The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 31, 1919, Page 20

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EE wrens RIPE VERO a ES ADMIRAL KNAPP.'War Tortured Kiddies WINNIPEG COPS. FLASHES WORD _ Forget How to Laugh ARE DISCHARGED Strikers and Citizens Issue’ Statements Commander Read and Men | Ps'srine Heroes of Great Trip © Menmpatis. BY JAMES WINNIPE » police of nine m One bundred and cighty-nine officers weré automatically dis charged yesterday upon refusal fo sign an agreem with the city severing connection with labor, The policemen had voted ap. proval of demands in the general strike here, had not voted to go out themselves. An effort was made to have mounted police do Ton nthe i + ‘ OLBERT [Continued From Page One |) mvc } i ght at Nag Ae th Kou Tne time of the NC-4 in { untrie niver of t ' v we oe a the pe Dreaking Journey overseas and 16 minutes. Te Honor Yanks A fiash to Bnnounced the arrival at Piymou apparently British Which woukl be 6 time, ‘The suceess of Read greatest enthusiasm among o Ronald ayenile labor porn child is working cor time 0 cots, and and remedy the def X ammer time, | Possible, Was should and ¢ teps carried on of ( ery infant, he a under pub vy yntrol for made ot eb for ch he sald © better workir ita bettermer van Work iren of w to Laugh tof a large Investigate U. 8. Forget "and shipped back to ANA Members of congress here gorts of plans are being laid for Properly honoring the men who made the recordsmashing journey Among these ts a recommend) by Representative Britten, Tlinois, memiber of the house naval com Mittee, that Read and his men be given the congressional medal of honor—a special one, if need be Various suggest have been Made for disposition of the NC4 ‘The ‘one most favored now is to have the machine down the United taken The del ‘a from “England, several other cor America to the Uni Belgium, uuntrie to Investigate tone in this country for They tion hol Members of t e. Cloth Belgium; Prof. Fabio ter, pan Dr. ing two sessions he party Ronald ¢ anor Barton. Mulon, Sand and Miss L. I Takayuki Namaye, Ja Frassetto, Ititly, a nid at Radmilla Lasarevi Miss L. © hoot for girls in Childre Ital are touring |on “The work being the hild prote peop elp they spent Friday in Seattle the unive many laugh, and that open whenever possib! were: Sir Davi France A short sexsion Car Talke on Ifure work ne only child w h Milo this m hev mols, talked gin,” thank many fright; that how to were kept to keep them from thinking of war's } brid. wns for delegates to the various were ay morning conference ang heard a = of the patrolling Returned soldiers asked Pre mier Norris to put collective bar ining In the provinelal stat utes. He was also asked to w draw demands on the police, He some action by 11 p citizens and nl trike commit conflicting bodies, today gave tt United Pre statements on strike as the The strikers nelet (t is a mere demand for better wages and the right of ‘ gaining. The citizens committee the heading th neo it the tive bar: | pmittee | States to preclude possibility of its Toss or destruction, and nave it Placed in the Smithsonian institute | here for posterity to view. ‘The navy department is without ‘Official news of Read's next move. Whether he will fy or travel other Wise to France fr answer to Presi “Gent Wilson's request that the NO4 /@rew go to Paris after landing at | Plymouth, is not known here. San Diego Aviator Drives Plane Into Mountain; Killed SAN DIEGO, Cal, May 2 Confused by a heavy fog bank Lieut. Everett B. Wisdom, a Rockwell Field aviator, formerly of .Portand, Ore, was killed when his Curtiss plane crashe into a spur of the mountains near here. Iiewt. BE. R. Kelly, of San Diego, who was rMing with him was bruised and slightly burned, when the gasoline (tank brust and enveloped the wrecked plane in flames, ignited from the still throbbing engine. Wisdom saw the mountain loom out of ahead of him, but bi ¢levate his plane qaick to avela it MIKADO PROVES GREAT WINNER , “Great Performance” LONDON, May 31.—(United Press.) Times and Chronicle todgy d the feat. of the American 's aviators in flying across the fe would like to have been the to fly across the Atlantic,” said ‘Times, “but as we did not) we heartily glad it was the Ameri-| who achieved it. This is a/ | spur cf the the fog vould not enough performance. suspicion that we entertain wil be ‘si otipreceee to no sign usy the port of the pilgrim | Elks Win Plaudits in Ea- | deprecate the achievement of| Friday night was “Hello nin" | and said: “When said night at the Metropolitan theatre ing the route of the flight and for the Elks made me with the of “gen along the tees Be musical comedy “Mikado” as a joy remains the Americans have | producer e the Atlantic without setting| From the first wave of John/ om the ships. ae Ph rage Be baton to the grand} have demonstra’ here is | finale, it was some show. i ler way between. Europe and) Tho singing was enthustasticalty | oe nes. Whe or ome pr oarmse |fecetved and repeated encores de- Wilson, a e tO) manded. common sense that they| How Fred River, who played B the best weather and the best Ko Ko, the Lord High Execution- | ‘Qnd insured their safety as er, ever escaped the guards we do possible. The ships along the not know. He Is a whole sack of manana t0 do, with the suc | nuts all by himself, and kept the audience in laughter all evening. Mrs. Dick Allen, as Pitty Sing, ‘one of the “Three Little Maids t Bawker Bays He . |From school” and Dr. Carl Hoft- ‘Was Misunderstood. pony as Pooh-Bah, were especially DON, May 31-—Harry Hawk- | f, Australian -aviator, is: today ex-| his remarks about the | ful, of Aterica’s transatlantic | In an interview with the oe he says be wes mis t he merely intended remarks for those who were ve the Br&ish government supplying ships along the route took., “The * Americans ‘My point.” be says. “It is dmponst- to compare the two flig (4 We Chronicle regrets any attempt clear voice. “Yom Yum" vummy, | Harry B. Flanders as “Pish Tush” jane good all the way, and th ing: or DS Of Hart A. Alexander as Poo” was a joy. He has a sweet voice. | "The show will be repeated Satur day night. The chorus, which, under the able say |leaderstip of John Spargur, was in Rot ish to have, shind Supplied | ."targe measure responsible for the “fam very sorry, indeed, the | "cces™ of the play, included 1 American press misunderstood me. Mathilde David, Bertha Saase-Dal ‘Wag further from my mind |by. Freda Solomon, Thelma Quist ae aelfliine the; Ampricane.” . Wilson, E. Stray, V, Brugseman, pte, be Baden Neva MeConaughy, Hawker | ted |. Thies, Louise Hampton, Mil ee romero Thomas, Beryl Smithson, Elizabeth banquet that it wasn't p Mattes. maken re serious | Halberstadt, Hleanor Mitchell, Eliza. Mra. Jessie Sachs was very as yum | clear, misunderstood | o clock | wage increases demanded are grunt- jet beam that time. | |qinal,” Dr. Read sald Satufday, on | w Tiles, Helen O'Nefl an “Kattshe,”|ie return from a tsp to Oear C DA TRIKE the Elderly Maiden, has a beautl-| puns, “and seem wilting enough to } | comply. anki | | move within the next 20 days. The | Clein, Rose Zolla, Marie Klinger, Ge | Pight “with a ship stationed every 29 | beth W. Albertson, Ruby Clein, Ethel | ‘yards. McDonnell, R Connell, Mrs, C. K. Bowen, Mrs. W. Mrs’ Lou Mahan, Mrs. Britain-Australia z tga nardt, Mrs. Robert H. Kay. Flight Next Race Mrs. W. F. Nilsen, Mrs. H. C. Blunk Mrs. W. R. Wolgumot, George W. ZONDON, May 31—The “black | saams, 8. H. Sachs, 8. J. Jeffs, L. A Mate tect seateraverats Boon Jacox, Fred Klinger, W. H. Starr HME tbe attieg yor hour, han been on. |2; % Hoblitzell, V. ¥. Thiele, 3 tered in the England-to-Australia ay * fight, it was announced today. The | 11° Dr. crew expects to start either from he pei Hull or Ieeds within the next 19|°°*% Art Dye Gays. The plane is equipped with two 250 horse-power Rolls-Royce motors. neva Clark, Elizabeth 8. M. Feldman Final Terms for Austrians Are Up Ov. BY FRED 8. FERGUSON eens Club Is | (United Press Staff Correspondent) Guest at Service| Panis, May 31.—The peace con The Overseas club will be guests | [ rence convened in secret, i & victory service to id in{ session shortly after % o'clock Bt Paul Episcopal church, West|*fternoon to consider finally Wvcen. Anne ave. and Roy st, Sun-| terms of the Austrian treaty Gay morning. Rev. Sidney Mor-| This wa. the meeting originally gin, chaplain of the club, win) Scheduled for Thursd but post preach on “Blessed Memories of |Poned at the request of ‘the the Dead.” pnations, The “Ships of Tarshish’ the| Vides for presentation of the Bubject of Rev. H. H. Gowen's ser-|to the Austrians on Monday mon at St. Mark's Episcopal church | Germain Bunday morning | Immediately after the session con Rey, EH. V. Shayler, now in the Balkan Hast, will not accept or deciine|besan obser the bishopric of the Nebraska dio-| arguments | cese until he returns to Seattle |standpoints, it wa — able authority. __ SPARGUR TO PLAY AT CHURCH SUNDAY, Bernstorff | to Be ee M, Spargur will play Envoy to Italy? “Bn Regurdant Le 4 ROMM, May 20.—(United Prove the First Methodist) rye Berlin correspondent of the cha fs evening. Services| corriere d'Italia wired today that “Over the Top-—What Next” win | oor °e,, be the subject of an addrevs by Dr. | ytaty 4G, A. Landen at the First church , “Bundey morning, At the evening | ‘| services, W. A. (’Weary”) Wilkins) ROME, May 20 | will tell of his experiences welling |The Corriere d'lt War Savings Stamps in be ep se nf the Vatican, referring to the | + Rev. Robert J. Reid w ch! reported opposition to “the Bs “When Faith Flashes Out” Sun tr hag aroused in every country, ey morning at the Green Lake|demanded today that it be church. In the evening the ehioir | immediately, “in the name of human will give a sacred conc plenary this the smaller present program pro. treaty at St will be the representatives vations and national vened presenting from various learned on reli rman imnbals ador (United Press.) peace {call a general netortt wg be o>-| Evickson Talks | the unofficial or-| power revised | given by the Commony charges an attempt to establish Hol | sheviem on the continent. Strikerw Statement ‘The strikers’ committee statement inued on condition ft be quoted ¢ actly, read im part "We have offered to both the city | authorities, provincial authoritien | and dominion authorities our offer of | settlement, which can be brought about thru constituted authority, but | the dominion authorities state they | will not raixe a finger to bring about @ wettiement until we order the post | men back to work, which, if agreed passed thru its first day of & #eD-) to, the city authorities would then oral strike without experiencing, ©) call upon ums to release thetr em: | far ax the mass of its population | roves all of which agreed to would | wes concerned, any of the Gisctder|becah the strike, and we would have! or inconvenience associated With | no guarantee that the Fight of collec: | such a paralysis of industry tive bargaining thru the representa- | Retween 7.500 and 8,000 tives of the organizations, for which | and non-union workers yr of &/! we aro striking, would be assured.” total of over 30,000 were idle yew " | erday factories in the metal Soviet Attempt | citizens’ committee sald “It trades Were closed dawn; 50 ahops| The wh Je were idle W®s immediately recognined this was | and. thr not an ordinagy industrial dispute, | [building operations on 40. jobs of but dad for itaalma the establishment | vurving proportions were seriously |of the so-called soviet government. hampered, There waa no disorder | “The committee feela most strong: | ms the city, and beyond the assem-|'y that the present leaders have be- | Sf tite workers at the labor| ‘Fayed the cause of labor and are| paar and at different points thru, | Using the minor dispute af a pretext | tomiPine city, there was little out- | fF leading the workers blindly into | Werd evidence of « general strike. @ revolution. ‘The city's firemen served notice “The citizens of Winnipes are te that they will go om strike at 8/ day more firmly convinced than ever | ‘Tuesday ‘morning unlens| that this strike cannot be compro- | mined or settled in any way until it! tas been clearly established that | there in only one government in Win- nipeg, and until the wrong done by | the strikers’ committees tn declaring | |& general sympathetic strike has been | righted. The citizens are fully alive | to the fact that Winnipeg had been | carefully selected by the Bolshevik ; leaders as the mont favorable field to | stage the initial attack.” peptic tongs “EO, wagons delivertng necessary foods were placarded “by perminsion of the | strike committee.” Strikers said that Was merely to protect the workers, Opponents said it was proof of an at tempt to show governmental author ity. {8,000 ARE OUT IN TORONTO STRIKE 235 Factories ies Closed Down by Walkout 7 TORONTO, May 31 Toronto union } re garments are mad the strike of carpenters, 100 RESIDENTS MUST VACATE Read Posts Orders on Cedar Falls Homes, Little or no opposition is expected by Health Commissioner H. M. Read from the residents of Cedar Fulle who have been notified that they | must vacate their homes and move oft the Cedar River watershed be- | fore July 1 “The people realize our order ix Now that we have taken | thin step, I can see absolutely no! on why the course waa pot) adopted long ago.” Dr. Read has posted notices to| vacate on 26 houses in the water shed area, and about 100 residents of the townsite will be forced to| Situation in - North Remains Unchanged OTTAWA, May 31.—(United removal of the squatters is taken | as a health move to guard the purity of Seattle's water supply. Atlanta Wire Men_ | May Go on Strike) CHICAGO, May 31. — (United Press.)—Atianta, Ga., promised to. strike in un- ers have gone “out in svereal lo calities during the last 24 hours, while in others an equal num- | ber have sought to return to | work, reports here indicated. | The entire situation will come up | for debate in the commons Monday. | day to be the scene of the first of| Ottawa metal workers, out for a series of fclegraphers’ strikes to|thtee weeks, demand a general spread generally over the United |Strike vote early next week. Team States, F. J. Campbell, secretary of | 8teTs, wood workers and street rail the Interna~.onal Commercial Tel.|W®Y men have presented new de wachea Caen of Ammon, mands to the employers, but refuse | o aes to make public their nature. y Nafte Indications are that Vancouver} workers will join in the strike, ‘Phe president of the trades union at Vic toria has stated that workers there will quit Hull, Quebec, is without fire tection, the firemen going follow ing the refusal of the olt ell to recognize the union, Electric em-| ployes were voting today with indi: | éations that they might walk out, | Pe a tying up electric Hines connecting Hull, Aylmer, Ottawa and Lake Shore points | 2 One thousand employes of the Hun Sociali ye ickers shipyards at Montreal joined | Planning Strike the strike yesterday t Toronto 8,000 May 31.—(United’ Press.) and neral ja reported today that) scheduled tor independent ‘socialists plan to! sti operated trike the day the ernment decides for or against the treaty, with the object of overthrowing Chancellor Scheidemann unde I sajd he had recetved no word from %, J. Konenkamp rela to the general strike, ports that ordert already The Atlanta situation An ultimatum dem reinstatement of discharg und the stopping of alleged ntimidation was delivered to Post master General Burleson with Mon \ the limit, he said pro. was serious ing men time were out today | } labor conference was | tonight. Street cars | and civic employes | working Rioting was reported to have oc. | curred at Lethbridge, Alb, where 8,000 miners are out. BERLIN The Germ: the were present gc any circum} | MINISTERS ANNOUNCE Says Beef Prices | THEIR SUNDAY TOPICS Will Be Lowered. ,, ev... 4: Matthews will talk on ‘The World Leaders or Christ,” at 4 a1 (United | the Sunday morning services at the Prews,) * will be lowered | First Presbyterian church. In the shortly, according to the American} evening, the address will be, P Meat Packe elation, In a|hind the Front Door.” statement the associa-| Rev, Norman R. Harrison will talk tion said the » would be no-!on “Our Heroes and Our Heritage ticeable within a few The y Suffer at Our Hands?” | probable the was | § evening at the University not given Presbyterian chureh Krom Marshy Plains to Moun-| tain Peaks the theme of the} Rev. R. J Van Bethany Presby Sunday morning Ballard ‘eabyterian | church Sunday morning, Rev, Honor L. Witihelm will talk on “Doing My| Father's Will,” | | | | here toc deere ay daya xtent of line on Skagit Plans |‘ terian church being faced by At the city With regard to the Skagit project will be explained by | Councilman Olver 'T. Brickson in a} talk on the Skagit Monday night | He will be the speake Various problems at a dinner | alth elub at} 6:80 o'clock Monday evening in the | Good Eats cafeteria, lg any lots you buy from us, we believe you will make better than 19 per in the next year, and as good as 38 per cent in 2 years. JEFFERSON HEIGHT ADDITION is located adjoining Jefferson Park, the Municipal Golf Links, facing on Che Boulevard and Beacon Avenue, a 126-foot paved thoroughfare. Price ine $875 Lot, 50x120, facing Jefferson Park, the Mu- nicipal Golf Links and Cheasty Boulevard, back to a 20-foot alley. No assessments to as- sume. Terms, $275.00 cash, balance six, twelve and eighteen months. Interest 7%. $1,000 Corner, 50x120, to 20-foot alley; paving paid; terms, $250 cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months. Building restrictions, $2,500. $725 Several fine lots; good view, both to the East and West, ofthe mountains. Lot 40x120, facing on 126-foot paved street paid at this price ; 25% cash, balance, 6, 12, 18 months; in- terest, 7%. 120 feet deep, facing on Robinson Way, feet off from Beacon Avenue, being. one of prettiest and highest building sites in them addition. Terms, $400.00 cash, balance } twelve and eighteen months. Corner, 50x120; one-half block from p street; $150 cash, balance 6, 12 and months. Building restrictions, $2,000. $475 Several fine, level 40x120-foot lots; one block from paved street; $100 a ance 6, 12 and 18 months; interest, 7 SALESMAN ON THE GROUND All day, and up until 8:30 this evening, and also tomorrow, Sunday. By auto: Take any street east to Twelfth avenue south; on Twelfth to top of hill, following car line, then through the Parl or take ae acon yal ¢ ar, No. 12, on Third avenue, to end of line; take our auto or rey: through! he Park. when title insurance deeds sk contracts will be r only 7%, madly. H. S. TURNER REAL ESTATE @ 1404 FOURTH AVENUE PHONE ELLIOTT Also Rooms 3 to 11 Downs Bidg., 709 Second Avenue, Commencing Next Week

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