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Ea Mother Jones in Anger and Tears Welcomes Revolution 7" le ARR RA Her Pitiful Story of the Hun gry, New Born Babe of an MOTHER JONES’ SAYINGS American White Slave Moth er—For Sake of the Children. This country Is as unjustly é |w ruled by wealth as Portugal }® was by its aristocratic dew pots. If the p t conditions allowed to continue, America will be far worse off a few years hence than Portugal ever Was If the present undercurrent of social unrest is not stayed a terrible revelution will sweep this country witha five years. It is coming faster than we even dare suspect untry ts on the brink t such a condition that about the fall Rome, The children a pee eee ee eee eee eee eee eee OFS EEEERE DEERE EE EEE ditions under which they are ® produced. Not one child in 5,000 is born optimistic, They * are defeated by their Inher # itance before they start in to @ live ‘ | | RAKKHRRARAKA ERNE MOTHER JONES | minors. Her baby had just b born, tt was her first. It should | been a fine, b “This nation, which started out to be the greatest in the world, ts nothing now but an oligarchy, con: | loll its tongue out in terrible hun | trolied by a few says Mother | ger and stretch its puny little body | lina, who slow 16 year-old Jones, the “stormy petrel of the | out as though it had been working | Austin when she refused to elope with him, has committed suicide by His body was found tn a labor unions, nd e beloved to a point of exhaustion. | turned friend of the coal miners Continuing she told the repre-/born. And it was starved, too.’ sentative of The Star | mother,’ he replied, ‘they “You can count on your fingers | are rly all that way around | the men who have this country in|here. The mothers work right up| their absolute grasp. They can pre-|to the day before they are born.” cipitate a panic; they can scare or| “And that ie the reason,” Mother starve us all into submission, but | Jones flashed out between tears, they will not for long, according te |“! am doing all | can do to change my notion. |the terrible conditions here in America. It is for the sake of the children—the yet unborn children.” “For although they give us sops/ whenever they think we > as I Frederick & ilies Basement Salesroom jf |$2,000 through operations of a clever |} No clew to the TODAY IN HISTORY. band of forgers jeriminals has t » with an army of 2,000 nol ever gave me rounded Western Ohio by ax many Indians court house yesterday of fresh salmon has been received here and local cann to handle the sh prices have been cu HE FLEW OVER } 9,000 FEET HIGH three-hour beat Washington and Washington! thony W ay ‘to do Obio's Indian fighting the Cleveland and other re | have atreets named after St Clair, flecting the terrible slave con. ® jbut they are of # after #| when of the affair of Nine marriage licenses w cook on a fish seow, ni has been found Moating in the bay bh & bread knife thrust firmly in tiful ohild. | his abdomen. | Hitmenbeck, and thelr) to the doctor and said, ‘That baby | shooting families. was worked out before it was) barn, Hight deaths were recorded im fe allie yesterday Strawberries are all ! crates have been ship JOHNSTONE ped to the late markets. altitude of over 9,000 feet at Bei Walla Walla. j ment rere making a new world been nwindied out “ot nearly serting a little independence, we! 9 om will not always be fooled day we will have the courage rise up and strike back at these | great giants of industry, and then, we will see that they weren't giants, after all; they only seemed So because we were on our knees and they towered above us. “They have driven us to it, and when the time comes we will/ square. ourselves with them. Some people think it would be wrong to have any bloodshed. Is it any worse to kill a few men quickly than it is for a few men to mil} the rest of us slowly? | Mother Jones is on her way to see her beloved miners in the coal Tegions of western Pennsylvania, to which she was called by the ter rible sufferings of the striking miners in the Greensburg district, who, with their families, are living fm tents and subsisting on bread and water. | She had just left the Iilinols fields, where the miners have re turned to work after having gained &@ great victory after an all summer strike. | “It was two weeks ago, down in a little mining town in Iilinois,” she added. “I was standing beside the bed of a young woman who had | been working in the company’s warehouse since 1! was old) enough to escape the law for MASS MEETING TONIGHT | Arguments in favor of the passage | of the King county harbor bond {s-| sue will be presented tonight at al— mass meeting at Dreamland pa-| villion, which will bring the speak-| ing campaign to a close. Mathew Dow will preside, and speeches will be made by Judge Thomas Burke, George FP. Cotterill Robert Bridges and James F. McE! roy. The necessity for the Lake Washington canal, the Duwamish and Renton waterway and munici ord docks and wh es, and the re ation of these to each thoroughly e: xplained. r of prom t residents and King county will sit form as vice-presidents among th | Furniture a Dry Goods and gray fox. unusual oppo Hartm. an inson, W. George Hill, W. P. Monohon, H. N Willihan and A. E Much interest in has been s bond fs women 0} attend the mass meeting SIAN SAT a 17 POLICE AFTER HUNTERS. mplaints have it 2.50—Linen and The the boys, wa adquart | Tacoma—Fifty men are required to help recount the Tacoma. Director Hunt ¢ @ day to men qualified for the , ff North Yakima.—The body of “Old | Great | @ugout, and Anthony McMicha« } | INCORPORATE Dee 1, a Ranges fMeqro, has been arrested charged wee “ yi bis murder, FREDERICK & NELSON, Ine Store Closes Datly at 600 Furniture Dry Goods On Sale Tomorrow A Special Assortment of Smart Hats and Turbans UR-TRIMMED Turbans, that play such an important role in the season's millinery modes, form a prominent f offering. Some have soft velvet crown and fur brims, others are in combina tion of velvet brim and fur crown, fox, chinchilla Tapestry- and flower-trimmed Mushroom T , of soft velvet, Hats of black velvet, silver-faced, j the very popular Soft Hood shapes, trimmed with fancy quill effects and pom pons, are also embraced in this very interesting collection The desirability of the styles and the serviceable materials render this an unity at $7 Two Dressy Models in Women’s Street Boots at $5.00 } Characterized by Excellence and Workmanship. Children’ s School Dresses At $6.75 Sizes 6 to 14 Years in Material 1 Dresses, of brown e, with full waist, vutache Comal Stationery _ A0c Box Tailored Waists CHILDRE) FULL COATS IZES 6 TO 14 YE $12.50—Of navy-blue, gray iots, 1 n double-bre turn-over velvet Har and mut MISSES’ WASHABI New Talered Waists of Linen, Madras and Canleic Peleie-willste f pg embroideries and clu effects, also well-tailored mod cambric, some in mannish linen-finished with laundered coll shirt style, some with full plaited fronts, and others in dainty tucked and Gibson ef fects, with laundered collar Carefully Filled and cuffs, 2,000 Pairs Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Shoes At Important Price Reductions ye several large lots of Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Boots, that were purchased at very favorable figures, we have added a number of broken lines from regular stocks, and offer the en tire collection at special prices representing savings of unusual importance All sizes in the offering, and a wide choice of popular shapes and leathers. Women’s Boots | Women’s Boots Women’s Boots : Special ae... Se ____ Special i $1.95 $2.45 ||| $2. =} Women’s Button and Lace B ots, in but. kid and gun-r ton or lace st ith kid or cloth tops, short vamp, with high arch, |, and turned military or spike heel or Goodyear welt sole, Weiaate omen’s 5 Roots of oneita, bales patent or Nomen’s j dull calf, in lace and button style, with mat kid or cloth top, tip or plain toe, me dium and heayy soles and “common sense” or Cuban heels. Sizes 3 to 8, and widths from C to B Special! $1.98 Pate aiviesmrcnant sl ine Mins Soo = = aa Misses’ and Children’s Shoes Decisivel y Under priced MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S DRESS SHOES, of pat- ent leather, with brown cloth top and buttons; also of fine, soft kid, in Blucher lace style, with medium round toe, pat- ent tip and low heel. Sizes ; to 8, special $1.45; 8% to < 11, special $1.65; 111% to 2, special $2.15. MISSES’ AND CHILDRE HOES, of patent leath- er and glazed kid, on “foot-form” last, with extension sole. Sizes 5% to 11, special $1.45; 11% to 2, special $1.95. CHILDREN’S PATENT LEATHER SHOES, in| BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES, SPECIAL $1.95 PAIR=@ button style, with bronze top, on “foot-form” last, with | Gun-metal calf and patent leather Button Boots, with: turned sole, Sizes 5 to 8, special $1.15; 8% to 11, spe | Swing last, raised toe, straight tip and extension sole, cial $1.35. } BOYS’ HEAVY LACE SHOES, of heavy velour calf, 7] MISSES’ SCHOOL SHOES, SPECIAL $1.00 PAIR | w 1 hea e. Sizes 9 to 13, special $1. 25; oy a —( rlaze { ith | p sizes 0 2. Mf glazed kid, with pa eather tip. Sizes 11 to 2 Basement Salesrsem, Boots, in patent, glazed kid and dull leathers, on good | | | | j | lasts, with sewed welt soles. Women’s Long Coats at $14.50 Many Smart Models Offered, Includ-\ ing the Three Illustrated Here | MATERIALS Wide-wale cheviots, serges, _faney mixtures, diagonals. These Coats are well-tailored, cut on grace ful, semi-fitting lines, and are 54 inches There are mannish plain-tailored models, styles with inlaid velvet collar and others with storm collar. Colors, gray, brown, black, navy, tam and brown mixtures. Sizes 14, 16 and 18; 34 to 42, Misses’ Well-Tailored Skirts | Serges, Panamas and Mixtares | $3.95 and $4.50 Misses’ Skirts, of heavy serge and panama, if black and navy-blue, also brown and checked mixtures, well designed and tailored @ the popular full-plaited model. Waist measure ments range from 22 to 25 inches; lengths from 30 to 36 inches. J $14.50 \ A Very At Attractive Display of Barrettes am ; a 1 Valenciennes ae gat | Trimmed Millinery at $6.50 | Lace! Vasoment Salesroom i s . Special 10c i } S pecial ee | | 12 Yards for 55¢ Jarrettes, in shell or am- |$ | ber color, in carved effects, i ae nch and Ger- with trimming of gilt, and $} man Vs ennes Laces, Back Combs to match; |} \% inch to 11% inches wide pecially priced at 10c {3 | in clear, dainty patterns, each $} on extra-firm dia Bas i$ §] and meshes. Spe Lingerie and AY x, ge ENT acquisitions to the showing of Milli cial, per 12 yards, 55¢. ement Salesroom Popular Corsets} $1.00 WARNER'S RUSE PROOF, STYLE 501, PRICE $1.00. excellent style for nery at this popular price inc dressy Hats of silk velvet, in large, drooping and mush $1.25, $1.45 $1.65 room shapes, faced with silk and having crowns in tam and stretched effects. These are tastefully trimmed with soft ribbon bows, flowers and old EK a howing at - gr varied sh v8 2'§ gold cord. The stylish Shirred Turbans, in black § figures that require extrem ese ysrices embraces : R pers. : 4 ie cea mae’) and colors, are also prominent among the newer 3 length the waist-lines Lingerie i prettily | rivals . The bus moderately-lowt yle, material and workmansh are very inter- §tWO pairs of hose supporters esti ke in straight and athe! Basement Salesroom, ROYAL we )RCESTER, of linen and linen-finished ST E 403, PRICE $1.0— Black Percaline and Sateen Petticoats This a ‘nade of song Women's Sizes, $1.65; Misses’ Sizes, $1.48. coutil pairs ¢ ipporters, ible for the av having bust int and skirt mode Serviceable vat lack percaline and heavy met finist back, fitted top and side-front fasten Have deep flar ing flounce, full underlay and dust ruffle erately ed sateen, well cut and d, with the new elastic ? | } mbination | The values at $6.50, from the standpoint of } mater ng coutil and i } “pasement Saleeroet