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Page 15 text:
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Page 14 text:
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+.....- 1 1 .4 ll-1l1p-g-I-I-1--:-91:7 :gt 3.-1: ' lr- ff: - 11:11 ll l DIABLO, THE MONARCH qFim Prize Poem, T Diablo, dark mountain of the Devil! i How oft and oft neath mystic skies of old, 1 Before the Spaniards journeyed here for gold, u With lava, coals, and fire thou didst revel, l With rumbleiand with roar didst then dishevel li Fair California's plains and wooded wold, i Till meadows round thee info mountains rolled Q Yet left thee there aloft, above their level. l Then grewst thou calm, and now is this our day, , Diablo, thou art a peaceful thing, l Like weary warrior slumbering after fight, : But who knows when again sometime you may ll Wake, and, with reddest flames in darkest night, an Proclaim to all the West that thou art King? -William wright, '20. il fl The Thoughtful Yard Stick ll A yard stick thus to himself did muse li As he walked along the streetg 2 l must buy a pair and a half of shoes T Because l have three feet. -Borrowed. I l, ,,.:,,- H , s- - - g- Y 41: -Q-0110! ini: 11:1-if - ..7xA-QL it-I lnl1idil731Ci1d THE CALAVERAS RIVER l sit upon your cool green bank, And look into your water cold, l wonder why you run so swift, And if you never will grow old. l sit and watch you twist and turn, And curve round every hill Till out of sight beyond the bend, l hear you murmur still. l saw some boys swim in your foam, Ancl then it seemed to me As if you triecl, with might and main, To bear them to the sea. Oh, limpid stream, come, sing to me, As on the bank l lie: While shadows lengthen, birds are still, And the sun drops in the sky. Jack Jordan, '20 -- A43 Y W -init!-Q -fx-riff: ff:-alill4l ' :l-I W1 ..-f- -- - - -I- gp- ,191 min-u 'pq-Q51 :fp-15 glam Y Q.: WSL nm i I LL 1313.1 +I-318
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Page 16 text:
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,.1n1..g1...1qp1l.igp.1n1u-.l.- 1. 1 - .- 1. 1 1 1 1. 1 .- - 1 'I' ...,...,.....-M.- .. -.......-...-..- - - - - ........................-..........-.......-nl, the strike. At eleven-twenty he was told that the vice-pres- ident of the company had declined the presidency tendered him by the Board of Directors because he feared for his life. Gordon quickly realized that if the strike could be broken in Sacramento, it would take the backbone out of the general strike all over the state. He also realized that delay would be fatal. Not waiting for the election of a new president, he decided to go at once to Sacramento. Rush- ing to the elevator, he quickly descended to the street, jumped into his car, and drove up Market Street at a reck- less pace. He headed straight for Ingleside Beach. Arriv- ing there, he jumped out of his machine and ran to the office of the aeroplane company. Yes, he intended to fly to Sacramento. He took less than ten minutes to make the necessary arrangements, to get a plane and a pilot, to get the air-ship started, to skim swiftly over the ground, to take off into the air, and get on his way. Gordon knew exactly how he was going to handle the men if he could get to Sacramento in time. He intended to call a general mass meeting and simply talk to the men. He felt confident that there were one or two radicals at the bottom of the whole affair, and that if they could be exposed, the strike would be ended. This was not what bothered him. What really worried him was that he was overstepping his authority by a long way. He felt sure that it would cost him his position, but, nevertheless, he deter- mined to do what he thought right, let come what would. At exactly one o'clock, one hour and ten minutes after he left the city, he was at the office of the company in Sacramento. The place was surrounded by a crowd of angry strikers, most of whom Gordon observed to be Amer- icans. Among them he recognized an old employee of the company who had been faithful for many years. Calling him to one side Dane learned the facts of the case. It seemed as though they were being stirred up by one man, Stocksky, who was of socialistic tendencies. That was all Gordon wished to know. He retired from the mob, jumped into his car, and rushed for the nearest printing office. Here he had printed, in record time, a number of hand bills, announcing a big meeting of the strikers at the Council of Labor Hall for four o'clock that afternoon. Returning to the scene of the mob, he managed to get ,these posters distributed among them. Although it was only three o'clock, the mob began to dis- perse and start for the hall. By ten minutes to four the place was crowded to overflowing. At exactly four o'clock, Dane Gordon mounted the stage, walked very quietly to the center of it, and stood before a table which he had had placed there. He looked over the crowd for fully a minute before he spoke. Then he said, My fellow employees, we are met here today to discuss the present strike. As we all know the existing con- ditions, it will not be necessary to delay by summing up the situation. l will merely call on our leader, Mr. Stocksky, to set forth our grievances. The strikers were dumfounded for a moment, because word had got round that the man who called them fellow employees and spoke so earnestly was the General Manager of the company. After a few seconds, however, Mr. Stock- sky came forward. It was evident, however, that the men did not care to have him called our leader. Stocksky started his speech at once, beginning by a harangue on capitalists and existing social conditions. He ended by denouncing all forms of capital and urging the men to burn the railroad yards. When he had finished, a mighty cheer for him rang out from the strikers. It was, indeed, a critical moment for Gordon. lt appeared as though the meeting had merely provided a place for the men to be urged on to greater vio- lence. 4... .,..................-..,...................-..-..-......-.... ... .. .. .. - -............-..- - .. .. - .. .. - - ft- - .. -1. ,- X.- - 3,31 . Y 34,
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