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Thene Mate 04¢0 Member of the Scetppe Northwest League of Newspapers Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co Seven Ages of Everett Tr 5 FLOYD “It's « Long Lane that has mo turns, = fence Lane ts an write sbout him. As to his being out of tunes, that's mothing. hire an orchestra Sunday. he storekeeper at Lesehi, A. LANE le the way the printer set ft. that bas ne thnes. who got the park for it, Lane ts slim, therefore long famous. If he Altho he’s famous he smokes Ford cigarete—Camels Also he drinks cora- other inagh at the Bull, the ‘they may eat the | park Bat 5 Fead away from the Leschi store, the Leach! store will still have ite Lane, Accidental discharge of rifle kills | Hamilton A. Watson, 17, at Juneau.) Dr. Frank 8. Bourns, former city | medica! inspector, leaves for the) East, to take post graduate work. | Eight-story building to go up on| block between Post and Western) and Madison and Marion sts | \ 1 | i} " ° Rev. and Mrs. Carter Helm Jones to entertain Sons of American Rev- olution. Employes were guests at dinner cecal a eeraae STELLA SORGHUM SAYS: ta An optimist Is @ man who can go home at night and make lemon- ™ from the | lemons that have | been handed to him during the | day. 7 E. Stevens, laborer, killed by 40. foot fall from flat car on Milwaw’ kee railroad, near Port Townsend. Snohomish County Goods Roads association asks county to submit $1,900,000 road bond issue. | Two more miles of track to be built, and regular passenger traffic) will be started between Port An } of the Pacific Cosst Co, Thursday! geles and Port Townsend. | | night. Women's Commercial Club met! ‘Thursday night, in Mrs. Louisa K.| ‘Lepper’s studio, Odd Fellows’ hall.| State Senator H. W. Austin, of Jilinois, head of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, visiting here, says bull moose have flocked back into G. O. P. foid. It was at the Longfellow school. | Teacher was asking for synonyms of various words. They came to the word “chaplain.” i c ¢ —+ Movies keep men out of saloons, complain liquor men. Six hundred saloons in New York go out of busi hess this year. Explosion destroys orchard of Wharles Herd, near Elma, Wash. John Finlayson, Wrangell, 103, oldest sourdough, applies for pen- sion under Alaska law. | | | Frank E. Monster petition to be signed in Frisco, inviting President Wilson to fair, Frank Ray, 45, killed by log while at work for Puget Sound Milla and Timber Co., near Port Angeles. State Master Kegley and a lot of) |other grangers make the day a rec Jord one at Skagit county fair. John Ivanholm, Tacoma, on mo: | toreycle, struck by auto driven by Green, Seattle, Not sert-| ously burt. Thomas Burke elected member of executive committee of League of Northwestern cities, which met at | Spokane | John W. Minto is appointed war-) |den of Oregon state penitentiary, to succeed his brother, who was killed, | | Mrs. C. Carrie Barr, North Yaki- ma, re-elected president State W.} aT. U Leo Schroeder, 10, killed as re sult of garment workers’ etrike in | Chicago. First & Columbia In velvet, plush, corduroy, broadcloth and fancy mixtures Belted and plain models, some fur trimmed. Sizes for SUITS In an extensive variety of styles, fabrics and colors Fur and braid trim- med, Ladies’ and Misses’ model New Dresses Received -_—_———— Redelsheimer’s StylishCoats$15 » $50 W. H. FISHER, Mer. it eae STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1915. PAGE 4. A Married Man’s Troubles* ._. hen . ie TOM, WAY DioN'T You Have TOUR o Anne Tae !] WEY, were You pool Es gee be DE \DEA OB siinin® SHOES POLISHED TODAY? Sogn. THEN Look Fierce Vit Go AND RUB JEM UP ALITTLE GOIN? WITH THAT Bok OF POLISH WAS BLACKING ? HeRe ID A SHINED ‘EM BEFORE “The Mail Must Go Thru’”’ OME people have an idea that the frontier days are over. It’s true that the “wild West” is ceasing to be wild, and is now mostly contained in the traveling aggregations of cowboys and Indians, who entertain with a more or less accurate picture of the frontier as it was. - The attack on the stage coach, the “pony express’ that carried the mails, the nearness of death, and the performance of stirring duty are mostly memories now, so far as our West is concerned. But we have a new frontier. We have only pushed back the frontier to the Pacific ocean and now it reappears in our northern territory of Alaska. Here's a real story of how the mails are carried and what sometimes faces the man who carries them. It comes from the postoffice department and it really happened. Once a month the mail steamer leaves from Seward and goes out the Aleutian Island chain as far as Unalaska, making stops along the way to deliver the mail. One of these is at Cold Bay, opposite Ko- diak island. After about the first of November from the Aleutian chain and in Bering Sea northward the ice packs form and navigation ceases. So the mail must go overland from the southern coast of Alaska into the interior. One of these mail routes starts from the steamer landing at Cold Bay, goes across the Alaska peninsula to Igagik, and around the head of Bristol Bay to Nushagak. For years the man who carried the mail over this route was C. L. Bowdry. Between November 1 to April 30 the con- tract calls for four trips over this 350-mile trail by dog sled. Bowdry was a “musher.” A musher in Alaska is a man who can stand the rigors of the winter climate, can wade in frozen water, run mail on his back if necessary, sleep in a bag on the snow, knows how to drive a dog team and keep the dogs in good condition, and is prepared to meet all the emergencies of a snow trail trip of this character. In the winter of 1912, Bowdry left the steamship “Dora” with his pack of mail to hit the trail for Nushagak. He never arrived. A searching party found. his murdered body and the looted mail sacks, A wandering band of hostile eskimos had encountered him. He had with him valuable clothes and fire- arms: They belonged to the patrons of Uncle Sam and he was responsible. He defended the mail sacks and was murdered while doing his duty. z But the “Dora” still takes the mail to Cold Bay and another “musher”’ takes it overland 850 miles to Nushagak, four times during the winter season,, because the mining camps along the trail depend on Uncle Sam for their communication with the outside world during the long Alaska winter night. The mail pack may contain sorely needed medicines, or important letters from the folks at home. And the mail must go thru! - a * o . +. They’re Just a Lot of Hickers X-PRESIDENT TAFT scores President Wilson on the ground that the latter's Mexican policy is “neither watchful nor waiting.” Ex-President Roosevelt misses no opportunity to denounce President Wilson’s foreign policy in toto. It is time that some good-sized, courageous, justice-loving audience hissed these ex-presidents off the stage when they made such attacks. Taft, as president, gave us a Mexican policy that got nowhere, settled nothing and he handed our relations with Mexico over tos-Woodrow Wilson in the rankest sort of condition. He should have kept his mouth tightly shut about Mexico from the date that he was turned out of office, by a country unanimous, save as to Utah and Vermont. As president, Roose- velt’s most important action toward foreign nations was his “taking” of Panama, an act of such dubious character that it is questionable whether we will not have to make an abject apology and pay $25,000,000 in order to ease the national conscience and conserve the national reputation for common honesty. . But even if the foreign policies of these two men, both tried as president and both later repu- diated, had been above criticism, the fact remains that they offer no improvement on policies which they so vigorously condemn. They do not say what they would do were they in President Wilson’s place. Having been president, they assume the capacity of experts but declare no remedies for the al- leged evils. Any blamed fool can make a kick. The expert who kicks is, in justice and reason, bound at least to suggest a remedy. If the public is to draw its own conclusion as to what Taft or Roosevelt would do if president at this time, it would be only logical to conclude that Taft's Mexican policy would strongly resemble Wilson’s and that Roosevelt would “take” Mexico, Germany, Austria and Turkey. The Taft-Roosevelt criticisms of Wilson’s foreign policies are purely poppycock, senseless and cowardly, and it Is about time that some public audience recognized them as such. * . * * * * BEFORE MARRIAGE, a man thinks his girl ought to have wings. After marriage, he makes an awful howl because of their price when the millinery bill comes in. * * * o . . A FRENCH order forbids soldiers courting with uniforms on. Wonder how many do their courting with uni- forms off? *“* «© © * © THE ALLIES at least realize Uncle Sam won't float their half billion loan on water * * ” J * * MR. DUMBA is declared “out” without a single strike. _** * © * © WAR MAKES no “merry widows.” IT’S AS SIMPLE | AS ABC | That, to get money ahead, one | must not spend it all. It is |equally simple that, to keep, Choice Bits of Information Blasts From the Bingtown Bugle Writes Farmer Corntassel to the Bingtown Bugle: j DENTISTRY “We Crossroads folks hey been Bnglish language is spoken by |of the income must’ be put | MAdicants away before the spending com: |) 7)%) 7 readin’ ‘about’ Prosident Wilson's| Miraing teeth are replaced by|mences. Yet thousands of|a minute on nn Venh About 70 great diplomatic victery, These| The Ohio Method by artificial teeth) bright, intellectual Americans) - In the French 2 bloodless victeries alr powerful pop-| that are natural as your original! 64 through life without 1 |mnans, L868 Austrisns aad te uler with us down here, for we air| teeth. Hxaminations are now being) js i elas Gah a ee orful pore fighters, It's a mighty| Copducted without charge, and jing this lesson from the kinder-| &*rlans and 592 Turks sia Stop this sinivin’ of in-| ™Ate® are furnished fn all cases, | garten of common sense, Germany uses almost twice as tine thi op this sinkin’ of In| we BTAND BACK OF OUR WORK |many posteards for domestte cor L passenger. y | FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE respondence as any other nation, ud Mee? ge gees me! $15 Set of Teeth, $8. Interest 4 Per Cent =| /4Pan ranking second and the Unit word by Si Jenkin’s delivery man Guaranteed @d States third. soon 4# each one fs sunk, I want |~—-An ostrich often lives to be more to be first to tell the news.” $10 Set of Teeth, $5 |than 70 years old, and ylelds mar. . | Guaranteed .......... UNION ketable feathers from the time it 10 Solid Gold or is 6 months old until it 1s more than ¢| BL f im | | $10 Gold or Porcetsia’ | saunrour . The Hohengollern fortune, which 4 | e ridge Wo ‘ totaled $5,000,000 when the great Bridg: ork grandfather of the present katser SWITZERLAND MAY MAKE OUR TOYS The toys which Santa Claus | Solid Gold Fillin new models in wood and paste It is said that in several cases will bring to American chil OF (BATTLE died, Is now estimated at seven Aree ‘Daxt Covistenal ay | Other Fillings times that figure, fro Switzerland The wise |) a f © Dp legation at W ahinaton has ad. | | Office haba vite 6. Sundays, | Capital ang! Surplus Sane eee ee Orr dinar ar eh rhea fos Berne as AREAS, | sdbaed | JAMES D. HOGE, President iy the record to which railways of urers a 1x10! © supp’ >» this country are pointing, It {s es N, B. SOLD the Christmas toy trade of the Cut-Rate | vite heh and Trust Officer {timated that 280,500,000 fares were United States. Hundreds of Dentists ee Cor! paid in that period, _ | | ~ | board have Been produced | 207 UNIVERSITY 87. HOG BUILDING |new organs have been successfully | In the Heart of the Financial furnished to soldiers — terribly ¢eo—-—orrrr—rern — ° CORNER SECOND AVE, Districg wounded in the European war, |OHIO METHOD IN |from spending all, some part *bout 10 per cent of the world’s tn-| —Solentists fignre that 36,000,000) EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE SEATTLE STAR Foucs!? KITCHEL PIXLEY |. | GETS HIS IRE UP Men. Declare War on Femin- H r |tan pe standin’ sore from bein’ rid critictam of our and We’ wow and San i a committee down to Tod \eral store and Todd sald that with- in the last 24 hours he'd sold out | his jand in t darned little trench fightin already raised a fund of $ corner the new Invoice of Tod “ram aaa ewnarqany OADy HEARTB INDIGESTION 0 A SICK STOMACK which surpasseth all under-|“Pape’s Diapepsin” Ends Stomach Distress in | bys served that the dogs of war is | runnin’ | us sicken ‘em on. For long months we hev quietly Anthony crowd baseball scores out of our fireside paper. W way showed no forcible objection But now we've | We've riz, I tell you, and while ithere may be a lot of noxshush gas WIS Shoes wiy ny COLD cREAm ion show in Seattle, we | | let us have a few Paris | | a8 collateral for that dollar loan. ism and Try to Corner 1s Sardine Supply. oT UMPTULIPS, Wash. Oct. 1. leadin’ citizens hey gone mil- it. We've ris! Notiss is here hereabouts, with ed for that politico-domestic | Our backs has long been by feminine manly misdoin's failures, and held still ve seen pictures of Susan B. Five Minutes Time it! Pape ve every |come & sour, gassy or o stomach surely within five he idee that wimmen’s true| If your meals don't fit sphere is under the general uplift|ably, or what you eat lies not over the washtub. lump of lead {in your voters at) take a dose just as soon as sen up and cheers| There will be no sour Francisco ;this sort of a shibboleth, put out) belching of undigested food by a Mrs. Holman, wife of Austra- Na's premier, who ought to be at _ home helping Holman at premierin’, to wit: | “Feed your husband sardines out lof a can and let your children run | around In towels, if necessary, un burn, fullness or heavy f stomach, nausea, headaches, dizziness or sides, there will be no ju get the ballot.” ell, sir, us leadin’ citizens sent gen entir: tow stock of canned sardines | stomach wasn't there, Relief in five minutes at any drug store. to be| These large fifty-cent 'vo|tain enough “Pape’s his warfare, there's go’ rdines|} stomach disorders and d's ordered. Very resply, for many months. KITCHEL PIXLEY. l|your home. YOU LADIES! Who Like the Stylish Things to Wear E have received a new ship- ment of the latest models in loose back, fur-trimmed Suits. We are letting these go for $20.00. If. you like, we can also show you something in the plainer models, in All-wool Serge and Poplins, for $17.50. Now in the Coats oo We are making a special offer— our new line of guaranteed Plush Coats for $20.00, and with fur- trimming, $25.00, and others rang- ing up to $60.00. Millinery manne In Millinery we have something special to offer you in our new line of Pattern Hats for $4.75. Remember — Our Credit System makes purchasing easy. — IN OUR NEW LOCATION OPPOSITE THE POSTOFFICE “WE SOLICIT YOUR ACCOUNT” —After learning some of the) prices on some of the styles on exhibition at the why it wouldn't be all right digest anything you eat and ov mobilized and | you have heartburn, that is look on the dove of peace as a foul | of indigestion. fraud, no better’n a crow, for w ] seen by Bothell Sentinel that that | cent case of Pape’s Diapepsig convention of wimmen Get from your pharmacist with acid, no stomach gas or hes gtiping. This will all go, a1 nauseous hy cause it takes hold of your digests it just the same.as stomach misery {swatting for 8 to| keep the entire family free | It belongs 53 on = | gear erage? PFRSEEG7E SEE bs pe _ —