The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 11, 1919, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR—SATOC inl JANUARY 11, 1si8, The Sexttle Star 1S ALASKA SALMON INDUSTRY DUNECTORY OLDER NOT TO COMMITTING SUICIDE BY CRUEL 60 BEFORE THE ° " Letter Followed _ Attorney sat Law by Death Message , * | PAGE 11 (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) St ttle’s Stockade Hell nd . 1 1 wyer nauitation. fre nf ential. Genera act Ce ens 4 Lowman 1 Ma ‘AN FRANCISCO, Jan re , 1 SHH ae — | mont Older, editor of the Call, today q , . B. RALL— ESTANT ISH BY ERNEST J. HOPKINS ; “ By Uéwin 4. Brown en. a anes, Free N “9 Announced he will refuse to appear at ulde, (N. B. A. Staff Correspondent) a : vag ; | Thin week, I am going to take ave. Main Sehind thes feuniliar ous F ( 16 San Francisco Bar asnoc a te Siete aiseaealied 1 thi nil supper tal \ Y S you inland nitarium, and Wome em ue te en ee or Your Supper | |stiom ‘Tueaday nia, when it boxina Han into: court wiih tay esettion for ORIN—T01 CENTRAL | ernment officials of California, Ore-| This was the fest step in filling that can of salmon you'll | 1M lnventiqation of | sensational writs of habeas corpus, but first I ¢ Main 3%. References: |” ) open for supper—the men and the meat of the big Alaska fisherins, | Sh!" ee® Which Older made againet I h 4 KugKeation to offer on this . ewriter Co. gon and Washington, by an investi | § ( W. Henshaw, former justice of the $15,000,000 street car deal Foundry ¢ gation just ended, have unearthed | -————~ aetna aati ~ state supreme court ‘ It will be remembered that the | I t his head i hw transaction se ——=« | grisly disclosures of labor abuses, Older said in effect that he would street car purcha wan originally | fore this writ of right was acknow!l- oy poreen ene i - | rivaling the worst cruelties of the | not aid the bar association until it based upon the theory that the | deed a# a principle of fundamental “S04 Stewart, at Times ry African slave traffic | enlarged the scope of ita investiga stress of war necessitated the pur. | aw by those exercising the powers lain 4°) | American and immigrant workers | tion to ine the activities of Din chase of the #o as to give Of kovernment. Its plain words and a shanghaied, or lured by false tales | trict Attorney Vickert, who prowe better service to our shipyard work. | Meaning are that “no freeman is to Chattel Loans ; MONRY TO LOAW faboard rotten sailing ships; hait-| cuted T J. Mooney ers be deprived of his life, liberty or e from $10 to $100 made quickly , ated wretches, sodden with opium, | The charges were all included tn The public records will show the | Property except by the judgment ot confide ntlally (om furnitur driven at revolver point to 16-hour | the Densmore report on the Moor appraised value, by the state tax ae peers, and the law of the oe naa, live stock, etc. fts of ceaseless toll; cannery | ease, and Older asserted the Hen: | commission of all the property be |It is our ma’ gainst rowdy M4 eC Smite Bide Bn, aces. | hands, starving and detirious trom | shaw charges were “comparatively longing to the Stone-Webster cor. | Political offictals jailing a man under c — Chinese diet of kelp, rice and beans, | unimportant poration in King county to be | What is known as false imprisonment ee }left to wander and die in Alaskan | Urging an investigation of the| about $16,000,000; that is, everything | OF fake charges Font Schenk Chew, TL Ate | wilds; a “system” ascending from | Mooney case by the bar, Older said: | they own in King county; light,| Before going into court, I had in- tion free. 212 Denny Mid. 1408 2nd, | UNderworld pawnshops and gin mills “Instead of doing what the presi-| power, real property, street car|formed myself with extreme care Colinteral Loans ~*~ | ‘Rte the mahogany-walled offices ot | dent wants, t has made tracks, equipment and their coal | 4nd caution as regards the physical SEY LOANED ON r opt, | Pespectable American capitaliste—| the case worse ing that mines; their street railway and Dealth of my nts, and was powl Rae of calue The Kelabic saz | these are regular features of the pro- | Mooney shall spend st of his ' : eqdipment comprises about one-half | tive that any judge, who heard evi- ind ave. * “| cess whereby the American house days in the penitentiary | Sergt. Paul E. Parker of their holdings in King county, | 4¢nce and gave my clients’ causes a Detective Agencies wife gets her canned salmon Within a few days of a measage|th® valuation of which should be|Teasonable, fair and honest judicial RE CORN STECTIVE How Expose Was Made | bout $4,000,000. Upon this basis, | investigation, would be compelled to ie COAST DETECTIV FE ged cevovnd Andee from her soldier husband saying. “I|tne people of Seattle are getting in| liberate them, so I went before the female o OI rca on gp thr seme san well and happy,” Mre. Marie tne neighborhood of a $7,000,000|C0urt and presented the following night. Office, & | ers, who wast — ager oes Parker, Fairfield hotel, Sixth ave.lienon handed to them when they | Petition for my clients Physicians and Surgeom jealmon-packing gang for patriotic and Madison wt, received a cable puy the car company at $15,000,000 |"TO THE JUDGES OF THE #U- SS SSeS Women's | "ensons brought about the exposure gram announcing his death. |under the present price and arrange-| PERIOR COURT OF KING ders readjusted. 4818 Stone || by — beg Soggy es = Sergt. Paul B, Parker, who died in ment; nor is that all, because the| COUNTY 3 Green Lake car. North 2385./ ing to California State Labor Cor action, according to the war depart: | people of Seattle are being betrayed.|_ “Your petitioner, E. L. T., respect: Turkish Baths [missioner John P. McLaughlin and/ acentent Lamacaiies rae, £ bo ment report, had been previous " The original bargain ~ strayed. sony represents to the court: RIAL TURKISH RATHS 1764 | Ms assistant, L. H. Saxon, have been ; By we’ | commended “for conspicuous ser lines provided that the lines were! “J. That on, towit, the Sth day . Union, if plans of the state develop rth ave. lectric cabinete, | Sing on for years. ¢ nal Wavetiel te, Gute 40 my|to be paid for from the net earn-|0f May, 1918, he was arrested, as peutic lamps, tubs, Rhew Laws to enable officials to control ment bureau of the Seattle Chamber hi Jer of he believes and alleges, without # fam my specialty Louis | thy t now being sought of Commerce materialize artillery f by the commander of |ings, and that the company would|he believes and alleges, Sixers. chiropodist, mechano-ther. | (n° system | Are Hew laine os Thru this bureau, a conference of | the 216th field signal battalion 9ist/take utility bonds secured by the| Warrant, by a police officer of the a Phene Main 3212, day or/in threo statas, —_ oe ecg vowing obo Yo iratgrand ind 7 SR car company’s property only, butas|City of Seattle, without being in- a ° i to block a ho, ; or y a might senekete are aligned t i rection of the state, will meet in Se-| Parker enlisted Nov. 4, 1917, and/the bonds now issued provide that|formed as to the nature of the a dunk | “The “e tem” last summer caught attle in the assembly room of the| Went overseas in July, 1918, In Se-|the car lines must be paid from the| Charge, if any, which was against [EASKA JUNK Co. 1120 Fi oti spre ¢ William | Chamber of Commerce, January 20,|attle he was connected with the Pa-|gross earnings before the operating |bim, and has ever since been, and S _Biiott 3291 ja Tartar in the person ¢ , tp tulsa eakeecuechaeiaehen sastheant Waid ohone & graph com-|expenses are paid, we see that if| still is unlawfully detained and re- Witeox of Berkeley, a landlord and) * | rer of the|the ro do no! ke lent | #trained of his liberty by the Police w a | of promoting the industry pany, and was a member of the| ada t take in sufficient | PIREPROOY BESS ee Eee weebes. | Wices Bere Spectalists in the breeding and| Elks” lodge . money to pay the bonds and oper-| Department of said City of Seattle, tral Storage Co, | Uncle Sam had contracted for the} heard a rearing of hogs will present statintica entire salmon pack, and | labor famine was theeatened. He and a hy by gt ucrarg d wf “enlisted” as a means of doing his converting much of the state's land! Public Markets {vit g-raising, algo feeding and mar keting, prevention of disease and or. “Crimps” Get Men ps ganization and cooperation among | Wilcox with A. H. Warner of San WESTLAKE—MONDAY | ~ 7 breeders. | Stalls 35-36, cabbage, to 1b | Diego and James Hennessey of Troy, cada thise re tk FD LITTLE PIKE ae teat cesar, Montana, revealed « “ring” that} __ | hue and Dr. L. C. Pelton, of the atate 4Be Tb.; loin pork che Voorn egg Pasco or tan |department of agriculture; Supt. W 3 choice Iamb chops, 25 Tb.; pagnate new ly get the A Dog Is: Fin B A. Linklater, of the Western Wash- Beef, 5c Tb. | Stall 105 summer cannery hands for the a Fine 0 Atte ut V oO |ington Experiment station, and Prof wees, lange, pk: jo®| Alaskan factories by letting cc t |W. 8. Thornber, of the Washington : te: : tracts to Chinese “crimps.” T W Lead Dog’ Life, S | State college gh, * BEN ‘“crimpe” agree. for & lump eum, to ants to ad a 8 - e, Hays By reason of climate, availabliity JOS. DANZ, Mgr. 19e and 15¢; | supply sufficient hands. M Wh ft fred, RES wf i an oO as ice of feed, proximity of markets and pa sare ay oe peng Poe The Chinese, in turn, sublet | oun similar inducements, Washington ae” |G end? © Lichtenberg, Is the canine man's fri Le their contracts to Mexican, Ital- ian, Filipino or negro “straw- tenberg and Nelaon Dogs are cussed. 129, Premier N. Prim-Ost_ chees Y. cheese, D.; ‘ should be able to export hogs in bulk mays Mrs. contrary |large numbers instead of importing | mean eee bosses,” who get foremen’s pay humane representative of the | brutes, evileyed and malicious, fang-| them, according to experts, who are | oa 26, fine granulated sugar, #| and the additional privilege of loca riff's office; also Leif Nelson, | ed ataviama, with snaris, growls and back of the new movement for state or | Sh pte nee = fleecing eng" so aette gir eal of 910 BE. 65th at eiane yawpa, according to ( ge Wallace development. . seq a *| ling games, liquor and vice. says George Wallace, o 2| This difference of opinion per —-— — ° Yee. ‘Stall | | og Roy re alls! ‘rhe Chinese contractors sell them) 14th ave. & | plexes the police, and makes their Dogs are affectionate, loving, kind-| work difficult. opium. | atures, with eyes that express| For, when Leif Nelson The in men are actually obtained, ly in tearn, re SPOOK LETTERS | READ IN COURT ‘The divorce suit of Mrs. Elia Cudi hee against Edward Cudihee, three many cases, thru the aid of pawn-|soul stuff, « mity of devotion and) ported that his pet dog, Fido, had S5c can Rogers’ 4 brokers, schlock shop “merchants, ard t trust, according to Mra, Lich-| been poisoned Frid teport Clerk Se pke. dive-keepers, and other adepts of the) Ray Newton brushed a tear from wel ‘ge cans milk, 25¢; , 25¢; 2 Ibs. choice PLACE—MONDAY Tie, Stat and naid man who wo shanghal route; these ye members of the “ring.” ‘The contractors, by exorbitant “re result’ BURGLARS LAYING IN SUPPLY OF GROCERIES 14 poison a set nd.” ‘The dog is a low-d wn t ‘ > 's | charges for food, transportation i cE then cacne George Wallace to & m= ted e ant anae isc | amd clothing, with gambling | When K. Ixhida, Japanese grocery-|the police station, stamping penne apa Hs Bea tet | ery American ee oe debts and a system of advance | man, opened his place of business | mad, to tell of a “viclous brut moraine ¥ | 1.89 ‘delivere fe ’ a Dointocs, $240 sack deliv.| money, year by year return the [saturday :norning. at 634 Summit | the boarding house where he Iiv Cudibee took the stand Friday! ; No. 1 white navy beans. 2 Iba| Workers to Seattle, Portland or met hie! "Friday he bit three different pe0-| srrerneon and testified that bis wife Stall 66, large can Carnation| San Francisco penniless, fam- Bnet Bis! bie, and he's too mean and cussed - 2 “ ” made many trips to clairvoyants and | ‘mili Le: 20c cam salmon, fise,| Mahed and tl. } and ornery (0 live." George "| mediums, and that he didn’t like it.| oc can on, "15¢ : ‘ © can K. C baking Meanwhile the canned salmon, for} Desperate at the high cost of liv. | claimed Yeap tng yg ome pore wider, 6c 3 It developed that this canine had chased George around the apartment which the corporation pays the con- tractors 50 cents a case plus trans can Maggi or parties: Ne soap, had visited ing, a party, who can read tea leaves and cards, | | : # Se Bi portation, selis at wholesale for $8.40) the four Gaop ne ‘MTN SSEY| threw men. Geclared tira Cudines In rebataal’ | so ent Co. basement. fresh fish, |to $9.40 @ case. | Following is the list of atolen|, The? Ray Newton said: “I'd lke! Atorney Fulton, for Cudihee, in- Shaering. ite wag dd Sal > Industry Suicidal | goods: Two slabs bacon, one large | °° gre rg “9 — ig ~ troduced notes which Cudihee testi- h sole, 10e Tb. Stall 21, K Naturally, as facts leak out, each| boiled ham and one raw ham vig 6 Se bee. 56 ike "to ee his wide had taken at readings hy 7c pt. Sugar! summer finds fewer men willing to| pounds butter, four cans coffee, Set a crack at — Uke that | with mediums and fortune tellers. Regare who protects dogs with the appr and vested in the © Lichtenberg. al of the . Bor-| 14tee can; 6 bars large Bob White, work in Alaska, A great American | Cans milk, 12 boxes macaroni Mra. Cudihee admitted writing them. lindustry is committing suicide, say | peas, 6 one pound cans Among these notes are such state ocoa, 12 cans | MARY wuthority . 26¢ pkg; large Se8lthe quthorities. Already the halibut|pork and beans, 12 cans beans, 12 Prat 8 : ments as “he will deed you the| Deel Cee Ane Sonne’ beac, | fisheries are passing to Canadian | Cans sardines, 1 pound tea, 2 doren | pneritt's Se He ate Reiamn |house before he dies,” “his eo large bottle Blue Label catsup, | control. oranges, 4 cans shrimps, § packages | | will pay for the furs. | mourns continually over Fido. Small 20c; larce can pineapple.| ‘The narratives of Wilcox and the| Cigarets, 16 pounds potatoes Fulton is basing his cross com- | 7 Se; 3 pk Dae | George wants the dog that chewed |. sod aancks salt, the, Phatine “see. |other workers who corroborated him! A larga wicker market basket had |») 00° people and chased him shot.| aint asking that his client | ied Seal Grocery. Annex, 2 pk«gs.| uncover a new “Diack hole” in Amer-| been taken to pack part of the loot | srg picne, sibaeg won't hear ef tt given the divorce, on these state eedless raisins, 25c: 2 cans pump-|jcan industry. These men tell of in. : ; 5 |ments, charging that Mrs. Cudihee | % The police reall. to do, a Casual way for the party or parties don't know what ooking about in 260; No. of r. can Karo syrup, 43c:| arley, 19¢. Stall 27, fresh 65e: 35 had tried to defraud him out of his | conditions In the planta of Libby, Me-| , prope: but they « Nell & Libby, the Alaska Packers’ | coffee, 25 BATTERY B TO MEET Bs Treo tea ase Wort association, Northwestern Fisheries) The regular meeting of the Person-| gullty of poisoning Leif Nelson's dog | | i powder, 65c . company, and other big goncerns. al Service ashociation, Battery B, will | Fido 5 | CENTRAL These concerns, according tOjbe held Monday evening, in the! — — — | dry prunes, 3 i white| Labor Commissioner MecLaughlin,| rooms of the King county council of| NEW CAST Ind., Jan. Re ag Rs $143; | 8Fe relieved of legal responsibility |defense, 409 county-city building.| ‘The First National Bank of I sole ne Price’s baking powder, S5e: P.| for the labor conditions by the fact | Those interested in members of the| ville w of $50,000 worth of § & G. or Cascade sos 3 bars 20c;/ ¢ their workmen are employed regiment are invited. | Liberty nds during the night rae caretana cats, 390: Oat! by sub-contractors, —— - — Mc: full at bottle vinegat, 18¢:| _ {To be continued) re = a a ea SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, Jan} bag 34 | > Iden Gate coffe la ; Blue Ribbon t I soon will retire from control Little Japanese Weds Korean of the railway Director Gen, Me a ‘ Adoo told the people of San Bernar- An Outdoor Story i R, R, POLICY NOT Prince to Bind Two Countries | dino today wand T will hail tbe Gay -athos and Laugh catsup, RR Bey EAE | with delight, because of the arduous Which Will Warr duties which I have been called up-| Your Heart. on to perform.” | McAdoo was speaking from the | Platform of the train which is carry: ing him to his winter home at Santa Traisins, full cream cheer 38e Ibi: :| TO BE CHANGED” | NEW YOR —AND— Jan, 11.—Policies of DaY PICKFORD of hter m FB Bag S the railroad administration will whe tilt Wieks |wie be changed, Water t. Hiee, Barbara. Three thousand employes | i egg eg ly asa ab roe of the Santa Fe shone here were out | WMT ar News Ribbon tea,| today in his first newspaper confer- rd orking clothes to greet} 8 neh McAdoo, ‘They carried banners] kl | Hines said he strongly favored bearing such inscriptions as “Mc-| ee VY ‘Wii, G. MeAdco's plan la oF Adoo for Director General Under | . 3 pla ve c ernme wine ” ge Cream of Barley, year control of the re He rnment Ownership McAdoo @eclared he waa undecid- ed on the question of government ownership, but was anxious to see it given a trial under peace condi tions, eans red beans, 20c; 3 Jars toes, 60c; new walnuts cans asparagus, \5c; 2 Ibs. Cali ia head rice, 23c; new walnuts Gib. Stall 145. new shrimps, large bottle Snider's catsup, 2 Font 07 | pects to lay his case before congress \at an early date. He did not say how vigorously he wor press his views. |but it was understood from other |sources that the plan would be in pressed continuo The intermediate under which the re ating was held by Hines to be dan |gerous, and likely to disrupt the or. ganization which McAdoo built up period of control ads are now oper: HAVE YOU GIVEN A MOMENT’S THOUGHT We mean, real serious thought, to the advantages of a@ savings account? ‘Went to F ront to Join Army, But He Couldn’t Get in REPAIRED What would you do if you were suddenly faced with EW YORK, Jan, 11-—Hringing a long period of sickness? ‘1,011 soldiers home from the war, the steamer Taloa docked here to: | Would you be secure? ‘/ day. The units aboard included the | Every person can answer this question for himself, Fifth batter trench artillery, 495th | | a aero construction squadron, ‘casual | Prinedes Masako aad Prince 31 | If you cannot face it fearlessly, then you have not IN “ep thor Pempiee pra et igaguoreg | 1 to The Star by A) |1t Chosen, while its king was given! Lesa ds tusecae niet, Miller, 18, Seattle, who eaid)" Toyo, Japan, Jan. 10—A ilttle| the title of Prince YL. ‘There has SAVE—There you have the whole idea in a nutshell, 14 father was a lumberman of Ta P Om coma, arrived. He madé repeated |17-Year-old princess in the land of) been a movement to take thelr Saving means more than the actual accumulation of 107 FIRST AVE efforts to get into the army, always Cherry blossoms is marrying to keep | claims to independence to the pea dollars. It means the building of your character, the se ial being rejected, and was in London,|#" empire intact congress, The union of the formal curity of your future, a self-reliance and a confidence of still trying—after going clear to the nt that the Japanese empire is| royal house of Korea and the im ess that is only found in the man who knows his 418 Pike St front, seeking to enlist—-when the|in danger of going all to pleces, But| Perial hou f Japan may bring an power, i - armistice « signed. He came| Korea, taken by Japan contrary to|end to thi home as a stowaway | the wishe cr people, has never| Among the ceremonies which pre START THAT SAVING HABIT TODAY—IT'S THE | been reconciled the union of this royal pair {ORT CUT TO SUCCESS Leary Bldg. Lobby. NEW EXCESS PROFIT royal house of Japan will marry a|to the spirits of the imperial an y i prince of the old Korean royal) cestors, a ritual performed by the Th U; N 1B k LAW WILL GOVERN iirc aia whe union is expected emperor of Jaan e Union National ban Butler Hotel Lobby. The new law, instead of the old,|make the Koreans feel better to Ss. ‘ eo new Ie ao jecond Ave. at Cherry St. will apply in the collection of excess | ward the Japanese, | THIEF STEALS STAMPS profits taxes for 1918, according to| Princess Masako, grand-daughter | Successors LJ the Washington office of the Seattle | Of the late mikad niece of the/| AND LIBERTY BOND Union Savings & Trust © Chamber of Come-nere present emperor of Japan, becomes Forty-one war savings stamps and 4 Mail Ord Invited The new law will be actually oper-|the bride, January 15, of Prince Yi,|a $50 Liberty bond were stolen from Ballard —BRANCHES— Georgetown j i rders invited, ative February 1, Jt Js announced. | Junior, son of the former ruler of|the tent of R. J. Callahan, Madison ° “ New blanks and regulations are be- | Korea park, Friday night, according to a re: S ™ ing prepared for distribution by the| Eight years ago Japan took form-| port made to the police department [internal revenue commission, al possession of Korea and renamed | by Callahan Saturd i . » |of which department J. L. is the acting chief. “II, Petitioner is informed that his auing expense, the bonds will have Warren to be paid from the gross income, and the operating expense will have to be paid by @ general tax levy on |Getention by said Police Department the people of Seattle, and in that|!# at the instance of the City Health event the bonds would probably be| Department of said City of Seattle, held by the supreme court as gen-|0D the pretended claim, vexatiously 1 bonds of our city. This will| instigated by some police officer, haust our constitutional bonded | that he is afflicted with some dan. indebtedness to our credit limit, so| Tous, contagious and infectious that our development of water | dinease. power for furnishing electric power| “III. Petitioner al would be at an end, and we would charge or accusation is untrue and find ourselves at the mercy of the | Unfounded in fact. That he fs not Stone. Webster corporation for | 4nd was not at any time during his power. Our Skagit power site would detention so affected. That neither be lost because our debt limit had| bie arrest nor his detention is been reached by the purchase of the| prompted by good faith or the part car lines at twice their value. | of either Department ‘There is too much deception, too| “IV. Petitioner believes, and om much bunk, too much doubledealing |*uch belief alleges the fact to be on the part of our city administra-|that the claim or pretense that he tion about this car line deal, The|i* so affected is but a subterfuge agreement of purchase that the peo |!n the furtherance of a conspiracy ges that such ‘ple of this city sanctioned by voting Originating in | | | | | \ { Dexter Horton Trust and |be proud of Firland as an institu- the Police Depart to buy the car lines is not the agree-|ment of said City, aided and ac ment of purchase entered into by @ulesced in by said Health Depart the mayor, Mr. Fitagerald, Mr,|ment to unjustly deprive your peti- Thomson, Mr. Moore, Mr. Hesketh |toner of his liberty. and Mr. Bolton. “VY. That petitioner further al- Public ownership is one thing and leges that he is and hag been de- |betraying the people and robbing tained in most unsanitary, filthy |them is another. This street car and poorly ventilated quarters |purchase begins to smell bad and crowded with inmates suffering |it is me for the people of Seattle from various allments and diseases, to look into their political woodpile |all of whom are forced to use the and find the black man in it. por Ti and, at times, the same N rinking cup, and fed on unwhole- PS as nee Seas 2 weil | {02% {900 and denied the privilege > - Penge. a ttle may welll of having or consulting a physician of his own selection. “VI. Petitioner further alleges that he has violated no law, is not accused of any crime, and is not a menace to the health, morals or wel- fare of society, but that he is the victim of malice and caprice of the Health and Police Departments in petraccde |the City of Seattle, who have arro- I was remindful of the striking | Sted to themselves the right to de | tain and punish him in an unlawful contrast between the treatment of | > - the sick at Firland and those at our |“) arbitrary manner, filthy stockade and city jail, who|, WHEREFORE, he prays for the are held under the fake quarantine |!™mediate issuance of a writ of of the Seattle Health Department. | htbeas corpus directed to said J. Ie paige * | Warren, Chief of the Police Depart- THE WRIT OF HABEAS = / ment, in said City of Seattle, re- CORPUS quiring him to produce petitioner at Magna Charta itself was necessi-/a time and place to be named, to tated and brought forth to re-estab-| show by what authority petitioner lish human rights, and even after|is so restrained of his liberty, and that the servile action of judges in| that he be forthwith discharged from indulging subterfuge to avoid ac-|such unlawful custody, knowledging the people's right made| Nex} week I will tell you what the it necessary for the people to enact| court judges said in denying the the famous habeas corpus act (31/ writs, and refusing even to bring Charies II., C. 2.) One English king | the petitioners into court. a ene tion for tubercular people. I did not get to talk with many patients. I did see and talk with men who are in need of warmer woolen un- derwear, socks, overcoats and the like. I talked with some who com- plain bitterly about having to work when they are not able and strong Having an Income N income is not usually the harvest or result of hard labor, but regu- lar depositors at this bank frequently have the opportunity to invest their “‘Jittle fortune” in some good yielding security—as a result of their prepared- ness. Your surplus funds are properly safe- guarded here. They draw interest all the time, They are available when needed. Savings Department open Saturday evenings, 6 to 8 o'clock. Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank Second Avenue and Cherry Street SEATTLE COMBINED RESOURCES Savings Bank and Dexter - Horton National Bank Over $25,255,731.48

Other pages from this issue: