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Member of the Sertppe Nerthwest League of Newspapers Published Dally by The Star Pubitsning Co. Thone Mat 0400 SNCASONENTS DOWN TOWN HAV® GOT TO STOP} You'Re MARRIED NOW, AND YoURE ELSEWHERE ozoo in America ALMARIN T. DRAKE | Within 20 days, Milwaukee line jw have passenger service to Wil- harbor; also to Centralia. lanted—Automobiles to show) ,eff our town to the delegates to the ¥W. C..T. U. convention, next week. Owners of cars notify Mrs. J. R. Morrison, 228 18th ave. N. Tele- _} phone, East 2508. A CASE OF BITTER Seat bf fd ‘Thief lifted sult case of Mrs. | ©. R. Glass, 1532 Summit ave., | near postoffice corner. When | police recovered {t later, some eandy and bottle of horserad- ish were missing—that’s all. When thieves got thru with auto onging to Donald Aasseltine, of the tools and batteries were , the windshield broken, the was broken, and no were left. Outside of that, Ford is still in good shape. ’ Twenty-two seek commissioner. a in Everett. ee id Staeger, 4, drowned in; Chehalis river. | State treasurer's report shows $577,486.29 more for 1916 than 1914 of six permanent funds. Total at hand September 30 was $12,221, : a of salmon so thick that Kal-| Sunday marked first year of C Vama river is reported choked with on W. H. Bliss as rector of Tri | | fish. State hatchery is respon- church here. : | sible. As long we Tim Kelly, 35, escapes from Cor) young,” said Rev. Hugh Daley canyon honor camp. |Brown, in Sunday sermon at —_——|srim church. | Republicans grant LONGFELLOW’S SHORT NOW | Concession In platform Charles Longfellow, Renton chusetts convention. I r, slept as sound as a log mone at Midway hotel, Seattle, Sat- COULD CARRY IT urday night. When he awoke, $12 in silver, secreted in one of his socks and slipped under his pillow slip, had slipped out } | } everything you do?” 'No—I don't have to.” “Lucky bey. How's that?” “The neighbors do {t for me.” as in Mass: lightly into the drug store | Scented?” asked the slick cler! vo,” the gurgied; | | i { County Agriculturist Rader says| 2,000 acres of bottom lands in Sno- qualmie valley, near Duvall, to be reclaimed with aid of federal gov- / ernment. , Sixty-one candidates for commis-) i sioner in Spokane. John D. to have been unnoticed in churc Sunday, in Colorado. Maybe |changing his clothes #0 oft found himself without mone the contribution box | Dr. Fredeick A. Cook Secretary McAdoo to visit Pacific) m6 tellow—arested in toast, beginning October 10. \G ‘ erman spy. Total number accidents reported | J , to industrial insurance commission| , League of Navy Yard clubs ba in this te in four years ts 66,483. erton Friday night a Dr. Kent K. Thyng, 41, of Taco) geattie tire and police bands d ma, well-known physician, dies at ee pam { Rochester, Minn., hospital. i Total death toll in Gulf district, fae to storm, now reaches 310. Gunboat Princeton, en route from| @ Frisco to Bremerton, in tow of the } cruiser Colerado. Princeton struck © funcharted rock at Samoa. | BEWARE! First number of Jewish Votce,|| “Roosevelt kills (published in Seattle, is out || save himself,” is the report 4 Pacific Northwest Society of En-|| from Quebec. Out hunting, \gineers to affiliate with general! | and, tho law prohibited killing ‘Society of Enginers of Seattle. of more than one moose, T. R i: Heavy freight trade to Alaska in-| | shot two. Says in affidavit he | duced Alaska Steamship Co. to] | did {t to protect his life. And ‘charter steamer Elihu Thompson.| | no one will dispute that moose } Semt-annual meetting of Seattle) | nearly took his political life Presbyterial society at Georgetown| ebureb Safety Razor Blades of all kinds sharpened, dozen F 15¢ SPINNING’S QUITTING SALE 1415 FOURTH AVENUE yes, India th j fair NOW, THEN, ELEPHANT, moore to ° “I suppose you write to your wife while she is away and tell her love we are Elmer progressive The sweet young thing tripped “A bar of soap, please.” she or. oA “Il can carry Rockefeller is reported in he for as ‘emselves proud closing day, Satur. |day, of Washington week, at Frise STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1915. PAGE 4. You KNOW TOM, | NEVER SPEND ANY IT's FoR Sk You FOR IT sp—t Yesyov BeT You Ask Me, AND You ASK we QUIT OFTEN THANKS TOM~1'M SORRY Here ARE A FEW THEY AMOUNTED TO So RECEIPTED BILLS = You CAN FILE AWAY — I've PAID BVERTHING up To DATE YOU SHOULD WAKE MONEN, By mail, ot months, 61.00; months Br eooond cians “TOM, You Don'r Ger WHAT | MEAN ~ FOR. INSTANCE = [NEVER Go THROUGH YOUR. POCKBTS~ SUPPOSING TOMORROW MORNING UP AND FIND ME GOING “THROUGH YOUR. POCKETS LOOKING FOR WHAT WoULD A ty, x0 pear, 1) Me month | rer, the mon V0 GeT UP AND HELP You Look n One Part. WAS BEEN SENT To GET NEWS ON Slapjacks and Happiness ONOR the cook! Bless the crisp mornings soon here. Pray for the sharp tang that makes sidewalks creak. Smile, hang you, smile as you think of the weather that is on the way—the weather that makes you step briskly, that makes your ears tingle, that makes you nose red, that makes your checks smart. The day of slapjacks! The kitchen, whose smells you have abhorred during the hot months, becomes the place from whence arise most heavenly aromas. Sniff it, breathe it, anticipate it, the slapjack, and his alluring brother, the sausage. Gird your loins, fortify your stomach, clear your minds of cobwebs, expel from your system grouch and gout, get ready for that morning of mornings—the first morning of this coming fall-winter season when you shall sit at table with the honorable slapjack and the humble, luscious sausage before you, for they shall tempt you to overeat, and you shall be happy and miserable; happy in having gratified your appetite, and miserable because you could not restrain yourself. Waken, pessimist, waken to the kitchen glories that await around the * . . * - * corner of the season Often Works That Way NE tenable objection to the war loan comes from much maligned Bill Bryan. He says a subscription to the war loan gives the participant a “pecuniary interest in the result of the war, which makes dif- ficult an attitude of real neutrality.” We have often seen that same old “pecuniary interest” the four winds. scatter many a flock of good intentions to Ford’s Real Work for Peace HE foundation established by Henry Ford's millions, thru its hired men, will soon be spreading the words of peace. We have little hope that Ford’s foundation will succeed where Andy Carnegie’s failed. Peace is not a matter of mere words—‘“Gentlemen may cry, Peace, Peace, but there is no peace,”’ as Patrick Henry said. Yet Henry Ford has already done a great work in the cause of peace—the establishment of a mini- mum wage of $5 a day for every man in his employ. The prime cause of war is not the lust of one peo- ple for the blood of another people; it is the greed of a nation’s ruling class. The United States should be well prepared to repel any attack that may be launched by foreign greed. But at the same time the people of this country must be on their guard lest the greed of a ruling class should corrupt public opinion in an effort to hurl this nation against another nation in the interest of private grab. No matter how well prepared for war we may be, this country will never wage an unrighteous war if we have industrial democracy—the rule of the many, the exaltation of the average man in the farm, mine, shop, and warehouse. Ford is making the automobile “universal.” He is linking country and city with a firm chain of “tin lizzies.” He is teaching foreigners English. He is giving the humblest laborer a wage sufficient to educate himself and his children and give both SELF-RESPECT. He is making the stuff of a proud and noble democracy. That is Henry Ford's real work for peace. * Giblets Not for Willis Alone OV. WILLIS of Ohio, on his visit to Seattle, rather hinted that chicken gizzards, which he is so fond of, are beginning to get his goat by the frequency with which his political opponents mention them. But gizzards should not be despised. According to Dr. J. Scott Walker of Chetopa, Kan., a Denver commission man is at Chetopa and, having secured options on much of the land around the town, is prospecting for gold. For three years past Chetopa poultry dealers have been shipping consignments of ducks to the Denver commission man, who regularly found a quantity of gold in the gizzards of the birds. Particles the size of a pin head were found. But “mining” the gizzards was too slow for the commission man; so he is going to mine the feed- ing ground of the ducks. oe .@ ©2828 ._* * &# * aoe ee” Se NOW THAT Dr. Dumba has about finished impress- ing upon all citizens of Austria and Germany the perils of hanging onto their jobs in American factories, we take the liberty of suggesting that the naturalization office is open every day except Sunday. AS A beautiful picture of love's labor lost, observe Cousin Bill Taft's effort to coax California back to the old-fashioned Southern Pacific republicanism. THEY'RE TRYING to make out that Japan is a peace country beause she has no war poetry. If Japan wants to borrow some war poets, we know where there are a lot of them who aren't doing much just now. h AN EXCHANGE prints a story of a pipe-fish that carries its young in a pouch like a kangaroo _ Some pipe! he n-| n- The Wara Year Ago Today ! It seems that it would be Just if a} common laborer for the city is not] nllowed to work after he has reach Te ee IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL @ | TAKES FALL OUT OF ' “BUSINESS” CAMPS » Star: We muat ad ightfulness of the orig 1 a brilliant idea of iness men’s and capt training camp to turn out officers for milltary purposes. It will be of great importance to them, when any of thelr em go on strike to improve their conditions 1 see, the officers could form of thelr own strikers jand them to shoot down pan. comm * and heir own a ipline m1 know dis and obedience are the main sin militarism 1 be a great saving to business, it will save the cost lof importation and cost of keeping strikebreakers, thugs and gunmen, who are always necessary to take big ed the age of 40 that the rest of them do not such as councilmen, mayor, police, firemen . and officers of their departments. .. Judges—tn fact, all that pass the 40 yea ’ So I, for one, say, out with them all that are that old, and see if they will take care of the honest laborer who has given the best of his life to! them | What's good f good for the # | WERER HURT; WALKS 6 MILES part in a atrike herve Preparedness for home tion! What bunk! After year's fighting, maiming and tea ng down of the foreign armies and ny Sane, thinking per n invasion by any of ther No, of course not Rig business only wants to be pre. pared to do more effective work at the next Ludlow, Calumet and Hay onne ERNEST MYERS protec over r the big guns is) WOULD HAVE SAME AGE LAW FOR ALL Editor The most valuable Star Kn paper for time it gives me a great deal of pleasure to know thé way after the truth ading your some now, y Norton, of Kingston, | you go} walked six miles to reach a boat for Seattle, with his foot badly After reading Mr. Fred L. Boalt's|slashed with an ax, and fainted at | statement in regard to the civil! First and Madison, He is in the service law of age, | agree with him,'city hospital, French and British war of- fice reports declared that the movement to flank the German right was developing at the northern end of the western front. Berlin admitted that there had been heavy fighting, but said that there had been no decisive result. Advancing Belglans reoc- cupled Malines. Antwerp forts were being bombarded, Russia reported repulsing desperate attempts of four German army corps to cross the River Nieman, to cut the Warshaw railroad, Italy protested to Vienna against sowing bombs in the Ad ‘iatic. : Austrians lost great stores of war material In the recent defeat in Galicia, ‘OUR UNCLE SAM ~ ISMODEL BOSS Railroad Workers in Alaska} Have Government-Owned Amusement House. COST $500 TO FIT IT UP) Your Uncle Sam is teaching em ployers a few fine tricks on that/ new government railroad he is bullding up in Alaska. William C. Edes, chief of the U. |S. Alaska Engineering Co., is the boss of the big job. What do you} think was one of the first things he| did when he began the work this summer? He wrote to Secretary Lane and) “said that one of the first buildings he wanted to put up at the new! town of Anchorage (which is the construction camp base for the railroad) was an amusement hall! He said that he thought it was a bad thing for a big construction camp not to have a place where the men could have proper recreation, and he asked authority to spend |$500 in equipping a hall with a phon pb, a brary, some pool nd other amusements. of the Treasury Downey promptly ruled that it was a most proper expenditure. 80 now the men at Anchorage have a government-owned recrea- tion plant, where they can get healthy amusement free as part of jtheir contract with Uncle Sam— mode] employer. | The building is a regular com- | munity playhouse and civic center. lIn addition it ts used for all sorts lof community purposes. The other day, a wandering preacher arrived at the construction camp. When Sunday came around the govern ment building was turned over to |him, the billiard tables were push- Jed back against the wall, and the men came in to Sunday service— those who wished to come. A few days later the hall was the scene of the first wedding in the new town. One of the boys de- cided he liked Uncle Sam as an employer well enough to risk tak- unto himself a wife and the emony, It's not recorded whethe the phonograph played the wedding march at the marriage, or the hymns at the church service. The weakness or strength of our) al Guard system, as compar- n the effictent citizen-soldiery itzerland, will be shown in two Iks on “National Preparedness,” at the weekly luncheon of the Mu-) nicipal league, at the Washington Annex Tuesday Charles Chevallaz, a Seattle arch- tect and structural engineer, for- merly a lieutenant in the Swiss army, Will speak on “The Making of the Swiss Army.” Maj. Fred W Liewellyn, formerly adjutant general of this state, will discuss “Our Na- tional Preparedness for War.” They were arguing about the war in Billy Sutherland's, Said one The Russians are the healthiest soldiers.” The other replied: “That's because they retire so regularly.” | | then EVEN GROSS, SICK CHILDREN LOVE SYRUP OF FIGS If Feverish, Bilious, Consti- pated, Give Fruit Laxa- tive at Once. Don't scold your fretful, peevish child. See if tongue is coated; this is a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with sour waste. When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, has stomachache, indigestion, diar- rhoea, give a teaspoonful of “Call- fornia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few |bours all the foul waste, the sour [bile and fermenting food passes out of the bowels and well and playful child again. a dren love this harmless “fruit |i ative,” and mothers can rest after giving {t, because it never | fails to make their little “insides” clean and sweet. Keep it handy, Mother! A litile given today saves a sick “child morrow, but get the genuine. your druggist for a 50-cent bottle o' “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plain- ly on the bottle. Remember, there are counterfeits sold here, so sure ly look and see that yours is made by the “California Fig Syrup Com- pany.” Hand back with contempt any other fig syrup. ‘SALTS FINE FOR ACHING KIDNEYS We Eat Too Much Meat, Which Clogs Kidneys, Then Back Hurts and Bladder Bothers You. Most folks forget that the kid- jneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing oc jcasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheu- matic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kid- neys active and clean, and the mo- ment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four |ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoon- }ful in a glass of water before | breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This jfamous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- jbined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stim- ulate them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids in the urine so it no longer trritates, thus ending bladder disorders, Jad Salts is harmless; tnexpen- sive; makes a delightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink which everybody should take now and to keep their kidneys clean, avoiding serious complica- thus ll-known local druggist sa 1 elis lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. eee You can't always fake everyth it may not be convenier mixed; or your oven m o put a not bake difference in results if you use is absolutely ce feathery, It generates an abundane ing bowl and in the oven, cooked through. Housewives who use K C never Try K C at our risk, Your grocer not pleased in every way. ain to raise your b The, raisi AHL AAN UU ing “just so.” Sometimes you will get in more shortening than usual; or make the batter a little thin; or cake in the oven the moment it is evenly and it is necessary to turn the pan around—none of these little uncertainties make the slightest IXG Bakinc Power This modern, double-raisa-baking powder has unusual strength and biscuits, cakes and pastry light and ¢ of leavening gas both in the mix- ing is sustained until the dough ts have “bad luck” with their baking. will refund your money if you are ow