The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 16, 1914, Page 1

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Re re SAA AAA AAA AAA Annan eeceeey “LET’S GIVE HENRY FORD POSTCARD SHOWER OF THANKS | WHAT DO YOU SAY? . Ford has done a big thing—greater than the building of libraries or the founding of universities! ay capi ; s} He has blazed a path which, followed by employers the world over, would solve the “labor trouble!” Pet al | if His plan is to let his workingmen who make his profits possible share in those profits—not just nibble at them, himself keeping FORD MOTOR CAR CO, ‘ / the big end—he would give them their fair share—the smallest pay for a man in the Ford motor plant will hereafter be $5 a day. DETROIT, MICH +) j HENRY FORD HAS TAKEN A GREAT STEP FORWARD! HE IS A PIONEER IN GIVING EMPLOYES A. SQUARE Dear Sir 8 DEAL! THEREFORE HE DESERVES PRAISE—YOUR PRAISE—EVERY MAN’S CONGRATULATIONS. | Here's to you! If there were more Henry Ford 13 a The Star believes everyone who reads this will want to tell Henry Ford that he has done a wonderfully helpful thing, and this | jy. 4 paciiklihere aaeid: be fewer’ Calumetst 13 a} : post-card shower will convince Ford and more timid capitalists that the people appreciate and applaud Ford’s action. . | For your convenience The Star has prepared the accompanying greetings in such form that the whole can be cut out, pasted on > 8.—T read the story about your divid $3 iia average-sized postal card, and mailed to Ford. Put your name and address on dotted lines; cut out and paste on post-card; on the OSD OM ci Ld Alc OR ee aI 13 BS other side address to Mr. Henry Ford, Ford Motor Car Co., Detroit, Mich.; and mail it. 4} par pct rnncaes pidedhithibe nibbled ith ceeceitadiitaainadhadadadachalaatada tir cba tadaan abinahidiinss sional hanannnsiwnntionAnhiinnnnedpipnbinminniiiadae T EDITION= MT THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS NO. 277. SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1914. ONE CENT oh crane att. NEWS STANDS fe RUNKEN AUTOMOBILIST KILLS GIRL aa>ECe a3d>deee aa>ece 333€eCe 333eee ployer Tells Star Man of $10,000,000 Gift to Workmen ule,’ Says Ford, ere il ies sssrsacea oll CAN HEAR HER Wil End War af ‘for Mayor, PRISONER SAYS 10 in Race Hiram Cc. “Gil and Otto A. Case will file for mayor this afternoon, bringing the total number of candidates for the office to 10. There is one more day left for filings. progress. and ‘prosperity commtties The man was drunk. “Drunk as a lord,” one have grabbed too much of the of the Chamber of Commerce, filed might say. “As drunk,” in the language of Patrolman Gay’s report, “as a man could be and stand up. He \didn’t know what he was talking about.” bg girl was pulsant iponyP oa and youth. She saw the street car standing at corner. Laughing, SE ee ee ee Or ae: Se. panions: | “Hurry! We'll miss it if you don’t,” and stepped |down from the curb. | . : profits. That makes the labor- Thursday afternoon by fixing $5 s day as the, 00. poor, discontented and The other candidates In the field It was 8 o'clock. The girls, after a day of work in office and shop, were bound for the home of a friend who wage for bis 20.000 work’) jNeepiciENT “AN AWFUL SPELL OF SICKNESS 4.0 it CG. Pigott, Austin E Grif was giving an informal party. Because the hour was late [so] The SeattleStar [ica — By W. H. Alburn TROIT. Mich. Jan, 16.—Hen-| Pord, the Detroit millionaire maker who amazed the adding $10,000,000 to thetr) “The cai 4 pitalist, the manag fithe, J. D. Trenhoime, Judge Rich Income, has just explained | and the workman ow 1 8. Winsor, A. J. Goddard, ime feet WHY be did it, And inen Thavve ’ Z : . which has baffled as-| together. HODGE PASSES. George HB Worley and Adam operate to meke their industry Ratmeeh, expan of tadustry and Jearn- successful. And the salvation | WOM “Gauss Statement is 80 of economics, of society depends on their Gil addressed the following Dac. a child can understand getting along together. open letter to the men and wom on of Seattle” “Now, what do we do {n our ‘ich ite wanted to give 2 etiae | plant? We find that we men who “With conscience clear as to my| |furnished the money to start with | Intentions, should I be chosen, and,! | can be applied to modern jare making bigger profits than we In spite of the knowled, that 1 He ry. chet alt ther ‘have any right to. So we simply | wii be bitterly seatnd by thees believes share up with the workmen, who, 0 do not understand my,mottives, | Pemployers of labor can follow = ReALLY make that mon EALL q ay. r have determined to again seek |" bie example, and that most of AND WE DON'T DO IT RY, Sticking determinedty to bis ame) ee eee aeer of teattle Sova) - when they under | civing THEM PRESENTS. That bition to become an attorney, “Bob” { Ge thin in face Of the tact that and tg always a short, the girl was impatient. would lower their self-respect.| Hodge, former sheriff of King|1 have been recalled from that of. She did not see the drunken man or the big car he Gelieves that his princi “ ct. " ve a Reteeheriog, Hgntly bade ive them thelr ck of ae county and progressive candidate | fice. |drove. He did not slacken speed, eye witnesses say will end the long war Uihelr pay envelo y week, 19 / tor governor, has, after a third| |! want to be mayor of Seattle | The next instant she screamed and was down. | between capital and labor. jen.{ But you're paying the man who| trial, passed the educational test pe sig ooh csevaa ‘ead mele fined The car passed over her. A rear wheel was resting oy! yy ent “thts | Seeps out your factory $5 day.|and is today taking the legal exam-| office that I learned my lesson| | on her head and neck when the car stopped. Her grayeyed man of 50] A%4 Your competitors can't do that, | ingtion | well and with profit not only to } face was crushed into an inequality of the pavement. is philosophy of life eet they?’ Ford smiled.|, it the former two trials, Hodge| myself but to the boys and giris Her fair hair was besmirched with the mud of the up and to the f this coming road. Patrolman Gay saw the accident from the rear platform jof the street car. A doctor happened to be in the crowd at the corner When th “ led. | tailed to pass Inthe academic sub-| Who are growing fimiles played like sunshine over | Wag goth img en Rat | jeots, the bar examiners requiring fathers and mothers Me thin, bronzed face. He was|tio, ‘standardize whatever |* S0OWine equivalent to # high Wan "gaye tie’ Keres ae Geaty and simply dressed in| youre making. simplify your prod. | *hool education Oe gta sothes that one of his own mechan- | Hodge was stumped by such pre r net and your process, and then MAY-| 165 as “the Dr risy. Yon will be told that I am ‘ore nc me aconian theory,” by i We eoald afford. He wore not a)" Yor toc. can’ double your payan theo Ml eecretiy the candidate of those automobile had been rolled of the girl’s body, doggedly returned to Seattle, got a! eS oar kine By men's wage jon in. the Hom Marche, end com | Who would like to see Seattle again the doctor made his examination, while the patrolman ques- . But suppose they can't do tt tinued his studies at nigh |‘wide open” These things I expect tioned eye-witne lhe man at the steering wheel lolle*s ME on 10 tet the,” I hed That doesn't affect the principle of and wha of f they may stupidly in his mi, “the PRINCIPLE of at | Be Cine Seng We tee it minst he borne Esther Sundquist, Clemmer Violini st, and (Inset) Eugenie Argiewicz, The doctor, the examination finished, stood erect P) Wetve done. It's all very well “The principle is to SHARE 1 ENTOM E ‘ There is no man or woman tn at the Colonial | “Hospital?” asked the patrolman ; POU to make YOUR workmen| YOUR | PROFITS WITH jthe city of Seattle who will tell) what did Gen. Sherman say;who played in concert at Berlin] = wppsPon aS eg: . and contented for a few| YOUR WORKMEN, WHETH you tha save Over Hed to them. | aout wart | vt Nahe wae tat 16 with Mme! The morgue,” said the doctor arreno, one of the world’s gia Te: dex anists All this at the corner of Pike and Third last night Years. But what about the thou-| ER THEY'RE BiG OR LIT > be mens la agreed | Don't believe it, At least there | Te Sands of other employers, and the| TLE, Be content with moder | wae : snes npugnec are wares and then there are wars. | « os illions of other working men?| ate dividends. And if you T 4 a war on now in Seattle) And tle movie phiends The gir! was Miss Bery! Bill, who, with Miss Margaret Add what PERMANENT good will can’t add more than five cents between the Clemmer and the are getting the musical treat of Meagher and Miss Bertha Raskins, kept spinsters’ hall In the 0? What will the result be a day to your men's wages, on ‘SCH NS Colont photoplay houses. And their lives between Miss Sundquist Lorena apartments, 1511 Boylston av. She was 22 and em- you're gone?” a profit-sharing basis, do esult in anything if not most/at the Clemmer and Miss Argie ployed at the Seattie-Empire laundry. Ford's face lighted up THAT. If you start, you'll pleasing to ear and eye. For the) wicz the Colonial So far as She was about to board a Merfdian car, and her two friends were “\ think | know what I'm do | soon find you can afford to PLYMOUTH, England, Jan NEW YORK, Jan. 16.—Capt.| principals in this conflict are two|the a incerned, the close beside her when she was struck down by the automobile driven am pi slowly. “I haven't give them more. 16.——With 13° Ilving men on | Dow of the liner Lusitania report |pretty young women—and very | fidd ontinue in-| by S. W. Boswell, saloonman and proprietor of the Bismarck, 319 Yesier te ae. I'm no scholar. “Why? Because they'll earn board, British submarine A.7 | ¢d by wireless today via Cape Race 4. They're violinists of ex-| definitely, The public likes it way. Pah aR Gr : a mechanic who has more. Every man in our shops was at the bottom of Whitsand to the Cunard offices here that he|ceptional ability Miss Sundquist is a Western Boswell, 28, and slight of stature, was taken to police headquarters, But I've thought is a partner In the business. bay, six miles from here, thie |DAd Just rescued the captain of the| It's a merry fiddlers’ war they're product, a native of Astoria, Her) and questioned by Capt. Stewart, who was unable to get coherent an- NO WONDER | MAKE oveding, unktle te ea * Canadian schooner Mayflower and| waging. Jim Clemmer started It first professional engagement was | swers should be shared MONEY WHEN I'VE GOT At 7p ic after the heat had his crew of eight men, 800 miles’ when he engaged Eat Sund- in a little “movie” in her home This morning, after a night In a cell, Boswell didn’t remem- and labor, and 20,000 PARTNERS HELPING been down several hours, the |off Nova Scotia. The party was|quist, a handsome fiaxen-haired town ber being questioned. He was still shaky. 0 get most of the ME INSTEAD OF 20,000 | ‘iicwing message was signaled |Obdliked to abandon the Mayflower | young woman, who has been de-| Miss Argiewicz, who {ts a native | “1 wasn't drunk,” he said, through quivering lips. “I didn’t Profits, because iabor does | WORKMEN WATCHING THE | {0ll)Ning message was sigrdved Jind take to the boats when the lixhting her audiences with both of Russia, is Miss Sundqutst’s con-| see the girl or the street car. The street lights blinded me. | most of the work that creates CLOCK.” innh th eonnenand OF the gan, [vessel cook tite classteal and ragtime selections. | trast both » and in career | can hear her screams yet.” — —— - — . “ | Manager Hamrick, of the Colonial She's a bri and she bas con-| A. W. Dobel, Waldron hotel, was in the seat beside Boswell. He ts merged craft: All | Ee theatre, was growing green with |certized since she was 10. She bas|@ Northern Pacific fireman Mechanical dam- ‘SCARE M AWAY [20."°. Radavel an sulolst with the arent | I got into the automobile with Boswell at the Bismarck,” said perpen 4 i pam: Cee —- Hamrick Gets Girl erin Philharmonic orchestra aud] Dobel. “I didn’t know his name, or who he was, then. When we hit Salvage tugs were rushed to When you catch a burglar stick Off Vaudeville Stage in other European cities {the girl 1 couldn't get ont, pecause E oswell was on the side toward tha 00 ouse att the scene, and grappling was |!ng his head in your pantry win-| “I gotta get a lady violinist,” was door, and he just sat there. By and by 1 climbed past-him, but by that begun for the sunken boat. dow, throw @ tomato can at him/the ultimatum he delivered to him. Wilson attended vaudeville | time they had go ees y into the Owl drug store. }and yell “Scat.” Mrs. 1%. J, Erwin, | self, “and the best will be none too| show, occupying a 5O-cent seat Both Miss Meagher and Miss Raskins said the automobile did rot e After a woman has reached 40.6712 Firnt av. N. W., did tt Thurs. | good.” That controversy with Mexico must | #top when it reached the standing street car, she gets an idea that the old-fash-|day night. The would-be thief| So right off the vaudeville stage! have instilled a sense of humor in| It"—the antomobile—"was going on Third,” said the former, “and e on rac 1 ar joned mirrors were the best made a hurried get-away lhe t Miss Eugenie Argiewicz, him It seemed to be going very fast. I saw that it was going to strike her, — ————|s0 | shut my eyes. I couldn't bear to see it.” The penalty for mansiaughter in this state Is not more than 20 years in the penitentiary, or not more than one year In the county jail, or a fine of not more than $1,000, or both fine and imprisonment. panera . inctieeieeacitinemtiade cileieeis aaa ae Hi Gill! It’s the same old name, but the owner says it means something different. Hi Gill reformed and a reform candidate! What does Seattle think about him in that role? What will Seattle do with him? The Star, in printing his startling announcement yes- terday, did so for the purpose of letting the people of Se- attle know about this new and important element in the mayoralty campaign. Hi Gill as a reform candidate certainly is a new element, .and an important one. This paper has been for six years an every-day, all-the-time opponent of Gill. The Star brought about his recall and again, two years ago, defeated him when he tried to come back. Gill himself gives The Star all the credit for that. An announcement of bargains and news of special interest to furniture buyers appears on Page 5 in today’s Star. The well known furni- ture store of Woodhouse & Platt has just dosed a contract for liberal advertising space. in this Paper, and their ads will appear each Monday, Wednesday and Friday from this time on. This is one of the oldest established furniture stores in the city, and during its “IT ONLY takes four generations to make a human thorough- bred,” declares Dr. Kellogg, the eugenist. We should worry about our great. grandchildren. NEW PENNANT COUPON BILLIE BURKE POSES wae “FLOWERS” pte § Many years of business in Seattle this firm has And now Gill professes to have seen the light. Gill insists that his candidacy for mayor does not Ait-Satine of Pennants Gan be Gad AC aRanGien® Gonne int id’ an enviabl hecuct ede gunlata dha mean the Gillism of the past, which cost Seattle so dearly. For Gill’s sake The Star hopes that his }J anq its branches by presenting this coupon and 20-cent nviable reputation for sq' convetsion is genuine. Every good citizen must hope for the same. . But in the meantime, Mr. Gill, for each Pennant. Twenty-five cents by mail All mail orders must be addressed to The Star, 1309 Seventh Av Main Branch: Northwestern Photo §upply Co., Inc. (Eastman Kodak Co.) 1320 Second Ave. Bathing Girl, Co-Ed and Stage Beauty Pennants can also be had this week. t dealing. Star readers will do well to Tead carefully the store news of Woodhouse Seattle probably will “keep its fingers crossed.” Seattle will not say to you that you are beyond salva- tion, but Seattle will say to you that you will have to prove, and prove beyond the slightest doubt, that you are sincere. And, Hi Gill, you can’t blame Seattle if she should insist upon your serving IN THE PRIVATE RANKS as a reformed man FOR A LONG TIME.

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