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onstration, and ruln and devae- tation were to mark its ful pe ky course. Five hundred thou. salon ‘to ‘te mt United States! gand, or a million, or two mil > Shand Severn | tion low, common persons were | to parade the atreete first, blow up the Winter palace next, and then, with curees, fling our mangled remains into the Neva. tlemen of the Be neither of the series of articles hari Russell, staff writer who has just returned from he months as RLES EOWARD RUSSELL 1 was telling you, if you re. f th Russian ae scare stories Various é and wild-eyed English-ep g colony ran fakes about Im. about Ina e of uncontrotia- ble emotion. A special train was hastily provided for the pending disas- r, how easil they are mai ‘4 commission, to take us into and what they Finland and safety over Sun. day, and we were told to be ready to depart that evening 8 o'clock. ‘ou cannot tell what le ne. isdom © June 30, hye | pen,” was the favorite wi was asing ithe excited ones With all thy a pretty lively violent persons let loose and armed, business around | there will certainly be scenes of “he Winter pal. | terrible slaughter, and your only safety is to get out of the city unul red | tt The next da: | the rioting has ceased the grand ten § | If any of ua protested or aid that dem. |perhaps not quite everybody in SEATTLE STAR 130T Seventh Ave, Near Unton St. mount to, About 8:00 on the morning jof Saturday, | f to be es free-for-all ‘Telegraph News Service he at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice 3.50 Dut of city, 35e per month up to & mos; € mos $1.90; year § a Te ee carrier, city, 206 & month. Phone Mate €00, M'rty rimente. Datty & Star Publishing Co. yt sounectin fy NOT A TEMPORARY JUSTMENT? Gs to be hoped that the owners and the workers in d strike will effeet a temporary agreement, by mien can honorably return to work without _board. ; : ' government board, it is evident, will be slow in ‘a decision to cover the Seattle case, inasmuch as Hand and San Francisco situations will also be 4 at the same time. The board will undoubtedly matter as a Pacific Coast situation, tho the shipyard fin these cities originally were not simultaneously @ or based upon the same terms. Accordingly, it is sd that at least a month would elapse. In the the yards here would. remain idle. A_ million a month payroll is involved. i is nothing but the most cordial feeling between fers and the ship owners. The controversy really the owners and the government, as to which y the wage increases ttle workmen have patiently waited for two months government to act decisively. But it has not And he strike was called. If, therefore, some kind of agreement can be reached the men and the owners, by which neither side's d be prejudiced,’ where each side would give and bit TEMPORARILY, they would accomplish more i¢ interests of the government than has the government done in this case. ic consideration demands the continuance of our ig uninterruptedly, in spite of the procrastinating of some public officials. Here is a fine opportunity shipbuilders and their men to perform a real patriotic federal adjustment board will adjust the perma- wwe scale. But the Seattle men can, in the meantime, to a TEMPORARY basis, and let our industry con- swing. Francisco has adopted a temporary scale. mid do the same. IREE ROUSING CHEERS FOR THE WHO DISCOVERED $58 STEEL ow that President Wilson and the federal trade com- have fixed the steel price at $58 per ton, Secretary Josephus Daniels may smile and say “I told you so.” is was the man who discovered $58 steel. ny months ago, when the war was young and the de- for steel plates for warships was vigorous, the Honor- le Josephus “went to the mat” with the steel crowd.’ They a to charge him all kinds of fancy prices, beginning at ‘and ranging upward. Gen. Goethals thought $85 was a ogg fon expedited steel. . the Honorable Josephus took out his little pencil Ad wrote on a little piece of paper, $58. “That,” said he, “will be about the price the government ‘pay. That gives you a profit of nearly $25 a ton, suf- ducement to hustle.” ' é steel men saw Daniels megnt business, and signed ) for about 700,000 tons at that figure. They waited and ted, however, and cast ashes on their heads. And now, imminy cracks, along comes the president and the federal ssion and say Josephus was right, and that the of steel is, and shall ever after remain, $58 a ton Now, bullies, three rousing cheers for Josephus!! CAN IT be that the woman slugger is under the delusion that a boche in Beigium? IT 18 reported that members of the legislature gathered at , but talked no politics. If wonders do not cease, we'll hear of a case of German raiders refusing to kill women and a) oo Seattle AD JUDGING FROM Prosecutor Lundin’s and Commissioner Ram. vations, King county roads are just about what they are ‘up to be. | JUDGE R. B. ALBERTSON was always a gentleman. Cour. he was always courageous as well. To have known him was jo have respected and loved him. Aristocratic in breeding, he was, , a man of progressive inclinations. He served well in Negisiature and on the bench. Seattle mourns his loss, for it is genuine loss. pod Souring Causes Indigestion, Gases, Heartburn—Pape’s Diapepsin Instant Relief! Neutralizes acid in stomach, stop- ping dyspepsia, pain, belching-It’s fine! You don't know what upset your h—vhich portion of the food the damage—do you? Well, 't bother. If your stomach is tn “& revolt; if sick, gassy and upset, what you just ate has ferment- and turned sour; head dizzy and ; belch gases and acids and undigested food; breath |, tongue coa Just take a lit Pape’s Diapepsin to neutralize dity and in five minutes you what became of the indi- n and distress . Millions of men and women today si that it 1s needless to have dyspepsia. A little Dinpepsin occa sionally keeps the stomach sweet- ened, and they eat their favorite fooda without fear. If your stomach doéan’t take care of your liberal limit with lion; if your food ia a da stead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless antacid Is Pape’s Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It’s truly won- derful—tt stops food souring and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing Your stomach will digest your meals .f you keep acids neutralized e “Terrible” T sell Tells How American Mission Refused to Petrograd that day was to be put; wanted’ to see them, because he the case of either side before the federal adjust-| “|dition of the U. 8 to death, he was told with pitying condescension that he knew noth ing about Russia “We that have Hved here so many years or all our Ii or some | other Interesting period, we know Russia, and we te you that it ts} absolutely dangeroms fer you to be in Petrograd, You caa't tol what might happes.” Jim Dunean, whe ts about as mab-| Ject to scares as a wooden Indian is to chilblains, remarked that so far as he was concerned, If he went |out of Petrograd that day, it Would | be feet first, He said that if there | was going to be any fireworks, bh | | | of putting tn an electric doorbell, but 1 know I ought to have some thing to save the people the trouble and pain of knocking with their knuckles, What can you suggest? Mra. G.0.G Hang a damp cloth on the door | men and let people wring that, What is ft that a woman does not Worry about when It is stolen from her?—Mias Rose Buddy Her dress. She frequently asks somebody to hook {t. Why should an aviator be a man who ha trade?—1t. F. A. Hecause if he breaks his alrplane he can't make ascent. When ts a straw hat the softest? oO. H. O. | When you feel tt; because then! it's no longer straw. It's felt, | - ' Why can a sailor always get the better of a farmer?—D. T. Because a eallor ts so accustom 4 to handling a tiller, eee QUESTIONS £. D. K. CANNOT ANSWER | Please tell me what kind of a | gown I should wear at a moth ball. Myrtle Green. My children tle knots tn the spa ghett! How can I break them of he habit?—Mra. M.A. R If Thomas A. Edison were to take! up ter would he write light fletion ? | Do the fish companies always figure on net profite?—H. J. M | Are printers all alike, or are they | jmen of different types?—W. R &. .. K HOUSEHOLD HINTS A small amount of sand sprinkled jon the bottom of a bathtub will! enable one to stand up when the soles of the feet are covered with soap. | Never throw away an old foepick. It can be sharpened and used to take the paper tops off milk hotties. | Moths can be kept out of the hair at night by weartne a rubber cap. | A discolored celluloid collar can | be brightened up and made to look like new by giving ft a coat of| white dressing such as ts used for buckskin and suede shoes. | eee | “Having had our wheatless and meatioss days all summer, and now urged by Hoover to put tn a few sweetless days,” posteards R. M. M “the Janitor is giving us a fow heat | less days.” eee Re that as it may, Johnny Humble is a janitor in Chicago. | And Steel Dome lives in Brown, W. Va. eee The war experts are almost as good prophets as the baseball ex perts. One of the former, Frank H Symonds, says the desire for more territory would be a great «tumbling | block In the way of peace negotla tions, That's a great discovery eee George W. Perkins, who has spent the greater part of the past two years in telling the people of New York how to cut food bills, delivered & speech to farmers the other day, advising them to organize a dairy men’s league. Has George bought a cow? | Knowledge of German will come in handy to Americans when they are shopping in Berlin next year, says Profeasor Burgess Johnson, of Vassar, therefore we are urging our students to study German. The man talks as tho he were a member of some big city school board. eee MAKE YOUR WIRL = FrinsT friend, send your drug order to Neo one ever lived to rej it, | Advertisement in Prescott Journal. Aria.) | f You Bet They Are! | 4 o——_—__——_— PREMIERS au FEU MEANS mH EneweN FIRST rOFIGHT tot Grocer soe WS: MARINES “Premiers au Feu!" Thus has the prowess and tra- marines been | translated into French in the latest recruiting poster issued by this corps, which was first to fill its wartime quota, It means “First to Fight.” The poster herewith reproduced | shows the new steel helmet in which the U. 8. marines will go to the battle lines, It is on dis splay in Seattle. ruth About Bloody had wore hi if the were of the kind that ric were really good, and fireworks| Anyway, it was NIX on that spe-| gaged, and would le fancy, Also he sald that/ctal train, and gents from the|from the Finland station. Pack up exp 6 of their varying emo-\to any fireworks that Jim Duncan king people of Russian | Mnglish-speaking colony lamented] your hand baggage in a hurry and/tions. “Let the Council Be Su-| got a chance to see was\the match and sized them up all wrong, and ought to stand by and take notes on his min it a cou! Russia, de hadn't noticed that the gen tert infallible guides about Russian af-| the palace and destroy us, The evi-|that got the whole of it told me| white except the banners in the|then the “Marselliatse,” tl fairs, and if they sald he was about dence wan in the hands of the gov-| afterward it was fine, and the x toy anarchist section. They were inte inated? es 7 ae bn to have his throat cut, he would ‘ernment, which w that | cited persons that always Ko around | 5) 4/4. bands let up the people sang them, eae - se ——=| seeing visions of wholesale murder | Six hours they marched like |first the “Marselllaise,” then the %° eoccccccccccccccccocccocccccccoococoooooooos Mid Russia sunk in a nea of MitOr| shig There was not a disturb- | “International @| der did a great turn, and well worth} {"'8 There was nol a amt : I ° f th W M 3 the price of admission | pot ” by a ries, 0 od SOME DAY, WASN'T IT? NO ; , ercation, not @ , RODY HAD HIS THROAT CUT A\m $| We got back from our speaking | cardi . a VSS ) c ar oves $|ntunt about 3 a. m., and turned out| Plood was shed and no shote Ok WAS § (TERED IN HIS ire xcept In the songs |BED. BUT WE CAME JUST AS \already moving down the vaky | RUSSIA HAS TO A THOUSAND eeecccccccsccccsooess e e | Prospeckt, accompanied with; When they reached the Field of OTHER DISASTERS THE HEC- One more proof of the crafty,;this conception of the uses of! bands I never saw so many bands | Mars they piled up their banners|TIC ONES HAVE BEEN EQUAL medieval diplomatic methods of the |diplomacy {x the reason for the|;, any one place, and didn’t know |b the graves of the men and wom-|LY SURH OF. kalser as 06 | tlong of Bolo | I do not wish to go to the expense) rupt the French nation by the use It appea mar hire @ race noted for thelr raseality, and $2,000,000 at his disposal with in- structions to corrupt France. T class as the German effort to tn spire Mexico to declare war on/,4 victory to the great Field of Mars, the old| y |street and cheered him until he/doing this he heard a splashing in ary RS al Texas, Ari BY words caunet be taken; parade ground of the troops and stood up and made them a crack- the swaben and looked up in time > their signature, to the most solemn sent colossal Speech Vent of|ing gdod speech and isappearing The mental degeneracy behind | agreement, has value, trograd. lenoerad inten apie more. ssheMiewus amar 6s OT as a STAR—FRIDAY, OCT. 5, 1917. PAGE 6 Sunday in “Run for Their Lives,’ take his chances that they had the;we had better get out of the city | wrong dope. The special train had been re-en ve at midnight Between the playings of they bands they relieved their soulp by|and bloodstied. singin There n't seon any in a long time that that lighted my cigar. that being spon his otherwise acter. Hut bands played 4 One was the preme” wan the favorite text. Some called for the elimination from the ministry of the ministers who were not socialists, Some denounced the capitalivts of the world, some im and I had a speaking engage: | demanded that all the warring na ment that night to address 6,000 tions should lay down their arms,| soldiers at a big Coney Inland kind | some demanded the vigorous pro®\the other was the of a place outside the efty, 90 we! ecution of the war eek wan en mianed a lot of this show, but tho All of the bamners were red and | aise,” then get down to the station lest the Plood Thirsty Bolshevics discover |they are about be cheated of their Prey and begin the massacre tonight. all day our foolhardiness, and con. signed us to an early and unmarked grave When eyening came they return: ed to the chasge with triumphant vigor, certain now that they should be able to save our lives in npite of ourselves Conclusive evidence had been discovered that the ter rible Bolshevies planned to attack vine had smoke, the ad, bloods! revels in take, so that he shouldn't make gain. Also he said that, in the rso of his interesting visit to tlemen now performing the hy# a stunt were world beaters as the t 8 to seo the horrible outrages | |begin. A vast army of pe was | an occasional cheer, there was | no voice raised, EAR TO 8UCH Written for The United By J. W. T. Mason Press ined tn the revela | menace to civilization which & ViC-|there were so many in all Petro-|¢n who fell in the revolution, broke . sha's efforts to cor-|tory by the kaiser would mean. Such plottings canpot be dit-| mystery wan simple. They were|tory until 4 p.m. Then they went} D length burlap bag with | had caught. mocracy established in Germany, there levantine methods would be elevated to still greater heights of cred worship by the kaiser and *# paranolac followers. There can be no trust put in the kaiser and the advisers who now surround him, Nothing is too ex travagantly preposterous for them to attempt as a aly way of winning bands that struck me first as re) QUARTE markable and then as very signifi-| They came to cheer the “Ameri cant. canskies” until they were hoarse, THEY ONLY TWO/to serenade us with their fine TUNES. bands and to return our acknowl- Behind them marched, tn broad,|edgments by waving thetr caps in straight rows, men, women and the air and shouting their cheerful children. From early morning until | salutations 2 p. m. they marched up one street A group turally to the Ger n militaristic mind, however, to levantine, belonging to a cunning and place nearly PLAYED then ed for home. h ‘he plot ts in the same futile stopped Afebassador and down another until they came | Francis in his carriage in a side|ground to drink. Birdseye View Alderwood Manor Demonstration Farm \ EXACTLY AS IT LOOKS NOW ae a I ee eS atte meee At ALDERWOOD MANOR Poultry buildings, the grounds, filbert orchards, the model farm home, educational and social hall—the “latch string” is out everywhere. Come with us and enjoy the great outdoors— imbibe the spirit of this New Life of the Land. Nature has painted a wonderful picture, brilliant with gorgeously rich autumnal colorings. The highways and byways leading to “Little Lands and Liberty” are flanked with flaming maples, native grape and trailing vines. Visit ALDERWOOD MANOR Sunday. Get out into the countryside—take a lunch along. You'll return at the eventide with warm blood in your veins, health’s color in your cheeks and a picture of Happiness and Riches in your mind. You will have seen 5 acres and independence an actuality. ELECTRIC COACHES LEAVE EVERY HOUR Big, beautiful upholstered electric coaches leave the Everett oe Interurban depot, Fifth and Pine, Seattle, hourly on the half hour, son . . . - . . Y arriving at the Alderwood Manor station in forty-five minutes. he Or you can drive out in forty minutes via Westlake and the oat North Trunk Boulevard. Land PUGET MILL CO. b2remen ‘WALKER BUILDING, SEATTLE—PHONE ELLIOTT 182 Open Every Evening Until 6 for Your Convenience—Literature Free \erad, but the explanation of the, Up into groups and listened to ora| -, , ~ Catches 45-inch Eel, Russia and Saw Spectacle of Democracy Ho ended this terrtbfe day of riot waen't even Also by carrying bafiners an arrest, and the near@st approach Jim doesn't only blot excellent char- about those two tunes the aise” and mnational,” First the “Marsell- “International”; THINGS AS of German money obtained in| missed indulgently as the futile ef the regimental bands of the garri.| home “ Amertea forts of childish diplomats, b&|s0n and the nearby troops, As| IT IS TRUE THAT AT ON | But It Makes Escape No other first-class power would | cause, backing this kind of Interna goon as they heard about the dem-| STAGE OF THE PROCEEDIN POCKET LAKB, N. Y., Oct. B= adopt. such methods as these, tf tonal immorality, Is the full power! onstration they volunteered to fur-/A VERY LARGE DETACHMENT | while fishing in Little Pi lonly for the reason that they are |f the kaiser’s fighting machine. | nish the music, and certainly did a| MADE A MOVE TOWARD * ve f eh “ si : Je Ag so futile in dealing with modern| If the war should end before good job. WINTER PALACE, WHERE pj aek eee eee ee kalsorism {8 overthrown and de There was one fact about these| AMERICAN COMMISSION WAS/|¢¢! Which measured 45 inches in He placed the eel in @ 30 bullbeads he He quit fishing, placed the bag of fish over his shoulder and start- He stopped at a spring for a drink of water and placed the bag on the ground. was necessary for him to He on the While he was cin testlameenmn