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r«.-«% "W* Place Your Money WHERE It will be safe, and where it will bring you sure rot urns. You may need it later on. Four per cent on Saving Deposits. Citizens Bank <& Trust Company Cor. Wctmore and Hewitt AMERICAN DYE Vl/ORKS HERRETT & BAUCHWITZ lMj£<S\ LEADING CLBANKRS AMD **V\ Wetmow DY¥BS i Plianei 94« ' CRYSTAL DYE WORKS LEADING CLEANERS CHAS A BBRG 1011 Hewitt :: Phone Ind. 1113 REPAIRING DONE FREE WHEN SUIT IS DRY OR STEAM C M. STEELE Grocery and Confectionery Stock always fresh. Least pos- sible prices PACIFIC AND GRAND For high &Tade Watche* see A. J. MOHN 1416 HEWITT AYE. D. KAMERMAN Everett's Reliable Jeweler 1616 Hewitt Avenue Ind. 227 X Sun. 50C j , . ■ ...... i. ..-....-...--.—« , EVERYTHING IN COMMUNITY ; SILVER < o ■— " " AUSTfN S, 2004 Hewitt Are. S I 6% MONEY 6* MONEY Leans may be obtained for any pur pose ob acceptable Real Estate se curity; liberal pririleges; correspond ence solicited. A. C. AGENCY COMPANY 758 Gas, Electric Bldg. Denver, Colo. The Commercial Press Printers Manufacturers of RUBBER STAMPS 2931 Lombard Everett Chris Culmback FOR TOBACCO CIGARS CANDIES 1405 Hewitt Aye. PHONES 237 FOR HEATING AND PLUMBING CALL H. C. BROWN 2825 Pine Street Ind. 603 X Sunset 327 WOMSLEY GROCERY HOME-MADE BREAD A SPECIALTY 1203 Broadway Phone 324 X (Ind.) IWESTBERG GBOCMT j| Staple and Fancy Gre««riM R Phone* 42 2933 Bra Mtvoy U We Give Green TrMHng Stamps R EVERETT, WASH. || i Our Shoes Are Bettor Fisher, the Shopman Cor. Hewitt and Wttßtun Fifteen Year* In EVerett CLEANED Loren Thomas Frank Valller PARIS LAUNDRY Wo Rauaranteo all our work and prices are right. 2818 Grand Avenue Phones 1157 KITTLESON GROCERY 00. Good Things to Eat Phones: Ind. 47, Sun. 1540 1701 Wetmore Ay». J. C. SOVDE GROCERIES, DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS 3419 Everett Aye., Cor. Summit Phones: S. S. 1818. Ind. 470 EDW. ECKLUND Dealer in Fancy and Staple OROOZRDH Pk»n« JBB r ~ 2707 vV«tnior» THUESON GROCERY 00. Agent Dr. Fahrnay Medicine* Groceries, Flour, Feed, Fruit and Vegetable* 1209 Hewitt Avsnuo Phones: Ind. 14X, Bunset 18N MOON & REEP Successors to REEP GROCERY .. .. 1912 Hewitt Aye. Phones: Sunset 197, Ind. 43? HIGH SCHOOL GROCERY Both Phones 1166—25 th & Colby HIGH GRADE GROCERIES Our Motto, Quality and Service CHARLES L. LINDBLAP Staple- and Fancy Groceries, Fruits, Four, Hay and Feed Sub. 1064, Ind. 466 X LOWELL WASH. WOLD BROS. & WEST LUND Nineteenth and Broadway Dealers In Fancy and Staple Groceries, Dry Goods, Drups, Grain, Feed ft Flour. lun. 357 Inrl 319 An Economical Place to Trad* MODEL SAMPLE Ne Mara $3.59 No Less SHOE COMPANY For Men For Women The Upstairs Shoe Shot* Th»t Saves You Dollars How de we da It? Snail expanses I^»w remt, no clerks to pay FO»E» BUILDING, Room 18 Next Deor te Star Theater 1M«-1M3 Hewitt Avenue UPSTAIRS Gymnasium suits and shoes, football and athletic goods at Arthur Baily Sporting Goods and Hardware Store. Socialist Congressman Will Speak to the World By IHA W. BIRD "Meyer London won't I"' able to do anything In congress, Why, ho can't land any Bofl John for tht> boys who voted for him," the Tammany polltl elan I<>l4l me. "LondonT Why they'll bury htm M one of Hie Useletl commit teen mill \onll never hear of him uKiiin," hhlil a member of the Democratic machine Ilial will run Ihe lloune of HepreHen tattvel when 11. meelH again, "It we onh had some more m hers we could do something, bill with Meyer London alone on the Jot wo Oan't expeel linirli, with Ihe |VMU oddi agalnsi him," n;ii<i a Boclaltat That t| whal Ihe croaliers Kal'l when Victor Berger of Milwaukee was elected to rcprcHetlt Ihe Fifth <'on lonal DUtrlCl of Wisconsin In ihe i [owe "i Representathes, Ici BergOr forced the oapltallll press to take notice of his finhl for Ilk> law ranee workeri and his attack <m ron dlttoni which cauie unemploymMt Although enrolled In the House of Representatives from the Fifth Dis trict of Wtsoontln, Berger considered himself the representative of all the workers of the United States and wns hot on the trail of judges, public of ficials, employers and others who made the lot of the working men and women harder. No great epoch-making legislation WU enacted during Merger's term to give him an opportunity to speak for the Socialists of the United Stateß. TH CRITICAL PERIOD Representative Meyer London is a member of the House of RepreMrta* tives :it the most critical period In the history of the United State*, a disciple of the national party that ad vocates world peace when all others are mad for blood and slaughter. While mad militarists arc frothing at the moult in their frenzied demands for more powder and more bullets and more guns to slaughter the Mexi cans or the Japanese or the Germans. Meyer London will sit in the House of Representatives that considers the •war appropriations. Whether there is war or not, Meyer I^ondon will be the most prominent figure in congress when the bills for the Powder Trust and Armor Trust and Shipping Trust are considered by Tue riultuu's. 1.-wmantTH. "Where do the Socialists of Amer ica stand?" ask the Germans and the French and English. They will know when Meyer Lon don tells the members of the House what he thinks of Mr. Rockefeller, Mr. Hearst, Mr. Guggenheim and the others who have hired agents pro cocateurs to furnish the war with COUNTRY PATRIOTS Byron knew something of "country patriots" who looked out for harvests when war sent prices soaring. Said he: "For what were all these country pa triots born? To hunt, to vote, and raise the price of corn." In Australia there are some "coun try patriots" w:ho don't care a dump about hunting, and who even consider it a trouble to vote. But they are still as good as their forbears were in Byron's time at raising the price of corn - Australian Worker. Bargreen's Golden Drip Ceffee. Im perial Tea Co., 1407 Hewitt Avenue. SOCIALISTS OF BOSTON The Socialists of Boston must be getting lo a point where they are wor i ryin).' ihe capitalists of the "City of Deans" pretty much, for we notice that wherever the Socialists get to thai point, the capitalists always try jto ha\ c a rival organization formed to fl.uht thr regular Socialist organize tion. This has recently occurred in lion ton. A so-called Socialist Propagan da league has been formed to clean up the Socialist party! "War, What For?" in fer sal* by The Nerthwse* Werker at Me, post paid, or I copies for $1. COTTON LOBBY WOULD KILL CHILD LABOR BILL WASHINGTON.—That a lobby of COttOU mill interests is seeking to kill the child labor bill in its Infancy, whs alleged recently. Although introduc ed nearly two weeks ago by Repre sentative Keating, Colorado, the bill is still on Speaker Clark's desk. The Pioneer-Alpine is the only dairy delivering milk In the city that advertises in this paper. Cut out all the others and tell them why. Phone Ind. 271 or S.S. 1835 and ask them to supply you with milk. NORTHWEST WORKER Mexico thai win insure the safety of their nlnee and phIIIh and plantations, When ihe crooked wen a ton and Representatives make their howl tor "preparedneHH," ho they can H' t hands crossed with silver from the \ondorn of armor plate and powder. \ie\er London will he there to ex pone them and their masters. THE SOCIALISTS' SPOKESMAN if noun- globetrotting loafer poclpl talcs open strife between the United '♦lull's and Germany by being oxter minated (iii a torpedoed steamer, Moy or London's name will be called for i lie vole on the war fund. What Meyer London Hays on world peace, on militarism will be read at the breakfast tables the next day In I.on 'ffm, Petrograd and Tolilo. The re ports of the kept press will be gar bled and chopped and distorted to dbme extent, but the reporters and *Utoiß win not dare Ignore, the spokesman of the Socialist party, the only Internationalist In the United States congress. Win1 mill preparation for war will |u> Him moßl Important questions be tore congress wheti H meeta In lie 4"ini)ci' or a( an earlier war iMilon, if the war madness control! a major ;ty <if the membtfrs of the House .-mil Senate, ;i tremendoui tax muni be wrung from the country ii> net the 1(00,000,000 for battleship! and mil lions Baore for other murder machines, Meyer London musi flghl alone to proipci the worken of the United static from thin burdensome tux. Again his cry against wnr, against (bloodshed with honor, will be heard, LONDON ON GUARD With the entire nation aroused by the jingo press, with the blood lust causing the most sane to waver, "big business" will try to slip some pet bills through congress. Bom« dirty, patten bills, fathered by the crooked est gang ever sent to congress by "big business," have been lying idle for the moment when the nation's In terest is elsewhere. When the time is ripe, Senator Un derwood —"Wall Street Oscar," as you know —will try to push some anti-conservation measurse through the Senate and House. But Meyer London will be tn the watch for these f tils to 'show the nation how Under ,. ,«u ..nu ~'.... .lef ftrkttr Trust ate attempting to grab all the available water power for ; a huge monopoly which will have the nation at Its mercy. The Shipping Trust is going to fight for the repeal of the seamen's bill, so it can displace American sail ors with Chinese Coolies and remove the life-boats which take away profit- START NEW RESEARCH WORK Five hundred and ten picked fight ers got into the trenches recently in the Central Opera House, New York, to give backing to the formation of the Department of Labor Research organized by the Rand School of So cial Science. The school has organ ized this department, not merely as a department of the school, but as an instrument in the service of the whole working class, as Juliet Stuart Poyntz the director clearly emphasized in her address. Among the speakers were three college professors, Prof. Franklin 11. Oiddlngl, Prof. Charles A. Heard and Prof. .T. Scott Hearing. Other speak ers were Florence Kelley and Assem blyman A. 1. Shiplacoff. Morris Hill quit presided. Help put The Northwest Worker on its feet by wiping out that $250 de ficit. OARRKTT, Pa.—A justice of the peace, auditor and oounctlmen were elected by the Socialists; also elected cauncllinun at Hooversville. BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — Socialists were elected as follows: School hoard S. .1. Jones and M. Applegarth; jub lici'H of the peace, Frank Ledvlnka and James llriggs; countable, Win. Britton. Upholstering and Furniture Repair ing neatly done by Svarrer Bros., 2811 Wetmore, rear of Robbins Transfer office. Between 2,000,000 and 2,500,000 men have responded to the, call for re cruits from the Earl of Derby, direc tor of recruiting, l^ast week brought more than 500,000 men. Help us wipe out that deficit of $250.00. Let us have your donation before the first of January. Help us make a sledge-hammer blow at the system next year by wiping out the deficit on the paper right away. getting space. Meyer London will )io In congress tO help Andrew Kwruseth, Of the Seamen's Union, in his efforts to keep the bill on the statute books and make the provisions for safety stricter, Instead of more lenient, LEFT-OVER MEASURES The Susan H. Anthony amendment for the enfranchisement of women, bills providing relief for the millions of unemployed, bills to regulate Issue or railroad securities, bills to extend Philippine self-government, hills to prohibit Importation or conviot-made goods and rural credit bills were left by the last, congress In the rush to »;el away from worl< These will be Introduced again, Every Socialist, is Interested In this legislation and may lie assured at this early date that Meyer London will have a word to say before the Committees that con sider them and also on the floor of the House. Socialists are somewhat of n curios ity in Washington, especially in OOn gress, Victor Berger was the first Bociallsi member of the House of Representatives. He looked nothing like the Socialists depleted in the cartoons of the capitalist press, He did not advocate the extermination of oapitallßtS by "Hough on Hats," or other similar expedient. He made friend: OB the night Of his arrival by advocating "Votes for men and wom en" in the District of Columbia. NO SOFT JOBS It is true Representative London will not bring soft jobs for his friends. There will lie no patronage for So cialists witii Thomas Woodrow Wil son In tin' White House. It is true that Representative Ix>n don will he placed on the Committee for Disposing of Waste Paper or the Committee on Engrossed Hills or some other committee that never meets. It is true that Representative Lon don will not create the Socialist Com monwealth during his two years In this congress. I can agree that far with the Tam many man, with the Democratic ma chine and the Socialist croaker. But the skeptics do not realize that Representative London, in a speech on the floor of the House, speaks to all the civilized nations. In the rear of the press gallery Is a battery of tdtegtltyt! instruments lhat flash "the news of congress to every industrial city in the world. What Representa tive London says is news to the So cialist press and to the kept press, and the telegraph wires will carry his message to every workingman and woman who can read a newspaper. That is what' the sole Socialist can do in congress. McADOO'S CONFESSION Secretary and son-in-law McAdoo has come and gone. During his brief stay in Montana he said three things worthy of record. He said that the iLaFollette Seamen's law does not de stroy the American merchant marine. He said that, despite the political boasting of Republicans and Demo crats and the capitalist press, there has been no "prosperity" in the Unit ed States during the past ten years. He said that the best assurance that any proposed legislative measure is desirable for the general public, is found in the fact that the political agents and organs of big business call such measures "socialistic." The Socialists have been telling the public these same things for years. Perhaps, with the official stamp of respectability which the "umoclalls tic" Mr. McAdoo has put upon the in formation, the average voters will pay better heed to Socialistic advice and counsel. —Montana Socialist. "Up to now people have been train ed to do their thinking in the inter ests of the capitalist class. The working class is not only poor, but inarticulate. Also, it is in the over whelming- majority. Since everything so far written has been in the inter est s of the capitalists, the minority, II la about time for the majority, the workers, to begin writing in their own interests."—Prof. Scott Nearlng, Dehs, Hlllqult and Maurer are a committee of three to back up Meyer London in his resolution before con greas "that President Wilson call a conference of all neutral coun tries." This committee will sec Presi dent Wilson. They have been appoint ed by the executive committee of the Socialist party. Morse steaks are in prospect in New York today. The board of health repealed a section of the code pro hibiting the slaughter of horses for food. Silverware at reduced prices at Cur ran Hardware Co. rHADI ON FfOCKEr f I I .{.('. AVENUI AND BAVI IONEV INVENTORY SALE NOW ON SPECIAL SALE OF BLANKETS SPECIAL SALE OF UNDERWEAR We Wish You All A Happy New Year SPECIAL SALE OF DRESS GOODS SPECIAL SALE OF COATS AND SUITS DOLSON & SMITH THE STORE AROUND THE CORNER ON ROCKEFELLER AYE. BEST BUTTER IN THE CITY Satisfaction guaranteed or your money returned Weight and Quality Our Motto FAMILY ICE CREAM ORDERS OUR SPECIALTY MEADOWMOORE DAIRY STORE. 1918 HEWITT AVENUE GEM DYE WORKS SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED, $1.00 2810 Wetmore Avenue Phone: Sunset 561 Phone: , nd 663 X PASTIME Amusement Parlors FOR GOOD TIMES Wetmore and Hewitt Driesslein & ter Quality Market Dealers In QUALITY MEATS 19th and Broadway BOTH PHONES 81 Union Made Shoes AT Murray Shot Co. 1715 Hewitt Sunset 1141 Thompson's Hewitt Aye., Near Mapla St. Something for Evarybady Pioneer-Alpine Daily Frask Milk and Ciaam Ba«Twe4 ta AJJ Parti at tha City Ind. 271 Suatat 1831 26th and Braadvray C.V.COLE EXPRESS AND BAGGAGE Office Phones, Both 314 Res. Phone Ind. 1080Y GAINING SUPPORTERS "Never before has any representa tive of my district, in any lawmaking body .taken me into his confidence as I you have done," says a non-Socialist \ voter in a letter. of thanks to Repre sentative Meyer .London for the lat ter's first written report to his con stituents. This expression is typical j of numerous complimentary remarks from the people trf the Twelfth Con gressional District of New York upon ' London's undertaking to keep In touch with those who sent him to the national legislature. Roosevelt was the guest of honor i at a big steel trust dinner at the ■ home of Elbert H. Gary, head of the trust. 'I in i daj, December 30 ,1915, GOLDFINCH BROTHERS Wall Papers, Paints, Glass 2812 Rucker Avenue Both Phones 285 CARL KEICHKLT, Prop. COMMERCE BASHES SHOP Commerce Bldg., Everett, Wart. Twa Good Baths ' Northern Transfer Co. ■' , N* hauling too large or •mall j J Bt*rag* In connection * Offlc* ph*a« tad. 292. Bun. 11l \ RM>M«noe lad. 41T J 80M ¥»OOUOALL AYE. Dr. Ross Early-wine DENTIST 205 American Bank Bldg. Both Phones 725 >♦»♦»#♦»■)«<»«»»♦♦♦»♦♦»—»« : RILEY- COOLEY : SHOE CO. ; : 1711 Hewitt Aye, J DECEMBER Melting Pot Adam Hill 's »<»»»»»»»♦»♦♦»♦»♦♦»♦»»»♦»< UMIOIf •YVTBR AN» cater Hovn CARL ERU'MtJM, Prop. We C«Ur ta th» Werkinf Men 1717/ a H».#i« Avwiue ALL WfHITB HBLP ►^♦♦»»»»»»<»»»»»»»♦»»♦♦♦»♦ i ............ .-.-...-„-■■» , Call far Mayal Bread at your Qraeara; •!•* Old Fashion Salt ! ■■ Kl«li»f, made at TWIi MULBRY B. F. DanloU