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F]'Ve Been So ALERT MAT I ‘Sue's Two SCARED ALL THE SPOONSRE MONTHS OLD, "eur 1 OD we mentee OUGHT AND WE CAL Hor THINK SHG Lovite AFTER HAS Your HER mA,’ Yes! One of the i] Reform Squad | — | Rival 4-Reel | ‘Screecher’ | Film = | Pen Libs THS CAPTAING oct S$ > piety. BVI IWANN OSCAR HUNGERS FOR ART, NOT PICTURE POSTCARDS | anit ee Dow T CRY, © “~» PTR DEEPEST Fier oF car. ENG TIVE AATUREE, ADOLPH. ‘i I NEVE® GAW ANY OF DEA. BUT MABE DEY WASt QQAAnND—— Jose STATUARY, DOSE TAPESTRY, DOSE OLD, HAND-PAINTED MASTER. ACH, VOT A Lowe! vor A Loss!! IR LOSS OF ALL Dose «| TREASUREW IN coT VAR RAINS AS 1 DER DESPEST FIGER OF MY BEWs. HE SS STILL HYSTERICAL } OVER BELGIUM. IT [65 A SEVER® BLOW TO Him lar, . Mother—Come, baby, give us the eat. You are hurting it. The Child—No; me want keep da Great Caesar, he's wise to poker already! Can you wonder the standpatters are so panic- stricken that they are begging and imploring for at least three senatora to come to this state to notorious Ed Benn, where the most deliberate po- litical theft ever perpetrated in the state was en- gineered. Yes, it’s the same Aberdeen where the crooked political bosses dominated affairs two short years Telegraph News Service of the United Mrees Association. 9 Second-Ciaes Matte: Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postéttice mos; etx mos $1.50; year $3.25 & month. Phese. Main 9400. Priv carrt By mail, out of city, 38 p By PRAY TELL 2. YOUNG IOUSE WHATS THE [OG B0aK rou nwe ae WTS CALLEO WHOS WHO | | M A/srerr’ THIRST FOR AN OW ED6E ener a who has been writing overcome Ole Hanson’s lead over Wesley LORI- MER Jones? : But Aberdeen evidently has purged itself of leaders for almost having heart-failure as they hear the crooked bosses. HE NEIGHBOR to our right at the lunch counter was of the remarkable ovations being given the pro- munching rice pudding Ole Hanson, progressive. 4 , 2 the. state. Hanson held the biggest political meeting in get on so well on a diet of dried fish and rice. m sure I Just think of it even Aberdeen black ° couldn't do a hard day’s work on three meals of rice.” le pay You pata on 6 is Stes The reason is that the rice which Americans eat is pearl Yes, it s the same old Aberdeen, home of the | _ feeling _worried. : white, while the rice that the son of Nippon eats is almost > Our rice is scoured, polished, to make it look nice And} | QUEAK the scouring takes away the very things which make rice) eRem $ mainly a mess of starch | * The commercial value of the scourings from natural rice | : ry —_ | ished. We doubly cheat ourselves when we fail to insist) | upon being served with the natural article | | + white and snowy, we allow the miller to take out the bran| “and the invaluable nutritive salts lying next to the bran; instead of being a “staff of life,” more nearly resembles shav- ings. rice, they soon developed the disease called beri beri. Then when the brown or natural rice was restored they recovered evén in the big cities it’s hard to get—buy a sample and com-| pare it with the usual kind. See if it doesn’t taste richer and ‘+ No Need to Hurry 4 S OME public men in Germany are, the cable tells us,} pieces for the papers on lessons of the war. | They have somehow caught the impression that his com-| Really, you've got to excuse the standpat . , i Aberdeen, free and independent today, cheers gressive candidate for senator in every section of “I wonder why it is,” he said, “that the Japanese can . i years at Aberdeen. He couldn't, but there's a reason with people who crowded to hear and cheer Hanson. brown as himself. F NTO. THE PURP)( OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE , "= good to eat—the mineral salts which nature craves—leaving | 77 K Shnnny Meuse amounts to almost as much as the rice after it has been pol- 7 EE It’s much the same with bread. Because we prefer it) and then we feed ourselves with the starchy remnant, ,which, In the Philippines, when native soldiers were fed polished If you find a grocer who has the brown rice in stock better. peeved at their old friend, T. R., & ment is lacking in sympathy for the German attitude . . * . — We have read, re-read and read again the colon FF pieces and we fail to detect any warrant for this impress | € seems to us to be as impartial, thoug t as silent the sphinx. The only fellow for whom his sympathy appears to be scant is that meek and patient person, the believer in peace who does not endorse the big stick. T. R. jumps on him with hob-nailed shoes The mere fact, though, that eminent formed such an impression brings intc wisdom of President Wilson’s counsel ¢ and sug gests that all Americans of international renown would do well to increase the caution with which they express them selves, saying nothing if they can’t say little safely There may come a time when it will be both fitting and } necessary to draw, for our own guidante, fundamental lessons » from the great war But, as the war is still young, we don't have to hurry SURE IM TRYMG TO FINO OUT WHO MY ANCESTORS WERE nee oe Germans have the high better vies LET THE jingoes roar! The Japanese have takén a German Island right in our midst—between the Philippines and Hawalli, EVEN THE Itallan king’s crown doesn’t rest easy. Wife's goin to make him walk the floor with a new baby and new bottle shortly. "| THUS FAR, Austria’s “fu Belgrade. STOMACH SOUR? STOP INDIGESTION, ems to be confined to bombarding | ‘ ’ | ONE WAY TO GET VOTES {ton to spend on our river and weyers in and admirers of Mother 4 GAS HEARTBURN— PAPE S DIAPEPSIN Bdltor The Star: In your insue | Couldn't very well go back on him|Ryther and her truly great philan 44 ’ jot Sept. 26 was an editorial in| 20st them vy. A. A. |thropic work even though {t may as Wank te: which you sald: “Occastonally| 7. santa be insanitary in a measure) ch yo HE EIGHT-HOUR QUESTION Do some foods you eat hit back {and puts your stomach in a healthy —taste good, but work badly; ment into stubborn lumps cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? | Mr. and Mra. Dyspeptic, jot|Pape’s Diap down: Pape’s Diapepsin dl- the gests everything, leaving nothing |vanishes—your stomach gets aweet, to sour and upset. No difference |no gases, no belching, no eraeta, how badly your stomach 1s digor-|tions of undigested food, your head dered, you get happy relief in five |clears and you feel fine. I am secretary of “The Co-oper. ative Sunghine Guild,” started in this city last July by a few earnest souls, all trying to help the shut ins. From my correspondenec with many of the mebers I feel justified in saying that at least a great ma Jority will stand for that Grand Old Woman, and we will do all we Humphries, too, got a dripping out of the barrel, ete. It may be worth your while to note that the “dripping’” sent him back to Washington for this present term You may remember that in the 1912 primary, your city turned him down, but in Skagit valley part of Editor The Star T call atten tion to the editorial in an afternoon |paper headed, “Miss Servant Girl, |Do You Want to Lose Your Job? Why does the paper point out that one clause in the servant |problem? Why are they so sorry |for the girls? Afred they will lose their jobs? Just to get the servant fer-|condition #0 that the misery won't and |come back You feel different as soon as psin comes tn contact stomach—distrens just Kitchen Privileges ie It that your Skagit county backs Humphrey up when Seattle drops him?” “Why,” sald the judge, “ho re. cently got us a $10,000 appropria- Eighth Ave, and Virginia @t., Renttle, MISS SERVANT GIRL. Any cars vin Weatinke Ave, Modern, ole. ly furnished rooms, with the best In Mines, comfort and courtesy tor the money Transient, 600 to $15 week- + $966 to 1% |longer hold them, Thomas Wilder, marshal of the town of Winslow tled them to the trees in front of the jail until they became sober enough for trial, None escaped, Is Now Located at His New Store 1010 Gecond Ave. Near Madcon. The Virginus GUILD WILL AID HOME Editor The Star: I wish to add my name to the long list of believ- * * WORDS BY SCHAEFER—MUSIC BY MACDO it You my FINE PICTURE POBTCARD COLLECTION rg OLE HAS’EM BADLY WORRIED minutes, but what pleases you! Put an end to stomach trouble the district gaye him just enough — To scare them into It. can to co-operate with her for the JAIL FULL; $0 HE most i that it strengthens and reg-|by getting a large fittrcony wee | of & surplus of votes to overcome| Just a word to you who are| pale of organized charity, ulates your stomach #0 you can eat|of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug| the difference and got his name on | working 16 long hours a day. | LUCY T. GUILD. TIES "EM TO TREES your favorite foods without fear, |store. You realize in five minutes |t%® ballot, no he won out in No-| Wouldn't you rather work elght | —_____ | Most remedies give you relief|how needless it 1s to sutfor trom in-| MPO te te ante | MOUER pcpatien A (gee ‘ok | PETERSBURG, Ind, Oot, 16 the w, but not |digestion, dyspepsia o - ar, “tes op n't lose her job | ETHRE 2, Ind, $s ngage redhat prove social datén pala or any stom-| judge Mouser in Seattle soon after|when the eight-hour law wan||| ALBERT HANSEN lWhen he tad areatad 0’ sunny this primary victory, asked “How | passed. Why should you? Jeweler and Bilveremith | drunken men that the jail could no =| } ie + These Prices svc’ THE ADVANTAGE © 3" SPINNING’S CASH STORE 1415 Fourth 1417 Ave. 25¢ Pint Can Roof Paint ........ eercccee 20c 45¢ Qt. Can Roof Paint 750 \y-Gal. Can Roof Paint . Gallon Can Roof Paint . *- ° esece For patching and repairing paper, tin or metal roofs. d ‘ ‘ SOc ‘| Quality Hunter's Hatchet or Small Ax Sheath . We won't be able to duplicate. 60c No. 4 19-Oz. Handied Germantown Riveting Hammer ....... Forged from one piece of tool steel; strictly bigh grade. Stiletto, Plumb’s or OXB Boy Scout Ax or Hunter’s Hatchet They should bring $1.00. 70¢ 14-Ft. Length Cloth-Covered Gas Hose ... osce reese SOS SOc 10x5x1\¥g Sheet Stee! Letter Box, With Two-Keyed Padlock. .35c Bicycle Tires Repaired, 25¢ Up, According to Condition of Tire SPINNING’S CASH STORE *tzi077 1210 BIG SNAKES FIGHT BATTLE TO DEATH FUQUAY, N. C., Oct. 16.—A |crowd here witnessed a snake |make a fight the other A KITE PUTS CRICKS snake made way with the mocca- sin by twisting around its rival and squeezing its life out. Then the king snake swallowed the moc- casin and crawled leisurely back to the spring. ; | king ke and a moc ’ a discovered in deadly combat near IN PEOPLE'S NECKS ~ a spring sini ae The king snake had the mocca-| NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—Curiosity sin’s head in its mouth when dis- &4ve hundreds on Broadway, 7] covered, and the moccasin had its ®Tound 46th st. cricks in their @ tail tightly twisted around a root necks, watching an “airship.” The | airship turned out to be a kite flown by a email boy. on the water's edge, the king snake being unable to loosen the hold so it could finish the Job. Onlookers broke the moccasin's La Oct. 16.—The po € hold from the root and the two sion ordered the destrute ro snakes were carried to a clear worth $35,008, opening near-by, where the king confiscated in Chinatown. = Here’s a Special Home Dancing Outfit Complete on the Easiest of Terms A complete Danoe Orchestra—or the Best Military Bands -with a selection of 80 of the Newest Dances, and you may have a dancing party {n your own home any evening you wish it. 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