neither heard from nor sean | |him, according to a letter receive from Dr. C. C. McFadden, of Sher burn, Minn. His father is now very | il and is not expected to er, | and Dr. McFadden wishes him to hear from him at once. ee Earl D. Pavatte, formerly of 1117 Fifth ave., has fallen heir to some ty and his brother in 8. Nash , Tenn., would like to hear from the brother, C. A. Pavatte, prop | vi | him, years ago, he waa employed by a local piano concern, the brother de Would You Call It Doughboys’ Meet? Bankers, representing millions of dollars, will be present when the Washington Bankers’ association | opens its 1920 convention in the rooms of the Clear tion Friday at 10 a House associa S. P. Announces | | R.R. Fares to S. F.| | Special rates from Portland to San Francisco during the demo vention nnounced by the Southern ‘oad company | Fare will be $36.29, round trip, with |sleeper $5.94. Beginning June 22 trains will leave Portland at 8:30 a. | | m. and 8 and 10:15 p. m | atic con. | ', DUNTY WOMEN’S SAN CLUB indorsed Joseph Latham, convention. Mra. Lath recent suffrage demonstra | SEATTLE is going to be all dolled | up when tourists from the come | | thru on their way to the 8! con | vention in Portland this month. The Greater Seattle bureau of the Cham ber of Commerce is planning Seat te’s new civic costume, | | rented them on a third degree ansault | warrant. THE SEATTLE STAR Duckworth’s Cables Tell Real Russia SOVIETS’ BREAKDOWN LOGICAL, SAYS HOOVER He Discusses Facts Cabled by Duck- worth From Reval to The Star BY fH P. BURTON monthly hundreds of thounands NEW YORK dune 48.6. Merbert | fre dineanes resulting from under | Hoover, in an exclusive interview ng, and the capital city has di | with me today, dincussed the an minished from a population of near yortant cable dispatch from Saft | ly 2,000,000 to enn than 600,000 reapondent J bert Duck t only have the so-called ‘up. » is Just out of Russia, de | per clamnses’ been brought to execu « conditions under the Soviet | tion, but workman and farmer have rule been flied before the firing squad in Duckworth's dispatch, which was | appalling numbern, because they re printed in The Star Saturday, told | fused to produce without retum 4 how Bolshevism was “slowly decay.|The function of the town and city ing.” how people were starving and to provide manufactused goods and i H DUCKWORTH how transportatto 1 other comforts in return for the pro pecs | wrecked. This be duce of the land had entirely disap The Star today publishes the sec | prediction of severa r 1 and nothing waa offered to ond cable from J. Herbert Duck | TWO CONVICTIONS the farmers but inexhaustible paper worth since his escape from a Bol | HORNE OUT BY EVENTS curreney which they « not ox ahevik ison, in which he was! 4 . ‘ change for their normal necenstities thrown ause he dared to enter . ement on Septem.|_ 12 & desperate desire to secure soviet F as a newspaper cor Med. . tement on Sey raed jon from factories, and the respondent after the Russian gov urepe during and betterment of the rail ernment had ordered him to kee} r “ne Holshevik government has ” d labor into regiments and Duck worth, 0 nect 4th | ov mind The t comes from . Pe seasged we Rohe ge withimy mioé. Th oo a ™ work over long hour and with tn N ork ¢ of © Sta yntact with stupendous social fer te food, and the death penalty and ite twentyone associate mem ” nd volution in which Eu H trike he Newspaper Enterprise | rope attempting to find solution his is the picture of practical the Bolshevik ex | f » by practical ex 4 nd 4alin fer and crawled under periments alism. My convic visin—-and ne “m, e at the t this whole philosophy is| FIRE MUST BE ALLOWED to Petrograd and g iteelf from a start TO BURN ITSELF OUT where he was oa rdinar wertng 1 have repeatedly urged that thin sian lets ductivity of.indestrial on fire « 4 not be put out by military we Jependent a point that u for but that ft must burn Iteelf th sian fondition realization of this bankruptcy, was 1 t in the hear bin vey people st ] Duckworth was seized, th below the necensity for continued ex iar tg od t his time is not} prinon, and deported to a de tence of their millions of people ars ; ia amp at Narvo | My aecond conviction is older,|. “Th Bolshevik government ttael has recently made frantic efforta tc re-entablish competition in the hope of re ug production, but once thts | great and Intricate machine of pre duction and distribution has been de | but bas been « y hardened; that reater appreciation of the nous distance that we of Amer grown away from Burope But he already had spent three weeks in Russia, traveli five provinces of Petrograd, Pako rod, Tver and Moscow ay > this soviet attempt to keep the © century and a ha’ arcte ey er uth about Russia 1920 from 1 existence, in our troy - Bm i ey Il be required for ming to the outside world did not . our relations toward our neigh. | * rehabtl | aneenae ‘ wether tesed or" our social and political ideais.| “The ‘capitalization’ at which the The supreme tinportance of thin|Bolshevist government directs its Hatribe in at times rotten enough in | its imposition, but It is not the com | petitive system that te wrong, ft ts the Individuals who would subvert TYRANNY OF MINORITY ' f greed. MORE TERRIBLE THAN only way to proxrem tx In Ing our own system; St car Americaniwm does not permit us to allow the use of this community for bas “dl Would Annul the Marriage of One Who Is Now Dead experiment in se anes.” | per ie Saawothan ah a te THE OLD Gen peuha be eat a kee “1 had recentty been In contact fot be based on any patent medicine instituted Ww t f socialiam, syndicaliem, commun Me wt béalt ot 1 lem, capitaliem or any other ‘tam cessful, Mre. Griswold's mether with the exception attitude of all radic d many re married Bert Smith, Vashon i» rity, who were com, | formers, that goodnes: be de ntroyed before pertectio: mued warmly clothed an be pur- They were sub shortly before her ft her estate, va Smith when she aughter have the marriage ann mother’s wil) land ranch here ts but one text quality of opportunity? If that measure adv toward that equality? Indian Lad Slain } in Liquor Battle OLYMPIA. June = 8.—-Following | St. Peters hospital Sun an Indian h has been Tr there an 0, doom Becks to x ace us this or ulled, her broken, and in way secure the eetate, Rent Car Driver Accused! Assault Accused of beating E. 8. Wood, of Tacoma, at an Auburn roadhouse Saturday night, Roy Andefson, for rent car driver, and J. Chavis, both f Tacoma, were in the county jail Tuesday. Deputy Sheriff Merrill re turned them after Tacoma police ar that o Unt Socialinm was brought In over night at the hands of a small mi fority of Intellectuals and criminals and the tyranny of this minority. more terrible than the old, has now had over two years in which to ef. fect the conversion of the competi tive system into the elysium of com muniem “Today three-fourths of the rail ways and rolling stock are out of operation. The whole popviation is without the normal comforts of the cities are plunged into the most grievous famine of centuries woods near Hofam tay, found a cache of moonshine, it ts claimed They moved it to a new hiding place Later, two white men appe and demanded the “firewater.” the altercation that followed Water man was wounded by a shotgun in the hands of ono of the whites, ‘The are dying at the rate: of!two men ff Radio t Wentport Ba Dependability Is a Success Builder— And The Bargain Basement Is Successful Because You Can Always Depend on It for Big Savings | There’s No Fooling About This Important Offering of Smart Silk Dresses at $10.95 Six new styles, just re- ceived from New York, await your selection— and right here we want to say that they’re REAL- LY REMARKABLE VALUES. Just come in and see the splendid materials—figured foulards, plain taffetas with Georgette sleeves, and rich messaline skirts combined with printed chiffon blouses — why, even a blind man could see that they’re most unusual, ABERDEEN tower t» ” THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT The colors are Navy, Bel- ‘ j f gian Blue, Tan and Gray — while the printed chiffon blouses are figured in four Oriental designs. Sizes from 16 to 42 are in this collection. The Bon Marche ESTABLISHED 1890 Watch for the | Checkerboard Signs | They'll Guide You To Big Savings Many times we have small lots of mer- chandise, remnants, odd pieces, or broken size assortments which we do not care to advertise because we would have to disap- point the late comers. Therefore we mark these unadvertised spe- cial values with checkerboard signs. Watch for them—they are sure guides to economy. WATCH THE CHECKER BOARD *- SIGNS: . Colored Silk Petticoats $5.95 Summer weight in silk petticoats of taffeta or mes- saline that are splendid value. _ In plain styles with ruffles trimmed with stitching or accordion pleat- ing. Be In red, gray, green, purple, black and changeable effects. Finished with adjustable waist bands. | —prrricoat LANE, SECOND FLOOR ) : Smart New Motor Hats’ . Reduced to $3.95 It would be a big comfort to you to wear one of these cool, light, becoming hats and know that you will look well at the end of your trip. ‘ Made with adjustable head sizes and very smart when worn with | veils. 1 Satin, reps, and nacre in blue, navy, pongee, rose, gray. In sailor, poke, tam, and turban styles.-snuriwery secTION, THIRD FLOOR Low: Prices on Damask Cloths at the June Sale of White | Damask Cloths $2.35 : : | Table cloths can be had at a small price | if you want mercerized damask — good ] quality; size 63x64 inches; in neat pat- jj terns. H Damask Cloths $2.75 | Mercerized damask table cloths are be- _ | Hats Trimmed Free This Week All this week expert trim- mers will trim any hat shape that you select from our stocks provided you also purchase your trimmings here. The selection of shapes is varied and fresh and so is the display of flowers and feathers and ribbons. MILLINERY SECTION, THIRD FLOOR coming more popular every day — they wear so well and look well; size 64x64 inches. 64x72-In. Damask Table Cloths $2.65 Each 64x89-In. Table Cloths $3.00 Each —FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) ns | ° ’ ‘Nulife’ Corsets for Health Nulife Corsets, which were so well dem- onstrated here last week by Prof, Mun- ter, are now on sale in the corset shop, where expert corsetieres will fit you gladly. 5 These corsets are marvelous aids to perfect health and requiré no adjusting, no bothersome lacing —they are self- lacing. ; You will be interested in trying on these corsets, which are moderately priced from $4.00 to $25.00. —CORSET SHOP, 20% Off Pyralin Ivory A duplicate shipment. of Pyralin and French ivory is to be sold at 20 per cent less. A selection of patterns and of articles, including mirrors, brushes, combs, trays, powder and jewel boxes. —TOILET GOODS SECTION, UPPER MAIN FLOOR ECOND FLOOR Girls’ Middy Dresses Reduced to $5.45 | Daughter can have a dress for much less than you had-expected to pay “if you shop here on Wednesday — for here are girls’ marine middy dresses reduced to $5.45. Regulation marine style with sailor col- lar, finished with sewed-in star on collar and emblem on sleeves—two pockets and belt. White or with navy or light blue bands —or scarlet on collar, Sizes 6 to 14 years. —DAUGHTER'S SHOP, SECOND FLOOR Business Men’s Luncheon 60c WEDNESDAY’S MENU Chicken Soup with Noodles Choice of Baked Salmon Meuniere Veal Fricassee, Timbale of Rice Roast Sirloin of Beef, Pan Gravy Baked Virginia Ham, Candied Sweet Potatoes Mashed Potatoes Fresh Asparagus Hot French Rolls Selection of Pie on Menu or Vanilla Ice Cream Tea or Coffee SIXTH FLOOR—TEA ROOM Oae v9et serves -' See Os ceveeo ce)? ae —........_,, Ce. SaevercusHeeesenees gern] 33-24 erove aazespe 8 se8eag -* g3