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The Cordova Daily Times Entered at the Postoffice at Cordova, Alaska, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Single Copies .% .10 Six Months (in advance).$ 6.00 One Month. 1.00 One Year (in advance). 10.00 H. G. STEEL, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. 1 All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also re served. , CORDOVA, ALASKA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1917. boDGiNG dRAfT iKi jAlL= It is remarkable In V'ifi'w of his re marks in hie OWn defense, that Earl Crissman should agree with the at torney for the prosecution that a twelve month sentence in jail was about right In his case before the „ury. He hurled metaphorical bricks at the government, declaring that the war was purely a i-apitallstic affair; em phasized his delicacy of feelings, which would not permit him to kill an. other person, and wound up by preen ing himself on his intelligence — a mentality of such high degree that it made it impossible for him to take orders from on officer who was su perior to hint ‘only in brute force. Crissman did not register for draft, if we are to credit his words, because he was averse to the '‘degrading influence of the army.’’ We suppose, by virtue of his ex pressed willingness to languish "at least a year" in prison, that he consid ers he will be thrown among mental superior and that his aesthetic taste ord superfine sensibilities will Jind much upon which to found reconcilia tion for twelve months of inactivity. When a mail is canary colored from armpit to armpit, forward and back, he can find justification for almost, anything. Crissman only mildly re sented being registered for draft be fore he was sent to jail. He his fig ured, naturally, that so long as he is behind the bars in this country, his precious (to him only) hide is safe. Like a lot of others, he believes that if he can dodge service for a year, he can avoid duty in the trenches. It fs possible Judge Cushman did not consider this view of the case. It is likely that, had he believed Criss man was seeking to avoid trench duty by spending his time in jail, the term would have been a short one and the yellow streak would have been given an opportunity to become red in ser vice.—Tacoma News. -0 Lieutenant Lufbery, the American aviator in France, has downed his thirteenth German adversary. Now hear the superstitious ones predict an end to Lufbery’s activity. -o Columbia Law School has a woman instructor for the first time in its history. She wdll not try to make every woman her own lawyer, but will point out pitfalls into which she might stumble while conducting her own af fairs.. ' -o Coal in Honolulu is selling at $27 a ton. Where is the hero who will vol . unteer to carry the message to Gar field? AN OBJECT LESSON. Passing the buck — a good poker term, with which most Americans are familiar — seems to be the only re ply Seattle has made to the public and military demand that vice condi tions there be abated. True, there have been meetings at which the sub ject has been discussed, but always there has been manifest a "Let Bill do it” spirit — a desire to shift re sponsibility; to avoid acceptance of the onus of becon\ing known as a "re form" leader. Judge Hiram E. Hadley has put the work of cleaning house properly be fore the constituted authorities. He was asked to head a citizens’ commit tee to be organized for the purpose of making the law effective and com polling public officials to do the work for which they are paid. He has de dined to undertake the task, not be cause in his opinion, there is no rea son for such a commission. In his let ter of refusal, he pillories the men charged with law enforcement — par ticularly the chief executive. Ht points out that Mayor Gill and his po lice force have all the authority re quired; that nothing remains to b< done other than plain duty — and hr urges that the machinery already pro vided be set in motion with a view' t< cleaning up the city. Judge Hadley’s decision was mad* known following a conference in hit office of representatives of various church and civic bodies. The con elusions of this conference were that the mayor — and no one else — pos sessed the pow-er to proceed with th< clean-up; that jt was legally impos sible for Mr. Gill to delegate that au thority to anyone else. The inevitable has happened in Se attle. A recalled mayor has been pui back into office. He was ousted foi cause. His re-election, to him, and t( the anti-reform element, was vindiea tion. The view was that the majoritj of the people wanted an open town— and they got it. Now it has gotter away from them and liberty has be come license. The worst element se cured control — and it has bun wild so wild that it has well nigh killei the goose — and their golden eggi are about to be taken from them. Instead of being a beautifully clear city, Seattle has begun to degenerate and it is on the down grade at a ter rific clip. No one — particularly thosi who feel the “liberals" put them in of fice — is left to apply the brakes. Se attle is in the hands of the wreckers— moral and otherwise — and there wil be no stopping until they feel the; have reached the limit and must seel other places to despoil. Tacoma and other Sound cities, of course, will profit by Seattle * Infamy. A state bordering hysteria already has begun to be manifest. The wildest stories of mutilation are being writ ten out and gossiped about. Sealtle soon will see the result of an exodus. Decent people will shun her as they would the plague. Business will dwin dle as the population decreases — but until then the plunderers, the gamb lers, the bootleggers and the moral lepers will continue their fell endeav ors. There will be no Improvement until the wreckers begin to see the effects of their evil work in declining financial returns. -0 A sweet time is in prospect for the "gentlemen" who were responsible for the hiding of 10,000,000 pounds of su gar at Buffalo. It may be that they will be able to convince Food Admin istrator Hoover of the necessity for • storing away such a quantity of this much needed article, but we doubt It. The circumstances surrounding the j case would indicate a well thought out ] plan to profiteer on a large Scale. The ! federal authorities no doubt will go to the bottom of the case and wifi find those responsible, and when they do. there can be no question that an ex ample will be made. The opportunity to convince the people of the United States that the administration at Washington means business Iq too great to let it slip. u is iiseiy mat senator uatouette is ! at heart a German sympathizer, but j there is no question but that he has ! grbatly strained his chances of future ' preference by endeavoring to paddle I is peace canoe against the current of I public sentiment. Lafollette simply iverestimated his hold on the public, and he now, doubtless, sees the mis take he made, but is too bull-headed to acknowledge it. At any rate, his political goose is cooked to a-clnder, and he should substitute "y” for the last four letters of his name.—Ex. -o Britain’s "contemptible little army” seems to be worrying the German war experts who find it more and more difficult in keeping the boche in ig norance of the true situation in north ern France, and the general staff is not saying much nowadays about the ease with which they could whip "de generate France." -o— Snowing in Chicago with the mer cury only a trifle above the freezing point, says the dispatches. That’s not as important as it was a year ago. The weather doesn’t cut the ice it did last winter, as Hoover is on gjl'i-d over the potato supply. -o A scrub woman at Wilkesbarre who bought the first $1,000 Liberty bond sold in that city has just paid $1,500 for more bonds. After paying over her money she picked up her mop and resumed work. The "come back" stag gered the bond committee. There is a shortage in the jute sup ply this year, but plenty of rope for traitors. -o Stir your coffee and see’how much farther one lump of sweetening will go. One of the great American wastes has been the use of sugar in tea and coffee. I (By United Press) London, Nov. ‘J. — After one of the most miraculous escapes of the war, Major Bannatyne. F>. S. O., is today ^ lecovering from his injuries in the [ C'ireencester hospital. r While flying alone at a height of ! more than 1.000 feet, his engine . caught fire. He headed tho machine towards the ground. Within- a few minutes the flames reached his feet, lie climbed out of the seat ami then crawled along the body of the plane toward the nil, while the blazing dane plunged toward tho earth- The flames reached him again. He swung himself off (he frame and hung by his hands under the machine — now a piass of flames. Just before the glow ering wreck struck the ground Ban natyne dropped. He fell into a plowed field and was picked up suffering from a broken arm, scores of .cuts and with i all his hair scorched to a crisp. The [ machine crashed into a shed and both j were consumed by the flames. ; -# There will be a sheet and pollow case dance at the Red Dragon Club House Friday night, for the young people. Everyone invited. m m Carter & Bogart PAINTERS AND PAPERHANGERS Estimates Furnished. Phone 75 An Up-to-date Line of Wallpaper and Glass. SIGN WRITING T — - "■ "_ '.A,11— 11 _«'■: a■ ■» Cordova Mill & Lumber Co. LONG AND SHORT MILL WOOD FOR SALE Manufacturers and Dealers in Rough and Dressed Lumber. Also Outside Lumber t We Have Succeeded the Arctic Lumber Company and All Mail Orders Should be Addressed to Us. Orders From up the Line Office and Mill Opposite Promptly Attended to. Railroad Depot. Phone 5 Fine Job Printing At The Times Office • • , » $1,000,000.00 And More In Resources Is Now Possessed by the Bank of Alaska System A Y oung Institution to be sure but conservative handling of Funds and Considerate Treatment of Patrons is producing what it’s organizers intended, “An Institution of Strength and Character.” Bank of Alaska I Looking ahead to November 15th, 1942, can see the thrifty | citizens, children who now possess Liberty Bonds, arranging * 1 redemption of their Bonds and receiving the accumulated | --interest. I Checking Accounts Savings Accounts f Time Deposits Traveler’s Checks j| | Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent jj __ __________ I I MEET ME AT The HORSESHOE POPULAR RECREATION PLACE Where We Can Always Find Our Friends. _____ . Finest Billiard and Pool 1 ablei In j Alaska. i _ BEST GRADES OF STANDARD BRANDS OF CIGARS. ■ The Red Dragon CORDOVA, ALASKA A club house for everyman. Recreation, read i n g. pool room, circulating library and late periodicals. Founded 1908 by Episcopal Church. Hours 2 p. m. to 11 p. m. REV. E. P. ZIEGLER, Supt. . r - T a tu J a GET THROUGH WITH BLISTERED. FEE! MANY a miner who has groaned and suffered for years with boots that made his feet feel like a spe cial punishment, has sudden ly found that he has pretty good feet after all, when he wears “HiPRESS” Boots. Just the other day we got a let ter from a man “Inside”telling us he hadn’t had boot comfort for years until he tried “HI PRESS.” There Isn't another boot made like “IMPRESS.” It's welded into one piece without a seam and it outwears any other boot on the market. 40,000 Dealers THE B.F.GOQDRSCH COHFAMY SEATTLE, WASH. Factories, AKRON, OHIO ■MHKFSHHBIB with the RED LIN E round the top The GOODRICH Boot That OutvHpars Steel Newest Georgette Crepe Waists at [rs. Kate Rolfe’s. -♦_ Times Want Ads Bring Results -« Sporting goods, cutlery, flashlights, t The Northwestern Hardware Co. 0-ia When Ordering Job Work Don't Think It la Your Duty to Build Up Concerns In the States, But Give The People Who Are Paying Wages and Spending Their Money In Cordova a Chance to Live. B--B