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Jiie iST.iKU'ii (Satruiaii AND \\ The Alaska Weekly Post Published Daily, Except Sunday* ami Holdiays By fiATEW \Y PI’lll.ISHI nH C OMPANY, (lnr.> Elmer A. Pnend. Editor „ . try V. H»h*n. I‘r«ii«lriit •,‘r»nk U S**‘ .nt«r**< •• aacond-claaa matter S+pt»mb»r 2. 1H3. at th*^ !’*»at Offlca •* S«*^ar«t. Ala untjpr Act of March 8. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: S POST H, ia.“tS adve'ktisTng KAnir'oi .....Vicu: Editorial and Business O Kee l’elephone Main .1 MEMBER Ol' THE ASSOl IATEI) I’RESS The Associated Kress is evclisnelv entitled *° ,hC ,f all news dispatches credited ot it or not otherwise credited in this paper. ind aUo the local new* published herein. _ — i _____— i MUTISM AUU'oM I-.S I'.KAM QUAR < ERS IN FRAN {Poriespondence oi the Associate*! press)— The ob>erver set Mod himsc' beside the pilot in the b u* bombiny machine. One either side the enyino roared. The >*yna! v'a> •„ \* n. an*i th* machine moved to. ward. turn d nt » the wind, and rushed anos.- ‘ urn* into the niyht^ It olimhe«I <w t*. y in v n *•!»•'. lhl**>. could bt seen the « ini country MiU twinkle*!. I'.»r t » tl* i at .*. ing liver, showing th** aj.!> ^or tt first stage of the *w * hun«! «**I nil • journey to the (ievnuin t«»\\ n whit form >*t the night's objective. In front of the two airmen in to' eoi oil glo\ve<l the phosphoreseei ’ • iia'> lie reeonling instrument.-. Soon ? e* r gistei e»l a sufficient heigh toi the machine to turn towat'l •he fighting line, up ami «lown which t ^rent white star shells were rising, to •a v Mispemlwl for a few moments ho fore failing out into the tlarkness. 1 i-i* vin.iT lights were switch*'*! ott. h»- n*s wore crossed, and friend!-* territory was K*ft behind. Kar ahead h** irluv** of many blast furnaces ,-.»uiil !».- seen, ami above them tl *• 'or.” whit*' finsrers of (lerman soaroh itfl't swept restlessly to and fro^ The machine flew on steadily, ho" •ver. in>crathed by the fierce barray*1 >f .di«-ll> which burst thickly tar be-1 low :t. Soon the first barrier of d** a> passed, and for a lonjr time ' r -n n lb o ■ ■ mile upon inib* * v territory over dimly-iit . i. i - '!, s and villager. , ' \ ' l> on f*yintr ov«*•* (lerman __A territory for more than two hour when they raw ahead of them on tlv* river tin* liRhts of another biR city. This was their objective, and at <pic( the machine swept round towards it. The observer, lyiiiR face down, open -od tlie sliding door in the floor of lb" machine. The pilot steered the ma chine around by the observer’s direct ion- so that it miRht follow the in wav, and so find surely the Rreut railway junction that was to In* the tai'Ret for hi.s bombs. Two search liRhts had snruiiR up, and here and then» in the sky hurst a few random shells. 'I he big city twinkling with hun dreds of carefully shaded lights la-, spread now below the observer’s peep hole. Tho fore- and- aft bar of to bomb-sight drew near the station, am! touched it. The observer's band road', od out to the bomb-release lever a1 his side He pushed tin* lever han ! over, drew it back, and pushed it ov er again and again. Ilelow he coin see for a moment the fat cylinder spinning down towards the railway junction. lie climbed up beside the pilot, am told him to turn. The searchlights or ratically swept to'and fro, with eve \ suggestion of panic, fear or lack o‘ skill. The airmen, sweeping round started on the long homeward join ney. The observer was looking down in tent I y to the black triangular mass oi the railway station, with its crossed sidings. A great spurt of red flaim leapt up a’ its edge, as the first bomb exploded. Then another followed it. right in tin* junetion. Then anothei yet anochcr. The fifth caused a treir. endous explosion followed by blinding white flames— acres of it. Clearly an ammunition train had been hit. Then the others burst, one after Q" other, leaving th<* railway junetion shrouded in moonlit smoke through which the red light of a growing fire glared dully. PLACE WHERE BRITISH FLEET IS AT ANCHOR LONDON, Oct., 22— There is a:i elbow of road above the Firth of For th where if one should come to it in *i fortunate hour, he would see the Orund Fleet, the hammer-head «rfi4lu British navy. »»■■■■■■ * J ‘ wmMwmmmm ...------ , where vou will a 1 wavs vceive a FAIR AND LIBERAL ASSORTMENT • * Highest srket Prices RETURNS—"QUICKER” “Shubert” Unexcelled Service is known to ii ] r shippers all over ALASKA. If you are not “Shipping to Shubert ' you are not getting the full benefit of the extremely high landi the present time- in line—don’t delay ship all the Furs ha ■ : ai da them coming QUICK. ; ‘Shubert” Returns are Satisfactory Returns—Write for ,“3hr £t)iibrrt Shiyprr**—It’s FREE A. B. HUBERT, INC. The Largest 1 louse ir theV/orld Dealing Exclusively in American Raw Furs Dept. 256-25-27 W. Austin Ave., - - Chicago, U. S. A. _r r n ■ « 3 m * a u_ BL a_P JLJL. &JT JLSJT.. TJULftJ MAJOR W. J. MACK I Maj. William J. Mack of Cincinnati brought home to King George of Eng land the kind of democratic spirit that j is customary among Americans. Majc Mack is agent of the United State | nsurance board in England When presented to the king and queen. Majoi | Mack asked their majesties for then signatures to encourage American sol diers in England to sign also. He accompanied the request to the km I with a well-meant, informal slap or the shoulder. _ i I Mile after mile of great and I it • j fighting-ships, their bugles sot e ; faintly across the water to quit. • streets ashore. ' It is four years since the battle squadrons slipped away to their wisi station and the Itritish Navy becaa: suddenly one decisive and fixed fa. * - or in an unstabled world. Tlie supreme task of tin* navy V been to make secure on all tin* seas «» the world the transportation of nv t material and food. IJetwoen the da* of the declaration of war and June last, the needs of the Allies have in*.•» -ved the carriage by sea of some 20. j i 000,000 men. 2,000,000 animals a . about 110,000,000 tons of naval and military stores, cargoes whose easi ness and diversity have never be. n contemplated nor foreseen. The si b marine war intensified and waxed l« its greatest violence, yet the groal work of supply and transportati" went forward with never an interrupt ion. The navy, which in August 101 J had comprised warships and auxiliary vessels to a total of two and a h d! million displacement tons had swe'i.’ by June of this year to a sum of six and a half millions; its personal hud grown from 146,000 to nearly 400,Ofn Of the twenty millions of men embark -ed and transported, the total los^e* due to enemy action up to April 2 . 1018. had reached the relatively trn u! figure of 2,282- roughly equal to o to lost for each six thousand carried --- SHEEP RAISING , HURT BY WAR i I ■ 1 ?ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Oct., i 22— That the war has affected th» sheep industry in Utah and that many sheepmen are going oiu because of lack of sheepherders, s . *d in a recent statement made by C. l». Stewart, secretary of tl'.r Utah Woolgrowers’ association. ‘‘The war has taken hundreds of t/c best herders,” Mr. Stewart said Men can be secured, hut they are not train *d herders When a sheepman intrust from $40,000 to $50,000 worth cl sheep to one man, the herder must he competent or great losses result. “Sheepherding is a trade which a women cannot handle. I know that it 1 is wholly out of the question for her i to supplant man at this occupation and so. as the draft calls more men in I to the service, the wool men are seal ing their flocks. I look to see a big de crease in sheep raising lor this rca i son during the coming year.” i ___ — PRIVATE GIVEN TWENTY YEARS FOR BURGLARY. CAMP LEWIS, Oct., 22— Private l Fave B. Slade, the last of seven mem * hers of the Cooks and Bakers school ] to be convicted of burglary and liigh ■ way robbery, has been sentenced to I twenty years at McNeil’s Island for i twenty -one burglaries which he ad J mitted having committed in Tacoma. -« Read the Gateway.. I Seward Light & Power Company Main 0 i The Seward News Company ckou'.j; niKLPS \booksellers. N<?\\ sdealcrs and Sia; ioneri* I ■ **y. .~ , v \* .V ... ; J i*ft' i mtT £hi k 3AD^Si5?A:;. LIN Ed. .vUi.I.V; I’KO.I SEATTI.E ADMIltAI. FAURAOl'T Oct. IfJth For Anchorage and kodii.k AD'IIUAI. W \TSON. ucl. L’:.rd. Sailings from Seattle to California thiee times a week. Further nforn i *>n audre*s Wayne Him*. ADAIlilAk ill !JJ)I.NC Seward Alaska BE VO crp V | ri • f; t Zr'~ f|' ' AM. RAINIER I wl ! • SEVARD.” ALASKA ALWAYS ■ wHittemore ^NABGULd MAE ’IE NORTHERN YOUR HEADQL ...vTERS WHILE IN SEWARI). ALL OF THE NEWS OF THE WORLD, DAILY. Read fhe SEWARD GATEWAY, Covers the local field and the entire World, Associated Press Service, “^ALL OF THE NEWS OF THE WORLD, DAILY. POWDER CAPS and fuse at d. I. Graef. . tf j -4 CROWN' GAS and Distilate r.t J. I.. Graef. tf Pocket Flash light and batteries a> J. L. Graef. tf -4 READ THE GATEWAY ALL OF THE NEYYS DAILY. : Seward Steam Laundry Phone Main 157 K A WARE & BADGER Best of Work—Quickest Deliv ery^ Family Work. Hough Dry ]2l/t cents per pound -0 Advertise in The Gateway. rfitld ■' TTEG The Satisfy ! - and, yet they!*e 'MILD • • 1 Wfr: UGOCTT & KYttt TOBACCO C03