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Function, or <^^7 : 'jM|«|M
if Shopping, /Jffi^|HJ
don't forget to have -p_B|| [ifr'-^
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valuable for Headache I have always taken great pleasure
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FISHER'S
B| { 117E believe it tO'LeTimpOS- lajajaaaiaaaajaajaaaaaaaa)
TT sible to manufacture a H|
f -H_M better flour than USHER'S fcT^--"^^!
BLEND; We purchase the <£p|sMlb,l
very choices! hard wheat I
y^'»j|3| t '|l/ ■ ;UK ' vei 'y choicest soft / ffij* \ I
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j/'FLoURffB ly blend them in "AMER- p.\SE/||
M B ICA'S FINEST FLOURING JSgL . I
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iDjwnis'teuMo bmwMl we wash it in pure water to . "*"■.;,■ R
I remove every particle of fea-__i-wa?_.T lull
dust or dirt that might be B_______S__S
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UMaIBH /. . iiv Hour that
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We have more than one million satisfied customers
KEEP IN MIND THAT
FISHER'S SCRATCH FOOD
AS WELL AS FISHER'S OTHER POULTRY FOODS
ARE JUST AS (LEAN AND WHOLESOME
AS OUR FLOUR:
IT'S REAL ECONOMY TO FEED THEM.
Merchants, like all others, must be judged by their actions. If a
merchant advertises in every paper but those patronized by the toilers,
it would seemingly indicate that he is not very friendly with this class
or overanxious to have their trade. Along this line, it is a foregone
ciiti_lusii.il that those merchants who do advertise in the columns of
the papers dervotcd to labor, feel friendly toward this class, and desire
their traele. It will, therefore, pay you to read the advertisements in
this paper, and by doing so ascertain who the merchants are who feel
friendly toward you and appreciate your patronage.
v, —. —. I—— '
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4me to another neighbor.
i. 1
REIGN OF TERROR
IN SPAIN
PARIS. — Although the Spanish
government is never tired of assert
ing that order has been completely
restored, word has reached Paris
that. Socialists and labor leaders
are still being systematically perse
cuted in revenge for the recent
revolution. Arrests are almost daily
occurrences in Madrid as well as in
the provinces.
Among those who have been seized
on trumped-up charges are two So
cialist municipal councilors of the
city of Leon, and the secretary of
the powerful Miners' union of As
turias. The Republican deputy Mar
celino Domingo was for several
weeks kept a prisoner on a warship.
It was intended to court-martial
him, but public indignation finally
compelled a transfer of the case to
the civil courts. He is now at lib
erty awaiting trial.
The general policy of the govern
ment is one of savage repression
of all liberal forces. The tottering
monarchy realizes that the next rev
olution probably will be successful.
By establishing a reign of terror it
vainly hopes to stave off the day of
reckoning. Some of its acts have
been fully as barbarous as those
practiced in Russia during the
darkest days of czarism.
Prisoners in Revolt
In the so-called "model jail" in
Madrid, a week or so ago, a group
of prisoners, among whom were a
few revolutionists, rebelled against
the harsh discipline and the bad
food. The movement spread through
the prison and took on the character
of a general mutiny. The soldiers
on guard, however, soon succeeded
in suppressing it and locking the
prisoners in their cells.
On learning of what had hap
pened, the captain-general of Ma
drid, General Echague, Count of
Serrallo, an intimate friend of the
king, went in person to the jail,
arriving after order had been re
stored. He demanded the names of
the ringleaders of the mutiny. A
Socialist was elesignated, and Echa
gue ordered that he be brought
from his cell. As soon as the un
fortunate appeared he was placed
against the wall of the corridor,
in full view of his Comrades, and
shot to death by the soldiers.
"Bring out another ringleader,"
said Echague to the jail employes.
The latter produced a labor man,
who was executed without a hear
ing, as the first had been.
"Another," insisted Echague.
Wardens Satisfy Blood Lust
The wardens refused at first to
point out any more victims. But
the blood-thirsty dictator intimidated
them with threats and was not con
tent unil he had five prisoners in
all shot.
Besteiro, Caballero and Saborit,
the Socialist municipal councillors of
Madrid, who were condemned to life
' imprisonment for their activities in
the revolution, have been sent to
the penitentiary at Cartagena to
commence their terms.
They were spirited out of Madrid
at night. The authorities had be
come alarmed at the growth of pub
lic sympathy for them. Thousands
of persons, including prominent
statesman, writers and artists had
called to seem them at the jail.
The last Sunday before their depart
ure, the crowd of visitors had be
come so dense that they had to be
admitted in groups of 100. Each
group had been allowed a few min
utes in which to file by the prison
ers, without making any attempt to
shake their hands. At this rate,
the extraordinary "reception" had
lasted for two hours.
It was hoped that the govern
■ ment might be influenced by this
demonstration to grant amnesty. But
the transfer to Cartagena was nev
ertheless effected. Spasmodic riot
ing broke out when the news was
published, but was quelled by trie
: military,
Socialism will make marriage a
! matter of the head and. heart, in
stead of bread and butter, as it is
UurgreeD's Golden Drip Coffee. Im
perial Tea Co., 1407 Hewitt Avenue.
THE COOPERATIVE NEW L
FRANCES WILLARD
ON SOCIALISM
Frances E. Willimd is recognized
nil one of the greatest women this
country has produced, Her entire!
lifetime was spent in the advocacy
of reforms, particulary temperance.
The State' of New Yuri, has honored
her memory by putting a statute of
her in Statuary Hall at the United
Slates Capitol in Washington, D. 0.
Miss Willnrd's statue is the only
statue of a woman Found In that
famous hall. This is what Frances
10. W-illurd thought about Socialism.
It is from her address at the na
tional convention of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union at Buf
falo in 1897:
Look about you; the products of
labor are on every hand; you could
not for a moment maintain 8 well
ordered life without them; every ob
ject in your room has in it, for
discerning eyes, the mark of ingen
ious tools mid the pressure of la
bor's hands. But is it not the
crudest injustice for the wealthy,
whose lives are surrounded and em
bellished by labor's work, to have a
super-abundance of the money which
represents the aggregate of labor in
any country, while the laborer him
self is kept so steady at work that
he' has no time to acquire the edu
cation anil refinements of life that
would make' him and his family
agreeable companions to the rich
and cultured?
The reason why I am a Soicalis,t
comes in just here.
I would take, not by force, but by
the slow process of lawful acquisi
tion through better legislation, as
the outcome of a wiser ballot in the
hands of men and women, the en
tire plant that we call civilization,
all that has been achieved on this
continent in the four hundred years
since' Columbus wended his way
hither, and make it the common
property of all the people, requir
ing all to work enough with their
hands to give them the finest phy
sical development, Lit not to be
come burdensome in any case, and
permitting all to share alike the ad
vantages of education and refine
ment. I believe this to be per
fectly practical, indeed, that any oth
er method is simply a relic of bar
barism.
I believe that competition is doom
eel. The trust, whose single ob
ject is to abolish competition, has
proved that we are better without
than with it, and the moment cor
porations control the supply of any
product, they combine. What the
Socialist desires is that the corpora
tion of humanity should control all
production. Beloved comrades, this
is the frietionless way; .it is the
higher way; it eliminates the motives
for a selfish life; it enacts*into our
everyday living the ethics of Christ's
gospel. Nothing else will do it;
nothing else can bring the glad day
of universal brotherhod.
Oh, that I were young again, and
it would have my life; it is God's
way out of the wilderness and into
the promised land. It is the very
marrow of Christ's gospel. It is
Christianity applied.
GOOD AND BAD
______
Nothing is wholly good nor wholly
bad. "Good" and "bad" are terms
capable of only immediate applica
tion. Things that are good today
may be bad tomorrow ,and vice ver
sa. Things are good or bad as
they affect man's welfare. A rain
in June is good; a rain in harvest
is bail. A rotting carcass is a
sweet savor in the nostrils of a
hungry jackal, but an abomination
in the nostrils of a man. War is
honorable and holy to the "cultivat
ed" senses of autocratic kings, aristo
cratic oligarchies and profitmongers,
but to its victims it is more horrible
than the imaginary hell of Chris
tendom. Which leads me to the
point I want to impress upon you.
Your morality, dear reader, is not of
your making. It was prepared in
advance of your birth and was given
to you with your mother's milk.
You grew on it; and that morality is
what is known as a "master and
slave morality." Under this morality
whatever adds 'to the profit and
pleasure of the master is good;
whatever substracts from his profit
and pleasure is bad. Hence the So
cialist program is "devilish, dia
bolical ami anarchic" because it
promises to detract from the profit
of the master and add to the wel
fare of the slave, while the capital
ist program is heavenly, divine and
holy because it supports the master
in idleness. As long as your mor
als can be controlled by the master
class just that Ion;? will you he
"good" under capitalism. I admit
thai Socialism is "had," but only
for the master e.ia-f, it is "good"
for the working class. "Good" is
good only as it enhances ju.ir per
sonal well being. It capitalism con
tributes to youi welfare then fir
you it is good If it keeps you in
poverty, slavery and misery it is
lad. II yeiur '»*■ thinking on
moral questions. lie your own judge
of "good" and "bad."
E. C. HURTON.
Socialism is an economic move
ment. It concerns your bread and
butter, not your way of worship or
your taste in ties.
Subscribe for The Co-operative News.
LYNCH LAW AND HOME
RULE
The i tiling class is Retting some
examples the day it will shrink
from facing in the day of reckoning.
And the day of reckoning for wrongs
done li sure to come. It never
fails.
Everything' i hal i".. contrary to
its wishes is charged to pro-Ger
mans and I. W. W.'s. This is very
convenient but hardly conclusive.
Are these persons in authority so
blind thai they cannot see that their
persecution is recruiting the ranks
of the I. W. W. ten time us fast
as they are temporarily decimated?
Down in Oklahoma the other day,
at Tulsa, the headquarters of the
I. W. W. were raided and all who
were found there were taken out by
a mob, stripped and. whipped until
their backs streamed with blood,
then hot tar was applied to them,
and feathers, and they were ordered
to leave and never return. Think
of such hideous barbarity in a so
called civilized community! Only the
vilest of cowards and degenerates
could be guilty of such infamy.
Have a care, gentlemen! The
dragons' teeth you are sowing will
bring forth their bloody harvest in
due time, when you will find your
selves the victims of your dastardly
crimes.
- ".■
Hundreds of innocent men and
Women are being jailed without
cause, meetings are being broken
up, and speakers assaulted. Mob
rule is the order and the crimes
committed under its sway, if not
condoned outright, are reproved with
such mildness as to imply acquies
cence.
Can it be possible that the capi
talist class have set themselves de
liberately to teaching the working
class the efficacy of lynch law
and mob rule?
Are not the workers told over
and over again in every brush with
their exploiters that they must re
spect law and order? And are they
not shot down without mercy the
moment they resort to mob vio
lence?
Is it not a poor rule that fails
to work both ways? And has mob
violence virtue and efficacy only
when practiced by capitalists, busi
ness and professional men, with the
working class for its victims?
There is widespread mob violence
in the land today, but it is practical
ly all on the side of the capitalist
class and directed against the work
ing class and their efforts to main
-1 tain their rights and better the con
dition of themselves and families.
If the capitalists persist in mob
violence, they and their, system will
perish- in a whirlwind of it!— E
ugene Debs in the Social Revolution.
AFTER SOCIALISM WHAT?
The shell of the old, long drawn
out era of Barbarism is breaking
and the faint grey dawn of a new
Civilization, beginning with Co-oper
ation and ending with Christianity,
is sending its effulgent rays into
the uttermost corners of the earth.
The great world war is ending the
epoch of Capitalism in the same
manner as the Napoleonic wars in
Europe ended Feudalism. With the
end of the Barbaric era, Capitalism
will be ended forever as a system
among men, wars will cease, poverty
will be abolished, crimes greatly
lessened; opportunity for all will be
established and mankind will enter,
under Socialism, into that peaceful
and divine journey which will soon
end into the summit of the weary
march upwards through the ages—
to the epoch of Christianity. After
Socialism is established, the time
will be comparatively short until
the epoch of Christianity will be the
next order under which a majority
of mankdin will live. The process
eif advancement is greatly accelerat
ed as the race gets older and wiser.
The earlier epochs were marked by
great lapses of time, savagery and
semi-savagery occupying hundreds of
thousands of years. Anthropologists
claim it took sixty thousand years
for the earlier type of primeval
man to get out of the trees, while
Capitalism, the last stage of the
Barbaric era, will probably last ap
proximately one hundred and fifty
years. When full Socialism comes
and the heartless and debasing com
petitive system of industry is com
pletely abolished and men's minds
and bodies are released from fear
and bondage, the advancement will
be more rapid. Probably only a
few generations will mark the epoch
of Socialism until a majority at
least of the human race will be liv
inb under the Christian dispensation
—the law of human conduct as de
fined by Christ,
"We build the ladder by which
we rise, from the lowly earth to
the vaulted re, and we mount
the ladder rung by rung." Man's
potential qualities are as high as
the stars above him in the heavens
and as unlimited and unrestricted
as the universe in which he lives.
Whether or not you desire to loiter
among the musty tombstones of an
epoch that is closed, whether or not
you desire to stand still or retrace
the steps made by your ancestors
through count years of sacrifice
and suffering, whatever your in- I
clinations as an individual antevert
may be, humanity will because it
must—take this forward step. It is
I the law of life—and God ordains it.
BERT GODDARD
I WASH. NOTES
By Emil Herman, SI it Secretasy,
Box 737, Evcretti Wash.
_____
X VII l.ftl III) LECTURE DATES
NEXT THIS WEEK
Monday, December 17, Trinidad.
Tuesday, Decern i 18, Colockurn.
Wednesday, December 19, With
row.
Thursday, December 20, Entiat.
Friday, December 21, Orovilie.
Saturday (2 p. M.i, December 22,
Republic,
Sunday (8 p. m.), December 23,
Malo.
Comrade Katterfeld organized a
local with seven members at Ever
son on the 4th instant. This was
the first unorganized point at which
he lectured, we hope he keeps up the
ratio, We will .-till accept a few
applications for lecture from points
iii South Eastern and South Western
Washington, and in Pierce, King and
Snohomish Counties.
TALLY OF NATIONAL
REFERENDUMS
National Referendum "F" 1917—
Resolutions on labor organizations
and their relation to the Socialist
Party. Adopted by St. Louis Con
vention, April, 1917, and submitted
for endorsement of membership.
Aberdeen No. 2 (Fin.) 13 yes; Ana
cortes, 6 yes; Boyels, 4 yes; Breida
blick, 8 yes; Bryant, 18 yes; Curlew,
7 yes; East Stanwood, 14 yes; Echo
Valley, II yes; Freeland, 8 yes; Ho
quiam No. 1, 8 yes; Kelso West, '.I
yes; Liberty Bay, 6 yes; Lower
Natches, 12 yes; Mt. Vernon, 8 yes;
Oaksdale, 7 yes; Orting, 5 yes; Pear
son No. 2 (Fin.), 12 yes; Pleasant,
9 yes; Roslyn No. 2 (Fin.) 2 yes;
8 no; Seattle (Estho), 11 yes; Se
attle No. 5 (Fin.), 22 yes, 1 no;
Silverdale, 5 yes; South Bend, 4
yes; Spokane, 11 yes; Sumas, 5 yes;
Suomela, 8 yes; Stevenson, 2 yes, 7
no; Tacoma No. 4, 35 yes; Tacoma,
German, 6 yes; Yacolt, 7 yes and
M.A. L.'s 25 yes, 1 no. Total 309
yes, 17 no. Locals Lynelen and Ho
quiam No. 2 (Fin.) voted but did
not state number of votes cast for
or against.
National Referendum "G" 1917 for
the election on International Dele-
Kates to serve at all International
Socialist Conference held during the
war, Victor L. Berger 157, L. B.
Boudin 15, Morris Hilquit 320, Geo.
R. Kirkpatrick 306, Algernon Lee 9,
James H. Maurer 61, Walter Thos.
Mills 80, Patrick S. Nagle 11, Scott
Nearing 129, Kate Richards O'Hare
214, Irwin St. John Tucker 13 and
John M. Work 29. Thirty-one locals
and forty-seven M.A. L.'s voted
Comrade Arthur H. Hansen, Route
No. 2, Box 6, East Stanwood will
fill the vacancy on the S.E.C. caused
by the resignation of Comrade Carl
Ulonska. Marias Hansome of Out
look was the first alternate but de
clined to serve because it inter
fered with his work of teaching
school, Nicholas Schmidt of. Seattle
was the next in line but did not
reply to our communications nor
attended the S.E.C. meeting on De
cember 2d, as requested. To legal
ly proceed with the preparation of
..the petition -.to initiate. the Eight-
Hour Day measure required a full
committee, so after failing to reach
Comrade Schmidt over the telephone
we notified Comrade Hansen to
fill the vacancy and he has ac
cepted.
AiC-ALL FOR HELP
Seattle, Wash., Dec. 4, 1917.
Dear Comrade Herman:
Your letter at hand. I can in
form you that Mr. Foster has" al
ready been paid $50.00 The com
mittee elected by Scandinavian Soli
darity local say they are not having
an easy time trying to raise the re
maining $150.00 We have given
three dances but lost money and had
to give up. Some Comrades here
will not give a cent, because Foster,
they claim, promised to defend us
free of charge. On the other hand
we had to promise him his fee or
be deserted. He is holding Peter
son and me responsible and we must
pay. "Solidarity" will hold meet
ing next Sunday, and some action
will then be taken. I-will let you
know. I presume you know of upr
dismissal. ,s yr..
Yours for justice and freedom, I
OLAF BERILD.
Comrades Olaf Berild and E. Pet
erson were arrested early last sum
mer on a charge of "Conspiracy and
Sedition" and spent several months
in the Pierce County Jail awaiting
trial—having failed to secure the
$5,000.00 bond necessary for their
release. They were brought to trial
in September and the jury disagreed.
Recently they were again hailed into
court and the charge against them
dismissed. You will notice that
they were deceived by their lawyer,
he first promised to defend them
free of charge, but after he got
them where they could not afford
to dismiss him demanded $200.00
for services and they were compelled
to agree to pay or be deserted. The
Comrades had no other alternative,
they will have to pay. They are
workingmen and can ill afford it.
They were and are fighting in the
class-struggle. Their fight is our
fight—we must not desert them.
Give a hand, let's help them raise the
other $150.00. Send contributions
for this purpose to the Socialist
Party of Washington, Box 637, Ev
erett, Wash., and we will forward.
Bellingham Katterfeld was O. K.
here, and more.— R. W. Thompsem.
Locals, Members at Large and
Socialist sympathizers are requested
to make contributions to the "Eight
Hour Day Fund" All contributions
will be acknowledged through the
Party Builder. Those who have
made pledges may begin now to re-
The rich fear a bloody revolution
yet with a great and most stupid in
consistency they use very force-at
their command to crush the peaceful
efforts of the organized workers to
bring about a bloodless economic
change.
Since Congress declared war upon
Germany, the American capitalist
press has discontinued the Mexican
your personality— get your Xmas or-
Page Three
Only Complete Office Oatflttera In City
PRINTING
I Rubber Stamps, Stationery
PRINTING
Rubber Stamps, Stationery
PUGET PRESS
2816 (lakes Aye. Main 197R
'
Commercial Press
PRINTERS
Phone Main 670
Clark Hldg. Everett I
WEISER'S GRILL j
1617 Hewitt Aye.
A Good Place to Eat
H. J. WEISER, Prop.
V , >
UNION WAFFLE &
CHOP HOUSE
1717 */ 2 HEWITT
i ■
I JARVIS &JACKSON'
CLEAR HAVANA CIGARS IN
STAPLE AND FANCY SIZES
We Blend Tobacco to Suit
Your Taste
Main 36 170.} Hewitt Aye*.
L •
s •
t -N
F. D. SARTOR
HIGH GRADE DOMESTIC AND
CLEAR HAVANA CIGARS
Corner Rockefeller & Hewitt
> j
* " —«
Thereska Hat Works
1909 Hewitt Aye.
Hats of all kinds renovated into
any size or style.
, ■*
"~~ - A. J. MOHN
JEWELER
Waltham, Elgin and Hamilton
Watches. Phone Main 118R
1416 Hewitt Aye.
Robt. E. Andersen, Prop.
v __/
CARL REICHELT
Commerce Barber
1.811 Hewitt
For a Clean Shave 1
GO TO THE
BAYSIDE BARBER
SHOP ..
FOR GOOD WORK
207 Hewitt Union Shop
*■ J
r— ; >.
CITY DRUG STORE
1910 HEWITT AYE.
Free Delivery to any part of the
city . Phone Main 119.
v... ! /
t -N
For Your Next Suit, Try
R. HULTMAN
Tailor to Men and Women
2926 Colby Phone Main 709
k ___/
DENTISTS
DR. ELVERA WESTBERG
DR. VICTOR WESTBERG
Office, 207-8-9 American Bank Bldg.
PHONE MAIN 814R
t -' '" -s
Don't allow your Eyes to make
your life miserable.
Slljm Stevens
2004 HEWITT AYE.
V .
, — __—
C. PETERSEN
EXPERT
SHOE REPAIRING
2921 WETMORE AYE.
t ->
Watch and Jewelry Repairs
a Specialty
NICK GRAD
3005 Hewitt— Riverside
v _
HATIONAKiMAiC
LAM PS fo/^mSlf)Sl\<
_____ tt/_*r?_
PACKARD
MAZDA LAMPS
10WRY & VINGEN
Everything Electrical
2804 £olhy_ Ind Main I!7K
Socialism in not going to give you
something for nothing. It will give
|you eemality of opportunity to jjet
[the things you need. What more
can you expect?
t'fte Clausen* FAVORITE COFFEE
33c lb., 3 Iba for $1.00. None better
—M. II Clauwn, 2513 Rockefeller.
Phone-, Black Mi.