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FVASIVE DENIAL OF gANK ASSESSMENT 4 pave ew fe ec ead Pthe effect that ee as the ANCHO Cc ittoc which r was chairman, w ‘ gommittes 1 ed , carrying ely’ depos r od whea aske h the perminsion to use the oe niftre te City Treasurereleet Pre ° { avked them to contri nave had ass? campaign fund in sume for campals ev Hating one-tenth af one per thing! “ the amount of elty deposits my time ; y Includes ¢ artes 8 oy | lon the might #hether (he ware bev' Mr. Bakers a me that & 1 i awe, in addition a! . wy i of a hold ented by ¢ tnuat t t , tribute would " ated nat in the ap a mment of ¢ lepowite durin . he coming admint tion LLED MEN HAVE ORGANIZED UNION , whe were ox should wo harmony with the ¢ Union No, | ep ore weeks ago, have some three eit alm held conte to retaliate against (het officers of the Bullde by forming @ carpen Exchange ‘eat Biners’ association | - with the local employers) or yo im thelr efforts to bea wages and disrupt (he lo thon s untor } this 3 rhree of m re Pjmeding of the 21, together 6, go into th ew movemer gee other nom-anion Carpem and of as, | understand, left the ayleity. With the 1 backs ett | the new organteatior snitation of the independent or hes tince been giving ganization ts betag foste daenents to the newspapers contra ‘gid be declares that wa cons a that emple rod by the will be used by etr eftor nen th ts to disrupt of i be very proud to confess, by aring @ medal that he had of Genoral democratic Sienanente for fact et medals be struck off as to go on supporting @ movement ‘af the 666 voters who that even the leaders inaugurat Wele ballots for the ing it had abandoned f democratic ticket in the ‘qeetion, has xiven rise at ft wilt be Fie send out a private de- a dark lantern to lo been do dense BLIND SENATOR T know, none of them | around democ ratic that General Metcalfe of @ show of election to throw away our Most of the club members outside, the Met fame is now eo com #ipeeed . 2 man who voted general Would be axhamed tat be had been caught “ etplained another democrat "cannot conceive how a man Maupevite tow. | <) y eteriainment witt | this efening by the Bo- tlab at Columbia 8¥. aad Usion st. un ‘he amaplees of the Seattle | Orier of Washington. WORUCE costume. WASHINGTON SNAPSHOT OF SENATOR THOS. P. GORE. (Seattle Star Exctusive Service) WASHINGTON, March 9. |tor Thos. P. Gore of Oklahoma is one of the most hard-working mea | im the senate. When he is not en ron | body he fs | government 4 visiting the vart artments } tine of the government's business. His bijndness does not interfere | a whit with his investigations. He is atteoded constantly by a guide ness of Uncle fam is done: ALLEGES SANTA CLARA IS UNSEAWORTHY . William Martin, an attorney, resenting 25 people who have suits |pending in the superior againat the Northwestern Steam ship company, filed an affidavit to day tn the federal court BFRY | court to Invest the condition of rep court in Nelvet has a deep waistcoat doth heavily embroider Seuteche matching the died _ bear! the steamship Santa Clar M the eaten, |, According to the affidavit filed oer eeane votvet Clara, which ia owned Northwestern Steamsh: The accompanying hat felvet feathers tn tones 0 ‘s seaworthy, and ts for junk, being dangerous the traveling pubite # ago, on a trip from Valdez to Seattle, it te claimed Tae Woe) F's 3 company, ia not rRovine Y A few wee ago th ante Clara for Valdez, but sprung and had to iar Paty Agen G, Lovett Wt first day ont sebiane Ao: ‘ . m _ D HEADQUARTERS prociatmtng the | MUST BE shown. | gaged in the sexsions of the upper | meeting | | the officials and learning the row | familiar with every nook of the © tal ‘What I + first of all.” he says, “Is to see how the bust | aking the | UUL "DUUUL UUUUUUUU OHO || i BUILDINGS At the me the First P | morrow | butiding several small church balld At the pres session of ting of the byterian church to evening the question of ings will be discunsed jent time the First chureh malotaine branches in the at West Seattle, South Seattle South Park, Latona and Capit | HEH, and it is the intention to erect | butlding Puptic MARKET PRICES TODAY | for theme dietrieta Sweet oranges are oo sale today | jat 18¢ per dosen. Strawberry plants, ready for planting, are qnoted at two dowen for tae. Home j}made bread, fresh, is on sale at three loaves for ite F stalls re cotved a supply of ska this morning and are selling them at two pounds for I5e. Liver is on wale at Se per dish Touay's que Ranch cage Washington 40¢, lowa creamery 66e; local ranch, 35¢ Potatoes, 16 to 18 Tha $1.26 to $1.55 per 100 Ibe. Fancy Swiss cheese, 250; Wis Ibe doz creamery 2 ibe. bbe wo for 25e; coustc full cream back, Ze 1b. smiter cheese, 1bc. Chickens, 18 to 20e Tb. Mutton chops, 12% @ 13% Ib; | rid steaks, i5¢ Ib; § sggeenarngen ibe Ib.; sirluin, 12% rouna steak, lie Ib; shoulder Stn 3 tbe. for BSc; hearts, lin each; tongues, 460 to 56c each; liver, be Ib; roasta, fe to de Ib. Onions, 2 bunches for be; bdofiing onions, 12 the for 26e. New nute-—-Filberts, t8¢ Ib; black walnuts, lhe ib; Ba lish walnuts, 19¢-20¢ 1b. almond Be 1b; pecans, 200 Ib; Brasil nota, lfe bb, mine nuts, I8e Ih.; cocomnuts, 10¢ to 120 each Brazil pds, lée each. Sweet potatoes, 4 Ibe. for te, Heota, 3 bunches for Se, Dried onions, 6 to 7 25. | Carrots, 3 bunches for be Radishes, 4 bunches for Se. Parsley, 3 bunches for 10c. Turnips, 2 bunches for Se. Artichokes, 4 for 26e. | Celery, 2 bunches for 140, Spinach to 6e Ib Cabbages, be to 10e; 1%c Ib. Sweet peppers. 25 cents doa Horseradish, 19¢ to 15¢ per Ib. labagas. 1%¢ tb. Sauerkrant, 3 Ibs. for 100, Lettuce, 2 for 6e. Lemons, Ihc to 20¢ per dos. gar, B6e Cider vine, gal Fancy apples, $1.00 to $2.26 bor; | come to this as the cause of the | military dropped from the cooking apples, 60¢600c per box; 1 Toa. for tbe. Pop corn, shelled, 2 Ibs. for 15¢; on cob, fe Ib. Cider, 49e to 50e per gation. Pineapples, 4c cach Flowers ‘arnations, 69 per roses, $1.00 per dozen; violets, 25c bunch; narciesua, 50¢ doz; iM of the val) 0c doz; tulips, 600 to Tic doz.; daffodils, 50e dos | Oranges, 19e to 260 dos. Grape fruit, Ie to The. Dried, prunes, 2 Ibs. for 16 | Dates, 9e-10¢ | e to i2e Ib. | Cranberries Pompking, 1%¢ 1b, Yakima honey, $1.50 gal; comb, 20¢; candied he 20c Ib; 2% | The., 450; 6 Ibs., 8 ! Fish ym cod, be per Ib.; salm lon trout 12%-17e Ib; salmon, Lhe per Ib; rock cod, 12%¢ Ib; halibut 2 tbe. 160; cat fish, 100 Ib; smeits, 2 tbe. for Ie; crabs, 16 herring. be Ib.; flounde chinook salma, ibs. 260; black cod, 100 Ib. Hubbard squash, Se Jb. The most distressing ca + f Salve University district, | pounds for! CALF SUPPORTERS | ‘CHURCH TO ERECT NEW ADVOCATES EMPLOYMENT BY STATE 1908. OF ALL UNEMPLOYED MEN To Edttor The Star be put to work ditching th | m, and Why are there unemployed men ax before, the state wo profit in @ state where nothing is finished, as would all the community. And where every honw bet-|all over the wtate there are public tered by labor acre of vacant land calls for more] work upon it? soctety to have men idle who want Everyone wants som « more'to work. It ts an economic loss to than he haa, something could | soctety, and it ls degrading to the be created by labor, and yet there/ men are unemployed tm What t» the “Lat ws recognize the fact that.) cause of the ever recurring lack of a8 a state, we are losing much emptoy ment? | money, and, as a people, we are It lew im our system of employ-| lowing self-respect and prospérity | ment through our bad system of furnish secretary for the Let ws consider the severe/ing work, and let ms set to work troubles of 1893, when armies of)to repair our machinery, This can idle men were marching acrows the country, demanding work, where no) lwork was to be had ‘There was then bo greater cause lfor idleness than there is now Then, as now, the land the crops good, and ra® material was abandant. There were fac torfes everywhere and men willing and anxious to run them. There wae great need of the products of these factories, fiat many people} while food waa de! farms, and many went half naked, while clothing lay piled in the warehouses. People! were suffering for the necessaries of life and these necessarios were| # right at hand and unused. All this) @ happened because men lacked the chance to earn what they needed.|@ It was Because of the bad system | # we work under, # thie aye | @ will fre} # * * . went hungry, eaying on the tem these bad o | quently recur Under this system the great © not free to labor | ‘0 manufac: | mass of people and feed themaelves or ture and ¢ themaeives except under a certain condition, and the condition ts, that the comparative ly few among us who are employers | of labor shall make money off the labor of thowe they employ; other wise, they will not hire “When sn 2 times come, there is nothing for the mass of ua to do. but to walt till the times right) eeeeesteee themselves; that is, to wait titi the| * employers can make money off our| * liabor, and then we may again be) * permitted to live \* } The cause of our trouble is right | * loyment of the mass enterprises, whieh conducted moment | here, that emp is left to privat | private enterprises are solely for gain, and the |gain is not forthcoming terprises are stopped }left without food, clothing j ter } This system denies us the oppor tunity to labor and produce what} we The production o' | necessaries of life Is in the hands jot the comparatively few, mt these few cannot money by producing what we need | they will not produce stoppage otf work and the conse | quent increase of the number of un-| bill by had been for our trouble would | ace -e-eennewemrae | employed | A remedy | be found In the laboring man be |comting his own employer, or the state or society becoming bis em ployer. The state has land that needs clearing. There are school lands that cannot be sold legally for jess than $10 an acre, that would he worth more than $100 an aere | when cleared, Lat idle men be em | ployed on these lands, at something lees than current wages, 60 as not other money to attract from |The state would make th general public would be relieved of }the duty or annoyance of giving to able-bodied men, Anyone! s asking the price of a meal c 1 bel referred to the place where could be had for the awit There ar only men alms work also desert irrigath and {dle men could juiring them producti ve “Gymnasium Supplies At Theodore Wilts & Co. First i work. | ™ and | ip » schools would be benefited. The | tr it for Kohler & every | roads that need t be done by work to all who are unemployed be Introduced in the | ture meeting at fertile, |{ng haw 9,661,000 acres jand. Th rich through Improving its land that (axes would disappear prompertty. be vastly increased. We want | best of po advancement of the welfare of the| people of Washington. | NATIONAL GUARD the | [4 now assured of a two w campment at Medical jake this sum and the | mer make | day gressman We always | that the $1,000,000 appropriation for for shampoo. be batit It ts not creditable to a civittzed | having the state offer A bill having this in view witt| logtale Olympia. Want of public become #0 ate might and genera! thorough ible discussion of this measures for the “LOCKE COLE. | Beattic, March 4, 1908," | i eee eee eee eee # |the auditorium of the First Pres CONLEY TELEGRAPHS HIS # byterian church. BROTHER. 7 President Wallace H. Lee re/ - vik % | ported for the committee appointed | (By United Pre: Jack Conley, a brother of ®| to prepare a memorial on the death | Gy 1CAGO Warden Frank Conley, of #|of Rev. Ren}. L. Parsons. }homs 43,000, Deer Lodge, Mont. received & Rev, W. A. Major will address oq 900. Hogs a telegram this morning from @/the Ministerial association at 18 | tive cents higher his brother, saying that he &|next sexsion, two weeks Monday | ae, 000. Lett had been stabbed six times # on “Humor im the Pulpit.” 2.000, Mix by nviets yesterday in an ® 194.60 to $4.7 attempt made by them * |to $5 ting along nicely * | Hoth of the Conleys are #/ | KANSAS CIT well known in Seattle. Jack # MISSIONARY INSTITUTE | cic. bogs, Conley has a home on Whid- #| isheep 6,000 by island and is inter * - - - j Seattle real estate. The Mon- * tana penitentiary is owned by ®/ he Conleys, who receive a & certain amount from the state # for each prisoner * * keke ekekeeeeee TO HAVE OUTING) National Guard ks’ en The Washington Col. George Lamping yester ved a telegram from Con Humphrey announcing which was military week maneuvers, house the committee Inst restored Soap—it's the best All druggists, *** TO LATE TO PACIFY. UYVESANT PIANO.—This is an art Soap Lake }lowing night ae * * * 7 BANK CLEARINGS . a * * Beattie * a ¢ , * # Halge * * Yacoma * a ave le ' HO * * Delete Ul '* . Portiand * fe Clenrin fay ..91,1 0% | ‘ 0 * 7 * eee rrr rrr rrree HARN DECREE WILL STAND Under a the supe granted M. J. Harn against ¢ ine Hi will wtar Mra. Harn started action to ound that It had bee ained by fraud, bat a der er inte posed to th tition of J.T. La ler, the woman's attort * : ained thie 1 by the court whieh held that the on did not u nt showing of the SURVIVORS OF WRECK ARE RESCUED The schooner John F. Miller was wrecked on Unimak taland the awka Ja 8, accord also in dire which arrived the erday, reported * had hat an unknown schoor » aid of the shipwrecked marines 1 taken them aboard and was roing to Pirate Cove The John F, Miller left Frisco mber 2 with lies for Alaska fishing stations PAULHAMUS TO SPEAK. gone to th thamus w Senator W. H. Pa ons the Ken ow eve ha At & pom at given to the clab members and at § o'clock the doors will be so that the public can hb senator's address MISSIONARY MEETING FOR THE LAYMEN At the Presbyterian Ministertal session held in the First Presby terian church this morning, Rev western district Presbyterian Dwight E. Potter PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN ESP ECIALLY “| TAKES CHILDREN. ON A G00-MILE SLED JOURNEY FOR THIS NEWSPA- PER AT WINNIPEG SHOW MRS. RAY AND HER CHILDREN AF- TER THEIR ARRIVAL AT WINNIPEG, (Seattle Star NIPBG think of making WIN would ae tw days. formar daring three children ber This trip with the ing two sleds feet wid » dogs to each | The distance was covered most a record-breaking per pluc it is ats eve the great north The unbroken wildern with snow at this few and heaped season | board of foreign missions, gave an | address on “Work of Foreign Mix | sions.” Upon his motion, it was decided by the clerny to endorme the plans for a laymen's missionary |meeting in connection with the |coming of Mr. J. Campbell White of New York, secretary of the nal Laymen's Mission, March and 27 It was decided to give a banquet Wednesday evening, March 26, in honor of Mr. White, and at which the laymen and clergy would be present. Thursday evening will be devoted to laymen's prayer meetings in the respective churches, In preparation for a large mass meoting to be held the fol Friday, Mareh 27, in The Foreign Missionary Institute for Sunday Schoo! Workers will be | sheep 6, 8 held this evening from 5:30 to o'clock in the Westminster Presby terfan church. On the program are the Rev. D. O. Gormley, Dr. D. L. Potter and Miss Julia Frazier, At 6 o'clock a basket dinner will be srved, the Iudies of the church providing the coffee $2.50 Croghan Guaranteed Razor and Croghan Swivel | Razor Strop . - $1.49 Razor is ed. finely and guar be free to held and cut extra bi Witch ' 6 Pipe Ragor ‘ ality, fancy Hie Ras S188 ' pinning, Clause or Union Rase S140 © W. Co. Magnetic Razor... 81.25 1 Re Safety Razor Oe . afety Razor 51.50 Bale ends Ma F. M. SPINNING 1310 Second Avenue Safety | At Rev Dr uled to address the confere City to the OMAHA, Neb. cotpts, A spent several years in 4 short talk, and stated that espectally at Val FW hogs To the reg: G. Clevenger Alaska, gave good Geld ‘ordova and Seward Colgrove Problems. large amount of business pe churches the address postponed until the next meeting LIVE STOCK RECEIPTS. Exclusive Service.) brave youngat eight drawn by ccomplished aversed in an FIELD FOR “CHURCHES IN ALASKA meeting of the! Baptist ministers this morning the question of establishing churches tn Alaska was brought up and a ¢ mittee appointed matter ar Was | es March cattle opened 1 $4.40 to $4.75 5; rough b light $4.40 to $4.6 igher and sheep strong 8,000, cattle 8,000, READ THE DR Di ALPRED RUGLESS I) Prices: would be impenetrable. * lurk on every band route followed th e Nelson | which empties into the Hu bay at York Facto t Nor House at the head Lake Winnipeg. Then she sh the hore to the southern ¢ the ake al, a “ ent From it w 66-mile trip acro countr to Winnipeg On the trip up the Nelson river was not unusual for the party to make from 40 to 50 miles a day »ver the fee. The dogs were of the pecullar breed used through all the north country, half wolf, half %. bred for sledge work expecially Much of the trip Mrs. Ray walked or ran alongside the sleda It was only on the rivers or In the 1 valleys that could ride. ehfldren rode most of the w quently it was necessary for all to walk in crossing the ridges She escaped encounters with wild animals, although scores of brown bears were sighted and countless wolves prowled about thelr camp at night. She killed several deer and much other smaller game. At slept in a small tent, which was bundled upon one of the night they | mii by day Amus pesca lil Moore Theatre JOHN CORT. Week ‘ la Shetle W. & Hart, | The Grand JOHN CORT, Manager. All Thin Week, Joe W * New Yort Production of the MM Gayety DREAM © Little Chip and and Lyrics by & j ste bY Vietor jon of © neada Seattle Theatre | | | Present Their Greatest Som WHAT WOMEN W “The Denver Expres Lois Theatre 04; Ind. 4334, Seattle, Runvet a CAWLINY.” on of T. Daniel Frawtey night is Ladies’ Night "AGES VAUDEN! Unequaled Vaudeville. All This Week—Daily Matiness. The Kobn Trio, Vocalists and Instras Delphine Hayes, ~ COLISEUM Seattle's Leading Vandeville House. reserved seats, 20c. 46, 9:26 dally, Both Performances phones 51 My NEW ACTS TODAY—2:90 | Golden & Hughes, Loper & Leper, and | 7 Other Huge Successes. | Beatties Poputar Vaudevilie House i) I AR 2 Performances Dally, a 30. 00. Prices—100 and 200; bor seats, 200 TODAY | erin, Vocals con's Mu i Pe ard & Ward. an L NEW ACTS Vora De Bassin Wat amily, Tempest Trio, Leom- ‘Other Ile Specialties Orpheum *,ty5 “ Dally at 2:90, 7, | Sand dpm | New Vaudeville —T Ble Acts, Heade@ by thé FAMOUS SIDONTAS. Lyric Theatre will amuse you ’ ase y Deautiful costumes to delight you. , ving, pleturee Sa. hece Tues " Matineon 100 and der 486 Chance for every 5c Star Theatre 906 Second Avenue This Weea— THE WINNING OF ro. sor.”