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Protect Yourself! At Powstates, Hotets of Kinew here Get the, Original aoa Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK * ° : The Food Drink for All Ages Mik, Malt Grain Wextract, te ng Vowder Not in Any Milk Trus! IF" Insist on “HORLICK’S' ‘Take m package home Paid Advertisement A. J. GODDARD Mr. Goddard's persistent loyalty | to the people’s interests, his ability as well as fidelity to every pledge, are called attention to by the follow ing letters which are but a few of those he has re a From a fellow councilman “Daring the past year [had ample opportunity to observe the conscien Adolf A {too BAT ‘ Too Bat! Mayne [NAF MORE CWTHES ON TOMMY, VAIT, 1 TARE OFF my i wat? 7 “ Der Sane J as Yesrernay — 456 Pounrs, YOu Har NoD LOST A Ounce ADOVF, NX tious manver in which Mr. A, J Goddard has represented the people | In the elty eounct) “He haa been always on the job, and bas given careful and earnest consideration to all people alike tn every part of the city “His unquestioned Integrity, bis eneray in the interests of the peo- ple, bis keeping constantly before him the welfare of the city, his long experience, his honesty of purpose, his evident ability—to all these 1 am pleased to give my unqualified testimony “ROBERT B. HESKETH.” “Mr. A. J. Goddard, “Seattle, Wash. “Dear Mr, Goddard “Tam glad to see that you are sti in the race for councilman. “Your constant and aggressive fight against the interests that are trying to prevent the building of the municipal car line has won for you the respect of the advocates of municipal ownership, and your con stant and successful fight to make pablic Improvements more reason- able in cost certainly merits your re- turn to the coune!!. I wish to thank you for the considerate attention and time you have given me tn matters pertaining to Improvements of the west side and | sincerely hope that you will remain in your Present position for the next three years. it would be a pleasure to me t6 be of assistance to you in your campaign. ‘Very truly yours, “GEO, R. COOLEY.” — TEETH rE AWe, The Albany Dentiets, to t People's Hank Huiiding. at Second and Pike Sireet, are doing Dental Work at a price so reaxonable for first-class work that every person In Seattle can afford to have the Very best Dental services at our of- fices. Come tm and have your Dents werk dome at your own We your practice and we will you. Examination and ad- Vice without charge. 90 days we are doing rvs Dental Work all bigh-clase at cont of material, to adver- tise our work. All work is guaranteed by our specialiats, and the high-grade ma- I< used insures you that your work will be the best. Albany Painless Dentists On the serond floor of the Peopie’s corecr of Serond Av- t and Mac- 1 &) Southw Take ele- vator or with up February Announcement the benefit of our pat nan 75 per cent” continu discount All piwm work—<dyeing. cleantny willowing and remaking. MODEL MILLANEKY 527 People’s Bank Bids. TRUNKS AND suUIT We manufacture our goods right here In Seattle well them at 921 First Av ner Madison. M. 882, Ind. 1655. am EdwinBrowa,D.0.S. Seattle’s Leading Dentist 713 FIRST AVENUE You Save a» Jar, and cam pay. T do not 1 work it with th hepriced a Base Combine Dentists for less than! my | half their price, I guarantee ork. jand wo lrules, and told a graphic story of | | Workers in the Massachusetts city Work at prices | mpete with cheap den-| “?’'ll Put the S. E. Co.’s Attorneys Out of City Hall,” Says E. J. Brown: “Clean house.” That is what Dr, E Brown wants to do in the corporation counsel's office. ‘or 15 years continuously it has been steeped with se vility to special interests. The Seattle Electric Co.'s attor- neys’ offices are within a stone's thtow of the city attorney's office, and indeed, right ont of the former offices come the deputies in the corporation counsel's office “What has been the result? In the case of the present incumbent, J. E. agreement with the attorneys of the Independent Telephone company by which Bradford told the supreme court that he did not think the company’s raising of its rates, contrary to the franchise avith the city was anfair; that rates the comparty was losing money. And, of course, people lost and the company is collecting higher rates now “Bradiord came into court and & formal atiswer to a complaint gave his opinion that the recall law in the city char ter was unconstitutional, This-was to help out certain coun cilmanic friends of his. Only a year before he defended the recall in the same court. And now, when he is afraid that his opposition to the people's progressive measure will hurt hir in the election, he again comes into court and files a second answer, in the same case, in which he says: “I do not know whether the recall was legal or not “Bradford has been a city official for four years. Yet he admitted to the Quiz Congress that he has been in the police court but twice. The corporation counse! appoints the city attorney, who conducts all police court cases, Yet, in face of Bradiord’s admission, he says he is now, after four years, g to begin reforms in police court methods, Do you think you'll get it? You will if 1 am elected, for I have been in the exy jail for the great crime of speaking on the streets. The third degree will have no place if | am elected, and cach man arrested will get an opportunity to communicate with his relatives, friends and attorneys.” “ Brown has been living in Seattle about 12 years. He is a law partner of Judge Parker, and has conducted many im portant cases successfplly. Brown has three sons, two of whom are at the University of Washington and the other at Broadway high school. In addition to his law work, he man ages a dental company the STRIKERS’ CHILDREN» WASHINGTON, March 2-—Ill;ger, leaders in the fight for clad and impoverished, 13 children Sweeping federal investigation of of the striking textile workers of M@ brutal treatment by the Law + pn - rence police of the strikers, escort- oreo ane * aotted en ed the children to the house office y before the house committee on | PUiding HEN ts THE INCUBATOR For you--The Ideai. Built for climate. Eight suoccessful of service. Sold only by the Lilly Co, Foot of Main St. the conditions against which the! rebelled. Representatives Wilson and Ber. — Single Tax Single Tax 95 Per Cent Of All Seattle Homes Will Pay LESS Taxes Under Amendment No. 2 The Erickson SINGLE TAX Aniendment. Downtown property will pay MORE. For example: Ist av. (Pike to Yesler) 2nd ay. Yesler 3d av, Yesler .. Endorsed By the Cen- tral Labor Council Favored By The Seattle Star Total Increase , Single Tax Saves Taxes To the laborer, homeowner, merchant—BVERY ONE but the speculator What better time to save than NOW—NOW Single Tax Means MORE jOBS BETTER TIMES MORE BUSINESS BETTER PAY What Better Time to Get Them Than NOW? SINGLE TAX MEETING DREAMLAND RINK, Sunday, Mareh 3d, 2 P. M “The Single ‘Tax as a Religious Movement.” Prominent Speakers. Admission Free Come Help Sing, “The Land Song.” Single Tax Campaign Committee 703-6 Northern Bank Bldg. Main 8000. ttempts to Che |New Fleet Bradford, the city’s attorneys went into an under the old| y | iwith cruelty, and each seeking @ TALK TO CONGRESS nis ftacks by mutinous sotdiers, a de- 1 Thi i at Sc jes DBor's STRANGE } SvaBose tf TAx@e OFF * My Coar§ wi STAR—SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1912. ales, But Work Is" Rather Coarse - i bors Funny! ANA | Tec. You-— 1 Tae STA NO CHANGE ) rr ASO MY be 3 a for Sound (By United Prees Leased Wire) WASHINGION, Mar, 2.—The navy department today ordered the biishment of a new fleet with quarters at the Puget Sound | This will be called the nd will be un- |der command of Rear Admiral R. [noida At first the fleet will consist jof the battleship Oregon, and the erulsers Pennsylvania, Raleigh and St. Louis. Later the cruisers West Virginia ‘ Cleveland, Chattanooge uod Milwaukee will be ‘The orders issued today Inangu jrate & new naval polley of keeping rily out of commis isioned and ready tor n instant’s notice, Mother and Son Fight Each Other REDWOOD CITY, Cal, March 2 With mother and stepsoh lrayed against each other, the fight for the $176,000 estate of John J | Moore, well known club man, who was shot and killed n San Mateo January 27 by 6 R. Timothy, was begun here today Moore cut off his widow with $1, jleaving the bulk of bin estate |his only son, Jefferson, There was much marital trouble between the | Moores, each charging the other | sion [tea divorce. The divorce was denied Moore med that Mrs. Moore was in the automobile with Timothy the night the two men efgaged in a pistol duel Diaz Is Ready to “Come Back” (By United Presse Leased Wire) NEW YORK, Mar. 2.—Generai Porfirio Diaz, former president of Mexico, is ready today to return to Mexico and tead the people of the republic out of their troubles, ac- cording to a statement given out here by a trusted friend of Diaz. The |former president and his son are now in the south of France, U. $. TROOPS ORDERED TO PEKIN TIENTSIN, March 2—To protect foreign lives and property from at- tachment of United States troops \today was ordered to Pekin. ~ action was deemed necesery beca President Yuan Shi ap. parently is unable to cope with the situation. $25,000,000 Loss in Pekin Raid (By United Press Leasea Wire) PERKIN, March 2 fronted on jail sides by frenzied mutineers who, throughout the day, continued & campaign of massacre, looting and burning, Pekin tonight, with) one-sixth of its area devastated by fire, is Uteraliy shaking in terror. Taking advantage of the cover of| jdarkness, the mutinous soldiers! late tonight forcibly seized several | freight cars, piled them to the doors with loot and left the city The retreating soldiers fired at civilians who attempted to inter fere, but no casualties resulted. | Hundreds of blocks in the north | west section of the city are in ruins, the latest estimates placing the 5,000,000. The his |torlc old market place is gutted ‘Pet Dog Saves Mother and Child (By, United Pres SPOKANE, M. loyalty and brav pet bulldog “Bum, Farrar and her 3yearoid child owe their lives today. , While Fireman Farrar, of en. Gine station six, was answering a fire alarm in another portion of the city his own home, near the station, burned, T house wi in flames when “Bum” saw them, He dashed through the amoke into the bed room, where mother and child slept, and awakened them by barking loudly. They escaped a few moments before the floors collapsed. 30,000 TAILORS STRIKE BERLIN, Mareh 2.—Thirty thou sand man tajlors, representing 31 lelties throughout Prussia, are on letrike today he men are dissat |isfied with thelr wage scale and working conditions | QUEEN ALEXANDRA iLL | LONDON, March 2.—Queen Alex andra, who is suffering from influ enaa, today is reported to have guf- fered a relapse, and {8 in a serious condition. King George was in- formed of hix mother's illness and hurried to her bedside, | will have the desired effe and Pirates! Police Patrol Can’t Find ’Em I remember the black wharves and the siips, And (he nea tides tossing free And the Spanish sailors with bearded lipn, And the beauty and mystery of the ships, And the magic of the sea. And the voice of that wayward song is singing and saying still; A boy's will is the wind's will, And the thoughts of youth are jong, long thoughts.” The police patrol Telegram was on ber first trip last night, look- ing for pirates along (he Seattle water front, She bad been out since & o'clock: it wasn nearly midnight now, and~she hadn't found any. Bought by the city and handed over to the police department to expert- ment with, the launch will henceforth patrol the front between # at night and 4 in the morning, ln an effort to put an end to thieving from boate and warehounes Now she was cutting with her sharp nose the stiff tides ruebing Sound-ward through the east waterway, She slipped past mile after mile of ships, docks and warehouses, which bulked big and dark and mysterious age'nst the sky, There was a miat around the moon, The stars shone coldly bright A® the Telegram sped on, the wavelets gurgied a lullaby against her bows and ¢ engine bommed a rhythmic song, Far away the lights of the city pricked out the streets—-rows on rowe—against the black curves of the bills, In the darkness between the rows, which the lights accentaated, were homes, though one could not see them, and in them people, preparing, perhaps, for bed. And theatres, with all their make-belleve. - And cafes with eating and drink ing, music and laughter. Over there people were plotting, intriguing, smiling, weeping, loving, fighting, working, playing, sinning, repenting, living, dying. But here was another, a more tranquil, world. Here was ‘the beauty and mystery of the ships and the magic of the se: “Red” Hughes, ancient mariner and sesistant to the harbor mas- ter, shivered hin Umbers, Which is what ancient mariners always do when not otherwise occupted. “Red” wan at the wheel, to oblige the police department, an this was the Telegram's maiden trip as a police patrol. And “Red” knows the Telegram as a mother knows her cbild. The launeh had left the G. T. P. dock at 8. She had squeesed be tween & freboat and the lean bows of the Admiral Sampson, with an inch of seaway to spare, She had headed for Smith's cove, where the levia than Minnesota lies resting, after her run from Japan, She had cireled around to West Seaitte, past Luna park, threaded her way through a fleet of yachte#—the aristocracy of the vasty deep—dipping daintily at anchor, nudged scows and coastwise freightere—the rough-necks—off Harbor istand, tying black and fat on the edge of an eerie world, and now she was in the east waterway In the dark and stillness one could imagine all sorts of things. Pirates’ Smugglers! Skull and crossbones @nd a plank to walk! Buried treasere! Sixteen sailors on a dead man's chest! Yo-ho-ho' and & bottle of rum! “Red” sang a deep-sea chanty and told of the prowess of “Castiron” Johnson, “a big man with a sandy mustache, who was a bellion in a mix-up,” bet who, some three years ago, got ten years for smuggling on Puget sound ‘Castiron,” ft seems, was the last of the really notable | sea robbers to sail these waters, Those remaining are pestiferous pikers Alas for romance! Our pirates in these degenerate days employ the methods of porch-climbers, and steal, not Spanish doubloons, but brass machinery parte. We digress, To return gracefully to the narrative, let us repeat that Red” Haghes shivered his timbers. Sergt. C. L. Jackson, formerly of Georgetown, the Telegram's new skipper, was on the lookout forward. Officer J. R. Robinson, formerly of the motorcycle squad, was familiar. izing himeelf with the engine. To the straining ears of the sergeant came faintly the sound of oars FAT IS FATAL Fat Is Fatal to Health, Comfort, Happiness and Often Fatal to Life. 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You star ation points, dashes and aste What the tion of Verbal skyrockets, Roman pi technical cuss words do you mean by trying to run med head?” or words to the same effect Gentle reader, the man in the fisherman, and he had been engl #0 way the Izaak Waltons, are ke bous moon is shining The Telegram apologized to whadows. Jed-bannered ekiff was not @ for salmon pest at night, kif and slipped the Makes Inter Admissi * The funeral of the “Taxpayers’ Economy place when Capt. John L. Anderson, of the Steamboat Company, over his own signature, words: “I admit that I am interested in the Port Commission Proposition Six.” Capt. Anderson has seen that subterfuge is no les available. Had he fought the Bellevue Ferry from the start, he would today stand in a better ly fore the community, for we have been info ers right along what the real and only o ferry was. Grasping at a straw of tangible opposition, C derson says that the ferry is a real estate scl per cent of King County, he thinks, has fenly ; into the real estate business. The farmers and daly from Kirkland to Renton, and from Lake to Lake Sammamish, the Post-Intelligencer, The Star, the Chamber of Commerce, the Club, the Seattle Automobile Club, the Pomona! the Municipal League, the Port Commission, the the East Side Commercial Club and hundreds of $ merchants have all gone on record in favor of d vue Ferry for a selfish personal motive. laugh, Capt. Anderson. Capt. Anderson, you know that your statement the Bellevue Ferry proposition is a real estate se ABSOLUTELY FALSE. You remember that meeting of two hundred farmers you called at last December. You were made to understand the voice and the money of all those farmers public ferry. You further know that the Bellevue: Committee was appointed by those same ers, told you a few plain truths in unmistakable tones December mass meeting. ce When Capt. Anderson makes the statement Bellevue Ferry will lose $3,000 a month he is romancing. The Bellevue run is the most Lake Washington today and the Bellevue : one year, will be earning a surplus over all ex] : Capt. Anderson’s asking the voters to turn down & ferry proposition so as to give tha Anderson 5 Company a “square deal” is, indeed, touching. ¥ poor monopoly. Let's shut downthe city light ony" give the private lighting companies a “squared ‘ have the street cars stop running after 12 o'clock to give the poor taxicabs a chance. The Anderson Steamboat Company has been tt found wanting. It has paralyzed the growth of the Washington country long enough. Lack of a that the farmers can get in with their teams is resp for the fact that there are whole square miles of forest within six miles of Pioneer Place. Tur Capt. Anderson's ad and read it. He admits in agraph that the Bellevue Ferry will be a great the country across the lake, but he doesn’t cause it will hurt him. Every public utility #® to hurt the private monopoly that it displaces. 88% try is run, however, on the principle of the to the greatest number. BCH or There is an overwhelming public demand for the vue Ferry, as instanced by the long list of inde cited above. When the ballots are counted day, Capt. Anderson will find that no votes Sav of himself and his employes have been cast #8 PROPOSITION SIX. { Bellevue Ferry Committe | , | UU \ } 867 Empire Bldg. E. P. Moran, Phone Main 911. SAY YOU. SAW IT