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Thur kU) . .l;inii)>r\ '.'!'. 1014 We Are Up Against It $30 Ladle*' Suit* $5.98 28 lets Fur* $40 to $60 off $100 Coat $32.50 Dresses cut to $2.98 $60 Coat $24.50 Skirt • cut to $1.75 $65 Muff* cut $40 to $60 off Big Bargain* In Men 1* Clothing 1812 HEWKT The City Grocery Staple and Fancy Oroceri**, Flour, Feed, Produce, Etc Both Rhone* in 34«0-«» Ivetett A»enue v ' JOHNSON * LnjKNBKRG ♦ ♦»»»♦»♦♦»♦♦♦»»♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦< • unset 1113 Independent 107Y Thos. McNeely & Son Proprietor* of th« Mm- Creeery Staple and Fancy Groceries •007 H*wMt Aye. ■v*c*«. Wea*. COME TO MY STORE and look over my Grocery depart ment Specials every Friday. WHARTENBY'S 5-10-15 Cent Store IWerftberg Grocery 8f awd Fancy Groceries PK*tm. MB 2*33 Broadway We Or** «r«en Trading Stamp* EVERETT, WASH. PULT-OST AND DRY MUTTON. TRY THESE. AT EIDEM'S GROC ERY. 2709 LOMBARD. ' TMUJWOM GROCERY' CO. ' Agwrt Dr. Fahrn*y Medicine* Groceries* Flour, Feed, Fruit and Vegetable* 1209 Hewitt Avenue Pheßea: Ind. 14X, Sunset ISM ' i , , , --■■■-! ■ - ■ ■* Good Groceries at J> | NEVILLE A STUMFALL % 1901 Broadway - »j | Phone*: Sunset 214, Ind. 592 & KITTUPKyH GROCERY CO. Goo 4 Thing* to Eat Phones: In*. 47, Sun. I§4o. 1781 Wetmere Aye. «««««««.«««'«'•«'»'>'> t • SFBHBVV DBrW 00. # '» CITY DBTW OTOMf J # jQBO MW^BjI Af6» i 5 Free DcMpbbf *»** *** «< S Ei» J Cut out that coughing day after day. Use Cherry Bark Cough Syrup. It will help you. 60 cents at DARLING'S THE FORERUNNER A MONTHLY MAGAZINE Written, Edited, Owned and Published By CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN "Mrs. Gilman is a forceful and stimulating writer, witk plenty of convictions and no lack of courage for them. No one is likely to fail of getting a full dollar's worth, who sends that amount £ . year's subscription to THE FORERUNNER —The Dial. ■ • ; • ' The Forerunner carries Mrs. Gil- Spec j a | Subscription Offer man's best and newest work; her social philosophy, her verse, satire, Flnd enc i ose( j 2 Bc for which fiction, ethical teaching, humor and enter my Bubgcrip tion to the comment. it stands for Humanness forerunner fur four months, in Women, and in Men; for better methods in Child-culture; for the Home that is no Workshop; for Name the New Ethic*, the New Econom ics the New World we are to make -are making. Address THE CHARLTON CO., 67 Wall St., N. Y. Fhonea: iml. 867, B. B. T.il The Riverside Cleaning Parlors Work Called-for and Delivered FRENCH DRY AND STEAM CLEANING Pressing and repairing neatly done. Suit to order »12.00 to »35.00. Fit guaranteed. 3008 HEWITT AYE. fl WOLD BROS & WIST- j| ■ LUND ■ ■ Nineteenth and Bread way I H Dealer* la Fancy a*4 I ■ Staple Groceries. Dry Goo**, I I Drug*, Grain, Feel * Titmr. ■ I Sun. 857 In*. SIB I ♦♦♦♦•♦»»♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•»•»»»»;; I EDW. EGSLI7ND |; f Dealer in Fancy and Staple <; f GROCERIES ' > Dealer in Fancy and Staple < GROCERIES i 2707 Wetniore $ HIGH SCHOOL GROCERY Both Phone* —25th A Colby HIGH GRADE GROCERIES Our Motto, Quality and Service I CHARLES L. LHIDBLAD 4 J> Staple and Fancy Groceries, V % Fruit*. Flour, Hay and Feed <• X Sun. 1014, md. 4kx X ■> LOWELL f;"' -.' WASH. I Reep Grocery Good Quality of Groceries 1912 Hewitt Avenue Phone— Sunset 197, I*4. 437 5 Per FmeSfcw '• \ e»TatMßMj9tmmiM Free , I Bfttfa FW**e 96 * t 1607 Btomt Mm. t The ADS. mi (fee fian*i> MMH clnea are Terr *»»"»1— «* tke Fl—>eet Drug Store. The beet Coffee for the moaey is our Favorite Blend, 3 lbe. for $1.0» or 1% lbs. for SB ceata. M. H. Clausen, 2812 Rockefeller. Tolephoaes SSI. «»♦»♦♦»♦♦♦»»»»♦»♦»»<»»■!>»»»; • •; grocuibs i : <; CANDY AND TOBACCO ;; <' x J ! E. F. Eemmerer, 2911 Grand 1 *' >^^.T E. 1! I nil LEGAL DEPARTMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH Answers will nppcar In tl«'% legal column of the Commonwealth iih booh a* posalbln after receipt of the Inquiry, and DO chnrgo will bo made the M plicant fur ndvlce. Heretofore It haw not (infrequently happened that comrades In trouble nought tho advice of the editor of this paper. Hut your editor is not a lawyer, nor has ho the time to devote to »uch matters. So from now on our readers are invited to address all questions Involving points of law to comrade lVter Huhli.v. Room 209 Stokes nidg., 1616 1-2 Hewitt Are., Everett, \Vnnh. Q. —I thought I would drop you a ! line to find out If I can collect my ', wage*. I started to work for a man who took a contract from a mill com ' pany for putting in shingle bolt* at so ', much a cord, and he was to have ' bought a certain donkey and drag ■ saw from them. As the drag-saw will I] not work, he can not make anything i and they are talking of taking the con j tract away from him. A* I have run I the donkey since the 17th of June, be sides working on the road, will you | kindly advise me If I can hold the donkey engine or the mill company for my wages, or If I have to lose it all? Hoping to hear from you through the column* of the Commonwealth, I re main, R- H. B. A.—lf not more than thirty (30 days have elapsed since you quit work, then 1 you can file a lien for your labor upon '■ the shingle bolts which you helped to I put In and upon the shingles cut there ■ from. You cannot hold the mill com ' pany directly. That can only be done I indirectly through the logger's lien. If 1 your Immediate employer, the contrac • tor, has any property, or if he owns the donkey engines and the drag-saw, you can attach the said property or any other which he may have. q.— I am a subscriber to the Com monwealth and would like some advice through It. One Manny, owing a home stead situated east of the government reservation and now within the cor l porate limits of Vancouver, deeded to > Clarke county thirty feet for a road between sections 25 and 26 running I west to the government reservation. > There was a road there before the land > was sold off In small pracels and it Is ' i 30 or 40 feet south of the line stated. The people living on the north side of the line have fenced to the road but I their deeds give them the land to that I line only. The deeds of the people living on the seuth side of the road I give them the land up to this same • line, but they have fenced to the road only, and are short that much land. The Blind school, which is situated on the north side of the line, fenced to this line only, and there has been a vacant space between the school fence and the road for twenty years; but this ' fall they rebuilt their fence to the ' road. Every deed and abstract calls 1 for that line and every city map shows It Now, the road is only twenty feet wide. Cannot the people living on the i south side of the line make the city • open the road wider without paying i for land that belongs either to them or to the city? B. F. P. A. —Of those on the north side of the i road, the Blind school can be ousted ', from the land they have taken posses ■ sion of; but those who have taken and • held possession for more than ten ', years may be able to hold the land. ' However, they must have made a I claim to it and thought that it be longed to them. If they merely fenced In and used a convenient piece of land without making any claim to the legal title and knowing that it belonged to some one else, they can be ousted from the land. It will depend upon the facts and proof in respect to each individual holder. If the county can recover the original thirty-foot right of-way it can build the road there. If it wants to widen the road where it is it will have to condemn the necessary land or secure quit claim deeds. GREAT COMBINATION OFFER Reader! of the Commonwealth are hereby notified that hereafter we will iseud the Commonwealth and the splen did magazine, "Popular Electricity and i the World's Advance" to any address on receipt of $2.00. The price of the > magazine alone is $1.50 per year, or 1 16 c a copy. So ftio subscriber would, lon this combination, pay only $1.00 j a year for a magazine which is worth at least ?3.00 a year to any one inter ■ Mted In electrical and mechanical I i progress. Do You Want a Bargain In I BOOKS ! I \ ■..,-,■■ let of the Enc) ■ i»« <iui Brltulca ;m<i • roluma ■•' ol the Mai . t • iii.- bum I * HILLS BOOK STORE 2929 Colby .... . . . • i-i-t •■ THK OuKMOffvTr.AI.TH CAPITALIST INSANITY. A Hil.nllHt prnplicsle* Hint 0) tho year 2020 fit.- tulinlillnntn of Id.- world will nil I"' Insane, Some Of M urn Inclined to think Hint todity Mi- world In one Imi'.c Inmine asylum, where III" wine ml- kept In limi'iiir." by lln In MM Or In It not an Insane, arrangement that which condemn! the producers of nil wealth tO poverty and delivers tht wonllh Of society Into Hie hands of those who havo M pnrt In Its produc tion? DOM It sound sane when truth Is ostracized mill hypocrisy consldpred a valid title-deed to respectability and public honor? Would a society of MB* peoplo waste billions of dollars for the arts of destruction, and let, millions of human beings waste their, lives In enforced Idleness, vice and crime and other forms of material and mental and moral pauperism? Our wholo social system Is a per vorslon of sound reason, truth and Jus tice, ami thoso striving to regenerate society on the basis of social Justice and rational living are denounced as enemies of civilization, morality and good order. Yet there Is method In this mad ness; It yields wealth, profit, power to Its foremost representatives. This Is the reason why It Is upheld regardless of Its Irrationality. Dut its end Is drawing near in proportion as its vic tims learn to see through the game and refuse to be sacrificed to it. The tendency of social development is not toward the fulfillment of that discouraging prophecy, but the other way. The world will recover from Its present mental derangement. It will under the leadership of the working class abolish the despotism of the I money bag with all Its cruel, brutal and Insane consequences; It will make rational man tho master of his econ omic and social creations, and liberate reason from the trammels of profit hunting and material gain,—Buffalo Socialist. The population of the United States contains 3,300,000 more males than fe males. Here They Are!—Tk Reliable: Ones Do you want the "merchants" of Everett to help pay for the printing of the Commonwealth? Or would you rather dig deep in your own pocket and use your own money to pay the expense of running your paper? You have no money to waste and the easiest way is the best way. Buy your food, clothing and shelter and pleasures from the list of advertisers below. They are helping to pay the cost of running the Commonwealth. DEPARTMENT STORES Dolson & Smith. DRY GOODS. Barretts, 2816 Colby. BAKERY AND LUNCH ROOM. Scandia Bakery. New Vienna Bakery. American Bakery. BANK Citizens Bank & Trust Co. BARS. Weiser. i Horseshoe. BARBERS. Sharpless Barber Shop. Carl Reichelt, Commerce Barber Shop. CONFECTIONERY AND CIGARS. Chris Culmback. Wm. Stout. DAIRY. Pioneer and Alpine Dairy. Everett Dairy. Meadowmoor Dairy. DYERS AND CLEANERS. American Dye Works. Gem Dye Works. Riverside Cleaning Parlor. DRUG STORES. City Drug Store. Dwight Darling. Owl Pharmacy. Everett Drug Co. Pioneer Drug Store. DENTIST. Dr. K. I. Kobbervig. GROCERIES. Ecklund Grocery Co. City Grocery. Charles L. Lindblad. Reep Grocery. Thueson Grocery Co. Westberg. A. K. Klttleson. Wold & Westlund. High School Grocery. i: F. Kemmerer. Newell & Stumfall. GENT'S FURNISHINGS. Working Man's Clothing Store. Wonder Mercantile Co. deck Clothing Co. L. c. Bennett. Ed. Wahl. (has B. F.ricson. Bachelder i Cornell. Thomsen's Up-Stalrs Suit Shop. HARDWARE. Ourran Hardware Co. 1. X. I. Hardware & Furniture. HARNESS SHOP. Riverside Harness Shop. HOTEL. Holton. HOUSE FURNISHERS. Peterson Furniture Co. I. X. I. Hardware & Furniture. Northwest Sales Co. Furniture. WHAT SOCIALISM REALLY MEANS. An n prmottaal moremanl s-k i:»ii m pi 111.•.i ii. inr indmtrtol i |udi in. hi ii h> "k« to Ntran t' 1 pIUIfUIOMI in tli' 1 prniliif linn 'if m 'IHi .nil Mr».-il'r i <|iiilv In II m dIR Ii il.it' Inn I miiii. I. |j >l,it. il. <li>- Socialist pin rr.ini ftO'TOGOIM I reorriini/nlinn of tin' existing Indiißtrial IJTtteß on tIM librlr >>f < "11. i li.M Of niilional owner snip of Ihi' MOW loolb. It demands Him Ih« control or the machinery of v. i-nlili creation be taken from the In divldiiiil capltiillßt and plneed In the hands of tln> nation, to be organized iinil operated for the benefit of the whole people. The program lmpließ radical changeß In the existing indus jtrial machinery, political structure, and social relations. The form of so ciety which would result from such rhungeH Ik usually designated In the literature on the subject as the So cialist state, or the Socialist Ideal. ThtH the dominant factors in the Socialist thought, movement, and Ideal may be Bald to be of a politico-econ omic nature, nut Socialism Ib not de void of ethical and spiritual Implica tions. The Socialist philosophy In volves certain definite views of right and wrong in the individual and so cial conduct of men, which are some times at variance with accepted stan dards; and the Socialist ideal is pre dicted on a change in the reciprocal relations of man and society which Are bound to affect our conceptions of individual and social duty. The moral conceptions thus implied in the So clallßt program constitute the code of Socialist ethics.—Morris Hillquit. CAPITALIST REASONING. A muddle-headed lecturer says we are very prosperous because we shipped four billion dollars' worth of goods out of the country last year. Let*! ship the whole business out and all be millionaires. —Socialist Voice. Full line of 1914 Diaries. Hill's Book Store, 2929 Colby. JEWELERS. D. Kamerman. Austin. A. J, Mohn. LAWYERS. Engest & Glure. Peter Husby. Dan W. Locke. LAUNDRIES. Paris Laundry. MEAT MARKETS. Everett Meat Market. Quality Market. Crescent Meat Market. Monte Christo Market. City Market. NURSE. Hannah Crosby. NOTARY PUBLIC. Frank Cort. NOTIONS. Barretts, 2816 Colby. Thompsons. Whartenby. OUTFITTING. Chicago Outfitting. PAINTS, WALL PAPER. G. McAllister. Riverside Wall Paper Co. S. D. Clarke. PHOTOGRAPHERS. Wienand. POOL ROOMS. Pastime Pool Parlors. PRINT SHOPS. Commercial Press. RESTAURANTS. Maize Cafe. Writer's Grill. Dad Llsk's. REAL ESTATE. Cort & Co. SHOE STORES. Fisher. Riley & Cooley. i: I M. Shoe Store. SHOE REPAIRING. H. Krott. Sherman's Shoe Shop. C. Peterson. Frank Qua SPORTING GOODS. Bailey. BOOKS AND STATIONERY. Hill's Book Store. THEATERS. Rose Theater. Orand Theater. TRANSFER CO. Northern Transfer. SniaH; Transfer TEAS AND COFFEES. M. H. Clausen. TRUNKS. Everett Trunk Factory. UNDERTAKERS. John F. Jerread. WOOD AND COAL. Cayon Fuel Co. Edward Wahl's 1907 Hewitt Aye. Gents' Clothing and Furnishings OUR PRICES ALWAYS RIGHT Ericson's Clothing Store, h«S&t Twenty-five per cent off on all Slipons and Rain Coats. The Wonder Mercantile Co. Up-to-Date Clothing Store ESTABLISHED 18 YEARS Hewitt and Hoyt S. Yeo & Son, Props. COMRADES N. B. and J. B. HATCH ANNOUNCE THAT THEY ARE PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF TOWING AND FREIGHT AND SCOW WORK Ind. 596 Y. Residence 2227 MacDougal, EVERETT f . ............ ..--- my J. a BENITETT 131 1 Hewitt Aye., Everett, Wash. I THE MEN'S STORE MEN'S 600DS EXCLUSIVELY ....... .---.-.... ■■.........« J Northern Transfer Co. •■ "' \ J No hauling too large or email , * Storage In connection _ .:.;J ' Office phone Ind. 292, Sun. 191 ' \ Residence Ind. 417 ' t J 3006 McDOUOALL AYE. { ♦♦♦♦»»»♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦» I RILEY- COOLEY \ i; SHOE CO. :: 1: 1707 Hewitt Ay*. \ \ ' '♦♦♦»♦♦•♦»♦♦•♦•♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦» I B. & M. I I $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 I •>? Shoes will save you money <& % B. & M. CASH SHOE STORE % I Corner Hewitt and Hoyt Aye. % . j ........................my J Our Shoes Are Better Fisher, the Shoeman Cor. Hewitt and Wetmore Fifteen Years In Everett i ....—......... ............ ... ......^, If You Do Your Own Shoe Repairing go to Frank's Place, 1114 Hewitt Avenue for anything you need in the line of supplies at reasonable prices. FRANK GUMSAY, Prop. ) <•••••••■••• »■•♦«•■-••«.-•-•-•■..•-•-•-•-•- •. Always go to C. PETERSON Oldeit and most reliable •hi»« re pair shop in the city. 1921 WETMORE AYE. Next to People's Theater ►♦♦♦»»♦♦♦♦»»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦« ■»♦♦♦•>»♦♦♦♦» CRESCENT MARKET BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, VEAL AND SALT MEAT Phones: Sun. 369, Ind. 406 X EVERETT MEAT market ] Wholesale Bad Retail. Fine Sausage a Specialty— Strict Attention Given to Or den 1317 Hewitt. Both Phones 249 4.-.-.-.-.-...... - * -• | JILG german Baus- i i age AND DELICATESSEN i : store ; • 1914 HEWITT AVI '. I Opposite Mitchell Hotel | ...i.i. -_i. i---i.i..i.i.a^i_i_ ;_s._ -l.* * .a a *. >l t . Page Three. I he Mm's and /iojjs' Store CONVINCIVE SAVINGS at BRODECK'S CLEARANCE SALE I MEN'S YOUNC MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHES HATS, SHOES AND FURNISHINGS I Every Department, including our great BOYS' STORE Offers top-notch bargains The Brodeck Go 1701-3 Hewitt Aye. I WORKINGMAN'S OLOTH- I ING HOUSE Men's, women's and children*! ING HOUSE Men's, women's and children* |J shoes. Big value* for llttte ,§> money. f 2014 Hewitt Ind. Phone* 711 SMATHERS' HOME BOARD AND ROOM Smathers' Transfer Baggage, Express and Furniture moving to any part of the city. Rates reasonable. Phone*: Ind. 559Z; 8. 8. 40 Stand corner Hewitt and Rucker Res. 2913 Norton At* ; ;♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»•♦»»»•♦•»•♦♦♦♦; \', Six Teaspoon*, Starling Inlaid, '. |; Guaranteed 25 Years, $IJS at ; ;; AUSTIN'S, The Jeweler i ' 2004 Hewitt Everett,' Waeh. ! ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦)♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦» ; ; For high grid* Watches m* ;: a. J. MOHN : : 1418 Hewitt ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦»»»♦»♦>»♦♦♦♦♦ ?---■■---•-»■----■ ■ ■-«..-- D. KAMERMAN Everett's Reliable Jeweler i(it Hewitt Aveaue Ind. 227 V, SunHt 71 »«■■■....-.... ........... CARL REICHELT, Prop. COMMERCE BARBER SHOP Commerce Bldg., Everett, Wash. Twe Goo* Bath* »-----■■• ----.....-. GO TO H. Krott For All Kinds of Shoe Repairing 3oo»^ HEWITT ! QUALITY MARKET ' Dealers Itl QUALITY MEATS Itotb Pbouea II 19th and Broad • '.',-i ;■;■'.-*.-•, i -iH-Vrt-i ■%■'.■ t-'t, ;-v;-»-« | MONTE CRIBTO MARKET Frye & Co. > Oealeri In Fre»h and Cured Meats £ Phones 201 2*04 Hewitt