The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 11, 1919, Page 13

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eSeattle Star = ™ J a SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1919. ORKERS ARE GIVEN WAGE INCREASE * *% ¥ + | SLIPPER MAY HELP SOLVE DEATH MYSTERY. Physician Dives Charge Will Cinderella-Shoe Solve Mystery TAKES HER LIFE Hines Orders More Money — | of Murder; Dainty Shoe ea ee Eee a 5 Sacer ee “| ASMOTHER DIES to 400,000 Employes on ~ Daughter Kills Herself and National Transportati io Father Attempts Death Te aa VASHINGTON, April 1h— atement inced. Dining an@ ited Press )}—Train and en ceping car employes have presente” Is Link in Weird Case \' 5 (N. BL A. Staff Special) mes wa natantly BELLINGHAM, Aprit 1L—A SAN FR SCO, April 11 t I I by | rf SS polly aoe apa he , heartrending story of family kinemen on lines of the national [ed urguments and thelr 5 sl ag fitted a woman's foot : ct: Siler troubles was brovght to light railways today were granted on before the railroad > as neatly as the famous slipper of! ander: w lat aid at Dr here last night by the death of other increase in wages by Di |t of the ratlrosdl Cinderella, has led the baffied de-| Northecott's door, He admitted at Mrs, Winifred Couch, the suicide rector General i ane ri} © given increases Be een by ee ee of her daughter, tthel, and the i ‘atieak a OR ra gristiest’ murder m hes Tho the girl had ¥ . neste pe hg X Hines’ Problems med t 5 " the attempt of her husband to end rouctive to January 1, Claims ; yeurs—that of the u = nalot ea te his Hite of the employes for time and nnnoUs decision nurse. th I ed or few hour ase : . half for overtime in road servie bode’ case, Hinata Obeying mute mandate « before t jclan was arrested A . was feft to « bi-purtivan boa ft of the ems which bit of footwear, p rt . , . t ttempt to obt ‘ inion . ‘ are Dr, Ephraim Nort? With — other ane he ha parde " “ i YP , my r working hysician, on a charge of beer hed of fw au H . PF paptaln of . Detectiv curious efrounm ™ { wes 7 Ave f great railroad brot was mad believes it wae North r | re San 0ods Increases ranging from $1 faced with the formed the al op from ' a ’ ‘ » for men p by t r which Mise Reed died. and who later “w ' for « t attle bank, and | and from $1.31 to $1 refuse to make any flung her body. into a lonel i mad w ® befor was sentenced from on 15 years |on a ¢ t r wage “dJustments whatever, because 2 im San Mateo count t us f t—and ithe peniter ¥ Meeks ales. present unsatisfactory condition: . a The shoe in question ix Dr. Northcott's name sneadilane Gseianed te reitreen te in spite of 4 4 pair which precisely fits t t Acting Gov. Hart t his @ * * Aesigned to T° ‘fact that this class of employes e Miss Frances Cronin, nu Mins « rn deathbed smpeny with his | 5 : prc tats [POM to ¢ t readjustments Northeott's off assintant wit civkare Sh oh 1918. Claim of cause of readjustments @éd Cronin was alse detaine Ethel ¢ b aghter + ge ‘at sinmen, firemen [Ot ¢ * of employes. to have given importa ‘ rm 1 ate sive “ lish relative a against her employer thine an tays. A any ey TR deration | between various classes of y The high-h few her mother hes-oe cutting down the 5 found in a house a fea 1 ort ime Asantats shed for the other which Dr. Nort latel ne ' elt ed two! board since the fir the wa se taken an option, When th " when hearing ‘To maintain reddju put one of them on Mise Cre A f ' her a i with those which foot, they declare she broke tempe ux prevented t Is Big Advan ade other employes. and told what she knew ' memt Only an approximate estimate ¢ Of these three por In the fireplace of the house “ Mrs 1 last nigt " ar of expense which stiefied that only the last % jon, say pe the that if € were retu 1 to privon 5 r of the ir acticable and just, and rred me “x. w would i he ¢ w railroad of- | adopted it." f 3 half hid « - The fam d that if ir As a result of his stand im train and er e, Hine id that, after ominent in Belling! Corp. Call Rescues His zooms Goo wee cro nd cory |Sostre, ao Sra “peace nd oisat Seat Sea 8 to Ger. i bearing | been in eff p Poy whey ; Pa Iyge 9 _ died in the future *"sa am Officer i in Bullet Storm 5 aoe mame, some of them uf the ions the aadilons) ageanens om ght of conditions bereft | $66 000 annua Thi tement, however, does A comparison of the 1917 w t the pay of employes the ur brotherhoods and © the American Railway express wegen now ordered is given below: | pany will not be given just 60 With the disposition of the broth-|eration, officials said. The a - YOU ‘SHOU D READ | peas Lites beet eece «||. BY AE GRLDNOE lone bayonet charge on the Huns D.C. Ape ‘on the Marne—one of the Al! the Inwtances of ind | erhoods’ claims for re ent of Hero Stories of the war mong our boys in Fr ! : ; ‘iver {men's wages have been Gig 4 By Gen. Pershing | wage only two relatively |for several months and it ds nT we Ster the war es classes of ratiroad employes! unlikely they wi Ube decile, emperors ie ts | infantry. Mome . | " rain to be dealt with, the Hines|two weeks, according to official, members of th | sae ac tbat aeaeta yore ¢ tank COfps will make pages in our history thy They Steal Costly Vestments| y ai ——1017 Wage *aseenger conductors ....se..e.06 $125.00 t 165.1 .. and Linens Passenger baggagemen 71.50 to ree pa pss aeenger brakemen . to 90.00 per mo, * worth of Passenger engineers . per day wer firemen 2 per da ight conductors 4.09 per day ht brakemen 2 day ford st. Thursday night. The theft nt engineers 5.33 per day wax reported by Rev. M. J. O'Calla ight firemen day Sept. 26. Corporal Call was in a vered the lose. rd’ brakemen 347 per day tank with an officer near Varennes The church ts open at all times | Yard engineers eeeeee 4.20 per day driving thru the German shell fire} and the police believe that the|Yard firemen ............cc0.c00e 2.72 per day to put the German machine od | chureh was entered and the loot car- | nests west of Varennes out of ac | ried away in an automobile sen |First Enemy Rush Stopped (eritisn LABOR’S TRIPLE ALLIANCE |." oxic cect Queen Mary Shocked by ‘ Tank Is Hit the act of ¢ A nelf-macrifice perforn Several hundred vestments and linen were stolen from the Holy jomary Catholic church, at Califérnia ave. and Han by Corporal Donald M. Call, of com: | 244th by m tank corps ‘ont lieutenant. Li Call hafla from Larehmont Manor s of lace 12 feet long, several iacieani Galva beaks hae renghedl by Narrow Margin }} National Union of Railway tee Hicin isch velvet altar cavers dott tlle mlddiet. Ne Man's Land when { National Transport Workers’ Federation os ) ites ean a ak: werpten ondadon um Distri ry be 2 direct artillery hit knocked off half} LONDON, April 11.—Dealing with Miners’ Federation of Great Britain...... {''The place was not left in any way : of the turret the record of the tith army, af Sisardered by the thiev and al LONDON, April 11—(By United} «very tl a | ; ' — Sldisordered by the eves, and al y nice and clean,” the queen The shot shook the wrecked ma-| dispatch by Fieki Marshal sir Doug Total Rama ela eee 1,550,000 j|careful check is being made to as-| Press)—Stirred by her personal dis-| was always able to say, on - te ag ay | betaine’ law pale. _— amg pr Rae bs dsichindaad iunalions maaan certain if anything further of value | coveries in “slumland.” Queen Mary |ing, but her unofficial visits ases fro e explosive shell] public, declares that the allied vic as taken. othe: filled the air, and rendered the of-|tory over the Germans was little |(Special to The Star by N. BE. A)) The alliance prevented the|*** ‘* today took the unprecedented step | ¢ ae si of the picture, 7 ; fuer wk acealbnaled Cobpora’ CoM lakers. of, cagrecdinmn LONDON, April 11.—"The triple! introduction during the war of the of summoning the leading British | ree ee gripe fn she exc unconsclous T high water mark of our/alliance” is the strongest labor or-/sands of colored indentured labor | ing and health authorities to| ast at the squalor and nam LIEVT-DONALD M.CALL. Choking, coughing and gasping | fighting strength in infantry,” he nization in Rritatn ometimes | ers $ din oa tga ci Saati a | conditions she found for air, C d “the big three.” ‘The strike ie the last resort of Gal . pe? | Then, “Why wasn't I tald of rporal Call threw open the | says, “was only reached after two it's ¢ mediate betterment of living condi-| The court officials had noth door of e tank nd leaped out.) and a half ears of conflict, by It is more powerful than the | triple alliance It trusts more to} " Shells were bursting all around him,| which time heavy casu: «had ak!Trades Union congress with ite/neégotiation—to a give and take pro-| tions of the worke say. So Queen Mary turned and machine gun bullets were spat | ready been incurred. It was not un- | 4,900,000 affiliated worker r it} gram. | King George ma |man who would know, Col. Wy tering 4 speech of wel gainst the steel sides of the| til mid-cummer, 1916, that the artil jis more closely organized ut if a strike is called, it prom dome the Gilkedins, Whe title pee’ Bist? ip East Side | ates, of Bethnal Green. | The corporal saw a big shell hole| imately adequate to the conduct of ance demands shorter bours and world-shaking tests of strengt | Pilot Hawker Flies Around | *re? Beet 1, ant sie See t a afraid I have always nee |20 yards away, and crawled on his| major operations better pay and other concessions, it|tween labor and capital yet seen. | the liveliest Interest in the proceed- wnt e_ highways too much iam | . attention’ [A GenGlek Whloh ‘te Itkelp to Western St. Johns ings, but it is known the queen's|*¥4. “I want you to show me i ne triple alll-|ises the most bitterly conte ( nk lery situation became fore, when all matters concerning the nation’s | the United Press: “The queen waa stomach to it. Then, for the first | Causes of Anxicty gets immediate, serious result by-ways.” _—_ time, he thought of the officer. } During the Somme battle artil The full title of the organization |in fonalization of industry ir — desire for first-hand information on| ~ ae ak ‘ Tacoma Veterans Will Wait) “He must be sult aliver” thought | ie-y ammunition had to be watel |i: The Triple Ind | Alliance|Great Britain to an extent un-| ST. JOHNS, N. F.. April 11.—The| Lalo tempp Menace Dy. ‘all, and without further hesitation th O17 tho: Unio of Rall y- | dreamed. British rplane of the Sopwith type F with the greatest care, During 1917)0f the..National Union of Ra | ritish airp pwith typ cag a pl noah s Labor Council Move he climbed out of the shell hole and) ammunition was plentiful, but the|men, the National Transport Work —— made its first test flight at-5 p,m, {Homes was responsible for this soara pitta tire alte stole thru that hell of ghot and shell| sry uieyation eaueed ansiety, it ler# Federation, and Miners’ Federa:| J vainente for yesterday, preparatory to attempt-| “housing durbar,” as the press calls lay's conference 1s G58 aa TACOMA, April 11—The Tacoma | ack to the ruined tank sen only in 1918 that artillery oper:|tion of Great Britain, 1t was first| “prover ing the trip acroan the Atlantic tt personal investigations’ tai ay Soldiers’ and Sailors’ council prob-|_ The Hun snipers had discovered | ations could be conducted without |constituted in London on April 23,| Car Lines Planned) |” 10 Hawker at the wheel,| pp, Christopher Addison, president!” Qvercrowding was the chief jthe machine made a successful get him, and thru all his advance they | 45. a decision of | limiting. consideration beyond |1914, in pursuance ¢ ed the local government ‘teerd, éu-|0us keane te Gaeen GEE ably will not attempt to stage an A new utilities bond issue to over the western part of St rained bullets around gut Call | that , * rence . rs away from the Improvised aviatio iether tag day Saturday, altho some | ied the Taal onteiy, shonase alt) that of transport iit¥etiae ia finance street railway improvements | ¢Nay from the improvine F aviation | troduced the deputation, which was|ed ® mother and seven children of its members have been in favor fely, The margin with which the Ger-|at Scarborough in 1913 Had te coteba ie ic moe toe re ’ thoroly representative, and included |two small rooms. “They all lept dy : et | side, and found his commanding of- o re , ansportatic of such a move, it was stated today 7 on ae bed m: onrush of 1914 was stemmed} ‘Tie up fuel and transportation and/ tne council follows the lead of the the country's leading social workers} the upstairs room for fear of . ‘3 | ficer lying unconscious on the floor, o ow eo subsequent |g ia ted Fonte SS woman by Earl V, Simmons, member of the | redhape was sc narrow and the subsequent |all industry is tied up. | utilities committee ive : and public health expert The queen assured the ve board of the council. but unwounded. struggle was so severe that the word| The ¢ agreement of the There is nothing new as to the executive board o coun: 4 og | ‘The working » agreem: Following out the suggestion of ; Queen Mary recently paid a series | she also afraid of mice, 1 i early in the week Pulling the inert form from the] ‘miraculous’ ia hardly too strong alt ful s which form day of starting thé actual ‘trans The eitecs, saxty ia *| machine, Corporal Call lifted the of-|... nti 5 Rigo SH eeRe , Rownetak merone SS Corporation Counsel Walter F.| \Uantie flight of surprise visits to the Bast London| As a thoroly energetic h ; decided to leave the gee am | thoer ta his aeaesiee ous seartaa tack otis to , descrine ieee prooeey dithe triple alliance is based on Joint) sefer, the committee Thurs in-|“sphe Sopwith machine was brought | *!UM area, and was shocked at what herself, Queen Mary is cccorsuinal ee. afar, OP te° me Cones rye ata ha. al gpg action only in, national attalr |structed Utilities Superintendent]... trom England, in sections, ita |e saw, Hitherto carefully stage-|to “get things moving.” It will to the American line, more than a he breakdown of Fussia in 1917 svidea for submission of any| mile away. ‘The German snipers and| pro prolonged the war by a ihe on to.4. tall yoneinsvod of (PA Rain a ae night, he said. machine gunners peppered him with] year, and the military situation in| joint body representing the r Steve Burke, for whom the police | thelr fire, but the heroic corporal) italy in the autumn of 1917 necessi of both Tacoma and Seattle are|™4rvelously escaped, reaching our| tated the transfer of five British dl front line with his human burden in yt a time when their | CAUTION WATCHWORD " searching, has been removed as sec: | ions to Italy at a time when their i pra ag peing, oer Frat ik en ‘retary of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ | “fety s prewence ALLIANCE | Recast te Se improvements and for ABEL ES! for the royal vis ‘council, and Jerome Buzzolari, one | far-reaching © te, The foundation of the triple alli a R of the men against whom an in| Buy » Victory Bond and help | German Failure lance its extreme caution. It has | Identity of ail formation hax been filed by Prose.) | pring back our heroes to us “The rapid collapse of Germany's |been testing its strength. improv:| Detectives Back Victim Unknown euting Attorney Askren, has been | 4 p military power in the latter hi of|ing its morale and assuring disei No one has yet appeared to ide elected to fill his place, it was learn ——_— lAdi8 wae the logical outcome of the|pline step by step: With Ben Honda |? eo ee ished, white ed today. . fighting of the previous two years. Tt has never called a nation-wide Honda, former waiter in the ae ntl ne previous y | r n ilighting from a train near Maple 20 Bridges Are It would not have taken place but/strike such as is now threatened, |r nt of I Yatnida, 003|vatiey while it wae traveling r at for that period of ttrition | But {tx leadera ure confident that) First av | acy, ee fe < 5,000 U. S. Troops | Burned on Amur | 0 re “ Tuesday. ‘The body ia at an reserves. | 1 win onee they dec such @/|Portiand Thursday night by Detec-| the shmeyer undertaking parlors ae : Court-Martialed| 70xv0. Avr s—qelayed)—| ir in in the great battion of 1916 and| strike Is necessary. (tive ‘Dun MoLennun. “Honda ‘at [qr° xenon where it, was, brougie |W. G. Edwards, Jt, Coming| Allies Will Strengthen the NEW YORK, @pril 11.—Less than (United Pres#)—Bridges of the Amur|1917 that all have to seek for the se-| Demands for each of the three|i by Farrier, conductor of the With Squadron April 23 Eastern Front Se ceighth of ohe per cent of the| Tiwary have been burnedyat more cret of our victory in 1918 Juntons involved have been submit:)$1,115 of his employer's money,|train, ‘The man was about 65 years managed “visits to the homes of the | result in prosaic official reports, workers” had provided nice, clean| their ultimate pigeonholing by cottages belonging to the better class | ficialdom, progress is workers, and energetic officials had /and the queen is delighted to find a seen that everything was in order | subject so thoroly womanly in ch _she can interest herself. Labor council, and to the Metal) Trades council, which will meet to- i to an ordinance | yiot, Hawker, is an Australian. He ovidibe for L issue to cover] had first intended to start for Eu “I reilway improvements. a ti but delay in setting up fore action is taken ] n : 5 ree ian bed rolled before acti | It was pointed out in the meeting | jig plane and bad weather spoiled necessity of keeping separate the | hig plan, in France might have had|OF TRI was brought back from] fast rat gone to Portland with ed to have than 20 points, as a result 6f Bolshe The total of more than 000 Ger-|ted. Concessions have been made.jwhich he was supposed to have de —— | os f he wi | h ons ay ot rultttary ccs iategs vik disturbances. All traf man prisoners captured by us on the} put there will be under the princi | posited in the bank Four times decorated by the) PARIS, April 11.—Gen. Humbert] 7 been suspended, according to a western front is in striking contrast | nies of the alliance aapedtanee| ” Mpnda-was teaced to: Tacoina: andl h and for two years with ajand gh to place them in military , « he Protea cod “ Ip | a wa French and year and Gen, Gragziana have been ap Prisons, Col. John EB. Hunt, com. |"¥s* dispatch to the Jiji newspaper. | to the force of six divisions, compris | of terma on the t of any one|then to Portland by the police Federal Jedae of crack squadron of the Lafayette Es-! pointed to command the allied com hea . . The dispatch declared that 1,000) ing some 80,000 fighting men, with |o¢ the three until each of the others Mandant at, the Governor's ‘Island | peaengare, wound for Viadivoniny,| which we entered the war ot the thre Ten E A omg , Agius mall had been delayed at Habarovex} “It has been proved that caval Example of the | backing ‘ani en Enemy lens | With dudge Jeremiah Neterer en] Jr, of Seattle, will be one of the) the Baltic to the Black sea, it was! Out of a total of nearly 4,000,000 | "P*re there Is great confusion whether used for shock effect under |union giver to the others is shown | Are Given Liberty} route to New York, Judge Robert 8,] members of Uncle Sam's great flying | reported today. men in the military service during | _ if suitable co pis, or as mobile in| py the $4,700,000 unemployment ben-| oara paki CITY, April 11-| Bea of the United States district} circus to visit Seattle April 28. A dispatch to the denkta aia 4 ie war. lade than 6,000 found their} TRE Province of Amur, in Biberia,|fantry, have sull an indispensable | ome the rallway workers paid dur-| no cemy aliens ff es court of Portland, 1s expected in] Edwards, was only 16 years old} aniug have evacuated tha} t : : |4s separated from Manchurla by the| part to play in modern war, | More the miners’ strike of 1912, and my aliens from the Paciflo! coaitie Mriday to preside temporar-| when he enlisted in Spokano in 1917] bp pores ' e Isthmus way into military prisons thru court t cannot safol i ee ee Soe . been interned of Perekop and are fortifying Se} rtial anes BNR it cannot safoly be assured lin” the fact that the same union a ‘iy. Judge Neterer signed an order}as an aviation mechanic, He went] dastonoi Se -: | bin 8 TUS ware the flanks os) t to its ow bers «since the beginning | cifivcating a bootlegger's automo: | across and was assigned to the 103rd | : | | the opposing forces will rest on neu- |" to Pay to iis own mem were released today. Of| Fa tecent reports said the allies would creda; 5,000 in the railway strike bile before he went east. ‘The car| Pursuit squadron of the Lafayette | establish a new eastern front pen Portland Coming} cadritte, witiam Grirtitn Edwards, |don, which will be established from, Ten ¢ | Northwest, at Fort jor the w 700 aliens held there, 240 will be | only $2 Admiral Owen New |91st Units Leave tral states or impassable obstacles.” 107 “911” phig in Indication of the t ; ill be sold at auction next week, Bscadrille He has been cited four) ine A — oneenend leased at the rate of 10 a day * : ti jthe Rolsheviki by bringing about co- Chief of Islands Soon for Frisco) srupy rte propucrs [pint suport had even before the)! “a ; ego times for bravery with his squadron. | operation of the Rumanian, Cxecho. WASHINGTON, April. 11--aa:|. SAN FRANCISCO, April 11.—The| Dr. Horace C. Byers, head of the| formal organtmtion of the triple al) BUREAU WIL! MEN AGENT ERR four Genoration erie paventa, Mr {Sovak and Polish armies. These = ral Oliver hax hauled down his| 36rd infantry and 347th field ar-|department of chemistry at the Unt [Unter 5 ‘The publicity and bu] Hh H. Everett, United States pos:| ang uA ercilian ©. Skene Wee ae armies were to be officered, equipped i ery, Califo he Sist|versity of Washington, vod |PART IT PLAYED reau of the Chamber imerce|tal agent at Shanghai, China, was] 99 ; : ; jand organized by the allies. i as governor of the Virgin is-| tillery, California units of the ist gion, annopnced | 3 3 Nn 16 36th ave. &. | : du, and is proceeding to the | division, will reach San Franeisco|Thursday three graduates in ehemi IN WAR LE LATION and Commercial club will give ajin Seattle for a few hours Thursday : se ad Cavanaugh, |cal engineering at the university are| The triple alliance played a dig |dinner Friday evening at 6:16 injon his way back to the Far East. |, HELSINGFORS — The production Navy Roosevelt songynces to |commander of the infantry, tele-| doing earch work in @ pulp mill| part with ite recommendations in|the Masonic club rooms, Every He conferred with Postmaster Ed-{* en you think of advertising, of soviet banknotes exceeded $2,500,- : | graphed today from Camp Merritt,}at Berlin, N. H. The men went Kast | forming the British demobilization member will introduce some “big!gar Battle on the shipment of mail| | think of The Star. * | 1000,000 worth monthly, Lenine told Admiral Owen succeeds Ouver, The troops will entrain Tuesday. in January of this year, pand reemployment program liaea” for the benefit of the club, from Seattle to the Orient — i the All Russia Trade Union cong Inited States, Acting Secretary of | April ora ol,

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