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1HE STAR—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1909 Member of the Untted | ne gs Fee grt og od Mehed dally by The Sta Rentile, Wash, po f tne Co. nd-clase matter TtMents, are ‘omortow, § sm tid... WHOSE JOB THIS WINTER IS COLDEST?) < 4 ae Any 1ow what sort of critter comstit oy? f 4 in irl) 4 act usband ith { of Chie ago W nas and : T E TR T ‘ : netted hings, Suitg, fi the husband of Ts iti owned ak Calne at Me Children’s and Miso | bts, Samuel W. Van Nostran got frst prize as the “model,” | | Enclish Picco largely upon nony offered Van Here's what) who has the coldest job in the . — ne ; —% i ] , Coats makes Samt 1 : 4 ae onl to Chicago wives. |world? Who has the loneliest job? 7, E lly Pri + i . bea wo Especial ric “Prompt and good-natured at meals, Good entertainer, An|The man has been found, He has i if “5 ir ed Groups fop 4 P both the coldest and the lonelient , j > 00 . adept with the chafing dish. Good judge of feminine beauty bee 0 adie nd the lopell | I a £ “— Enjoy m , club.” Ss also |*”? ; i € labe es the quali Generous. Enjoys home more than the club.” Mrs. Samuel ROT’ whid than ts thé:Opueaian ‘tiep Mit oodty : renee remarked on the side that he allowed her to carry the family | per, who tramps thro the anow ff | wag: ‘abar childves Ma er. pocketbook and had told her that her cooking was “far above |i" My Pippy bow rm Canada alone for mater eh mother’s.” | People in Seattle who may be and the but |complaining about the cold since ; I novelt ; |the approach of winter will feel ; . | % or wives-at-large will not swallow it without some explicit ¢X<| warmer after reading the account | smation before they demand the : isbands live up to it,| Which follows of the man with the } planation before they demand that their ht and p t | Coldest job, by Henry Chartier, of Poaclisie by a long shot }the Hudson's Bay Company—-Hdl rricel A good many husbands are prompt at meals simply because | tor The Star aie Sal “ee ' N q Juaiit ey're hungry, and hungriness will hardly be listed as one of + ) they're hungry, and hungrine cE | BY HENRY CHARTIER, ’ $10.00, | the domestic virtues. Sammy Van Nostran may be first down} Wed ener ere te ; . | i Fall Assortment of Children’s Janiors’ and Misses’ at the table simply because of an aching void within him son's stationed fike to know what he does when he gets there. Does he kick like] Northern Labrador, ‘ ws : | Cloth Dresses ia : ; ; ; he tabi \ RUPERT HOUSE, Labrador, ‘ . t i & Missouri mule about what is or what isnt on the table “I Nov. 6.—There are no hardier men — I | $ nd Dresses with \ any brute of a husband can be prompt at the table, but does |in the world than the trappers em : * H le , light or dark ma r Is, in Serge, panama and : : a fe wine his hands on the |Ploved by ahe Hudson's Bay com : ‘ d sioner 4 te: 9R eeird | Priced baad Sammy cat his pie and peas with a knife, wipe his hands on the) oany phat they have the coldest i ‘ ‘ 5, $7.50, $8.50, $10.00, $13.75 and to $9 tablecloth and roar about his victuals jobs In the world goes without say ing. The company which employs Skill with a chafing dish is evidence of a! ic temi-| oon got ite taped dhabter in 2076 fae is i B , D perament, but as most wives’ husbands don't know a chafing|and for nearly 260 years there has ie oys epartment ‘ i ,_ | been. tthe change In the manner|/A TRAPPER'S LONELY CABIN IN THE FAR NORTH CANADIAN WILOS — HI6 DOGS STAY dish from a tennis racket, we'd like to be informed as to Sam-| or toning used by these ons of} OUTSIDE, AND KEEP WARM WHEN THEY SLEEP BY BURROWING IN THE DEEP SNOW. We repeat again the very special offer on Boys’ Knicker my’s adeptness with a good old-fast 1 ing pan, before we jut at oh MS SEA, REM " i ~~ if bockers We can fit any size, from 3 to 17 yea a nthe company HAs $19-) oe of tur clothing, and snow-| covers his first day's circuit, which{(he trapper out in it all day, seeing |f| Made from cheviots, worsteds, tweeds and vicunas, shoes, Over bin back is slung his|is a zigzag course on both sides of a fellow trapper once a week and winter weights, lined throughout and aa bag, which also contains balt|the main route to his next stop-|gathering during his winter exile Hi made by men tailors; ities selling for the traps and food for himself. ping point. Here he dresses a bird | maybe $2,000, maybe $10,000, worth st $3.00, $2.50 and marked it Wetewellanedus female bed roes.. Sam|The more co . the |10 bis hands te his rifle, Most/or some other game, roasts it over of pelts Nast ELA y 0 page miscellancot male aarp bo. = . . y sae more ‘comforts they ave the | rappers will also drag a sled. |a huge log fire, makes tea and en Then the weather begins to grow |ff| to .... a $1.75 hould have a prize for it, if he doesn’t devote too much time to] ey know it * ' game varies. There are) joya a big meal. Then he smokes /milder. It is no longer below zero. toys’ Suits at prices that will prove ft and doesn’t hang blue ribbons about the necks of too many | This station ts cold all the year! k, lynx, muskox, ermine,/a pipeful, and finally winds him-|The snow melts some. The warmth ; ; , sen s F s Sn oe jround. The wild beasts that lurk white and silver fox,|self tnto his blankets and goes to|makes the fur poor in quality, #0 “ : pee hie . ; beauts.” But if Sammy has worked up much of a reputation) huge pine forests around |#2¢ 4D occasional bear. Silver fox | sleep in the “pup” tent he carries|the trapper packs up all bis Boys’ Suits, sizes 6-17 years, double asa judge of feminipe pulchritude, it wouldn't be injudicious or |here are endowed by nature with - rare, and so is white bear. T on tris sled jtrophies and rapidly Aravels back breasted, on sale at— : : : oe i f Sam’ atter iw a formidable adversary,| At the end of the week he bas/to the Hudson's Bay Co.'s post $3.50 and $3.75 au fait in Mrs. Sammy to make a personal inspection of Sams - encom and without hie rifle the trapper! perhaps traveled from thirty to}He turns the fur over t i Boys’ Suit 8-17. { fy an ; 5 os ald Ne innit would be killed forty miles in a straight line. | tor, and his joys Suits, sizes 8-17, formerly $6.50 staff of typewriter ladies, for instance As he starts out In darkness the| Ahead the welcome light of the! comfort begin and $7.50, on sale at .. .. 84.50 And Sammy enjoys home more than the club. Alas! wind blows a zero gale in bis face.| next shanty on bis trip shows him| The men are well paid, and us poye’ " ee i i ; . Ww Swirling snow blote out the land-|there is another man there. Hejually live in comfort during the a There's a wide — door for igh a, here, bs and he must depgnd on also is a trapper, engaged on a | summer peieryrn must ask, What is the limit at the club? Has the club discov- his compass to steer himf@hrough similar bunt, and who has planned FrenchCanadians, Scote I Boys’ Ov i 2% Sammy's weakness for four-spades-and-a-heart? And has . the drifts to his first tray. Per-jhis trip so that he will bave a/| Englishmen. There ar alf all colors, 3 a ered » . , haps it is snow covered. i 0, week-end companion breeds who are good trappers. The annish # arance and service- there sprung up in Sammy's model home that beautiful but sim- on it, rebaita it, and goes| For perhaps a week neither has/Indians, who know more about bl 3 pd ple little diversion called “bridge,” at which the good neighbors orbaps he sees a fox of alspoken a word aloud. They com ¢ than anyone else, are too | 2DI ;. ee ee to $17.50 i p 1 tired out with strugsiing!pare their game haul, and the Is ow it in the winter. | Boys plese I all shades— can oft be made to yield up bric-a-brac, small furniture, and, in M against the trap. There ig)a shot | trapper with the heavier load will As far north as Lower Seal lake and $1.75 the moré intese situations, even sordid cash? and the game is in his bag or ond lighten it by giving the other more |and as far south as Apiskagamish | Children's Beaver H black see : e : . : the a! adding to the weight he|to carry lake, a small army of these heroic Pein yA The madel husband's virtues, as published, may go, in Chi : must carry Bo {t goes on, month after|men is working now, Their tramp, | "4VY, browns ago, but unadorned with explanation they wil! not pass with| ‘ Very rarely does the ‘trapper|month, with the weather far be-|tramp, tramp will be kept up as/f 3rand Shirts »p Tor a noonday bite to eat. He|low zero nearly all the time and jlong as snow flies if] Negligee Shirts and Blouses, 5 It's a mighty good bill-of-fare of masculine virtues, sizes 4 give him a prize as a cook | 000.0% 0 capital, and supplies vale But Sammy's a xd judge of female beauty, Lots of hus-|able furs to all parts of the world, ; : ttle civilization or comfort has oS . mmy ¢ stand ha . roing | bands are, and if Mrs. Sa y can stand having hers going coma inke the levee of the iwabpend especially interesting to parents zes 6-17, very superior the wives-at-large. Each of the latter will be likely to hang on fo her own standard, almighty thankful that there's anything at re : y” Sy 1NTIMATE STAR DUST Sahiats! ud Children’s Coats This.department is exceptionally well-stocked with Landlords as | Airlords > ; : Si : RESPONDENCE fac Sriee Bares | attractive apparel for little folks, “Everything for the A very sightly Child's Box Coat, cut high c “ BY-RATA eX VOCE AE Id vat, cut high neck ide Lyttleton Fox, a New York lawyer, startled the Aero club > tad with soutache, shown in tan, Copenhagen and rose | ice America the other evening, when in an instructive lecture to c “ Am! eens tee eae ors bd ss > club df would-be sitoet he informed them that before : ete ag —, ine Sedans thes & hwy Hag 5 ee oat eon | a srunaitig Ustle Titlored Cost,: with larg itt e ip uh Dear Dad: At-Los Angelea | lar ter eo |} shown in tan, gray, veda rose and Copenhagen, they could become even air butlers or air charwomen, to say ‘a struck &@ variation of the “shell “ee re pid . ae ig H Price Gees bee cate Oe nothing of lords, they must settle with the landlords ; ne a this case bape yr were} I suppose the capitalistic le = i} Dainty Novelty Coats, for very little folks, in A ‘ . od with crab ment am * part . f . P ¥ He told the gasping navigators of the ether that every time ‘aaacedhinsthe-ahelin soak. tee: Aaa Sen: Teen. BY ere, ee ? nga ato a and crepe de chine; fancy * - % 1 hanc ide ace trin “S they pass over a man’s land they commit trespass; and as they jandria hotel. To be explicit, we! uprixing of the people in Mexico. rand embroidered or lace trimmed; ages 6 Mill inden tech andinbody'n tant all she tigve--eniees they at: {the two of us) were eating food In| That is why they are go sensitive years, in assorted styles. Priced from, each— we to pas ver somebody s lan e tin es ey skim the main, dining room of the de| and 1 judge there are r sag) $3.25 to $12.00 & <' . luxe hosted wf southern Califor: | " } it + co . a—that they dre trp peep iam. cv cy. exhaust of the m@tor, min Ee walliotdion iat uiaan Cit ge oh beg Ay q Our display of Children’s Fancy Bonnets, in French fell a . _ and corded silks, is very extensive. Prices from, each—~ going and comings - ee « J " Beh * A HUDSON BAY TRAPPER. crab tneat @ In gratin, .60-$1." Just! would take this opportunity to pull : . ‘ 4 r . ° Presider didn’t really mille: elie Anta nin the earth, own the sky. like that When it came it was/it out. The revolution aay be do-| Wika be cdtaiet ts the ce $1.50 to $10.00 : : it i very nice crab meat, very nicely | layed, but it is bound to come, and | wilt , ; ‘was'so in ancient Rome, an: , ‘ apes : \ will step down and out. That would ; The law says so. It gos : and it is so now.|..., richest furs only bécauae of| Prepared, but there were only three| the delay cannot be for long. There |ieave Capt Hutt without an seeupas Station It B t Section Herbert Quick's new novel, “Virginia of the Air Lanes,”|the extreme cold. That is why |*hells. So I asked questions. Yes/arg ominous sputterings at tho | tion ery items—-Dasemen }Hudson’s Bay ia the true center |°2¢. portion was two. ene is, And) safety valve, and it wil’ not be apna f Fancy “German-made” Baskets, Se packages Commercial ‘ a % 4 fof the fur hunting grounds in}® Portion for two? Three shells.|jong now before the old thing lets castorn educator thinks “Thou suitable for Holidays; Glove, te aromg at 2 tor worked out the whole scheme of monopoly of the air by means | America Now figure it for yourself. Sim-|¢o. This business of jailing Mex-|Stalt Not Drink” should be added |ffl Handkerchief, Work and Hand Bex Stations aa ¢ of monopoly of certain strips of land. As a working model for| Immense resources are noces-| Plt mental arithmetic. If two shells |jean patriots and breaking-up thelr |? tinicion cava acre en we wont |{f Baskets, open work or ribbon | opes and 24 Lay cf lsary to the fur hunt, both In ma-|f crab meat cost 60 cents, why the| “juntas” is only “putting a nigger | Prohibit oth on, we won't iil trimming, etc., priced for, each | linen finish), at the airship trust, Mr. Quick has Mr. Fox beaten—for he tells|terial and men. Supplies are|!ank should the addition of one) poy” on the safety valve ” nO Grnseement @5¢ to . + oe Just how to turn the trick. brought here by the shipload, and|™more shell entail the expenditure) And I'll bet, when she does let] sree Penge ie se $1.50 Hammered Brass, F ieee At f the Writ the men must be atrong enough to| Of 2 additional 40 cents? And who! go, a piece of scrap iron will £0! oviparous function. took @ comatitus Id and Silver-Piated Picture | S60"). ‘ox suggests that one of the rights get some friendly [battle with worse winds than oo to eat the sade, my the ugh th pages of the Los An tional around the yard, Returning ‘ames, all sizes, cach-— | pee ~ sner to sue $0 .as-to #1 , 6 tc dify an eary encountered | of eles Times. Sincerely, RA" » her nest, she found emp | Y! Badowener to me him-——so.as.to get the courts to modify this un laaabos to the North Pole gun If you like to look at fruit—at . — ated ’ : It's mighty Fhe = pe EY | 2he to 85.00 moderately priced. favorable law—but how is this to be done without upsetting the} The trappers have already start-| strawberries in October and things | POINTED PARAGRAPHS. renat I can never find things where lay them.”—Boston Transcript whole theory of landed rights? ed out on their trails. This prom-|like that--this southern California| - : M he lies « a rs lines to be one of the coldest win-| country ts the place to come. Nev if-you are dissatisfied with your | i Mr, Craighead, in “Virginia of the Air Lanes,” sunf$ thelters. Zero weather {s upon us, but | er saw more delictous looking black: | lot, advertise {t ror sale. So the divorcee bug has stung the |i y r ALL, J whole thing up in a rather extraordinary way, in a unique court |the climate ts healthy for a strong| berries than are now on the mar-| There's nothing so tiresome ato Jacob Astors! We bappy mar- AA RAE ANG its “6a ig man, although very severe in win-| ket, and as for apples! Well, they|an argument in which nobody gets |" *t folks will yet be content to re- Secono Ave.& Serine St foom scene. }ter. Sickness is rare are as gorgeous to look at as pie-| mad Spee i | McCall's Patterns and | 4 “How am I damnified,” says he, “by the air-ship, which may| ‘The old-style trapper ie disap-|ture post cards. As to taste 1 can) The man who tan't afraid to work that anybody cares, but there's} Pamphiets for December | Visit Our Cony Tea Raat | Resta aaa ae s sols ot Bath : ‘ |pearing in t mer country |give no testimony. At the hotels,|can always find plenty of It to do. |, revolutin in Hall tere Are Here | Hot Lunches Served All ‘op a monkey-wrench, a spanner, a gob of ballast or a casual | south of here. Progress has driven | restaurants and on dining cars the! The man who bas a talkatty remark into my privacy? Like other highways, the air will be }back the fur-bearing animals Into! prices of all fruit were prohibitive,| wife may have a whole lot to say, How é country which no longer tempts eee |but he seldom gets a chance to| man? infested by accidents and collisions. Aeronef 1 fall into lonly the c eronefs will fall into the |only the bravest men Going on the 4 o'clock train from | #4y It | “Only once, guv‘nor!” replied the tural silo, drag-ropes will rip up barb wire, and Pyramus and} Here i# the regular course of} gan Francisco to Los Angeles I had | | Bs bape & man has enough money j chauffeur Tit-Bits Te ay Hy ‘AER ai 7 . one of our trappers a most exciting experience, The|/ald aside to keep him on Kasay ¥ Thisbe, in their Arcadian wooings, may be smothered under fall He rises at his post, a log but|train carries a dining car, and on| Street the rest of his days he ought |, “#rriage builders aver the horse tC) ing gas bags or torn asunder by dragging anchors inserted in |Plastered with mud, or board| this particular dining car—f wish 1} %@ 6ive others a chance,—Chicago |) Polding his own. Po be sure, Dis ; i shanty, at 5 o'clock in t . rense News. {Rome Sonne: & their pancreases! I shudder, your honors, at what may happen|ing The ctreult of hie teal ei jor esi Elo Hoon number—at ae 2 towed in Editor of the Star b h a fine erop of : i . | . |the dinner served oO passengers Editor ¢ e Star: gether with a fine ¢ when the air is populous with flying-jiggers, pop-popping about, | last a woe ; It will ee. perhaps there was bread that was actually INDIFFERENCE ‘John, you've got to quit keeping} Last Friday evening it was my | speeches served with salve {rom F mal ge i oe. ; |thirty miles in a straight line to| good. Not merely fit to edt, mind such late hours! pleasure to listen to the address by | bac Pullman 60 raining ballast, and wine bottles, and bacon rinds, and stale} ‘ wed good. NOt merely , = g address by) back end of a Pullmes et le cotige end P »and stale beg i stanty or shelter, though | you, but actually good ees) _ Somenle itadene Browne. I don’t keep ‘em, Marin; they just/Senator LaFollette in Seattle, in| is what we get every four year ananas, and hot coffee, and soft-boiled eggs, and lobster a la|he will cover nearer 150 miles to oo 8 iy ag RO. | way from me before I know] which he roundly denounced ‘the|seem to like It Newburg on a lost and undone republic!” rmst # Bia traps, porn R eS John Kenneth Turner, who ts| Prowdly ‘aay °ril oa notl® « trosta, nailed Cannon and Aldrich| LaFollette is y le tea and lots ‘ : ; are and do, wha _ re to the mast and bewalled the fact| bunch, and rety eG ings i : a 7 ; writing for the American Magazine Mrs. Jones—This milk looks sus-|'O Me RG dewaued the fa unch, an tut Lawyers who make a specialty of damage cases should buy | cold reayeerdog starts out before | 6. Rarbarous Mexico,” ts sofping| Put inaifterence trom you ts piciously blue |that the Republican party, of which| If the ator is trying to up the edition of “Virginia of the Air Lanes.” It gives the case {sen a? fo, vislt is first trap. He) at ono of the bedch resorts near| Say "= will or "Twill not.” | Dealer—Madam, my cows were|he is @ leading member, was no| the Republican party wears heavy underwear and the| fi. anecios 1 met. him at the| NOt. { care, cannot ‘but mar rained in the blue grass region of old|longer the party of the beloved Lin-! it might be well to wren |house of a Mexican refugee. He fs|_A°% inaltterence means « biot. | Kentucky.—Woman's Journal coln. He refuses to be read out! a few drops of ink will make® of said party, however, by the few) of fresh water good and airship case, “it ain't got none.” ’ It is beaten before the j s| | distinctly all right, and will prove P & 1 veaten before the jury is| HEARD AT THE SHOW EP ecteahle andition (6 the Shine uy THE ARTLESS ANSWER moneyed owners of this successful | try and figure out how may a tells just how a crazy ne’er-do-well, a certain Mr, Craighead, often does your car kill a of the airship against the landowner dead away. And as for the drawn. ‘so anuae takeon President-makfng corporation, and | of clean water will purlly ® iar ipdccbceineane aaa, a ses all in all made a very good all| of ink . a d, sure-enough Democratic| If the Republican pai 8 f who wi money w Speaking of muck rakers, you - aroun 8 R is clentists wh ‘ant money for| won't make everything right for. X should co the bey med Lae jen THATS F ONNY! speech Senate LaFollette every new menace to life forget| ever after. geles Times froth at the mouth ‘VE GOT COLD a tat och 1 ben ak eid bare : rely it's no, eG aa tat tt is Mr. Carnegie and not) De Lebalt mgt een Og Pgs Mow CREAM ON (I(T @ successful politician, well Iked| rights of the common people Mr. Rockefeller who expressed a| Those interesting Spokane riots 7 son Gray Otis must have stock in in his state, where he has jacked-| If the Republican wish to die poor, are all right in their class, except a Mexican taine or a projected rath cs up the railroads to the keen delight] the senator claims It tee" ey that a lot of people would iike to road. The day I left Los Angeles | Gist titeea One White te ir tar | ses cont 2 Ps rd make & With due allowances for circum-| know what vey are all about f the editor of this interesting, and) from me to endeavor to take Biol Senin: While I had a clean stances, Mme. Steinhell in’ her é Fe agg Hb dete ng ean | |—if the Republican party 1s as rot-| skirts and take no chances, | President Taft passed up a wint | showing colicky symptoms over| tan a0 be cates ©) let would Wee) the way Sensing Lane 1 Pinta hae a teaaocte | Me are Creaveral aad ticad? jto be so brave as to ask one ques-| and the way he prints . - : ulep in Georgia, Also nobody for-! ‘ hy ‘ iy va n Bi ae | J |tion, with no expectation of an an-| but don’t care for the Way ven if we do have @ grand jury | got to tell the reporters about his | Ere ee | jawer—Why does LaFollette {nj and if he can. say bah) It 18 well to remember that. that! wonderful self restraint jit to death % Ing te ‘ elt restra ea ingen 0 death by feeding Mad : I lke the frank pro-trust way | by c ‘ | = the Los Angeles Times is edited, | REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. cause It Intoxicates his vanity to 4 own way is quite a Peter Miller. the facts presented by the get his rec! senator regarding that Most-Suc-; I hardly expect this come cossful-Grand-Old-Party have been! tion to receive any attention # |told and retold by William Jennings the fact that it 1 sure long |Bryan and his followers these 12! rambling, but take it from lyears past 000,000 men are thinking Now after the National Bank} same thoughts these days 4m me has again been pulled off ts a fine ct with its usual regularity, they put! come ove over a nice little tariff bill, cut and elephant o' fitted, bench-made, ready-to-wear, (his gets in the is no pretense of anything} - have people tell him so. It does not even make be ‘The most hopeless thing is to try| Generally when a child is ireft Heve to take the people's side. If} to realize on hope ing Wo fon Jn Pechiie it deeent! |there is a railroad to be defended, it doesn't Ja union to be fought, a capitalistic | The exact truth is always elther|Mke you and doesn't Y boresome or brutal ES et nr ape ta job of any kind to be pulled off,| line sy per pcs ldepend upon it, the Times is on| Z) ot more money aman can make || What impresses the fob.. It-4 t of a N Gauls ike patie tee et ‘s > y pnd s'a-sort of a New lo fuore other people can get it. traveling with her husband: Oe My father ig rich now, and It has! York Sun of the Pacific const, with more than chapped lips without hay- to be comte epee ete urned his head | something of the Sun's ability, more 4 tag earned thom, LAL agate onthe Rover] “How dose it affect. him?” than the Sun's prosperity, and al and guaranteed to fit any old trust | one satisfaction—tt's otf en a, [ee tome.—-New York| “Now he doesn't spill soup on his| most the Sun's vindletive spleen | ~sand the people—well, they re- Yours very oi . ~airt bosom when he eats,” ‘ ct ceived a few funny cartoons in the GRO, P, against everything and every per-| neh aRl penal yn Regs Don Ua er vi! e p y, to 348 Gist Av. woman about}