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BUWORK FOR TWO WEEKS HODGE WILL (TEDDY'S PLAYGROUND TAFT’S WORKSHOP GOMPERS GOES TO NL ASK GHAND | | overseen GOMMISSIONER WIL q | ‘Sarted in Philadelphia Is Carried Out. ‘Sheriff to Take Fight Com-| Saree ee ye sAtwo weeks! “abel spetathagpers soceansestc xls nTE sis the) on Him Before Inquisi , 3 c 1a : 2 Sates, bringing every industry in the country to a cori Bed: ; will be attempted i ¢ Gompers, Morrison and teed ey. . | . ? : oe Sentemce for cont t is approved by the supreme ‘ | piThe krand Jury called by Judge * : Reporter Dunn’s Account of Terrible Conditions at Mitchell Gilliam on Saturday last, : i Wa i sen sment was starts Philadelphia yesterday. J mber 32, will be! ” Georgetown Institution Stirs County Officials to of the centra y in that ci developing | of the relationship existing between | Z Action—Women’s Federated Clubs Join in De- aa a the sheriff's office on one side, the | y . ‘. eas i re P " ; orn. y 0 mand for i f —Dr. eps brought to Seattle by a United Press dispatch Berean atreey atl ht SM ppeeiogNT TART NEW M0000 Full Investigation of Conditione—-De samme, and local unionists immediately began action.| The initiative in this matter will | Fice. j Corson Makes Excuses and Defends His Manage- rs P : be taken by Sheriff Robert T.| Toler — a ter ail the cae. — a iwmteeg the matter up before the next meeting of the | Hodge. It te probable that the aher. | {ermine once and for ail the ques. | | y msesoarrs ‘I, ment. ioe tons at laeue. | body. iff will send to the court, or to the That there will be a grand jury! ! : f th delphia « d jury, a communication 19) sitting on the date fixed Yesterday's mee I adelphia central body ci ane te eae tan | sitting on 4 by the King county bench was positively “We are going to have a grand jury. I will file a request asserted this morning by Judge Gil Sark, A Somee puatieniion Paes j with the prosecuting attorney that the management of the versy between him and oth oun made considerable stir with | County Hospital be investigated. ion were forwa to the annual convention of|ty officials ansertion that the ¢all of the an . : Of L., now in session « ‘oronto, and duplicates will Wants Jury Probe. | jury was illegal, inasmuch as it was | I told Dr. Corson that I did not like the way that the tuber- —Statement of Dan er all of Nort! T want t into the! in all ways according to law oy cular tents were built out over the river.” of North a * en oo j 2 ov : : f 7 he toeding ade Gillam missed the state Abrams, chairman of the board of county commissioners. ned to inangurat alk-out the day Gompers | prisone nd of the disp y mer f this publication this morn - hiss : aera if th neal | the. P recs Sher ing, in this fashion I stand ready to have the grand jury investigate the Coun- e sentence, if their appeal ' dle r } Pi . ‘ 5 * begi € Hodge this 1 ar I didn’t call a grand fury halt. Pas eas ty Hospital. That place is costing us a lot of money. We don’t ‘The strike will include not only the United States,! xious to have bt sed | cocked. I looked up this thing be 5 : ei toa se, pees ib jas to whether or not my office has | fore I took the etey ed 4 aim to run a hotel there, and it is as good as any institution in sible eed. va a per America. I don’t believe one word you wrote.”—Statement of marl * Pie oun OLD MAN Is ON pee | | A. 1. Rutherford, county commissioner. \ CONE FAR 4) [zrene er ar Sond t om . "No public institution is perfect. Our hospital will com- i be ‘ 5 now! 10-YEAR DRUNK ‘ | pare with any in the country. | “It tw Wkely that the rf | | “I will welcome an investigation of the institution by the will ap; ta special prosecutor cael ® 1 ‘ ” sesns hcodie thts sive spare Ages ; Be 4 a vga ; / | | grand jury.”—Statement of Supt. Willis H. Corson, of the [tevestigation, teesmuch ‘as Prows| eq DTwek fverz day ot ble life for| ff | County Hospitat. jeuting Attorney Vanderveor is a| ‘This was the admission of Joseph | _ - —-—— ‘ , lof : : party to the complaint to be made At a meeting of the executive board of the Seattle Federa- by Sh bangs . v2 to Police Judge Gordon n of Wouie 4 A ' z ¥ Sheriff Hodge, and as ' morning. Johneor 14. de tion o omen’s Clubs, the following sentiment prevailed: in| Parting, of the Chicago, Milwan-| not properly act OR, Ole Se | bling, stood before | “As so much i i i v = jkee sud St. Paul railroad. neither Said Hodge Was Right Charatd GAR Grentan|. MAMET bowl. 15) Dearlesservepene dete, loctes you over. (2) At- is being said in severe criticism of the man: of whom has slept since Saturday One of the points on which the | Néss, and in a yolce made husky by tendent shows you a chair, (3) Your card is sent to Secretary Carpenter | agement of affairs at the County Hospital, it seems to us the morning, stood at the mouth of a i x «| ig be poe ea ba mouth of sheriff will lay particular stress ts the fiery stuff that burned out his | (4) Yeu see Carpenter, (5) President gets your card. (6) “Hello, Bill | part of wisdom, as well as justice to all parties concerned, that | ~ fig. | the feeding of the fed prisoners roa\ DOR Ke jor & chance to) WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 15.—f expert army enginee d architect Taylor presented a pathetic fi " | b N, 7 pert army engineer and architec : ure. The tears rolled down his | He will point out that at the begin-| leave Seattle. He got It | Visitors to eee the president since| “The brick barn” some used to j the conditions and muthods obtaining in said institution be aibiision ‘au tio: wate ning ot hie rg in open meeting ‘ bl Rye we | myself to death. he returned from his swing around call it, “The wart” was its nick-| thoroughly and impartially investigated. . Therefore, be it > attended by the sheriff, the county | Judge; but death seems slow injthe count tice a remarkable | e fro th Bat the im “ s 1 believe the mine inapectors |“ * ; country notic able /name from others " nif | will tell. you that this was the /comminsioners and the prosecuting coming. I haven't drawn a sober| change im the executive offices proved office structure is as con-| Resolved, That we ask the grand jury called for Novem- B Nov. 15.—Bulletin. | sagest mine ever built attorney, Mr. Vanderveer stated | breath for 10 years, except when I Workmem have been busy since he| venient as it could be made-for| ber 22 to take up this matter at the earliest possible date.” fire had burned out “| don’t believe this could have | ‘M8t the money received by the have been in jail. My daily allow-|ieft. The result Is Taft's new work-|the president | The above resolutions were passed at Scant ot f » where nearly /happened in any other way than sheriff for the board of the fede ance of whisky is » half a quart./shop, right on the ground where} But if Senator Sorghum or Con _ 3 eats pa a a recen “meeting oO entombed, waslthrough the accidental ignition of | P™Sners belonged to the riff, |T'd be gind to die drunk, but I'm| Roosevelt's famous tennis court} gressman Cornflake want to intro-| the executive board of the Seattle Federation of Women’s when four Fescuers |some hay in the stables to do with as he pleased, to put in | afraid to die sober used to de. duce Citizen Haltassel to President) Clubs and may be taken as a fair expr om of the sentime fecond trip into| “The men in the stables must his own pocket if he so desired The old man's story brought} The workshop is in the form of! Taft, it's going to be a hard job. Be . a lair expre ton c he sentiment eported that they pave lost their heads and fatled to m Later ogee 8h riff Hodge pee quiet ve ~ bss Totes : Rrery ear/an addition to the offices Roosevelt | The way the new office is built, vis- | of the women of Seattle toward the expose of the inhuman treat- Intense heat, after! 7 % : : his money for the payment of the | was strained as he continued jhad built at a cost of $60,000, Ex-|itors will have to pass through a accorded to inmates a » Cou al; m w ieee pent. Slee {seat go stables from the rest) cies of the counts jail matrons,| “I have been arrested hundreds|perienced builders have said since | labyrinth as crooked as the recent | ent accorded nmates at the County Hospital, as published n't think that the men need the prosecuting attorney advised = _ ‘s ae a, th ge LA i that the yeeia job could have been | course of the steamship Oleander | in The Star the belief that : he county commissioners to bring | have long since forgotten the de-/done for $9,000, but that doesn't | down the Mississippi river The above federation embraces 19 clubs ar ane aging there | Pecans OF thn tect wie thit over [Mit Aaninst the sheritl for its re-| (alls, -Mosily the police have taben|matise, WAfier Roceerelt mevea ta] All of which wilt belp Taft work, The a federation embraces 19 clubs and has an ex- to any trace of | lived have died here through some- | CO%orY : i y on me and let me go. | am|he began to feel cram: for more|and work hard, That ls why he | tended membership WMS, either living or| one’s carelessness Stade. she od will set forth to the on help or heme 1 will drink |room, but he didn’t complain. Be-| ordered $60,000 spent to make his BY ARTHUR W. L. DUNN. hich you are respotisible tee. Se | Many of the families of the min-| 884 Jury other incidents of a like and | be drunk until I die. | aides, there was that tennis court. | workshop bigger Keen surprise was ah by|They want to know what you are Went tothe 200-|ers are destitute and food supplies | ttre to prove that the present at You may go," said Judge Gor-| The firat thing Taft did when he| S80 when you pack your carpetbag | " ede ae eee lasien te ab aeak 1 data Shang tried to pene-lare badly needed titude of the county ¢ nisslor don, and the old man, who has) became psesident last March was! and tell your friends you are off to | County ‘ommissioners Dan Ab. abo Mel Hose men! Several train loads of food and | #24 Prosecuting attorney ts detri-| swallowed 1,500 quarts of whisky, to apptove the plans for the en-| Washington to see Taft, remember | plecon > L ragreemecte when I Rutherford Speaks. fight the fire| medicines already have been) mental to the best interests of the | and who lives to tell of it, stumbled) targed, 6ifidam, that there is a new workshop to en-/#8ked them what they thought of! Rutherford, who was in the — - — | taxpayers of the county, and as a|out of the court room to try to] They Gave been built under the|ter and a lot of red tape to go|the way patients were being treat-| office, spoke up now rt has pat the most lew (Continued 0° Page Seven.) reason why the grand jury should | drink himself to death. ldirection of Col Spencer Cosby, through before you see him. Jed. at the King County hospital. |" 1 don’t like the way you went fee wa eines 7: maaan - I don't want to talk to you,” | apout this business,” he said. “If sald Abra in the dor hall h O2OeeeOroe Os Sees eoeeeeeeserereooeoeseoesedeoesedeeeeeeeeeeoehebed Ooosbessbssoonseseoeorororororooooorerorerorerers way, and disappeared tito ‘i he cco it so that you pes joffice. I followed him in —DO WOMEN MARRY FOR LOVE?—TAFT AND THESE WOMEN DOUBT IT= dea Mt! ay galt? Se Sn “You would have 3| payers of this county, the men who : a ged Song PPO OeeOeGeHeOrooeHEOe Oren esos oegeesHeHsHoe sors ODDS OEEDOLOEOEOIOSOIOOEOSEEDEESOLOSOSOLOLSEOIOSOOOSOLOSOLOEOOEOEOEHES fill Jul! Ii wilice, They want to /AePPEd Or Corson a note that a as been a the accident. A 7.| 1 | £ | know about this hospital business’ (Continued on Page Seven.) lstghter ix accompanying 5 — <1) ALMOST EDUCATED ial she hall Talelalaahabababal 2 Pencns %e/President Thinks That BEYOND MARRIAGE, s PRESIDENT-TART:S. VIEWS. | Three Questions Suggested Be the Present | SONG THAT WENT HOME Wy ordered that tie} Many Marry for Homes eaniter — lagi | oder ? originating was introduced by H. C. | vestigation of the con soe in his 4 , ; . office, and of all mat n ow > Cigar Makers 1, and was adopted. Copies | oe a oe aay cases yet | MB & result of the of Mrs. Camille Fears, who is sp Seerores “| ahall be glad that I shall not have any property to leave to my boys, of whom | have two, but only good character and a pride in themselves and @ good education; but for my daughter | am going to sorape together as much as | can give her, and a8 good an edu- cation as | can, so that she shail marry only when chooses to marry and not be Among my own friends, the cause of ciroumstances. t Others re P Btik ie educated women I know, women “{ wish that every woman y grief, d to discuss the question Nes ,* either have not married at all or|* in the world were so situated a 4 when married, they did not marry |# that she did not think it was Timko, whose one of them came “back bisects : for financial advante |* necessary for her to marry if Whree sons are among the breathless answe | ‘I think there are fewer mar-|* she did not want to. We on the verge of 4)... ? : \) rages among educated women, 1|\% “Now, that Is a proposition this afternoon or love | , ) know @ great number of educated|# that | am prepared to defend h SMeral superin- | 1e of them got around to .. = girls who have remained single|* against all comers. | am the laine, and President ” from choice. That sounds like an|® last one to take a position that conclusion by a circuitou f E ” argument against a college educa-|* against that old doctrine of tion, but it i# really an argument|* the common law that there 1 } ie t ea Tet for the ideal marriage * ought to be nothing to inter- ou—flashed back] pang and know how to bring up her| “These women have had oppor-|* fere with matrimony. re, “For love |children. But ‘she ought not to|tunities to marry, but the edu-|* jut | would have the mat- ‘ work outside of the home to earn|cated woman does not marry for|® ter eo arranged that the wo- t chill yor her Hving. Every man ought. to|the sake of being married, She re anneal be able to earn enough to provide | quires more of the man she mar: | SHOULD ‘NOT WORK; |for the females of his family ries, and he must be a as » he SHOULD AVE HOMES. Most working girls arry for|tual equal ging pl ; ; n a home and support many of |educated woman marries, she stays ay SS H them have tg work so hard they|married, There are fewer divorces would a woman marry|snatch the first man that comes|among college marriages than in not for a home and support?” | along to have it easier, and the|marriages among any other class Miss Alice Lord, secretary |firat thing they know they have |of people. nusiness agent of the Walt-|them both to support “The smart thing for the prest Aannouncemen: c Union, “Woman was created “If women were financially inde it to do, instead of bringing his Mile fspue and joo. reside over a home. 1 despise|pendent there would be just as|daughter up to depend upon her| im the city should “Educated women do not marry Rone but children., @nd Support. i for homes,” says Mise Isabella Surrounding « | | Austin, dean of the women at the food and the art ye? - Unity ity of Washington. Ml the Red Crows} Why do women marry ! “Among the uneducated classes Me's 4 food The question was put al ii = I think ft fs true that mothers | f < often urge their daughters to Pury, of the United | "umber of Seattle women the I) marry for support In such @trived here today past week, the ult of : a families there are girls who must L. Lewis has F . ‘ s! go out to earn their living and they statement made by President! ff , I] ook upon marriage as an escap ‘ Some had “r \ i} |from earning a livelihood Taft's views suggested three BY T. J. DILLON. questions The one little touch of sentiment which makes the whole world kin was revealed in a little five-cent moving picture theatre Why do women marry—for {ff on Second ay, last night. It was a song, a song about “Mother, a lonesome mother’s hungering for a word from her roving boy homes and support? T | The song came after the moving pictures, They were good, If all women were financially bad and indifferent, the same pictures that, with variation seen in a score of places every night. The “theatre” was ventilated storeroom, packed with the heterogeneous audience that fewer marriages? seeks relaxation on Sunday night. There were men and women there, rough and gentle, but for the most part giving no evidence of being sentimental. They laughed or scoffed at the moving pic- deter a woman from marriage? tures, as they sat in that vittated atmosphere, with thoughts far ‘ away from their mothers. Jindependent, would there be Sereyerecee rrr sy Does a profession or business hes These questions were put t Finally the picture show was over and it was time to leave Seattle women. || To hurry the audience out that another might come in, a young man {s employed to sing. In a blue plush box, garbed in evening —— inn |i clothes, he began his “chaser,” the song designed to empty the companionship, but not for support house. He was not a wonderful singer, probably not even a good They can support themselves and one; the song was not written by a genius, and the music was like It, But every woman wants a|f Obviously a melange of musical thefts. Everything looked rather |home, don't-you think so? cheap and tawdry when the song began “Professional and business wo But as it went along a hush fel over the little audience, de- men are pretty particular, When |f Partures were delayed, and soon there was not even heard the they marry they make the most|§ 9°@Wing of a breath, as the audience hung on every word. The companionable wives. Their hus-|§ %°%9 Plotured the heart-aching mother back somewhere, dreaming bands can come home and talk || Ve" her little boy, now a wandering, careless man, And as the over all affairs of business or pub-|f Singer in a trembling tenor urged these wandering boys to write ie matters with then as they | home to the old fotks—to write home tonight—then eyes began would with men down town, T'vye | t© glisten, shame and remorse to take their places on the tense because it Is better &Joften heard my husband say to|f face ring up at the singing figure in the spotlight. The Se red some that they expect, men about some venture, ‘Well, |[ attle audience, probably every one of them born and reared in but a life that they look for: *|my wife doesn't think much of the the East, took each quavering syllable to heart. No diva ever ward to with unmixed happl- *| plan.’ | soca * none Soniniene trlumph than did this unknown singer In n * “ ‘ e 8 cheap little theatre last night; no preacher ever stirred the I don't think a professional h heart ¢ bi tion; 1 . ; work for wome re y riages but they wouldn't | father's provision for her, is to put career or business life deters aif [Uman heart to nobler emotion; no poet ever called a clearer pic- Become one « t nk tor wong It Moers any rarraues, bat they woulda} |her In. training for some useful aaa are rea ares woman from marriage. or neces, |f tre to memory than did this chanter of small ballads. %, iden, it's a x er go out of my home for|doesh’'t keep women from marry-|work and she will be able to settle) eet Be sarily interferes with the comforts ; . When the song ended, music ceased and spotlight went out NE Will show y.., 1 of public work. I hate {t,|ing. The Goulds and the Vander-|the marriage question for herself ° of a domestic life if she should|/§ there was not a sound for a full minute, And then came the Testing after | omen ought not to work, Let|bilts and other wealthy women oné of the wealthiest men of the|carry on her busipess after men {f applause, long and hearty, ork. Of course I don’t mean| marry as many times as anybody, city and herself president of the! riage, The joys of a home are ap. And who knows how many mothers in the sere days of old MDOURCOMeNt 01 roles shogid. not do say but of course they don't marry for cate yp ee Lah & ghey so b oad — preolated more by a busy, tolling | age, sitting alone and almost forgotten, will get a new lease of down to of wk. She ought to be| support. rn girls “t Ps mt ‘ bord sald) woman who, when through with joy In the shape pf a letter, ee its inspiration in a garish No. } r t up to know how to do| “Woman was created for a home bahia with @ roruial br at her ©o-|her day's work, can gain inspira Ittle Seattle playhouse last night? 3 work and manage a home,|and children. Of course she mar-|. “I'll show you my husband and| Workers in the club tion for the next day from the com “Cheap sentiment?” Yes, it only cost a nickel, but it will be ight to be educated so she|ries for a home, Why else should|then you'll know why I married,’ “IT think business and profes-|forts of her fireside and the com- worth millions to the mothers. a companiom for her hus sald Mrs, James Anderson, wife of | sional women marry for homes and|panfdaship it brings her,” sophy, but not one—not should have a full and free choloe, and that can only be reached when they put In a situation where that which bend choose Is not a life whioh eHHAEAER ERE E EERE EERE EERE EEE EERE obi bbieiek