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\\;v."hivrTon §tamhv" 0 VI P.VIV* i OF Till RSToX ♦ «♦!*NTY t> I \ *li * I % , U \ S|J mvm.. JWI \i;\ ti.wv. I'l ei edeltl - ">!|l'ol ililiate Kca-nil. \ ; T . C \ ! V 11. • T.il'J !' . .»y |. r tv. T}i»*n \vh» n • '.i Mi■ 'ow.is ti., t t.ager of the • i'e I,'a way system, rebates • to ' iVofed shippers I Oil to Ti. - -alll • Morton was a-terward- retarv of Navy in the 1 V ' .e* 1 J < , r st I'e( 1' ;o . s 1 1 res I :• JI t. \\ hen ti,e.., :,icts l-ec ame known, the ad: r;i> >!l d there wa< r.o procf tiia* M"t - 1 >n had any per sonal knowledge with resjkvt to granting such rebates: it was an affair between shippers and subordi nate «-mp'iiye~. It did not matter : ..1 speeia conns- ' employed by the government asserted that Morton ought to lie prosecuted, they were overruled and the Secretary went his way with a " clean bill of fare," as far as the administration was con cerned. Though it is not good logic, it es tablishes a precedent emanating from Jiigli authority, that agents of cor porations. capitalized by plutocrats can do no wrong while serving their master's interests. Reasoning along similar lines with reference to the relations of a member of our Supreme Court receiving favors from a rail road company through a lawyer act ing in behalf of the corporation, would it amount to a straining of the Roosevelt precedent to contend in behalf of the individuals, they were acting as agents of the company which is the real offender, if any offense has been committed ? Of course, it being well known that a corporation as an artificial creature, cannot be called before the court to answer a bribery charge or defend in a disbarment proceeding. Such proceedings, as had in the Morton affair, cause a contempt for law in the public mind and lay the ground-work for anarchistic senti ment. All of the anarchists are not by any means found among poor peo ple. A Pi. AGUE OP VERMIN.— A Spokane dispatch of the 15th states that the Ministerial Association of that city have been apixmled to for provision of a plan for relief in the matter of exterminating the vermin that is infecting the tabernacle in which re vival services are held, conducted by "Billy" Sunday. It seems his field of labor is among the lowly, and that hundreds of homeless men have been occupying the rooms as sleeping quarters. As the building is swarm ing with lice, and some ef the most sanctified church members have hail their religious zeal modified consider ably by a plague resembling some what Jobs boils. They have not been able to manifest Job's patience, how ever, and have called upon the police to make some other arrangment for holding the meetings. This seems to be a natural result of an effort to entertain as well as instruct and care for, a class that have no homes and are driven to other places for shelter and warmth. It may be, however, that the aftiction has spread for want of proper sanitary regulations and huddling together many who should be subject to a shower bath and a few applications of sapolio before approaching the santuary. Cleanliness is said to be next to godliness. WORDS OP APPRECIATION. —Here is what a true friend, Mr. A. W. Wis ncr, says of the STANDARD, in send ing in his renewal of subscription: "It is like a letter from home —in fact better —for you don't have to answer. I sometimes wonder if you ever get tired of the newspaper busi ness; very few people have served in one position so long. Children have grown up, and become grandparents probably, since you began the publi cation of the STANDARD. The paper has been issued with as much regu larity as the ebb and flow of the tides of Budd's Inlet. Do you not feel sometimes as if you would like to get out on a farm and ' grow up with the country?' I suppose, how ever, you would long to hear the rumble of the press on Fridays. Should you ever feel like taking a short "run"' into the country for a breath of fresh air and a good coun try dinner, come to me, on the shores of Lake Washington, and I will see that you get both.' THE U. S. Senate is discussing a proposition to increase the Presi dent's salary to SIOO,OOO per year: and the Vice President's and Speak er's salaries to $20,000, with $6,000 additional for carriages and coach man for the two latter, and the sal aries of the Federal Judiciary to an increase aggregating $328,000. It precipitated a lively discussion. The objections seemed to be more directed to details of the manner of increase than opposition to the policy of its being made. ♦ • . SEVERAL hundred stalled passen gers on the O. R. N., trains at Hood River and The Dalles, Saturday, crossed the Columbia river on the ice to take north bank road for Port land. Trains on that road were like wise delayed by snow slides and un favorable conditions resulting from the thaw. tniiie. Let I - Reason. liev. M. A. y...' s. p.tstorcf the F.r.-t Presbyter; tn Church at Seat be ;n a P <"tlt idir. ss delivered at 11,»m■ '\ of i a ■ • i. ' 1 " 'i\ nil • i" » : >!■ "Ti Woman S ilTrage la'.n.'.ng w<- aati's spli.-re was in the i' wi -h s ■* is ijueeti manag •;i• vi ■ 1 .selniid alia rs\ and edu> at .■ : r d..,.inn to lieci.ate useful , .; - c tlii- repu't>li> \\\i< ti reveri ndgentl -man aware * .1! n 1 million of homes m tfii— trv. owing to the presence of ■ condition*, women are driv er. : :i: their homes into factories .-.d sweat slu.ps in order to assist in ■ '.:.g a living for their families' Ih-w can those women become queens a their homes? For the most part married women would prefer to re •uain at their homes, attend t > their domestic duties, rather than leave tliem and work ten and twelve hours a day for less wages than their hus bands. brothers and sons will consent to work for. or labor for such wages that their families only eke out a wretched existence. If it shall be said the men ought not to permit their wives to go to work for wages, that they should perform the office of bread-winners: but suppose the owners of factories and proprietors of sweat shops refuse to employ the men in their service; feeling they can 1 _,:n greater profits out of the blood and l>oncs of the female sex. than from the male employes? TIM EARTHQUAKES PREDICTED. — Willis K. Kverette, one of the most distinguished scientists and a member of the bar in the Supreme Court of the United States, who had just returned from Alaska, last October, predicted a violent seismic upheaval in the then near future. The terrible earth quake in Italy and the occasional shakes, though moderate in this northwestern coast, afford sufficient reminder to verify the belief that his judgment was founded upon a scien tific basis. A judgment on such mighty forces is not necessairly con fined to near or approximate phe nomena, for if the theory lie true that its origin is due to an internal sea of fire, its action might, and doubtless would be, manifested all over the weak places on the earth's surface simultaneously. His view affords some comfort in the assur ance that our position on the shell is more stlable and firm than that of poor Italy, which from time imme morial lias been subject to violent upheavals. Here Is THE Way; WHERE IS THE WHEREFORE? —Do you know why a petit jury must consist of twelve men? Lord Cooke an English jurist, informs us that it was because there were twelve tribes of Israel and twelve Apostles. Some more modern legal light might have given as an additional reason, that Solomon had twelve brazen oxen; or an astronomer might say, that the best reason is that there are twelve months in the year. Now there are thirteen moons in each year, and the Judge is some times called the thirteenth juror. There you have a good analogy on which to base a precedent. One more instance: Christianity tecama a part of the English common law, which doctrine has prevailed in many of the States of the Union, because an old English Judge, Lord Mansfield, mis translated two words used by some unknown person in the fifteenth cen tury: " ancien scripture," Norman French, meaning ancient writing: translated by a Latin scholar, be comes "holyscripture." CHAMHERLAIN, Dem., was elected U. S. Senator, by the Oregon Legis lature, Tuesday, by a vote of 19 in the Senate and 34 in the House. Five votes in the House were given him under protest, for the alleged reason that they were not exercising their constitutional free choice. It is hardly probable that the U. S. Senate will deem it their duty to consider questions of constitution ality when they are given full right to consider the qualifications of their own members. AN exceedingly high tide occurred on Gray's Harbor, Tuesday, aggra vated by a strong west wind that had been blowing 24 hours. Water ran over east side dyke and into the city. The basement of the New Grayport hotel was flooded and the laundry shut down. Water in the fire-boxes of Coats' and the North western mill has compelled them to close, while other plants have sus pended. The rainfall on the harbor that night was, as here, exception ally heavy. PENSIONING PROLIFIC PARENTS.— A man named Cavanaugh —P. H. Cavanaugh, of Alameda, Cal.—the father of twelve children, is prepar ing a bill for introduction in the State Assembly providing a pension for fathers or mothers of more than a dozen of offspring, at the rate of 125 per month. Cavanaugh says he has a letter from President Roose velt endorsing the scheme. Of course! A REVENIE Collector for the district of Alaska was in Tacotna last week and reports that the mercury fell low as 00 degrees below zero on the trail between Fairljanks and the Coast the first part of the month, and that the weather has been severe from the beginning of winter and a number of miners have frozen to death. A fuel famine has prevailed over a wide scope of country. CIIARI.KS G. HCGIIES, Jr., Dem., was elected U. S. Senator, Tuesday, by the State Legislature of Colorado. T«-< lui i< :i lit > and More .hi-li< c Tiwas. way back in the dark history of F.nglish j. risprudenee. if n 111:111 were prosecuted for the com missiotiof an offense. he was not al lowed to offer any testimony in his n.vnd- was eoinpeiled to take l.i-ehanees for ail acquittal on tin' w • of the crown s preset) t.4;: >i 1 .41 •' trial. Judges, lawyers a::d the ' ,ity saw the injnstiee of this I>.-.tetiee. but instead of aliolishingit' ill vented t eel 1 nil ali ties to ei renin vent this harsh rule. .Many of these tech nicalities have heen handed down to our day. are referred to by lawyers anil eourts. when the reason, if there were any justification for their ap plication. has wholly dissappeaml. Men now prosecuted for crime are jiermitted to offer their evidence with great liability, for the judge is made to believe lie is as much on trial as the culprit at the bar. by reason of technicalities from which he aims to steer clear, in order to avoid a re versal. If lawyers, who In-fore occupying the bench had taxed their memories with fewer precedents and studied the sociologie conditions that existed when the precedents were announced, appreciating that law being a growth, from moth-eaten propositions of mid dle-age scholasticism, ought not to rule the conduct of individuals in a more advanced and humantarian age. A Hitter Excoriation. Representative Willett of New York, has a new name for President Roosevelt. lie characterizes him as a Gargoyle, and "a pigmy descend ant of Dutch trades-people." It is one of the most keen excoriations that has appeared since the removal of the embargo on free speech es tablished by our vitriolic Presi dent while firmly mounted on his high horse. It is unsurpassed in satire by Byron's "English Hards and Scotch Reviewers,"' though the latter has the charm of poetic meter, while Mr, Willett's strictures have to de pend solely upon the honest and ex pressive Anglo-Saxon, without frills or ornament. THE LANDMARK MUST Go.—The City Council have done a wise thing in ordering the old "historic" build ing on Block 12, removed to some other location, or torn down. It was saved from the latter fate, three years ago, by Gov. Mead, who asked the city to restrain the destroying hand and afford time for the State to provide a place for the old building on Capital Hill, that the State site was at that time the subject of litigation by the Sylvester heirs, and only a little time was wanted until it could be settled. In the course of a few months all doubt was removed by a decision of the courts, approved by the Department at Washington, and everything seemed clear for the Governor to redeem his promise. But it was never done, and the old build ing continued to be the rendezvous of hoboes and the playhouse of child ren, until the late fire in the New England demonstrated how easily it might become the origin or spread of fire to much property on the whole block. The building is a mere shell, minus windows, one end gone, and a very poor reminder of the fact that it once sheltered the first Territorial Legislature, when it consisted of only thirty-nine members —nine in the " Council," as the Senate was then called, and thirty in the House. The Council will notify the prop er State authorities that they must at once provide some means for abating the nuisance as well as a grave men ace. A BERNIKR RESORT FOR LAKK WASHINGTON CANAL.— King county's plan of making the State A.-Y.-P. funds pay the cost of the Wash ington ship canal, that has l>een the only project the irrepressible Seattle spirit has ever failed to handle, re minds one of the hackneyed, high- Hying, oft-quoted metaphor of hitch ing a car (a simile for any exalted ambition) to a star, and soar away in space, like a meteor, or possibly a comet. There is very little assur ance of stability, however, in the latter figure, for the comet is mainly a nebulous tail and there is not much evidence that the head pos sesses enough solidity to create any great disturbance in the planetary system. TIIK State of Texas will be in funds soon, when the Waters-Pierce Oil Company pays its fine of $1,623,- 200, which has been ousted from the State and fined that amount for vio lation of the anti-trust laws. It is announced that the company will pay in silver dollars, amounting to about fifty tons of coin,which it will take an army of clerks several months to count. TIIK Oregon Legislature) is con sidering a bill making it a misde meanor for any Republican to pledge himself while a candidate for office to vote for a Democratic Senator, as was done in the last general election. Imprisonment is a penalty provided, of from six months to a year and fine of from SSOO to SI,OOO. Too bad the party has to resort to law to keep its adherents in line. DISASTERS by land aad sea, are unparalleled. If one were inclined to superstition he might think that at last Mother Shipton's vagaries were coming true. ANOTHER flurry of snow fell this morning. Congratulations had been exchanged that that cold visitant had passed on for the season. llazel Harris is quite ill of fever. Legislative Notes. Nineteen Senators have signed a petition for a caucus on local option. * * # llesolutions have been passed in iHifh branchs, forbidding lobbying in eit lief house. * * * The Senate. Wednesday, passed House hill appropriating fln.uati fur I.egislat ive printing * » X I Joberts asks appropriation or - IHMI to build a home for aged blind and intirm. while Hutchinson Intro duced tin- uniform accounting hill. » * » The committee on mileage rejxjrted the cost of trans[K)rtation of the members of the Legislature from and to their homes this session as $4.035.- » * * Among the many bills introduced Wednesday, in the Senate, was one by Kline and l'olson. to raise the State highway tax fund from one half to one mill. * * * Allen's bill provides for State health commission, who has numer ous duties and is to l>e paid SS, (MX) a year and serve five years. * * * A concurment resolution was l>assed creating a commission of eight members to confer with a like committee from the Oregon Legis lature on the fishing laws controlling the Columbia river fisheries. * * * Another concession to the A.-Y.- I\ fund increases the interest on the series 15 warrants, to l>e paid from the receipts of shore lands, to six percent, guaranteed by the State, and extends the appropriation to May, 1911. * * * Cotterill introduced Judge Frater's bill providing for the care of delin quent children under the age of IS years and for punishment of parents who contribute to the delinquency of their offspring. The latter are to be fined or imprisoned, or both * * * The four bills vetoed by Gov. Mead last session failed in the House yes terday. One of these was for pro tection of owners and lessees of sec ond-class tide lands, known as the Clam-bill. It received a majority vote, but not the requisite two-thirds ♦o pa.»s. * * * Representative Ghent has intro duced a bill making it unlawful to exact more than eight hours labor |K>r day from girls employed in mercantile or mechanical establish ments, including laundries, hotels and restaurants. Kmployers are obliged to furnish seats and permit their use while their dependents are not busy at their duty. ii it h The Senate has defeated the reso lution of Brown of Whatcom, to limit the legislative session to 40 days. A precedent has never lieen es tablished for a Republican legislator or any other pap-sucker of that party, to voluntarily relinquish a hold on such lacteal supply. Only six Sen ators voted for the resolution. * * * The House fell into a confessed blunder when they adjourned Friday morning for a longer term than three days and that Ixxly hastened to change the meeting and records to conform with the hour limit 10:80 A. M. instead of 3:30 I». M. This i» the first time on record that hours have been considered in counting adjournments. # « * Potts had a measure to issue to hotels license to sell liquor to /<-./«( fi<h guests on Sunday, providing no drinks are served over the bar and no one is allows] to become intoxi cated. Metcalf has a bill which re fuses to permit saloons to sell liquor to minors who have an order from parents and raises the tine for con viction on such offense to SSOO. ♦ » ♦ The Joint Railroad committee are planning for an increase of appropri ation to $82,000 for the State Rail road Commission to continue its work. It has been #78,000. It wants an expert accountant at SI,BOO a year and an attorney with a salary big enough to keep him from being "stolen" from the services of the State by tempting offers of bigger pay by the railroads. * * * Representative McGregor of Ren ton county, has introduced a bill to authorize County Commissioners to levy an additional tax of not to ex cept five mills to augment the State School Fund, for support and main tenance of public schools in each county. It would appear that the State was already amply endowed for all needs of the school service, with hundreds of thousands of dollars loaned at interest. Let the State ap priate some of this surplus, instead of keeping it as a fund to draw from at times to issue interest-bearing bonds on the general fund. * * * The Senate has been in a quanda ry over the long-term holdover State officers. The tenure of some of these is four or six years; some who were appointed by McUride and others by Mead. That body doubtless did the proper thing in passing the matter of confirmation of these holdovers up to Gov. Cosgrove. Their term being fixed, an appointment of suc cessor is the only way of affecting an ouster till the term expires. The law certainly contemplates approval of executive, to ensure harmony of the administration in all its parts, and the duty, from this point of view, ap pears plain. * * * Another controversy ensued re garding an intimation that a sus picion existed that an effort was be ing made to defeat certain legislation by burying those measures in technical pigeon-holes. The com mittee to whom moral legislation was referred stood 4to 4. It was in creased to 11 and when sized up stood 7to 4on this policy. Lieut.-Governor Hay asked consent to increase the committee to 15. This was consent ed to, but Ruth afterwards declared that his consent wa« without due considsration, and it was here that the charge was made that an attempt was apparent to pack the com mittee on certain legislation and a motion then carried to restore the committee to its original number— the eight lawyers of the Senate. * * * Two local option bills were intro duced in the House, Monday, one by McMasters of King, known as the anti-saloon league bill, which denies the right of deciding by vote the separate wards or precincts the ques -Bee Page Three. SUMMONS FORECLOSURE OF TAX LIEN j In th«' Superior Court of tin* State of \\ ,i-I»iiiiit«» ii . f«»r Thurston <*niiity. v: <; < ".rutin. 1 'l;iilit iff. vs. S 'I hor« sun. and Thoreson. his wife and all i»ih« r persons unknown, if any. having. ~r <• aiming to hav»\ an int* ivst in ami t«i the r* .»I i»rojuTty h« r«*inaft« r «!«•- .«-«•! i « «l. I )«*f«'iMlants. 'l'll,. ot Washington to <\ Thoroso-i an ,j 'i'li. reso i. Ins wife, and .ill |.tlx* r |M-rs<«ns unknown, if any. having. ~r «I.timing to hav«*. an int» n st in and th»' rt.tl prop, riy In n inalter tl«*- >. nl»« d. I »« f« nil.nits: You are 1»• r• »»> not ti* «I ili.tf S. <1 Grif ifn. of oiympia. Wash , is the o\vn» r and hold* r of rtifiratf of <l.liri«|ii»'ii<v num -1 ••*! «-«I -l!«l. issu* d l.y th«» treasur» r i f Thurston «<>unty. Washington, for tlu* s.im ot IJ.HI. thf same being tlu- amount tht n du* a and d. litnpi» !:t tor t:i\«s tor the , y. irs 1«"«. l'*d. !!♦*».'», I'hm;. together with penalty. interest and eosts th« r« on. upon y« a I property assessed to t\ Tlutivson, and of whh'ii you are the owner, or re puted owner, or in which you have, or elaim to have, some interest or estate, and which said real estate is situated in Thurston county. Washington, and more : particularly bounded and described towit: hots 5. ♦». 7. s and ?*. of bl<M-k 21. of Scam- j mels' addition to West oiympia. Thurston j : t'ounty. Wash. i That plaintiff has paid taxes, other than 1 'those Included in said certificate of d- j linuuency in the sum of :54-I«hi <$ .:m>, dol 1 • iars. and which tvar interest at the rate of Qj |H-r cent, per annum. Von are fur ther notified that plaintiff will apply to the Superior Court of the State of Wash- j j ington. for Thurston county, for ju«lg j merit for the amount of said delinquent . certificate, taxes, interest, penalty and eosts, and foreclosing his lien against said property hereinbefore described, j And you are hereby notified and sum rnoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the date of the service of ! this summons upon you. exclusive of the [day of service, towit: Within sixty days ' after the service of this summons upon j you by publication, and within sixty days I after the first day of January, A. i>. 19W. i which is the date of the first publication of this summons, and the date of the ser ; vice of this summons upon you bv puh- I lication, and defend this action in the | court aforesaid, or to pay the amount due and in case of your failure so to do. judg • ni«nt will be rendered against you for the amount of said certificate of delinquency, i interest, penally and the costs and f«>rv- J closing said lien ui»on the lands and prem ises hereinbefore described, and the same 1 will be order sold to satisfy said judg- I nient. This is an action brought by the I plaintiff against the aforefentioned de- I fendants to foreclose plaintiff's lien for ' the payment of delinquent taxes upon the j property aforementioned. Any pleading or process may l>e served upon the undersigned at the postnffiee address hereinafter m< ntloned. GORDON MAO"KAY. Attorney for Plaintiff T. O. Address. Third and Columbia Sts Oiympia, Wash. KICK!!! If you don't get ATEERTOIBOUHBOI On sale at Tfifc OXFORD GEORGE TARLOR, Frop.. I' 6 Fourth Street. Oiympia. | BICYCLES! BICYCLES! § * * 5 lOOU MODELS i|j ifc & Arc now coming in. Am prepared to give exeep- Hjjf tionally low prices, and better terms on the EAS Y |j/ ifc I'AYMENT PLAN this year than ever before. . . ill Us ifc Columbia, Kacyclc, Rambler and Excelsior jjj | E. E. TAYLOR, | Opposite Court House. 203 E. Fourth Street. "|J^ ■I XALCOTT BROS. ¥ Til OLDKBT JIWRLI! lOUSI II VIBTIRS WASIIB6TOS. IBTABLISBII tilt O ,U —DEALERS IN n rf WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, H 0 CLOCKS. SILVERWARE, CUT GLASS, 5* LEATHER GOODS, CUTLEKY, NOVELTIES W u' SEWING MACHINES, SUNDRIES ft MANDFAOTtIRERB OF 1 NOTARY AND LODGE SEALS § RUBBER STAMPS & UMBRELLAS Repairing in All Departments. rV, V V 2* and 428 Main St., ... Olympia, Wash. jn MMMMIMIMKHOMMMMIMMMUItItMHtIttIHI * > ii A Fine Line ! I! ji ji 4MILLINERYI j; 1 ———— I<• W AT THE V I| LADIES 1 HAT STORE II ; > MRS. C. J. NESSEGEE, EAST FOURTH STREET !! :! tt)t) , ()) OLYMPIA MAEBLE WORKS » ESTABLISHED ISSB. J J". R. DEVER, Proprietor I IT MARBLE AND GRANITE * * * I HQ Monuments, Markers Qi Headstones, Etc. C Fourth and Jefferson Sis. OLYMPIA WASHINGTON R. G. CAMERON, PROP. •) | Fresh % Cured Meats 1 Poultry and Game of All Descriptions I® when in season. 9) § West Fourth St., next to K. of P. Hall. Phone Main SS j) <£ (• BUY N0W?1 I C( EI () E^ ,E I 1 . 0 Comforts, Blankets s Heavy Underwear s Woolen Hosiery, Gloves, Shawls, Woolen Under skirts. are all reduced to close out quickly, yj Children's heavy all-wool Long Coats, from 6t014 u [l years, worth $5 to $6, all now $3. Girls' Coats, $6 and $lO quality, 6 to 14 years, are reduced to $5 each. || Bear Skin Coats, sizes up to 6 years, now $1.50. I Ladies' Long Coats, all-wool, reduced to $7.58, SB, $lO, $12.50, regardless of former prices. (I Men's and Boy's warm Overcoats marked way down. U] Can you AFFORD TO BE UNCOMFORTABLE? jy lci=K>E=>l[Slfo]£H 101= )|fo]|c=ioEr^|aoDl^ I The Mottman Mercantile Co | I ** 111 every pergon'a life there come opportunities fur making money. + ■>' All good openings require some money. They are business up|«>rtuii- 4 ities and it takes some money to make money in business. With a i .. little money you can make your opportunity. Begin to build your for- 3 <► tune by starting a bank account, l>e it ever'so small. That is'the first > " step. In our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT we pay interest at the rate i ~ of THREE PER CENT, per annum. 1 ■» ► + The Capital National Bank }■ *' Capital and Surplus—s2so,ooo Deposits—over $2,000,000 % ♦ 111 ♦MM♦lMM♦♦♦♦ ♦MHH» ' - « t H 111111 M 111 II I I 1111 I "IT MAKES YOU STRONG." | Y If you need a tonic to build up your system, drink pj t Olympia Malt Extract | L A pure non-intoxicating extract of barley-malt and hops. Higher fi s in extract and lower in alcoholic content than any other malt [J extract on the market. Only 15-100 of 1 per cent, alcohol. T The price is $1.75 per dozen or $3.50 for two-dozen case J : OLYMPIA BREWING CO.I f TELEPHONE MAIN 10 KKSKSffiKKSKKKKiKKKKKKSKSKSSK M K M K 55 have just received another ship- K K ment of Boys' Peg-top, Cuff-bottorn, M K Loose Welt CORDUROY PANTS, a strong, K M sturdy, stylish trouser that will wear w«ll H K K K5 H M —————— M I The Emporium § K M SXJ A. A. GOTTFELD, PROPRIETOR. {FTJ Kj Opposite City Hall Phone lied 1343 K >o< "Oikj* V "V" V" V *.* VI *»* V V *»* V *•* *»* VVV FW V%* naiaauAoaooa UVaVtVooAAmVioioiAiAcii' * HEATING STOVES The largest and most complete stock, of Heaters in the city. We carry also a general line of building hardware, paints and oils, logging and mill supplies, stumping powder : : : : : ::::::: OLYMPIA HARDWARE CO. FRANK BLAKESLEE, PROPRIETOR. Phone Main 201 325 Main Street i: Olympia Gro I I T. L. LAL'GHLIN C M I»YCK , 1 As successors to the OLD KELIAKLK A <> LANSDAI.K stand—we carry the same 4 < | large and complete stock of . . . r ij Groceries, Flour, Hay,J Feed, Etc. { <> _ J which we ofler at BOTTOM I'RICES. t , 1 Highest Cash Price paid for Farm 4 l • Produce. Give us a call ... r i: - \ Cor. Fourth and Jefferson Sts * ( 1 Telephone Main DO