The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 18, 1913, Page 1

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)

a Because he discussed with a passenger—a passenger who turned out to be a spy—local conditions as they relate to employes of the street railway company, Roy Jones, of Sumas, Wash., a student who is working his way through the university, was dismissed as a conductor on the lines of the Puget Sound Traction, Light and Power Co. He was dismissed because he expressed the opinion that, as a class, street car employes in Seattle were not given sufficient pay. He wasn’t complaining about his own lot, because he hasn't any family to care for, and he was getting along fairly well. But he knew men who went in and out of the barns ahead and behind him every day who did have families. And he was a free-born American citizen, wearing no man’s collar, free to think and speak as he pleased. So when a passenger on his car, during a dull time of the day, engaged him in conver- sation, he said what he thought. FAIR TONIGHT Ee TTTTTTTOCTTTTTTTTLTTTOTCLCLTTE CCL UCL Ly oS ‘i More Than | 40,000 ni Circulation Every Day = EMM VOLUME 15 SEATTLE, WASH., Confessions of a Wife! No 2. ; é Wherein the Bride- to-Be Suddenly Rénambara! } That She Is to Start Out in a New and Untried | Business With a Stranger for a Partner—That Marriage Is Different From Love—and She’ Grows Cold With Fear. CHAPTER II. who has ng things to me, but I ar wrong. Dick and I are different from the whole world and, like the Princess in the fairy tale, we are going to “live happy ever after.” W very disquieti that he is Love like ours cannot become cold. ay s in his ee |start suit against the company to recover the stolen land. ~~ y! my!! st tha 1 aby r : le * Bagge “ calling for a congressional investigation of i the world is GOING TO BE MARR ) I : 3 i t rid RI } and the copper trust in general were h ppy mother was that ag adopted yesterday “T twenty-four, doctor,” I ’ hallenge of the “Is that so?” exclai 1 It seems only like yester- : day that the nurse brought you in your : eso! c a con- 1 And i ar " ! D. « estern sarap . at , annual and ‘give y away eport Ss ( rks, of tlhe houie “Yes, dear friend of my dead father,” I said, “you know exe ' s 1885-6, the official I € I have no one—no relative to do thi ; The old docts k y 8 and Photograph of part of the 28 women who salled from Seattle Tuesd ay aboard the liner Yokohama Maru for the Orient, where they will sate | iy) y cs t € anted I 1 into my eyes and sa ter to various parts of the country as Methodist missionaries. The petire wae taken on the deck of the liner. . : t ditch MARGARET, HAV HOUG val MUCH eet 5 7 rot on ABOUT WHAT YOUR al copper MORROW?” I I raised m ¥ eyes to | and then, like a s face, for it was a strange loves me, always with me—some one to grieve when I grieve—some one to laugh when I laugh—some one always to be thinking g of me. Don't ve | I have been al } 2 ’ “a pr Me HARRISBURG, NEW HAVEN, Nov. 18.— nie Ag aa ‘ K © « f F Mrs. Sarah Deviin w ading ; ‘i " the fight today of , pe to save the rt t pe Bese e Wakefield, A p . hang in March for ; aan S of her husband said: “My dear girl, that is| 8 was , . are the ecstatic bliss of romance love that you are describing * _ De and it makes gods and goddesses for a time of those human . re ae of. f el beings who experience it, but only gods. can live upon the pone al { ; . a mountain tops, the rarified atmosphere of which we mortals he b« owed to complete Devi Wd Te cannot stand for long se. re : ; - a : ; om) VE ' this > t s catield we ste h mut Gi : ward con ned 1 t AKTee Ine sw “Marriage is hy eeipacaal BUSINESS OF WOMAN Tener was form 1 It is obeying nature’s great behest, and nature, my dear, takes | *t*" no account of love Don't th ~ WANTED W VAIN “The over-powering, all-embracing love, my | sioner Knud Chatr child, that you feel now for the man you are going to marry /7le wes pre B is but a part of experience, but marriage is life in which the yoy" a ha ails experience of love is but an incident. Love may be for a oq itn. an week, a cia pri ora year, mut marriage is for ney day I Bridge ro} ? . 1 one nt Fra vA SLANGY THIEF BROWN Pie EW YORI G.I if s Yo R. R 1 tod emotion of the dea i] 3 years old ’ 1 Mor-gage given LIFI the t COUPON Why sholiid the city of Seattle pay $200 a month for the base P 7 NO. 121 ment of the Wingfield hotel, at Fourth and Westlake, when the owner | ° of the lease on the basement has been glad to rent it, with ten pool Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecttively num and billiagd tables thrown in for $150 per month? cred, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle And why should the city pay $1,200 for the lease when the man you to a $5-cent Pennant. Yale and Navy Pennants are now out. || who owns it now has always lost money on It ennante w ¢ sent by mail If 5 cents additional for each Pen. The finance and public s ommittees of the city council are ant pt enc closed Bring or mailto The Seattle Star, 1907 Seventh asked to consider thes n they report back to the council Unicn St n the offer of C. D son to rent the property for $200 per month and of C. E, Wingfield to sell the lease for $1,200. HOW TRACTION COMPANY GUARDS ITS DIVIDENDS! AND WEDNESDAY; MODERATE The Seattle Star THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1913 [~ TWENTY-EIGHT WOMEN GO TO SPREAD GOSPEL At PEL ACRO meses 7 GOVATENER WILL STATE IN FIGHT — INDIANS GATHER ie Pes Sake —— wo BE ELECTED AS TO SAVE WOMAN ONMOUNTAIN TO HEAD CF LEAGUE FROM GALLOWS DEFYU.S, TROOPS ee THANKS FOR THE LOBSTER!, And the spy took the information back to the men who paid him and the next day the young man from Sumas was called on the carpet and told that he wasn’t on the payroll any more. He was an intelligent young man, with views of his own and that permitted their expression, and in the eyes of the officials of the Puget Sound Traction, Light and Power Co., he was dangerous. These officials don’t like and tells what he thinks. They’re afraid that somewhere from within the ranks of their employes there may spring up a leader who will see to it that they take a little off the dividends and tack it unto the wages of the men who run their cars. a courage men of the Roy Jones sort. They’re afraid of the man who thinks EASTERLY WINDS SO) SPY TEAPOUATUENIT UOTE DES VENA EETAA ESTATE ETT NIGHT EDITION TIM LT TKAINS AND TAN ONE CENT} DEMAND U.S. SUE MINE OWNERS S PACIFIC | MINERS WORK NAKED WITH NO FRESH AIR Labor Delegates Hand Charge That Property Stolen From Govern- ment Is Made Hell for Workers Accusing the Calumet and Hecla Mining eration of z Co. of gigantic land thefts, Labor par the American Fed is today pre- a dem ent at Washington nd that the st ¢ depart ALL CHEERFUL AS THEY SAIL FOR Cihnok further read, from page 189, that this land had never been recovered and is now in the hands of the copper trust. 1 z to | e case of Chandler history e officia FOREIGN SHORE e t tract of mineral land © copy ated SANTA FEN Nov TELL OF TERRIBL CONDITIONS IN MINES r the . sha P And is 8 x r c ved in corrup- . caus ; a 4 m and iniquity, * 1 of Labor is rh zvhan t pap ea ‘ matic “Look at the conditions that have existed under James Mc- Naughton, the Calumet & Hecla superintendent, who refused the proffered aid of Secretary of Labor Wilson, and has since called him a peanut politician. “The mines in this district are down 8,000 feet. It's so hot down there the miners have to go naked. fields 4 and yet the only air furnished in the lower levels is : Ur | Taliak (Chita act 4 the e ist from the compressed air drills. : k s. t's as near hell as you can. go on this earth, : | of M I pa ne men who work in those levels last about e ya Merge) Pry ome a was : fe three years, and then have to go to work on the r jhiagnteos dump outside, broken down, physical wrecks. : ae ery 8 r t e end of o1 er * ans that he and bis family will Q 7 a ¢ ing WOMEN ACCUSE BOSS OF OFFENSES IN HOMES a yme mine bosses ar 8 enc to « ination . r w We affidavits women 8 : . Cond nve existed at ( et t would be a disgrace to fe ted Sisters Go to Same Field 1 I wne eve tom + re yn Calumet The In t i t A i , land and the ¢ any guarantees the tJ Gilliam . f 1 Delegate Thomas Van Lear, of the Machinists’ interna- 1 le sa national, when the resolution calling for a congressional investi- gation had been unanimously and enthusiastically passed, an- nounced he would im tely draw up a resolution demanding that the government ute suit to recover the stolen lands. ed by a of @ tee sehr ts rhitne test of the DRU =N SOLDIE INSULT GIRLS ON STREET “Orur ith ivers strapped to them, roam the s g and otherwise insulting women and girls, threatening peaceful strikers, and doing all In their power to incite them to acts of violenc he said. “In spite of my age yd judgment it almost impossible for me to keep from strangling some of them t t a c d etion They are not \ r or it \ PN t firn rR oe & © pma re tt u V pF taurant men o® Pike st r t t Lewy aD Rippe is al fan |e { Percy Spoke to Her With His Sole. er loment char r r te xiow thy without relief in His Eye ‘Chapman lis like 1 ard with eer.

Other pages from this issue: