The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 5, 1907, Page 5

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THE SEATTLE STAK-—SATURUAY i| JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER SAYS A CLEAR CONSCIENCE IS BETTER dining room whe covers Were For Three Hours the Sage of the Pocantico Hills) (ii °c! hose’ win “trate Talks to a Star Representative, Who Visits)’ ” “"Sonn’D: Lives mute A maid brought the steaming kitehen and hand ed them to “John,” who served the Mr. Rockefetler lingered x over his soup, though he ate Him On His Estates»Multimillionaire As Gay As a Boys-Tells of His Early Life and the j dishes from the meal lor 5 . . little of it. Me nibbled at the alm Accumulation of His Riches, enda Oba salted pastels end onié y of thom that he had learned of thelr nutritious qualities from a BERSPSSP EES SE SES ERHOLERER URES ES |gentioman in California, who ate * no me but lived entirely upon * JOHN D, ROCKEFELLER'S ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN * vogetables and nuts. - ** | “I do not eat a great quantity,” * hh ‘ co to a young man at the opening of this new year w jhe * but I am well nourtshed ® a ENS ‘a i and do the best you can to make a sauce & by what I do eat I like to eat salt & be: Go straight arew ed nuts They agree entirely with | & cose tor yourself, and keep Rappy and comfortable those who W [ny digestion, I do not eat much & depend upon you If you make nilatakes, remember that it is ® | meat, though I am fond of it. 1/ harman to ert, but try amain and try harder, Above all thing, # [am always thankful for mifk, and | aman to ert, iT 7 : t: honest with yourself and with those with whom w® |! can drink great quantities of «it % be hones! . ’ t the end you Wit ot beast have 6 clear & | Winoet if effects. We have os % you deat you fall # « cellent cream and milk here at the & Gonsclence, and 4 colon is @ eater comfort and ® | Pocantico. I must tell you a joke. @ worth more than a reat fortune gained by dishonest methods. & A friend of ours from the West| John DB. Rockefelier to Marlen BE Pew # | came here last summer on a little *- & | Yislt. He brought with him a young * man whom he wished us to meet ae WrEeeeeeseS Si, 222 25 5.22 52 2 22 ee | They came in while | was flatshing ay M. &. PEW defeated brothers, nudged them in| my lunch Copyright, 1008. by Newspaper thelr riba with his mittened fist,/ For a long time the newspapers . Enterprise Association.) jae them to take their medicine| had been full of stories about the without squirming and with no/| dyspeptic millionaire. You remem tt ber those funny stories the boys NEW YORK, Be he t upen the good shots he ust nos when the { ye = jhad made, he expatiated upon hia| weed to print about me rived at the mas fioent Rocke! “* lerrors and Miustrated bow be might A Dyspepsia Joke. let eatate gt Pocanticn, (wo miles! nave done better | 1 b Bive hilla from dreamy Well, I had «a great plate of : ever the Blu Cin, te cordial hospitality Mr. strawberries before me. The young BK The workmen, most Of Rockerellor invited the writer to at lunch in) them Italians, were bs Rockefeller was playing golf with a party of friends, and they were at the No toe | Mr. Rockefeller was paired with Pother Patrick Lannen, a hand-| some, young Catholle priest of the} Tarrytown parish, of whom the mil- Honalre said he was very fond and highly for excellent work | the commanity, and for his intel} 4 aires againat the priest and cap ftalist were Ericason P<’ neil, a! Wholesale grocer of New York, who for years bas sung tm the Firth av. Rockefeller church choir, and his! Brother, Winthrop Bushnell, of New Haves, Conn, a mining engineer, ‘Mrs. Rameey, a neighbor, kept the “ more. Three stalwart italfan boys, _ laden with golf bags, stood about E the tee JOHN BCOLDED. Coming up over the hill I was by Mr. Rockefeller, who ap-| Poached with extended hand. My Mission was briefly stated. ) “Weill,” said be, “I am glad to see )you. I have been scolded by © * family recently for getting into the Bewspapers, but I like newspaper en, and | want you to meet my friends.” whereupon he presented the questa “We are In the midet of a very and | continued my meal, heaping the cream upon the berrt 1 ate them all Nothing was said that day, but when I saw my friend later he sald, ‘When we} left your house that day my friend | oa sat down lunch with him. Approaching the Dam, "tt dow: a0, Where the senior Hockefelier family are making their home, pending the construction of a half million dollar house higher on the idea that we believe will operate for our mutual advantage, We want to join our interests with yours, and Mi, Mr, Rockefeller dwelt upon the) took me by the arm and sald: | excellence of golf and told how his| "When | saw Mr. Rockefeller oat Lee ane “San as oe ama ba | health had been improved through| ing that big dish of strawberries | 004 vive you stock in our eompal its practice. | and heaping on that cream and hay His cheeks were pink, Ais eyes| ing the dyspepsia that I supposed bright, bis face unwrinkled, exeept | he aid have or we will pay you upon an eq able appraisal of your property I thought I would have | "", when he smiled or laughed as he/ to yetl—just to y i = teh few Moy ag weg! a a Gen frequently did. But you want me to tell you! (yen Mar uae te money He stood erect and seemed to) what [| hope to see in this country Those who ee ont to ua did not possess the buoyant vigor of a man! in 1907." believe In our idea They bad of 50. The gray sweater he wore had al Mr. Rockefeller paused for a min but they had ute or #0. He sat with his hands , how success faith ta cash tn hand, no faith In us. Look ragged rent about four inches long/ clasped in characteristic attitude, | tm one sleeve, A black oap was| and while “John” wax heaping the | fit has been, ue stook thes aoe pulled down over bis cars, bis gray| plates with roast veal, baked! (00. sao $400 $500, $600, $700. trousers were bagsy and old fash-| squash, French peas and laying &| $9 gsop, $1,000 a uhare. With foned. He wore heavy overshoes| delicious sealed at each plate, Mr. jour good iden We made & good bus-| and black mittens. Rockefeller began ineas out of a poor business. Ev “1 wish to feue a warning to the} “Really I do not remember of} Amertcan people. Let those whose! cnet those who sold out. Now having felt any better in my whole|Causeloss attacks upon cOrporaté) iioy ore the ones who attack life than I de today,” he said | interests, great structures that havo!" “rey attack us because “God's great Blessings, pare alr| been years in baliding, have caused |» stake. and bright sunshine, are al} about| the loss of millions, beware lest) prey say we are thieves and! ag, and certainly we have much to/ the reaction, sure to follow, Dring | woundrets, becnuse they were nit be thankful for, have we not? [suftertng to the working man whose enough to seo that joining id The Rockefeller lodge is a com-|Ostensible benefit the attacks bAVe | toregis would be proper economy paratively small and plain frame | been made. | Juat Their Mistake. | structure, almost entirely surorund-| “The laws of finance hose men who made od tyr @ Glaspinchoned sun parior.| nomics are os sure and Those men who’ made that Wty There ts absolutely nothing about as the laws of gravity take have gone around abusing me] this house to indicate the enormous Never Feit Better. ryone waa benefitted by oor idea,| and tnevitable In review Ive but I take pleasure in knowing that Ing the business of the past ¢ JOHN D, ROCKEFELLER, | question. | my business }to me ae now they are running our busl- = for ua,” and he chuckled mer- ne rity, Why, the office boys of the old days are now conducting depart- ants of our busivess. They have own up in It, and they are part of It in one of the greatest satiafac- tions of my life that T have mu 1 ed in surrounding myself with good men. 1 tell you that ta the greatent part of a man’s success, If you have good men—men whom you can trust, whem you know to be honest | and upright—about you, your suc- ome in practically aasured. “Hometimes when men get old they say to themacives, "What shall I do? I am old to work, and how shall I put in my time? T am fortunate in not have to oak that When I began life I had on the one hand, and other I had interests that wp and became as important my business Other Interests. “When, twelve years ago, I my forever, 1 still these other interests to occupy ny | L t niereste have Mi left business had PMmething to the general ood of my countrymen. And my re all too t to attend to} finye I did what was right and fair and bepee, + for the best interesta of that bush] pusy neas. I gave them the same oppor | nag tunity for success that Thad. They did pot accept i, and that was a ters He I used to ty | @eiting came,” he went on “This ts my sport, you know, and this le one of the happiest days of My life. Today I have registered! months it fs found that there has been an enormous shrinkage ta the Wealth of Its possessor. The broad and weil cultivated acres that stretch out over the bills om every| value of share holdings What will side indicate wealth, bat the house) be the result? Capitalists whose be permonal mk and my business to Tam just when I interests after as but i» well and hearty as | | j hae been heard in Judge is perhaps less ostentatious than| wealth largely depend upon thelr) my best score. | made nine holes s Now tsn’t that splendid for Mold fellow like me? It's the best ‘work | have ever done on the links, and I shall always be proud of it, and re mber this day | the homes of hundreds of the men | who serve John D. Rockefeller for | wages. Told Servant Ali About It. “Do you play golf? It is very ox An American boy waits upon the Dilerating It makes off men) ‘°F young again It is the best exer | aipresent servant, met his master dlse, and is an excellent tonic for at the entrance and to him the cap- the heart and lungs. 1t teaches pa-|{talist, with flowing spirtt, related TH tence, and that is a great lesson | ‘ll details of the ta life.” ron: 4 SS perfectly . . : ome, @ host's commanc . He Makes 2 Good Drive. land preparations were made for te Whit went » ball toward the next/tering the dining room. The in tee. Mr. Rockefeller was told that) terior of the lodge fx oven more ‘DMs turn was next. |severely plain than the extertor “I have bad good tuck with the|/ Mr Rockefeller sald it sulted him brassie today and I guess Ill use) well enough; that he and Mra again.” Rockefeller were very happy there, - A boy handed him a stick. The} but that “when the children come Millionaire took his position slowty,|it seems pretty smell For that ad exercised great care that bis| reason he was building a new and fest were in proper position. He|targer house fastened bis sharp blue on the} The inexpensive, light-colored gad four times swung his stick| wall paper in the large reception aa he drove at the little white| room and the ving room was re sphere {leved by a few etchings and prints ) “Good! Good!" shouted the] There were no paintings. Members of the party Several handsome rugs “That wae a pretty good drive,” ished Moore ald the player. “Look where it m the living room Went to, way up by that tree. Sey print Made = & Mat was a staring beast. Mrejend Child, in « gtit frame Ranwey, was I deliberate enough) were a tow retigt t time the mn the journey toward the eight twe n hole Mr. Rockefeller the interviewer. He tr to the chai Me thought @fucation 4 great adr every yo man, both the training and o the valuable) .¢ en, F Sebociations. “I wish more of out} pct 4 Seys might have it,” he said. Four! a... Plays brought the great of! mer-| @hant to the last hole. Happy as a Boy The He had won another game. With| the utter boyish husiasm he twitted the| the most — ~ ; Ha d men ithe world was ntly inter ed But that do with | by Mr. Rockefeller, who entered the oom in changed ¢ a heavy fact the tattor, | linen Collie tlethes to Aresners. T suit of gray cheviot and aparkling Whe know what “right tatiortn taking the place of the Givers go back to White f evening lem and over tee woolene | —_— adorned On the mantel wae a na book or maga bs Btely as Dasineas a college | ntage for} caune of Marked Magazines. od Changing attitude public In toleration of maligned founder of rd ON compan bible has the room of these ma paragraphs One referred to the the end A heavy a place in t ve writer npow simplicity of the iife of widely discussed man tn nothing fine | ew o) “Tt it | ready for thetr | sald, and suite of win make ail he etty and we are Tt am way o'clock tunch led the ia 1 ware Klein, the shoemaker, James at AFTER SIX 25¢ Decorated China Cup (gz and Saucer VEGETABLE SLICERS. j ¥ ' TABLE TUMBLERS. yw 3c 15¢ PAPER NAPKINS. toc roll e Pa- .5e per JAP ROSE SOAP. alue MILK JUGS ‘ ecor vite i china VEGETABLE BRUSH. 15¢ fan Milk fancy Bes a eerste nem Jugs Napkins re: “John,” Mr. Rockefetier’s om-| sitting: | the |ahare holdings will begin to call tn |the money they have outstanding. | The debtor class will be effected. | Then the suffering of the working people wil! commence. “it the Amertean people wish to jeontinue its prosperity it couse fis attacks apon capital Guarded in bis every utterance, Jepeaking always with deliberation, | |sometimes with @ soft accent upon | jbis words, and again with intense} arhontness, there raa through Mr Rockefellers entire conversation j with the writer, which was of near ly three hours’ duration, a note of | indignation which, though vetled, | was unmietakahie—indignation at the political attitade of antag oniem againat corporate wealth. | The Rest of the Interview. “Things used to be very different tm thie country,” he said later. Under the old system A joined | inte with B in a partnership mutual benefit. Sometimes those partnerabips continued agree ble and profit | they did not endure very long }the old 6 competition was se-| and there was much unneces:| sary waste of material and effort. | "After a while it became appar Jont to thoughtful business men that the best way to ace ab an eco. mie system of b * to} consolidate intercata Por years Interests have been ¢ and we have our great # as the result In} | | vere ow nant. | pora “Sometimes | look back upon the times in Cleveland, when | was starting my busin life. 1 re member that my first employer in Cleveland used to get $4 a ton for | freighting ore from the Marquette country over the Great Lakes to | Cleveland. No one complained about the rates at that time. CONSOLIDATING INTERESTS “But later, when | was associated {with @ party of gentlemen who had and consolidated these interes we were shipping ore over the route from Marquette to Cleveland lfor 68 cents a ton, | was called «| wicked monopolist.” | Mr. Rockefeller laughed merrily at thie term. “But you see what the consolida tion of interests had accomplished. They used to think that a barge with a thousand tons capacity was large enough for the purpose. After the consolidation of interests and when economiste were strictly re garded, we realized that 1,000-ton barges were wasteful and we en larged our ships to 2,000 tons, 3,000 tons, 5,000 tons, 8,000 tons, and the ore ships today, | am told, carry as high as 10,000 tons of ore. were i and 96, I among our think. We competitor r There | ‘ business. It f getting any present system fa no prow sin ata ndstiil have as ours. Ne 18 | well an a that the bath stment? G. Hi Have you ever considers is a wine Plumbing Co, 221 Garbage Can $2.98 With ide GC itting outside straps for cover # Ve, or bad mistake.” | “American corporat have! done much good for the peop is & serious mistake to atte tear them down and return to the! olf idea, which made business for} must |all of us a hated struggle. Failures payste bust nesses ot newly established used to be, if my resoliections serve | me correctly, between 76 and 76/ yer cont. That has been greatly} reduced. Pailures are very few] these daya it used to be that a man would invest all of his money in one co torprise, and if that fallgs he wos a goner. He used to put all his! exes in one nest. Now ft fs possi ble for a man to divide his tnvest ment He may scatter them around fa various enterprises, ad! that gives him a diversity o. Inter ests and it is also a safer plan. The man with emall means may do this, and be wil! not have the fear that the next day, through} some unforeseen misfortune, ruin will come to him and his family Fine Men in Wall St. that we have enjoying is due to the strict momy and wine judgment of our business men. I think that the t section of New York city financial district) holds some of tt at men of the world. As a clase they are Intelligent, well od | “The prosperity bee ycated men, with fine sense of hon 4 integrit There are ox fons, of course, but I have found most of these men as true steet : It is a great fact that, In these lays of vast wealth, when acquire large fortunes. d by it. These € th as} men can they are not men go on! m dying not fool or live exe working, many har They squander thelr money or ruin themselves continue to live and work hard, and periorm honest dw tles of honest men } My, sometimes I Ie in bed and} think back of the good men I have been associated with in my life and sometimes I am ashamed that I have not sald more tn praise of them. There were 60 of us in the nd now all but fouF gone on to the other life. Just of it left Standard Oll Men. j Payne Mr. H. M just 10 ye high Th ly four Origin There is 47 years old ' must show It T t he| bmw m for his old part reading, Mr. R he should bh which complirr had t him th nw 1 kefell that tion but weld ave omitte the whole higt greatly ald appreciated by ot refrat Office Boys Now on Top. wn't it ate from reading it all me that our vietered by were at ude. Ye and fought w bunt being admt ¢ the men who Wait for University Scenic Addition 1 ught 4 lots, moat di s. ix r big ad y service. | ch for It fiaiea iets | | was | You ean hav | Portland 11 | Health ‘BB ould ord to stop Golf ip a diversion and keep substantial, I fear that many men in business today are! making & wiletake im that they dc aot avail themselves of regular and atic © exers Frequently these men are too much engrossed in business activity to think of heallh of pave an avenue of Interest for their dectining years. Tha sertous error. It would be eh better to provide time for interests aside from business, the kind that will not be to be shaken off, and mo for breathing deep the fresh alr and strengthening the muscles of the body. ADIVICE TO YOUNG MEN. “My advices to a young man at the opening of thie mew year is to Go straight ahead and do the best you can to make « succese for yourself and keep happy and com fortable those who depend upon you. | if you make mistakes, remember that it ie numan to err, but try in and try harder, Above ail| things be honest, honest with your: | self and with those with whom you deal. if you fail at the end you will at least have a clear conscience, | end « clear conscience is @ greater comfort and worth more then «| gret fortune ned by dishonorable methods.” ony | MARLEN FE. Pew. | ORGANIZE NEW YORK SOCIETY presentatives of various states | od at the institu King County Tes yesterday and per} fected an organization of Thome hailing from New York state. The following were present Winfield S. Smith, Mariett Smith, Charles V, Beardsl A. N. Raven, Frank BE. Kemp, Lindsay, M. KB. Harper, Carrie L.| Train, Frank Best, Manche L.| Magen, Carri Mra. Anna J. Kerr, Anna M. Eagan, Marte V.| Kagan, Surah I. Haynes, Agnes H Craig, Biffle Jackson and Sarah| Cameron. W. 8. Smith was chosen chairr and Frank E. Kempt sec retary «Tho 0 zation eting of the organi next titute ' ARRESTED FOR STEALING GRiP| Faro Meyer, a German giving his| that of blacksmith, | arrested yesterday afternoon | ty Detectives Adams and Corbett on a charge of petty larceny. Meyer have walked away with Detective Adams Who followed the man to his home, ™ The ¢ re important tifloate lost. @ecupation as wed to a suit case belonging | and Meye all knowledge of them % t denied wer W. G. T. U. MEETS. ‘Tho Seattle Federation of the! Woman's Christian Temperance | Union will hold its regular monthly meeting next Tuesday at 2:30 p.m Plymouth Congregational Rev. B. F. Van Horn, the pastor, will give an address, “Buf frage and Christian Citizenship, being up for discussion IN A FeW HOURS summer sunshin the South T y's scenic Shasta New train now 30 p. m., making th jatly. Fast time, excellent | ands beautiful —seenery und plea to suit} at at the eburch Route trains Tickets a information Ticket Office, 608 First Ellis, general agent all Union | charged Peter Jackson with having LOCAL FLASHES Start Biblical Course Special Bible studies have been comm od at the Pilgrim, Conare «ational church, Mrs, Amy P . ingleader lowa Boolety M: The lowa Society n night at the Alaska elub ortant business matters will be} rooms considered Unique Cover, sue of the Pacific urnal will have T January | Lumber Tr J for an outaide cover a reproduction of the finest plece of cut and treat fir over produced Charlie Carter Mi Charlie Carter, aged 1 has been reported missing by | | ing, | 4iiF itt | av. his brother Fred, since Jan. 2, On| tha orning Charile went to #@ cure work on the tug Bvergreen Two Reality Sal j Hurd has purchased the} corner of Fifth ay, and| from ¥. F, Adame for $30,000. Two tracts near Alki Point have been sold by William Holt to Bmma Sehmits for $10,000. More Pay for Teachers. The school teachers of Seattle were given a special hearing fore the school board yesterday afternoon in the agitation for an advance fn salary, It ia Mkely that the raise will be granted the peda gogues. Reports Wagon Stolen, HM. J. Hull, manager for C. J Erickson, the contractor, reported to the police this morning the theft | of.a “Watson” dump wagon used | in carting away dirt from the Third ay, regrade. Takes Alaska Station, Col, W. A. Greene, U. 8. A., leaves for Fort William H. Seward on the next amer for Alaska to assume command of the Tenth tnfantry regiment. He suceveds Col. Noble, retired. The new commander's wife goes north with him. Food Law Welcomed. The new national pure food law is welcomed by Beattle jobbers. Liquor dealers,, druggists, grocers and others speak well of the new law and believe it will benefit the trade as well aa the public Ministers’ Meeting. The Evangelical Ministers’ Asso- elation will hold ite next monthly meeting at the First M. B. church Monday at 10 a.m. The Rev. My ron W. Haynes will address the ineeting Y¥. M. C. A. Tomorrow. Rev, Myron W. Haynes will be the speaker at the vesper service | of the Y. M. ©. at 4 o'clock Sun day. At the same meeting Robert Armitage will sing vary.” Commercial Club Meeting. At the regular meeting of the Commercial Club Monday night several important reports will be handed tn, and the lantern slides to be used In the coming publicity can ign im Lon Angeles will be thrown on the screen To Complete Church in May. The new church of the First Methodist Protestant church will « completed some time in May The edifice tx located at Sixteenth ay. and John st, and the congrega Hon is now occupying temporary quarters in the Renton Hill club | house Oo. B southeast Lenora st | } | | Loses Potato @uit. | Aluskan potatoe suit, which | Tallman’s | perior court for the last three jays, wan yesterday finished and a verdict returned for the defendant. | The Louch-Augustine Co. had The failed to fulfill a contract in selling three tons of evaporated potatoes. Canneries for State. Mr. Andrew Weber, president of the Andrew Weber Co, believes Washington state presen ample| opportuntty for the establishment of fruit canneries, It ts suggested that « board of information be aamed to go thoroughly into the matter and that the cooperation of the governor and other state of- ficials be Invoked Greatly Reduced Prices On all unclaimed Pursy Wusry Rugs All sizes. Pusey Wossy Rug Co, €11 Westlake ay, Phones yeen Anne 1822; Ind, 7379. ° whose earn are small will this company a suitable and safe place in which to deposit their savings, We ex- tend the same courte- sies to the man or woman who opens dn account with one dol- lar as we do to our largest depositors ings find B SHORPOCK, Pree PHA AN, VoPrem, ALEX MYERS 2¥. & SMITH. Cashion UNION BAKERY) & CAFE 1413 Second Ave. CREAM PUFFS, Made from Pure Cream, We will move to our new location, 217 Pike Street, Jan. 14, 1907. aoop PIANOS ictor and Edison ratking Machines SHEET ML 7TILl Seeend Ave. . The Sun- The Way to for| A nivation.” will furnish rousie SU and # p ling cir. NDAY TOPICS 22:00! Turning Over a > an a ning, "Come With Us and Do You Good;" platform tests after Baptict. the evening discourse by Mr. Cobb, fev. Myron W. Haynes,| Bible Acionoe Boetety—A, 0. 0. W. il a. m., “Betting Apart of 1928 iret av.; Rev, Le Magell 5 Workers;” 7:40 p.m x Vorter, pastor and monsage bearer hares of Btock tn a Gold Mine tees ducted at 4 and & p. im, Rev It. Btone; afternoon sub. | Jae Man's Tiusteat. Gongregationat, Jed" evening henomena of Piymouth—Third av, and Univer be nity at: Rev, Francie J, Van Morne D. Dy pastor; 11 a mm Life's Foundations;” § p. m., “Visions and i Life | Piret Chureh of Ch 412 Sizth Pligrim~Broadway and Republic- | av rvicen at 11 a, m, and 6 & an st; Rev, Sydney Btreng, D. D.,|m.; subject, “Lite pastor; 11 a m owing God 4p. ™., communion d reception of | Theosophy new members. | Theosophical society Heattle University-—Brookly North; | Le 1420 & p, m., “The | Rev, H.C. Mason, | 11 am, | F f Death in Evolution,” by A New Year's Me 6 P| Mee P. Bush m,, "The Web of Lit Queen ¢ vlety in America Youngstown—@ p. m, Sunday | Pioneer block, A. O. U, W. hall.;5 p. nchool; 7:30 p.m, ¥. M,C. A. quar-|m, The Paych by Prof, W. |¥. Kelley Kast Prospect at rth Bp, Thy Unitarian P. Weter au } o-Corner Boyla- 0p. m, worrbip, |t v Kev. W. D. fi Rey. C. BR. Gale on! monds, pastor; 11 4. m., “The Re- the Migration of | sponatbility of Unitarians in the Fue Birds ture Development of Beattle Episcopal. Socialiet. Bt Mark's Madison st. and| Walter Thomas Mills will speak at Broadway; Rev D, Liwy4, | Socialint temple, Fourth av, and iam Meaning of the | F at, Sunday at 2:40 m, on nation 7 p.m, “The Leg- |The Organizations of the Workers, ends of the Med jand of Those Who Work the Work- ers; 8 p.m, M. J. Kennedy will de- Methodist. liver an address on “Socialism and Haven—Corner Howard ay, and creme John at.; F. KE. Drake, pastor; 1ia.| , , Baptist. m. and 7:20 p. m,, evangeliatic serv- | Temple—Corner Third ay. and jcon, Muni str Cedar st. Rev. George Robert evangelints, Cairns, pastor, 11 a. m., “Jehovah- wife, Me | minni, ¢ Lord Our Banner.” 7:80 ss > s nr w. \p m., “The Record of Redemption man Park, Paller ev etribe Vorayth, pastor; 11 a, m, “Whee |°"* % Retribution Opes We Are at Our Best;” 7:30 p. m, Christian. dvent—916 James st. Rev. Geo the evening vice, Meetings will |B. Cooprider, pastor. Revival meet be held every night of the coming jing beginning tomorrow night and week, Tomorrow is missionary Gay | lasting throughout the week at the Sunday school pW Queen Anne Christian chureb, Prechytorian. Rey. BE. W. Daret. At 11 a m, First—c er Fourth av. and/*Keeping the Faith;” 7:30 p. mL Spring #t.; Key, M. A. Matthews, |rne Three Crosses.” pastor; 11 a. m., “The Works of the | Cor rations; 8 p.m ‘Our Bat-| Steam bathe, 26¢. Oriental Bathe tes and Viectort i 1907. try Bt wenty-second ay. and Cherry st; Rev. W. A. Bteven- son, pastor; 11 «. m., communion and reception of mer stp m, "The Creation of the World,” iilus- trated by stereopticon view Weatminster—Rev. J. M. Wilson, pastor; 11 a m. “The New A lutions am New Year's Oppor Use;" sermonette, “Th 4p. m, and address t boys, “Some Odd Things in Alaska,” by BM. Wells Welsh—Tenth av. and John st.; Rev. J. M. Hughes, pastor; 11 a. m, The New Year's Promise,” § p. m. Rev. J. Robinson of Pueblo will “peak on “Early Training in En- glieh.” Rellard—Rev, EB. FE. Thompson, pastor; 11 a. m., “Whatever You Are ing to Do, Do It;" 7:20 p. m., ser- ite, “The Man Who Was Strong nm He Was Weak” A special Musical program will be rendered by the choir, Spiritualist, First Society—-Knights of Pythias hall, First av. near Pike st Herri- son D. Barrett, speaker; FE. F. Cobb, mexsage bearer: lectures at 3 p. m. | FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Fourth Av. between James and Cherry—-Myron =W. Haynes. DD. ¥ Sunday Rervices, and 7:30 p m. Morning Subject, “Betting Apart of Special Workers.” Frening Subject, “Six 8 Stock in a Gold Mine. Strangers in Our City ¢ a warm welcome 10:30 «. m Practical educatio teaches one how = to think rather than what to think, We will belp == you to discipline == your mind into’ practical, business- like, money habits. WILSONS MODERN The Cleanly Bread Made from Velvet Flour, is taken direct from the oven, wrapped in wax- ed paper and sealed with hot irons, This costs you no more and it certainly is cleaner, VELVET BAKING COMPANY SEATTLE The Modern Bakery. We Give Family Work ~ Careful Attention HIS laundry has made a reputation in the busi- ness of washing flan- nels. To launder flannels and woolens properly requires spe- cial soap and who know how to do th We have both Prompt service QUEEN CITY LAUNDRY FIRST AVENUE AND BELL STREET. Both Phones 953 stainas = | oe ere naan em

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