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«2 i ‘ ; i SEATTLE STAR Ss NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEewsrarrny ii lensed wire wvies of the t a | Entered at Se Wash. postoffice as ond-class matter, | Sawyer and the Shushanna | HE report published in The Star yesterday of the result of Correspondent Sawyer's visit to the Shushanna gold fields seems to us to more than ever indicate the folly of rushing into that country not fully prepared for the trials and the hardships that must be incurred on the way in and the privation encountered after the camp is reached unless ample provision made for sustenance and protection from the severity of winter Sawver says there is gold there. He has seen it taken from the ground. He has watched | the men at work and has talked with them, He has talked | with the owners of claims, with old time miners and with | mining engineers. He says the Shushanna may or Fairbanks And the readers of The Star may rely upon what be as great as was Dawson he says. ‘ f He was sent there by The Star for the purpose of ascer- taining the truth, He is not an enthusiast—that is, not the sort of an enthusiast who would make a fire bigger than it really was, or describe an ordinary hailstone as being as large as a hen's egg. i The glitter of a little gold in a pan or wouldn't affect Sawyer’s reason. When he had finished in his dispatch yesterday telling of his at the gold fields, he pointed out clearly and} graphically the hardships on the trail and in the camp i He told us of the men starving on the trail from Dawson to the gold fields. Of the loss of packs in swollen streams Of men dragging themselves along, hungry and barefooted, begging enough to keep alive from other men with barely enough to keep the life in them Then he told in a private message in a sluice box visit of the troubles that ; aie come even to those who are amply provided with food an SOFT ANSWER 2 clothing 30.| A man from Buffalo went {nto a " on August 30, fre A slippery trail, snow and zero weather on Augus' | downtown drug store last night 1 That's what happened to Saw i ! . Y slip and a dislocated knee | stepping crowded soda : hi aself, and he had to hobble eight miles on this injured | water 4 for a pine Se ck on the back of his | apple soda leg with one hand holding to the pack on hee'g err sic ak horse ‘ neatly hin fe There’s gold, all right, in Shushanna! head, ha ago. But there’s gold on Second av., too. pane tabte K or « dr MAE the And it’s not so hard to ge into the las What's that ‘a dr ven WOMEN, mad at the jibes at womens That,” reg Fee a sparta kitty be put on men, Never ng hl a without @ blir hen he can't affo hesitation, “th spends like something a fellow could use w | pine "treat the ' — season you'll often off the strawberries : Oh,” mumured the Buffalo man, If Right You Can Afford to Wait ,,.0% 222% Mme © : \e ° Fo thousands of years men have been saying, on dress] LIFE AND SUCCESS. occasions, that “honesty is the best policy,” that “a soft | Louie 7 Tania tas ae vay wrath” and that “thrice is he armed |secraper bull who in twenty answer turneth away wrath « cig agers lt ig who hath his quarrel just BY prt sap er pee Yet, no sooner does a statesman aie to put any : pakke hoatdhg th arb $ i i critics z ¢ r or tO] “1 go to bed at 9 o'clock,” ho sald these truisms into practice than critics begin to snee | ‘© * ; Pt chide, and old MR. WORLDLY WISEMAN turns up his|“and 1 Ret up at 8 o'clock t play *. a little, t my pin 4 exercise to nose in contempt. a ” ik { trim for my office You saw, of course, with what condescending superiority [1 iia, to work—as other men work ns, offered sympathy and to piay the foreign press, with few exceptions, offer 3 counsel to President Wilson on his “failure” to work a quick] miracle in Mexico. And this is the burden of their talk “Morals have no place in diplomacy. It is quixotic to in- ¢ of the returns, When treach i ing behind the fac a ghey d land a cynical usurper on the despot seat of an outraged republic, you should put aside all your arene all the professions of democracy you have been making be on the world, and, for the sake of finding the easiest way Seven a difficulty, you should do as we did, recognize the act | accomplished and ask no question, Either that or fight TO SUCH DEPTHS HAS MILITARISM PLUNGED |} CHRISTIAN NATIONS! | It is the happy opportunity, and, therefore, the duty of the United States to lead the van in the world’s advance It] scored greatly for human welfare when it forced the breath of life into The Hague peace tribunal, thus bringing into pro-) phetic view the time when the disputes of nations will be} settled, upon the whole, as peaceably as are now the disputes | of individuals. : 2 But that servicé was not greater than the service Wilson has rendered by putting Uncle Sam's foot down on dishonest | revolutions, emphasizing that the clock had struck on inter-/ national buccaneering so far as this’ hemisphere is concerned, refusing to be a party to the wholesale murder, by war, of | Sr eapean toilers because an upstart despot didn’t forthwith, come to time. : : | Strength founded in injustice doesn’t need to be impa- tient, for when you are right you can afford to wait. | BRYAN’S LATEST “NOTE” from Japan Is reported to be “such as to carry the discussion along indefinitely.” Hurrah! Bill's got ‘em! Our Wm. can discuss the wool off the head of the slickest mikado who ever mikadoed. Laugh! It’s a Great Cure-All | IHMEERFULNESS is one of the oldest and most powerful remedies for bodily ills. It is a sovereign remedy against dyspepsia. Every one knows the influence over appetite and | good digestion a jovial companion affords. | Pope tells us that Lord Lansdowne was ordered by his} doctor to dance when he had an attack of gout, and to sing at the same time. | After the battle of Bunker Hill, a young soldier, who had) een wounded in the chest, was reported as dying. His com rades, who were watching him, finding one of their number | had fallen asleep, amused themselves by painting his face | with the candle fume; this made the sick man laugh so that he vomited blood and was completely cured by his gayety. | Voltaire tells the story of a lady who, seeing her daugh ter very ill, said she hoped God might take all the rest of the family and restore her daughter. The husband of the| daughter asked her gravely if she intended to include her gons-in-law in her wish, and this made the daughter laugh so heartily that she was promptly cured of her fever. IT CAUSES no trembling in our boots, but the democratic refusal to Increase the tax on incomes of $100,000 or over doesn't sound to us like any democratic attempt to make the Idle rich get busy. JUSTICE AT LAST! Idaho, Utah and Wyoming are howling for the despised English sparrow, who, it is discovered, will travel miles to get at the weevil that destroys alfalfa. JUDGE HUMPHRIES s he feeis like an angel. But who ever heard of a cherub slamming the door and curtly remarking, “Oh, hell!"? | THE ELECTION of Billi Taft as president of the American Bar as- sociation again exemplifies the subservience of the legal fraternity to) the dead past. MAYOR “BOB” HESKETH biue-penciled a boost in his Occasionally, economy does begin at home. ary. BOOST FOR Seattle by boosting Alaska. Boost Alaska by boost- Ing the Poindexter bill in congress, which will hasten the development of that great territory. Dejected looking young man was driven out of the Central Park Zoo, New York city, where he was feeding perfumed love letters to an Angora goat. ‘ Girl in Peoria who wore a slit skirt was remanded for examination as to her sanity. ‘ Grounds for Divorce.—Steel and Wire company official says his wife won't live in Bayonne. Man in Newark, N. J., was drowned in water pumped to extinguish| a five. | An tl The Day’s Best Stories e * NOT THINKING OF WILHELM ° There may have been a tim when th oe we 1 have been thone t ontend that the lyr choolboy In question did not re urh an entire neorrect answer | to @ certain question put to him. As it was, however it must be! confessed that the boy t hin | history and physical ography somewhat 4 teacher The kaiser” sald the boy, “te a stream of hot water that spouts up and disturbs the earth ‘ Mr then in he sald, st Success demayds sacrif mon set out to ac fa suce 1. The Washington Star. Horowlts 1 lived.” other Where You Can Buy ’Em 6 for a Quarter Seattle merchants are sponding to The Star's sues tion. In spite of the company’s arbitrary withdrawal of the sale of tickets on cars you can buy «#ix car tickets for a quarter at the following places Panton & London, ond av. MacDougall - Southwick Second and Pike. New York Outfitting Co., 825 traction 1111 Sec. Co. 204, Weat- American Paint & Wall Pa- per Co, First and Union. Wright Restaurant Co, Inc., 164 Washington st. Tailor Ready Co. Fourth and Pike Golden West Grocery, 65th and Phinney The Bon Marche, Second and Pike. J. G. Seecamp, cigar stand, 1406 Third. Bel! Drug store, end of Ra venna line. Perfecto cafeteria, Third and Jam Bell-Guice Grocery Co., and 63rd 8. W. Alki Edw. Rohinson & Sons, Fre- mont av. and Ewing st. Summit Liquor Co, 1603 First av. Jewish New ve Card store, 1715 Yesler way. People’s Cash Grocery, NO. 2, 420 30th av. N Spring Cigar © (four stands), 709 First av. Second av. and Madison st., 915 Second av., Third av. and Pike st Bickford grocery, First av. and Madison st Olympian Cigar store, Second and Washington Green Lake Drug Co, 7208 Woodlawn av. Battersby & Smith, 906 First av. Herman Blumenthal, 120 Sec- ond av. §. Smith Pharmacy, 23rd and Jackson. Nationa! Liquor Co., 405 Pike. Renton Hil! Pharmacy, 14th and Madison Box office, Colonial theatre. California Wine Co,, 5303 Bal- lard av. A. D. T. Co., 112 Columbia. McCormack Bros., Second and James. O'Keefe & Mudd, 610 First av. Eagle Transfer Co., 611 Fourth Rainier Laundry (downtown office), 103 Second av. 8. Westlake Av. Market, 233 Westlake av. N. Uncie Sam Dye Works, 1125 Pike st. Cascade Laundry, 5403 Ballard av. C. Nybo, 103 First av. Golden Pheasant Restaurant, 1115 Pike at. Brooklyn Av. and Brooklyn av. Hub Clothing Co,, 615 First av. Butler's Cigar Co, 614 First av. Frank Engquist & Son, tallors, 5422 Ballard av. Heroux Lunch Room, 5503 Du. wamish av. Columbia Cash Market, 81 W. Columbia, Shamek Bros, jobbers, 227 to 235 Lumber Exchange Bidg. Grocery, 40th What ts the kaiser?’ asked the | ° z WHEN ‘YOU'RE D ~ OH, BY THE WENT TO THS THEATER CAST. NIGHT. GooD SHOW, Too, STARTS ©vT WITH ——- a $2 THAT'S THE WAY IT IS! OUT OF TEN WILL BoRE You WITH A LINGO OF DRIVEL AND PIF FLS UP TO Your EYES LiKE TSEE IN ONE OF FANGLED DRESSES TRY T CLIMB A STEP LADDER — EPTEMBER 4, 1913. = SAW A RATTLING THE PLOT — NIN© Peopce A WOMAN THEM NEW hy Go where To Be Cheated! t be expecting bis wife's rela We will pay you more for your | tives poultry than the pure food law and My ac te welrhts will allow any ON THE LOOKOUT fecent people to pay. See us be on ff est to Labrador, fore sell cr Meat Market Th sky r clearer. Raymond (8. D,) Gazette But I never saw a woman yet eee Who scorned to pipe a mirror! Glass was discovered by the see Egyptians in 4,000 B. C. and by see brick #¢ 4 of the Eng fragettes 1908 “ee Ambassador Page has rented 20-room house in London He Boys’ Suits $3.50 to $15 Ranging in sizes from 2% to 18 years old. All the correct styles in the latest fabrics and colors. Overcoats Sizes 2 to 18 styles. Best $3.50 to $15 Rubber Raincoats for Boys, xizen 3 to 16, at $2.50 and $3.50, Relt Mine in and the plain elty. FREE! A Guaranteed Watch, a German or a away Harmonica Combination Safe given with Boy's Suit or Overcoat, eve Complete Assortment Hats, Caps of Boys’ and Furnishings. J. Redelsheimer & Co. Two Entrances nd Columbia | RE Los Angeles has barred the X- ray gsowne Every time we hear of a town doing that we feel that it is an exhibition of vanity eee Street sprinklers have a poor sale in Venice, Italy . Yes, an Art Student Should Know Something About Posing. Young was an abject Joker as a poker He hardly knew how to assume a boxing pose, the primary exson of m manly art student Cleveland (O.) I r “Ten thousand passengers re- turned from Europe in one day says a Now York paper. Quick trip eee Anyway, 80 long as the Thaws fight there's no danger of William T. Jerome going to the poorhouse ee Huerta home at noise like Is building a suburban Popolo, which makes a it was right off the toe eee Our Idea of @ good president for Mexico is our old congressional friend, Uncle Joe Cannon. ° Another contribution to the dis cusston of dreks reform comes from a Texas senator, who rises to urge Let us clothe women with a bal Dou ese he has in mind the blanket ballot * 2 Our grandmothers In their time knew only three rage—the dish-rag, the wash-rag and the carpet-rag 9 6 “And you really once saw | Pripce? mh,” she exclaimed, elasping |her hands and gazing with awe into the eyes that had upon }roya “what was he doing?” Trying to balance a chatr his chin to amuse a chorus girl.” looked on AUTO GOES THROUGH): BRIDGE; TWO KILLED ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Sept. 4.—Law- rence Blakeman, aged 19, and his| fiancee, Miss Lucy Beach, aged 20, met death here today when Blake man drove his machine through an open drawbridg Two hundred persons saw the accident tcaT SAVED BY WHISKY TRIES DROWNING DAILY SOUTH NORWALK, Conn., Sept. 4—-Mrs. Matilda Haf. ner’ seven-toed kitten fell Into | a bridge excavation in Bast || Norwalk recently and was | | nearly drowned, But James | || Shea jumped in and made a | | gallant rescue of tie cherished || feline. | || To assist nature in {te res. | | | toration proc few drops | | | of whisky were placed in the | milk administered to the eat, | || Now the kitten falls into the | trench six or seven times each | day, and the rescuers are get | ting tired { °° REPORT EXAGGERATED GREENVILLE, Pa, Sept. 4 Mrs. Mary Everhart awoke from a trance to find the family tear fully arranging with an undertaker for her, funeral, ! What doe y hee me that maker t to ¢ | getting married? Nothing | “Then what's the trouble?” “That's just the point, He see nothing In you Complains of Kadltor article }h jto call }to country Ther ne sting ster ottve | necond, oom The aving The to be ¢ Th cold air next to the floor to} lepth of 10 to 12 inches remains } actically stationary n t to the heater and ts warmed agatr he floor and the feet are always id 1 submit this as a theory, having jhad 20 chance to make practica test, but have heard numerous cor The defect, if such it in 1 by closing the Redr FOUR Enumctaw Stirred Up. Editor The Star: Wer in the Tacoma Tribune of Septen ber 1 a writer who gave Buckley writeup saw fit to class Enumel as a BU Enumel time a | If an | which | real estate into th Enumclaw, Wh Koch. night hand Ko that ently the b dashe K the p bag valua deed alth in leaves a Haven't Heard a Word. Has Exciting Time in Town Fourth handb The Hartford Heating Schools. in County The eo woh uttention of ead ance echools « © is in mo so-called heat a ve system knowr which I belleve to be First ant entilat as to proper beatir #yatem consists of nded by a inlet a tf jacket in that the the f of open Nowtr drawn back to and circulate ket” and nd of t sheet cost but little JOHN CARMICHAEL. pond, Wash Have you heating the truly ONE HALF r The Star g about . 3 AND IDENT MILE uburb of Buckley. The write had better c an live for a nd get the right clasification y one wants a is the suburb, rentals, proof as to let him price and inquire business towns LA con. ours RUST Wash. nen the auto struck W. C of Hartford, Wash., at and Pike Wednesday , he went down, and the bag in his hand went up ch sh along on his for several f and his & landed in the machine ack him driver saw Koch appar uninjured. He didn't see andbag at all. So off he ed to escape arrest ch has enlisted the ald of police to recover bis band which contained a lot of ble papers, fncluding the to 40 acres of land near at ALBANY CUT-RATE DENTISTS DON’T Cut Rates Are Continued « dontist proud CUT We Alba Second our vy Hundreds of patients and fri are writing to us from all parts the Northwest and Alaska reque ng that our cut rates be nll they can avail th this most wonderful We have wo RATES need pub --and we ha until January 1, 1914 Our name alone tsa guarantee that your work will be satisfactory and| of the be come AY—Dow'?T PUT rr ofr Set of Teeth, Guaranteed A Fit, now cocccee es MOTE Solid Gold or Porcelain 9 Crown oe Gold or Porcelain Bridge Take F OUR PRICHS WILL HURRY WORRY their dental ¥ REPUTATION sand a rey of both EXTENDED } eity; we want ou to talk about us. We hav nies—we can't afford to hav p extended our cut rate ny Cut-Rate Dentists | © People’s Bank Bullding Second and Pike. evator or Walk Up. SUPRISE YOU | WORK WILL PLEA YOu. “The Bureau Dainty Waists for Fall Heautiful Marquisettes, lawns and nets are the materials in- , with embroidered fronts - Fifte els to choose from a one a business-build ing value at the prices, 7 $1 $1.25 and Ladies’ Tailored Skirts Made from tailors diagonals tn navy, black stripes. ele. Siz waist m 1 th management select the Mannish tans, also ¢ g winners. choice all-wool fab- ries from our own Dress G Department by first-class Seattle mixtures and 00d brown $ an ray, chec $2.98 Aluminum Percolators $1.98 Handsome, efficient, durable— these Coffee Percolators tonish all who note their qual- ity and price. six-cup size at New Jelly Glasses The low, broad making a@ very a ive mold for your jelly; 22¢ 20c lacquered per dozen In lots of 3 dozen, per dozen Lots of 6 dozen or over, per doz sty NEW CHINA DINNERWARE Just Received EACH YEAR HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF WOMEN BUY Style No. the popular necessary play me $1.98 le, ct are sm R. & fortab} for one for you actly, lines, rer ted and ri good hose supporters attached. Style No, 2—Is designed for a medium full figure, medium bust Elastic allow perfect freedom of motion in the construction of this model, with trimmings Three pairs of strong hose supporters See illustration and extremely and ribbon are attached. Style No. 3—A Corset for stout figures, medium bust and long This model is stamped “Double § excellent material, strongly skirt boned and of resist the conditions. attached, strain, Price Use Our Quick Service Mall Order Department. long w p skirt inky op i ANTON & low Bring Your Trade Marks and Coupons to the Exchange Floor Third MAY MANTON PATTERNS. Economy Store’’— Second Ave. Bet. Spring and Seneca Ladies’ Plain Tailored n 4d atest Fal) mod- asure, Price. .90+98 Concerning the Cash Prizes The interest shown has indeed been very gratifying to the Of the thousands of answers were a great many which contained valuable suggestion it will take several days to go through the entire jot and We are very thankful to all who have given thede questions their careful consideration and favored us with their opinions on the points in question. FRIDAY-—-HOUSEFURNISHINGS DAY “ECONOMY BASEMENT” | Gold Band Cups and Saucers Fine grade of china from Ba varia simply and neatly decor- | ated with a gold band supple mented with a gold hair- | Mne. Spectal, a pair. Thousands of them are slim, thousands are stout, thousands are tall, thousands t each finds that the skilled ner has fashioned a corset that just fits her figure; that makes her gown look just right; When a designer builds corsets woman in ten in this country of fine figures he knows how. all. Y¥ 3. des! There is an R. & G. Corset fashioned 1—one that fit Come and try fitting rooms for you, and corsetieres to serte you 1—Is a splendid average figure model. straight and the extreme long skirt the comfort of the we: confines the hips snugl when ic, trimmed in lace bbon. Price Price Four strong hose supporters ts shape under the most, trying es ee LE a Car Tickets te in PHONE These are the old orig- inal Jars from Muncie, Ind. On plete, and rubbers, per dozen Boyd's Jar Caps, per doz, Frida 10¢ quality and extra thick. Friday, a dozen .. . bust, the long supporting back -all this with due consideration for The novel construction of the skirt in a standing position and allow! The material is of a fancy stripe bands Extra quality rength.” MAIN 6035, ase Ve se pon Co ‘t New Fall Suits Are Here} |. bs FOR YOUR APPROVAL | recelved there and 12c 12¢ Ball Mason Frait sale Friday, com- with best caps 9 158 Jar Rubbers, best that makes her com- suits you @x- Plenty of ou one on. It possesses the in the skirt coutil is used of lace, braid $2.00 inserted Being heavily od in front to retnfor