The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 22, 1910, Page 3

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THE STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1910. ee ee (Conoluded.) ] There was war over those butter Dy ca “ ~~~" | Dalle My mistre hobby was | Concluded.) | at nea trimmings, She cared little for d ! i But no rity ward would ac-| fundamentals, such as enough cook * But NO CD AIEY Ward wo a ee ttae uat she: outa. nave] Seventy-five Thousand Garment Workers, Driven to Revolt for Well, 'm 1 don't. know,” | fluger bowls and candelabra every| Bare Necessities of Life, Tie Up Great Industry, Give Strik 5 . ' aia @ said; “there are working girla’| hight for dt It was the same ing Example of Tariff “Prosperity” and Learn for Them ( , mes and th I suppose you| Way with the butter balla, and abe selves the True Spirit of Fellowship i try the ‘ A bewalled my inoapacity in this re | Where ts W. ©. A. I/epect, while it | entered ryt THE BIGGEST STRIKE IN THE WORLD TODAY has been al asked ke p peed t ind, out whe Fran | most overlooked and forgotten, because it lacked spectacular features You really 1 xpect | kept my and tea towel’) of riot and bloodshed and “horror”—the strike of 75,000 makers of . to answer y que V aWeot ling and free from) women's cloaks and suits In New York city, involving directly hun t ye sek your young man who | &erms, dreds of tho di f om d children, t re ng here » the Making Butter Baile reds of thousehde of man, ween 6A and chiidren, and indirectly the ‘ her night?” asked the mistreas of So 1 ay all my ure gg | To get the REAL FACTS of thia etrike, the Seattle Star commis e kitchen even when I v supe 1 Pag ; sloned its-New York correspondent to start an investigation, He . 1 do not know that your & man | entertain ca aly pa found not only the bigness of the atrike and its broad effect, but a wih “ ei we hough to care to te y) aitng Ut 1 Of CFOAMETY | marvelous, stupendous example of the new brotherhood of mankind, co. a. ble © him,” I answered matte tuation| Worked out by unorgant: slaves of industry. Following le the first “ge ; ae ae a — ‘ i. sad ap i for be ituation of three articles that should draw the attention of all America to peveree se dare say be would be pe without a re ¢ these brave, determined, hopeful 76,000 brothers shaking off the in- ee ie tre | fectly willing to look after you for) spent a half hour trying to Impress) dustrial shackles 3 grive at Sa \ la few days She threw the in upon me the fact that she nev Hews of the ‘ wire | at me as her silken skirts swished | employed help who could not s through the pantry rr references, but she engaged me be p Sa att renee the pastry dant 1'canse-cwell, 1) wee. le WAY WHAT THE STRIKERS ARE FIGHTING FOR | Abolishment of the hom | The 48-hour week Strictly union shops Definite mintmum wage scale, sufficient to maintain the work er and his famtly during the part of the year he ts idle because | of trade conditions No more than 2% hours overtime per day during rush sea son—-this to avold the killing #train of 18 or 20 hours’ work a day in the Industry use of powerdriven sewing machines and all Incidental requisites for work tahop. 2 AN THEN HIMSELF Garfield Johns Betterwort ‘ Guaie Swans ehason, Is oe Part of the 200 Excited Strikere Pa cked in Beethoven Hall, the Strike Headquarters. Secretary Zimmer- man, the Big Man of the Strike, ls the Square-Jawed Individual Seated in the Center. national union of lady garment panyoty eno” ) ae 7 is nahi at Sh U5 NEGRO HUNT MEN WHO a at while Mrs. | xt down by at the city | = we. poopital. The ob ting occurred at he Swanson ° 1 Stewart night #. about 9 « ast Bish Heading of the Famous “Red Call,” which silenced 1,500 shops. [in sieht. We he those who need Bmil Swanson. his wife and Trans! 4 there, one or twe ted from the Yiddish, it reads: “The General Strike is De | it most, b Jedason »: ed from the 4 . J Virgil Your eK ¢ (By United Press.) Ripe? rivers’ pict ‘at Wild clared This Afternoon at 2 o'Cloc k. do lars at a time, just enouxh to) ney employed at the P Bose winuina?o: xa ee wood Park, ar € standing at vu " a . a shot Sadie Hicks, negress, three) extry ge f' today tele- , ihe door of the f when Jobe NEW YORK. fue te thle is cent he ‘na he abe mee jes yesterday afternoon as the vrester Buck, at : fm, without an) wn provoce a chee a en a FACTS ABOUT aS ae ally iat talox tacetn ‘toh o4. im front of the Yeeler wa oy fiat to ; tos, drew evolver and began | Genk Dithaiiind—the sanelb-at THE STRIKE nd Hundreds. probably a thou.|uarmacy at the corner of Broad t the men suspected . 260,000 denizens of the packed east a: sand, dispossess noth » been | 787 ed the forest fires In from Scandia, side tenements, ground between the bap on July 7 issued, bat the union ma Your has come,” cried the | Southeastern Oregon is a ce «2 y y = 6,000 workers quit note Arfitesor wirace ted me! negro, as essed the revolver Th ove ban 6 10d to ll l-ator nerican econ chine ell organized and t e service has appealed to the : ron Pin: mill-stones of American economies, 1,860 shops involved inery is w reanized and bas) veri st th wus Side and’ fired.| war aesertesmst fem ene GaOUE a fought successful forced to pay more and ever more Strikers The unionizing of the shops is the for the bare necessities of life and She turned and ran, the negro fol lowing, firing at her, Two mor Swansons for the rangers in fighting the anson, the in- | mostly Hebrews with exception of 10,00 Ital driven to work for leas, ever leas, last thing the employer ntest man's husband, coul ta a ployers contest, | ruliets hit her, on¢ he eye, the 5 fred sacgeed husband. o™ sive of the cash to buy them—the 250,000 aheae iReee though they themselves have a/ Dullets hit her, one in Cera s SS : | men women and children whose | 4. are young wom “union,” the Employers’ association, CRO" In the tet t Young, .One,| American Lake Companies There. | bread winners make women's suits and cloaks | Six weeks ago the bread winners struck, just at the opening of the busy season sand cutters, finishers and pressers | answered the “red call” to industri The manufacturers have twice re to the injunction—onee te the assaults they cia! PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 22— Z od 1, First men, and Second Field ery, arrived in Portland last from American Lake and left nediately for Michael H Broadway, grabbed a revo and fired after the negro. The woman escaped into a pharmacy farther down t nsot, Strikers are divided into two general Classes, the cutters, largely Americanized and re would be made on # ely per higher wages, and the re, and within the past t ore ah fell t ore and pressers, largely days to enjoin the strike iteelf! street where e ‘el ero foreign and working for || They ‘rent her to th starvation wages “voepital. She & 18 SAILORS DROWNED d the Beat necu the first injunction |al battle in a desperate struggle for but the second has such a shadowy - est fires in t a eee ec | a living wage ed Soonk ees of the J) pasis that {t cannot win. They want a per . forest ( From an unorganized mass of . ttle or no [ithe strikers enje from striking ry a tata dete BNDON, Aug. Lo ay tollers they have developed in that —. on the ground tha y are striking pita thule five teh cg ee . eine ee ere crewasd | winee: We 5 six weeks {nto ® compact, well-or shops already won, in- | for the 4 shop! ers The fire in the Crater national | cruiser Bedford went “1 Had a Fly-Away Piece of Lawn Pinned on My Head lgantaed body, fighting shoulder to | ‘l@4ing most of the small | f me to jail,” he cried.| forest grows steadily worse, ac- Mhore fast night on Quel Part isi- a — n= — ” . - : j plants | “Don't hang me here They took ing to intormation received at and, near the coast of Korea, ac | shoulder Sih courage and ters: 35,000 stalkers bac! ere "5 a Gas |him to police headquarters | forestry bead t wording t - 1 t and say to her, 1 am sure you will look a per-| helping each other stave off starva ra back at work. J) . - cage when {an | the local forestry Beaaquasters St 0 an Exchange Telegraph was only a servant and ay ] wa wk ak © POe | dour the trove tertunaie amd bate i 1 was jealous of her,” he’ ex The present force of fire to. woman, what Ijfect duck in a uniform! My plained to ( Bannock. “I heard is inadequate te handle the a today. as woma 7 " us | pald ‘owing in bie lot with uo « writing club papers | maid was so homely that my bu paid throw vessel was under command thought of her % ’ kept him awake fortonates who face the wolf pack.|{n the women's garment industry | Boy Detective) tats oe Bee eet ». Some of them have been lire line for 72 hours with- “af Capt. Fitzhubert and carried a on “Universal Sisterhood,” and be | band sald it Ww 4 hope she @ a we ~ le hat does this mean to you?! We rk fe 7 NS one yy a eet 0 men. The cruiser was fore the ink was dry, treating one reo 7h Tou ee ae asians Simply that Roveced part dl ng ee we ean then! Lee Lamson, Chinese detectiv Serre ou cop. Many exhausted men igeute from Wei Hal Wei to of her own household so uncharh| Wise yeu Sin ive very little to| United States will pay more for her| roonths. ‘Then comes the rx rigid Lake Washington ot) the Hunt's W G THOMPSON troops are under the coamand ef el with 9 eguadren. You! fall sult this year—and probably | son aghin. When the rush ie on. our Point her 7 ies peli ’ cee Oe i ee tw caller I bad during my | do—and the work t# not bi Mrs. was a man who/| Will take care of all the rooms to er colony Maj. Martin. Four companies will and day. They| Lee is cook and steward for a MERCHANT DIES go to the fire at Butte Falls, while arly, sometimes at group of bachelors on the point. Re ’ y will be The position of the Bedford is Sed tle kai ak ti | carries © more for her spring suit next year, people work ni e e | the house except the kitehen, and — two or five dollars more, de | go to the shop @ vessel have been taken spen’ an hour with me in thet elt j emainin| etal po apts postabitity at no ‘one evening after my work |I shall expect you to dust the ay re pe ding on the sort of suit #h ong a They work till 7 or &, and| cently @ lot of things dine ag? ° 108 lr sale te: Ashiand to foin the mili- s done He was the friend of &| along with the furniture every day. | buys ben take home more goods to work | peared from the ho’ jewelry,|, W- @. The of 108 Maiden | s.men in ani effort to. check. a de- pee Go to pleces ¥ na that New York, as @ on till midnight Lane, vic sident and manager pr ae one t d the! It me : : Le nother city and she| There are only 16 rooms, an or later, with all| clothing and f ctive blaze ne Married 61 Years. girl I knew in another “Most of his | woodwork is all white enamel, and| manufacturing center for womnen’s| the family helping. They strain ev-| U°l ketch “em,” Lee Lamsor of Cheasty’s baberdashery, while | #tructive blaze pear Ashiond ae 4 aske ogee : mt tole . men been hit another sert * : Pampa nage ass Pn? on a Ja r| Acting jowerman prol “PITTSFIELD, Mass, Aug visit was taken up with my mak ly cannot tolerate finger | garments i anoth ery nerve to make all they can in sured hi , ere riding a = 0 Carl tt tee 6 call for eater GL Saturday evening, was taken {ll and died at Providence hospital shortly |£° to the fire front in Southern Oregon. Gov. Bowerman intended ail out the state militia for fire He found, however, that the Of course there will be the | ous blow, like that which came with! the rush season to tide them over| So t and the bathrooms. I have/the strike of 189%, developing this when work is slack. Work at some boy hiked to the at children, and they are per-|tndustcy in Chicago, Boston, Cleve-| thing elwe? They don't know any took bis shoes. He| after little cherubs,” she concladed | land and St. Louis, Manufacturers other trade, and there isn't any! watched through & crack tn the had gone to and Mrs. Gilbert West -today | ing butter balls ted their Glat wedding anni ‘Ob, the putter balla’ y. Mr. Weat is $2 years old) hey were the bane of my exis Mrs. West is 81 ence and a disgrace to the house rt Failure Was the Cause. pew Sa - - * And head of a child, whose na-|from ali t cities are reaping & | other work for them to do floor for two hours before } ard Mr. Thomp was 51 years of ite flogging machines are old. The go sergered be called ight have been termed more | harvest of orders | “Look at them, hundreds of then: vol ee ee eel ace Gn8 ss here since 1889 i d not allow him to do so. me of the armies of Bo- | they ead mas TANS impish than cherubic, appeared at| It means that another vivid/Do you see any red cheeks, any maT a . widow and| Bowerman said that he would call nish disobedient soldiers. |a howling success. tthe @oor lesson of the conditions caused by! signs of red blood like you Ameri ja er, Thompson, | Ut the state troops should he find At sy AND the poodle! MeKinley-Dingley-Payne tarifm™ Is/cans have? They're emactated Funeral servic be held at way to do so "Loo-Loo,” contin the Indy,| being painted on the canvas for all) worn—working day is a darling angel—I just know care re her! She has to go sa ble out for a walk ev day—and it/million just now shaking hands! “We haven't had any riots, or Bonney-Ws at 10 to morrow, Rey. W iy ® Major, of Beth GAYNOR RETURN any Presbyterian church, officiat | nd night when ook there's work, worrying and trying strike to the quarter-|to get it when there isn't any LAST WEEK — 0dds and Ends Sale Odds and Ends Bargains Are at Their Best NOW will be a nice Httle run for you, |with starvation a owicge caused a bit of trouble. We have the r. Cheast who is In New TO REGULAR DIET 00. nd it's still bigger in the broad] picketed the shops—that's all—to York, wired the 5 Sc Padded Sleeve Board, 10c Mre did not really see | sense 90,000,000 all over the| keep new workers from taking our gla 4 all day tomorrow in r : A good, —_hhardwoe enough of her children know Indirectly affected. | ptaces, Sometimes there's trouble boys for Mr. Thompec (By United Press) : board, padded and mus whet they we cherubs or than local-—it's sympto-| but it's caused by the private de-| | ‘ give. La HOBOKE NJ. den a jin covered, for shirt imps. They wer entirely to of a national condition. tectives nen hired to make and addresses. 8 RR RE Mi am J. Gaynor, of New y 4 ; le If po of the previous st * York, was today allowed to return ts or sleeves. This the care of the governess. But) Annie Leswietz, a striker on | troub if aaible f the previous 1 6 map price is the let “angel Loo-Loo’ indigestion ploket duty arrested for “aw “We'ro wiuning—we're bound to! recovered. * HEINZE nd MARRY = ordinary food, and his condition result of an overstock from stuffing herself with oatmeal| sault,” doesn't know about the |Win. Forty, fifty, sixty firms are * ACTRESS. * | was pronounced highly satisfactory. Odds and n and rich cream, and her mistress} tariff. She never heard of | Ssulng every day. The smaller ANOTHER HOLD UP ce wheat Tice: dean ae His fare includes everything in the Ends, each ut would run a hot water bottle Mr. Payne or Mr. Aldrich. ones Yes, but some of the bi b * m. ge tha Fe way of wholesome diet. No com- and tuck her up in her silk lined} “Schedule K” would sound to ones, too. Mostly those that make ‘ — & was announce — corset s are feared, and the physi- basket bed her like an & the highest grades a landing out C.D, Reteb in o re *® Augustus Heinze, who recent! cians ip attendance are considering TSe Dozen 25c Dozen Jelly Ghe ended the interview by tell word. But she’s out of work They belong to the Employers’ as-| police this morning, state é * figured in federal prosecutions, ® | plans for his removal to his home ght - eee ae ing me that she was sure I would| and suffering just new be | #0ciation home, at 18th and EB. Union st «| marry Bernice */or to the mountains for con- led Rade special, bee Glass Jelly oie cue otas cause of Me, Payne's Zimmerman's optimism and spirit been « about 11 o'clock . member of the * | valescence each Tumblers, 17 ee ee ek f nifty all-inclusive | are a reflection of all the rest. They | day morn and $40 in| money|*® as” company — Bc w 4 1 on oe c F ee se tay yer dae wa | She. can't live on what she struggle along somehow—and know taken. His description of the thief, * is set for this * Rockefeller is taking a bath in ater Juge—%-gallon ca | 5¢ Toilet Paper— ie aa ny ee ante na O eT to make| earned in her trade under old | they are going to win. They get no/ tallies with a description held by | * couple will start * y regularly, say the die- Eeeity, clear orystal 10 ¢ Medicated Tissue 1 think ne peaitlcasant, don't] eonditions. While the cost | Tegular strike benefit the authorities of an unknown per-|# moon journey in a * pate Ue rich! meas es > oe Sh perforated sheets, ne? We all try to help each other| of living goes up, her pay has “We Were a small organization|#on who rifled a bakery on the|* spé * “ 7 $800 Sad Irone—Set consists of | jarse rolle. OF my you? We all try to help cach otlm.| been coming down. The other [only @ Iittle while ago,” sald A.| corner of 2éd av. and E. Cherry * various size Irons, Stand and 7 for 04 A ogg 74,999 tell the same story. |Rosendorg, prealdent of the inter st. 20 minutes earlier ke RKEREEERKERARE handle asbestos cover over 25¢ Sink Strainer Malin's Enamel Sink Strainer; hangs in corner or stands in sink vats 10c ply exhaust myselt planning the | ot eee dhcihel TALKS ON TEETH work. ' n he crowded smoky strike | "ut Thad vot bean tn the Mucor |neaaguariere wt heathoven bail on| Labor Unions Will Contest for Relea, ee ees tes a Handsome Trophy Labor Day to Be | By the REGAL DENTISTS You will run up and down stairs) overdue, whose families are threat eee an ptatles corring ate oe went ete Rare Presented by Standard Furniture C 0. | ‘LOW PRICES, BETTER METHOD day,” said she. “Besides serving} the ‘meals, caring for all the silver,| bread—but you won't find one who glass and china, answering all tele-|ig gorry he struck or wants to go pine and door bells, the re will be | pack--except on the terme demand. 4 enough daily cleaning to keep two| 94 that is, a living wage Odds and {nds—Pocket Knives Odds and fnds—-T OVS women busy.” | 9 $1.25 Express Wagon—Stee! She was right tobe AA 8 I har man Pd cutive of the strike committee " : gear and body. Odds 98 Five breakfasts were served In| executive of r pene Ad IP and Ends C five different rooms every morning,| tried to tell about the strike amid $1.50 Child's Swing—For two luncheons at noon, and three| that talking, jJabbering. gesticulat MASS 0 in Beethoven ng in door or to cell dinners at night ing mass of humantty ear 3 Mer ‘ hall. Every half-minute some one Our great spec jalists are curing | pyorrhea alveolaris, | commonly known as Riggs’ disease (loose teeth), and restoring missing teeth without the use of plates. There is ust have room for new © boring into the gums or cutting. | It is and painless process. " ing Another of my regular ceremon-| e asa 48 ” m spiral spring .. jes was laying out the night clothes | Dushed his way through the crowd | You need all your teeth to prop- er $2.50 Adjustable and opening the beds every even-| Past the sentinels at the end of the jerly masticate your food. Let us ndle 5 yf tables and into the space where supply those that are missin = © rt § othe 4s blacking the au ‘ 8. Knives. Cholce . c Walker a ine Stil) another wa Fre | clerks and volunteer workers were This is the largest dental estab- : 7 e er’ of I acecom- Lot 2—All $1.50 and $2.00 teaches thi master’s boots, which poms ts -* eer dre « . vs boy, | S0lving the probleme of the str Pocket Knives; fully 98c hild to walk .... plished by tipping the fursace boy,| Solving OB¢ Prove to this man sent gray : From 6:80 jn the morning until 9| him away happy, with the news that at night were my hours, except for | his oe had settled. n short my Wednesday afternoon out PY fortes nd bed net eee every other Sunday afternoon. No|*wered their excited pive to hin Souder my predecessor had been | seit, over some trivial trouble in P discharged because she would be bag shop erm d poe ae atl come faint after running upstairs , ae he « - trong an Irish girl 5,000 members in t be uni jons now on She wan as strong an Irish Bi)! strike,” he sald. “When the strike po Sy tag gy ee ago.” the | Wa# called, tf" we didn't have oogee tng at “ge “yg pn working in the industry—75,000 of oe yy Arey he peta them, They struck because they pgp tang ne te . They were just Cook's prophecy came true. 1] Rate, 7 fone ganised. workers, glish. might have a wick maid on her| "ni we called a big mass meet neges, ing in Madison Square garden. It was jammed, and the streets packed with people outside. The papers {4 60,000 or 60,000 were there. Did } they want to strike? They were eager, excited, demanded it, Then in Seattle. That means to you if you will Just nsider the matter g so big, we ble to spe- nts in the hands of a specialty of ce 1 diseases of the teeth | If you need our help you will be Jasked\to pay less than the private dentists who does all his own work himself, for the gi volume of business enables us to cut the prof its down, in individual cases, much | below what the smalier concern or > one-man office would be com- ed,to ask in order to pay ex penses. | Furthermore, by specializing our we patient receives far bet- ter treatme It is the same dif- ference as exists between the jlarge department store and the | small private merchant Not only ean we underbid the private dentist in his charges, but we offer you a special method of actice—a_pract Casters—Set of $1.00 Hose Bibbs—Odd assort pearing ment of nickel-plated Hose ery ‘oot Bs Bibbs and Faucets. 69 We Dozen Coat Hooke—Coat | Giiicy , c F Celling Hooks. 4 f) C | $3.50 Crosscut Sawe—Champlon Mc Clothes Line Pulleye—Made | Tooth Swedish € and 6%-foot especia’ for this use. : Crosscut Saws ° rn ones 25¢ Choice ; $2. 49 Handled Axes, in- | $2.00 One-Man Bowen ex $1.00 Axes—Odd lot of Men's | pees shan", $1.39 (By United Press.) it was announced that a ‘red call.’ ' MANAGUA, Aug. 22.—Gen, Mena,| {issued at noon, would tell the hour and permanent method lcommanding the advance of thelof the strike, They waited for it ’ ; ing teeth: famnese superior revolutionary army, entered Mana-| impatiently Then on July 7, the} This year’s Labor Day celepra-jfrom the Standard Furniture Com-|Day parade, Monday, September 5 to the ordinary b work and pany on behalf of the labor unions|The contest is creating keen inter-| partial plates. which will take part in the Labor in labor circles and will be an| we give a written guarantee Day parade, The trophy will be|incentive for bringing out the full| with all work much interested. The | presented to the labor union hay-|strength of membership of the kun today with several thousand|‘red call’ was issued, At 2 o'clock! tion will have an added feature in | troops. that afternoon every worker In the| Jiich the Labor Unions of the President Madriz thereupon pub-|industry walked out Oe Tika os licly acknowledged his defeat and| “What did we want? Just enough ¥ peige NUE AND UNION proclaimed Gon, Juan Estrada pres-|to live on twelve months in the|Central Labor Council has accept-|ing the largest percentage of mem- unions which will take part in the REGAL DENTAL OFFICES There are two short seasons'ed this handsome si'ver trophy |bership represented in the Labor! Labor Day parade | 1405 Third Av, N. W. Cor. Union St ident of the republic year

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