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Thursday, Nuvember 25, I.M >. B ACHELDEH ® CORNEIL Better Clothes for Men and Boys The Wonder Mercantile Co. Up-to-Dftte Clothing Store MTABLIBHn II YEAR* Hewitt and Hoyt ft. Te« * Boa, Pr»j« PAY LESS AND DRESS BETTER AT ot)<t Suit"3fouse MEN'S CLOTHIERS EXCLUSIVELY ROSE THEATRE "EVERETT'S LIVE WIRE" ALWAYS THE BEST SHOW IN TOWN GEM THEATER 5c Riverside Movie House 5c To Produce Growers: The City Council of Everett has reserved a portion of Cali fornia Street for market purposes. A covered stall has been built for produce growers to display their products. No charge is made for the use of the stall or street. Saturday is market day. Bring in your products and cut out the middleman's price. The market is located at 1900 Block, California St. Call for Royal Bread at your Grocers; also Old Fashion Salt Rising, made at VIENNA BAKERY B. F. Daniels UNION OYSTER AND CHOP HOUSE CAJIL ERICKSON, Pro». We Cater to the Working Men 1717|/ 2 Hewitt Avenue ALL WHITE HELP Weiser's Grill A Good Place To Eat W. J. WEISER, Prop. EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING Essex Electric Shoe Repair Plant 1914 Hewitt Opposite Mitchell Hotel GALLOWAY BROS. Proprietors POCKET SHOPPING GUIDE GUIDE OF THE Northwest Worker Advertisers December No. 3499 NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Superior Court of the State of Washington, in and for the County of Snohomish. In the Matter of the Estate of Frank Sylvester Misho, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un dersigned, Lillian G. Misho, adminis tratrix of the estate of Frank Sylves ter Misho, deceased, to the creditors' and all persons having claims against said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers within one year after the first publication of thin notice, to-wit: within one year from the 25th day of November, 1915, to said administratrix at the office of Peter Husby, 215 Stokes Bldg., Ever ett, Washington, the same being the place for the transaction of the busi ness of said estate. LILLIAN G. MISHO, Administratrix with the Will Annexed of the Estate of Prank Sylvester Misho, deceased. .PETER HUSBY, Attorney for Administratrix, 215 Stokes Bldg., Everett, Wash. Date of first publication, November 25th, 1915. 4t "War, What For?" Is for sale by 'The Northwest Worker at 25c, post paid, or 5 copies for $1. Don't forget the big doings at Bir mingham. Look up the details on the front page. AMUSEMENTS Broadway Theatre, 2012 Hewitt. ATTORNEY Peter Husby, 216 Stokes Bldg. BARBER SHOPS Carl Reichelt, Commerce Bldg. BOOTS AND SHOES Model Sample, upstairs, 1808 Hewitt. Fisher, Hewitt and Wetmore. Wonder Mercantile, Hewitt & Hoyt. Riley Cooley, 1712 Hewitt. Murray Shoe Co., 1715 Hewitt. BOOT AND SHOE REPAIRING C. E. Ogrosky, 2001 Hewitt. Qeo. Schmick, 2010 Hewitt. Galloway Bros., 1!I14 Hewitt. BILLIARDS AND POOL Pastime Pool Rooms, Hewitt and Wetmore. BANKS Citizens Bank, Wetmore and Hewitt. BAKERS New Vienna Bakery, 1409 Hewitt. BOOK STORES Hill's Hook Store, 2929 Colby. Chris Culmback, 1405 Hewitt. CLOTHIERS Boston Clothing Co., 1611 Hewitt, Bacbelder & Cornell, Hewitt and Wetmore. NEWS AND VIEWS HOW PRORPERITY IS HELPING THE WORKERS The iiiiri'iui hi' i,;ihoi Statlitlci of iin> United Statei Department <>f La bor ini'i Inucd m luintnary <>r the re huHh of the third study Into the lerlei of Investigation! being made Into nn> employment in 12 weitern oHlch, of Butte, i.i'h Angelei, Oakland, Orden, Portland) Baoramento, suii Lake City, San uicK", Ban PranoiioOi Seattle, Bpokanc and Taooma, mil of n. total of nt!,ri:!7 faniin<>R oanvaued, haTlni a wage <>arnltiK population of 48,888 ilt wan found thnt 8,873 or 12.9 per cont. wore entirely out <>f employment and 0,071 or 20.2 per rent, wore employed only part time. This cuiiviihh took Into I'oiiflldprutlon only thon<> worUci'K who havo sonio pcrmjinoncy of ronl denoe und did not rovor Iho IminonHo population of KlnorantH In then Oltlei. ONE SURE GAIN OF WAR The complete overthrow of the fal lacy that propurodncßß for war Ih a guarantee of peace Ih one sure gain of tin- wnr. Tho century of peaco be tween Hrltain and America has been maintained by means of an "unguard ed frontier, and a chain of lakeß on which, by mutual agreement, no war ship ever sails." Among European nations tho very preparations they have made to defend themselveß against each other have constituted their greatest peril, and after tho war tho peoples may come to see that any kind of military equipment is much more a menace that a protection. We have disarmed the Individual citizen to secure his greater safety, and it certainly scorns that disarmament Is the method whereby a saner and surer protection for the nations will bo es tablished. —Melbourne Socialist. 'BULL DOG" BLUFF Sir Edward Grey, secretary for for eign affairs, made this written reply to a parliamentary question: "in our view, the condition! of peace must fulfill those laid down by the prime minister, Nov. o, 1914. It is very desirable that it .should be understood once and for all that this is the determination of the govern ment, collectively and individually, and of the nation." Premier Asquith's historic pledge, thus reaffirmed, is: "We shall not sheathe the sword which we have not lightly drawn, un til Belgium has recovered more than she has sacrificed; until France is adequately secured against menace; until the rights of the smaller nation alities have been pledged upon an un assailable foundation, and until the military domiation of Prussia is finally destroyed." This is good old "Bull Dog" bluff, but the Germans don't seem to be af fected by it. English cabinet minis ters are blaming each other for con tinued British defeats which looks as though they were preparing for Ihe ultimate defeat, which seems in evitable. At this safe distance we now can see just how the railroads, back in the nineties, were playing cat's cra dle with New England.—Brooklyn Eagle. If tho German-Americans hiss Pres. Wilson, what would (hey have done had th>) Colonel been elected? —Bos- ton Herald. Berlin to Bagdad sounds as good as Cape to Cairo. Brooklyn Eagle. Brodeck-Fleld, rroi-3 Hewitt. Ed. Wahl, 1907 Hewitt Avo. Norman Suit House, Hewitt and Hoyt. Wonder Mercantile, Hewitt and Hoyt. Everett Dept. Store, 2813 Colby. DAIRIES Meadowmore Dairy, 1918 Hewitt. Pioneer Alpine, 2600 Broadway. DRUG STORES City Drug Store, 1910 Hewitt. DENTISTS ■ Dr. Ross Earlywine, 205 American Hank Building. Dr. K. I. Kobbervig, 406-8 Commerce Bldg. Drs. Victor & Elvera Westberg, Realty Bldg., Hewitt and Colby. DYERS AND CLEANERS American Dye Works, 2821 Wet more. Gem Dye Works, 2810 Wetmore. DRY GOODS Dolson & Smith, 2817-21 Rocke feller. Geo. Thompson, 2:ili Hewitt. EYE GLASSES Stevens, 2004 Hewitt. THE NORTHWEST WORKER VIRGINIA ELECTS FIRST SO 0 CIALIST 0 i.iiki week wo reported that the Socialist! had Invaded tlii! South by electing a nan to office in Blrmlng' bam, Am , and thli week we report the election of th« H»1 Soclallsi to office in Virginia, In the peraon of Comrade H. U Thompson, iio was elected olerk of the Broookvllle conn ty road board. PREPARING FOR MORE 111«; very (iorman man must be taught to feel thai he linn failed to perform a ploim and pnlrlollc duty If ho Ih not a father, and every woman miißt be mnde to understand that, the has fail ed in her obligations to Germany If ■ha dot! not. become a wife and moth er." A committee of scientists and bocl ologlHts, detached from the immediate, war service to study the problem of Increasing; Germany's population, has submitted to the fSoverntiient a memo randum of whirh the above Is the, key note. ¥EW ZEALAND KEEPS FIGHTING MEN HOME A decree has been issued by tho government providing that no males of military age be permitted hereafter to lenvo the country for destinations overseas without military permits. TO SHOOT FOOD RIOT HEADS Frequent food riots in Berlin with threats from authorities that the ring leaden will be shot if the disorders continue, nre reported today in Co penhagen dlapatobei, The mashing of shop windows and' looting by throng! of needy in the' German capital are of daily occur-; rence, the reporti say. Warnings of punishment have been' placarded throughout the city by the i ministry of the interior. Resides: death for the leaders, all the partici pants are advised that they risk 10- j year terms of imprisonment. TO MAKE 2,000,000 SHELLS If Lloyd George will permit the women of England to win the war for the allies by solving the question of munitions, they'lfdrrit, they say. Two million of them say it. Under the in creasing pressure they are bringing to bear on the Minister of Munitions he is showing a disposition to give them a try. They have pointed out to Lloyd George that England has at least 2, --000,000 women who can devote their entire, time to shell making. Every woman, they insist, can make at least one shell a day. That means 2,000,000 shells a day, a number far beyond George's most extravagant estimate of England's needs. The women would like to undertake the job for all the allies. SOCIALISTS TO BE SHOT For refusing to fight, 200 Italian Socialists were condemned recently at Florence to be shot, according to a nceut statement by Dr. Lovegren, a Socialist deputy in the Swedish par liament. The doctor said he saw the party, In army and navy uniforms, being herded like cattle into box cars at Florence, whence they had been or dered taken to Arez/.o for execution. Cut Out and Fold at Rule Lines and Carry in Your Pocket for Reference GROCERIES Westberg Grocery, 2933 Broadway. High School Grocery, 2504 Colby. Wold & Westlund, 19th and Broad way. C. M. Steele, Pacific and Grand. Kiltleson Grocery, 1701 Wetmore. BdW, Ecklund, 2707 Wetmore. J. C. Sovde, 3419 Everett Aye. Thuoson Grocery, 1209 Hewitt. Moon & Reep, 1912 Hewitt. Farm Products, Lombard and Calif. Chas. L, Lindbiad, Lowell, Wash. Womsley Grocery, 1203 Broadway. HARNESS SUPPLIES C. E. Ogrosky, 2001 Hewitt. HARDWARE Curran Hardware, Hewitt and Bdwy. Arthur Bally, 1610 Hewitt. JEWELERS Austin'B, 2004 Hewitt. I). Kamerman, 1616 Hewitt. A. J. Mohn, 1416 Hewitt. LEATHER GOODS Everett Trunk Factory, 2815 Rocke feller. LAUNDRIES Paris Laundry, 2818 Grand. MUSIC STORE R. D. Hodgins, Rest Room, Colby. SOCIALISTS WIN BIG OVER FUSION TICKET CLINTON, liid Bodallltl elected flvn (int. of six oandidatei at the re oeni municipal election in this city. The Kixlli candidate was defeated by two votes. If whh a straight fight with but two tickets In tho field, all Other parties having united on a "Citl sens* ticket. FARMERS TO BUILD PLANT PARQO, N. I). - Farmers of North Dakota will build a large modern packing plant, which will be located either in Fargo, Valley City or Mlnot. Selection of the site is In the hands of a committee of three appointed by tho North Dakota Koelety of Equity, under whoßfi auspices the plant will bo erected. The plant will be known as the Farmers' Co-operative Packing com pany, and will be Incorporated with a capital stock of $500,000. HISSED FROM FLOOR SAN FRANCISCO.— For declaring that churcheß were charitable toward organized labor, Vice-Presldent Dun can of the American Federation of Labor was hissed from the convention floor. DIVING SHELL LATEST TERROR A diving projectile, as effectively destructive under the water as the shell of a 6-ine.h field gun is on land, has swept the seas clear of German ' submarines for Great Britain and her allies. The Conan fuse, as it is termed Officially! is the admiralty's most pre cious asset today, and its most closely guarded secret . It may be affixed to a shell fired from a rifle gun or howitzer, or to a bomb dropped from an aeroplane. In striking the water, the projectile i of which the Conan apparatus forms I part, dives and explodes at any pre ; determined depth up to 30 feet below the surface. It explodes within 50 feet of the point at which it is aimed. FRENCH ANTIS GROWING According to a partially censored article in "Avanti," the Italian Social ist daily, the anti-war section of the French, Socialist party is growing in strength Opposition to the attitude of the Socialist Minister! is gaining great headway. Resignations have already been demanded. Two editors have been forced to resign. Labor organ izations are criticizing the work of the opportunists now holding office in the French parliament. LOCAL EVERETT FORMS PRECINCT ORGANIZATION At a meeting held last Sunday af ternoon in the headquarters a league to be known as the Socialist Exten sion League was formed. Every pre cinct in the city will be in the charge of a captain who Is a red card mem ber. Every Socialist and sympathizer is to be induced to join the league, the duos of which will be ten cents a month. Another meeting is to be held next Sunday afternoon to extend the activities of the league. All interest ed r.re asked to attend. NOTIONS Geo. D. Thompson, 2914 Hewitt. PRINTERS Commercial Press, 2U31 Lombard. PLUMBING AND HEATING H. C. Brown. 2825 Pine. RESTAURANTS London Cafe, 2013 Hewitt. Weiser's Grill, 1507 Hewitt. Union Chop House, 1717 Hewitt. RUBBER STAMPS Commercial Press, 2931 Lombard. TOBACCOS, CIGAKb AND CONFEC TIONERY Chris Culmback, 1405 Hewitt. Adam Hill, 2929 Colby. C. M. Steele, 3028 Grand. TEAS AND COFFEE Imperial Tea Ct«, 1407 Hewitt. TRANSFERS Northern Transfer, 3006 McDougal. Ebert Transfer, Phone 1268 Z. UNDERTAKER John F. Jerread, 2929 Broadway. WALLPAPER, PAINTS, GLASS S. D. Clark, 2820 Rockefeller. Goldfinch Bros., 2812 Rucker. CAPITALISM J. E. Snyder Qene Debt said, "The Capitalists will drivf, the voters to us, what ttin Socialists want to do Is to build well within." Qen6 Debt was right as ho Is in most, things. We need to bind our selves into a compact form. Our heads must be together thinking out the way and preparing for the attacks of the prostituted and greedy masters of the world. Labor united is all wonderful. I^a bor divided is at the mercy of those who would enslave it. Labor com mands the machines to start or stand still at its will. Under capitalism la bor is under command because it is unthinking, unorganized and afraid. Under Socialism, labor will be thinking, organized and fearless. All power will be manifest in Labor. The machine will be the instrument for man and not man the attachment to the machine. The product and its profit will not be the important thing, the use of the product and its worth to the workers will be the only con cern. The sooner we organize the forces of labor, not alone here, where you live, but everywhere man lives on the earth, the quicker we realize the bene fits of the fruit of our toll. So long as the masters can keep us unorganized just that long can they keep us unacquainted and hating each other, going on jobs and staying on jobs, and scabbing on each other, marching to the ballot box on election | day and voting against each other, and continuing to turn the world and its product over to the masters to enable them to continue our slavery and bind the children who are to come after us to the wheels of mam mon. THE BLOODHOUNDS ARE ON OUR TRAIL . Wall Street, with the aid of the I post office department, is getting on j i the trail of the Socialists. War is in [ the air, preparedness is becoming J quite an issue, food for cannon must be drilled and equipped, patriotism, : glory and freedom (so-called) must ] be burned into the brains of the work i ers of the good old TJ. S. A. Anti ■ military agitation must be checked. ! The bloodhounds must have plenty of leeway for their damnable teachings. War means profits. Profits mean idle luxury. The agitator and his litera ture must go. Hence the action of ! the post office department in barring from the mails Jack London's famous definition of "A Good Soldier." It happened this way. The Appeal to Reason issues and sells envelopes on the back of which is printed Jack London's definition. It spits fire. It hits out from the shoulder and it hits the war-monger right between the eyes. And the war-monger has re sented it and had it barred from the mails. It hurts the war business. Here it is: "A GOOD SOLDIER" Young Men: The lowest aim in your life is to become a soldier. The good soldier never tries to distinguish j right from wrong. He never thinks; j never reasons; he only obeys. If he is ordered to fire on his fellow citi zens, on his neighbors, on his friends, on his relatives, he obeys, without hesitation. If he is ordered to fire down a crowded street when the poor are clamoring for bread, he obeys, and sees the gray hairs of age stained with red and the life tide gushing from the breasts of women, feeling neither remorse nor sympathy. If he is ordered off on a firing squad to execute a hero or benefactor, he fires without hesitation, tho he knows j the bullet will pierce the noblest heart j that ever beat in human breast. "A good soldier is a blind, heart less, soulless, murderous machine. He is not a man. He is not a brute, for brutes only- kill in self-defense. All thiW"ls human in him, all that is di vine in him, all that constitutes the man has been sworn away when he took the enlistment oath. His mind, his conscience, aye, his very soul, are in the keeping of his officer. "No man can fall lower than a sol dier—it is a depth beneath which he cannot go. Keep the boys out of the army. It is hell. "Down with the army and navy. We don't need killing institutions. We need life-giving institutions." WOMEN TO WEAR MALE ATTIRE BERLIN. — Trousers for women workers are recommended by the home secretary for some of the new trades which they have recently en tered in place of men gone to the front. In certain factories the ordi nary women's skirt and blouse is a menace, owing to its likelihood to catch in the machinery. Patronize YOUR Advertisers. Page Thret !fc9C Green Stamps We Are Thoughtful Are You? —You should think of your own personality, especially when clothing is to be con sidered. -We have the right goods for the right people. BRODECK-FIELD 1701-1703 Hewitt Aye. A. A. Brodeck, Mgr. —Outfitters from Lad to Oad — Wall Paper and Paints S. D. Clark 2820 Rockefeller UNION MADE SHOES AT MURRY SHOE CO. 1715 Hewitt Sunset 1141 LOWEST CASH PRICES Phone 1224 Y. Free delivery Bartlett's Grocery Corner 25th and Summit GEO. SCHMICK'S is the best shop in the city for SHOE REPAIRING He Is located at 2010 Hewitt Phone Ind. 162Z STEVENS FITS THE EYES 2004 Hewitt Aye. DENTISTS Dr. Victor Westberg Dr. Elvera Westberg Office in Walsh Building over Low man'a PHONE IND. 1253 EBERT TRANSFER Let us do your Transfer work. For quick service phone us. Stand phone: Ind. 1268Z House phone: Ind. 296 X LONDON CAFE UNION HOUSE A GOOD PLACE TO EAT 2013 Hewitt JOHN F. JERREAD Undertaker and Embalmer Phone Main 230 EVERETT, WASH. PETER HU3BY Attorney at Law Room 215 Stokes Bldg. 1618% Hewitt Ay«. DR. X I. KOBBERVTO DENTIBT 406-8 Commerce Bldg. Phones: Ind. 163, Sun. 436 CITY DRUG 3TORB 1910 Hewitt Aye. Free delivery to any part of the city. Ask for Green Trading Stamps.