The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 12, 1919, Page 1

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! ich les, lar, ing hed ing ith em ti Tides i in Seattle yRipay JUNE 18 Piet High Pirst High Tide Tae Pirate Tide : Piret Thee “ae . low Tide Second Weh . tt cond Low Tide | Second High Tide An American Paper That Fights for Americanism Rntered as Second Class Matter May § The Seattle Sta 1899, at the Postoffice at Ronttie, Wash jor the Act of Congress March # 1 SEATTLE, 1919. , Ww ASH THURSD: + A JUNE F. RAIDS 4 WORD TRUST IS UBORBODY 1S ( OSCULATION I WALL ST. P _ SOLONS DECL WASHINGTON, June 12.— BY Lc C. MARTIN (Unjted Press Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON, June 12— ‘They declared the ments of Morgan, Vanderlip and | Davison in the “treaty leak” investi ation showed that Wall street plans the formation of the greatest trust in history, to be underwritten by the | United States government and to }controt not only the country’s mon: | ey, but the industry, as never before. frank state the money Staten must [into Rurope to rebuild and restore it, |Votes to Insist on Mooney | Tag Sale Here Despite Mayor’s Edict |WILL RENEW REQUEST | The three financiers declared that | Central Texdurees of the United | night, after numerous delegates had be pooled and poured | pointed out that such a sale would| At the risk of going to jail, the members of the Central Labor council will hold a tag day to sell tags for Tom Mooney. The per mit for the sale of the tags has been refused by Mayor Hanson, but the council will make anoth- er request, and if this ls turned down, it will hold the tag day re- gardiess, some time before June ba ‘Thin course was decided on by the | Labor council Wednesday jbe unlawful and would reader the passed by and the United States government |seliern of the tags lable to « the would notify the {must cooperate with Amertean| Others declared that the i! pon Eye United States re | bankers and European governments | discriminating against the serves the right to delay its de |!" mobilizing America’s dollars to | council | ¢laian on the membership in the help the Old World The discussion resdived iteelf into league of nations until the sen- Vanderlip caused a senaation!s question of whether all the dele ate and the people have fully de | when he said there was a strong | gutes were willing to go to termined whether they wish such sentiment in England and France agwrt their right to sell tage. Near. | siaberel that the United States should notity every epeaker admitted he Those voting in favor of reporting | expect repayment from those coun-| been in jail, and declared he wasn't] the resotution were: Lodge, Borah,|tries of the billions loaned them. | afraid to go there again | Brandezee, Fall, Knox, Johnson| That money, Vandertip said, is re “If an attempt is made to hold a} (Cal), New and Moses, all republl- | garded in thone countries as part of | ante in defiance of the law thean men | eeaaig America’s fair share in the War's| iit be thrown in jail. was Mayor burden because of this country’s late entrance into the war. Would Boost Prices ‘Those opposing ft were: McCum ber, republican; Hitchcock, Williams, | Swanson. Smith, Arizona; Pittman | and Shields, democrats. ‘The inevitable result of putting ‘The committee's action was almost) iit, wall street's grip the whole coincident with introduction of @) country’s financial and industrial resolution by Senator Sterling, South | -eources, these senators eal. would Dakota, to except the United States from compliance with article 10 of he league covenant. Ibe the elevating of prices of prac | tleally everything the people of this country use. Opens Great Fight High prices, it was declared Today's developments were regard | “would be justified” on the ground ed as the opening of the great fight | that Europe's needs for raw maten to amend the treaty, ax approved by | iain, machinery and other Ameri President Wilson in Paris, a cours | can products, caused shortages ir which, if successful, republican lead: | tig country ers admit, maf result finally in the! “1,acue opponents believe the United States making a separate pes ORS pr pgp treaty with Germany D Senatot Harding, who was absent from the committee meeting, was paired with Senator Pomerene, who, therefore, could not vote. Harding it was announced, would have voted for the resolution, and Pornerene was opposed to it. Hence the committee ‘was really lined up nine to eight DELEGATES NOW IN BIG DEBATE Hitchcock vote¥iggr for Senator 2 — Shields, who was absent bee mag Disagree on Plan of Ger- o 4 reporting the resolution 5 x Te Scport was ordered ater two) many in Nations League hours’ warm debate, in which demo erats twice sought vainly to post BY FRED S. FERGL Soy pone consideration until next Mon (United Pr Staff ¢ respondent) day. The committee approved Sen ator Lodge's motion striking out sec-| PARIS The big four tion & of the resolution, which | parently are entangled in discus pledged the United States, in case of |sions and disagreements such as a future war, to come to the res have immediately preceded conclu just as it did in the recent war, It | sion of ry important subject tak resolution peace conferen This situation rq srt: days of framir he ¢ n treat Turkish Minister ; Following Premier Cle Arrives in France as Fevine’ j : ON, France, June 1 ermany to the . Preas)}—Foreign Minist h ° 4, of Turkey accom par a date ar a " nied by his secre s, arri here | big four are tr tr from Toulon at midnight. He was | promise. greeted by French, Italian and Brit Ajlied experts were expected to ish The remainder | complete the league of nations and armies of of t ates will a reply to ¢ ; and the | possibi! f - ng Turks | or du , « departu ter on th f reing decide at the fu «s w De and t th f that re regarding a There are men in searigai ef’ is f a line this city with some (kerbs pap leon, money who seek op- ir ¢ lin Kun ou a patent, or an ‘ . wxaes dea, or a busine: r plan which might in- 1 ot meet terest them? If you ave, a classified ad e Tu eace delegates, who can serve you 1 1 erday on ’ n, between t. Cloud. Hanson's only comment when asked what course he would take Resolution Adopted The resolution, an adopted, de clared that as Mayor Ole Hanson had denied the committee in charge of the interests of Tom Mooney the | right to sell tags, and as “no good reason” had been assigned for the refurnl, and no objection had been raised to the solicitation of money | by ot organizations “not of the} working class and because of the “domineering spirit shown by the city administration, be it $ That we, the members of the Central Labor council, demand ONTD ON PAGE TEN) JITNEY KILLS GIRL, AGE 10 Driver Held by Police Pend- ing Investigation Stepping in front of park jitney, 1year-old Studebaker, daughter of S. Studebaker, 1822 sustained injuries at nesday af m, she died at th 4 Cowen Croldie Henry Howell st., 15 Wed from which city hospital at 1 a m, Thursday H r 4, 516 F. Thom t ft t as arrested . rt © D ‘on, in} em " was at make a t n tle ¢ 7 he path of tin fe. Other } er Fi “se , peared r have r met t t Ar ext lent be made ‘Thur w r ' t f GOVERNOR SLIGHTLY WORSE, SAYS DOCTOR oo => wi —J oo Unionists Ask Construction Program to End High Rents and Idieness |WANT AN APPROPRIATION BY A. E JOHNSON {United Preas Staff Correspondent) | NTIC CITY, N. J, | unions several cities have applied for membership in the Federation of Labor, Morrison announced today. The applications are being consid ered by the organization com mittee. Morrison would not | reveal in what cities these | unions are located, but it was | understood they are mostly in | the West. | American Secretary A total of 211 resolutions has jDasw pronented. It in expected the resolutions committee will require |practically the remainder of the |neanion to report on these doocu- ments. The principal apeech in the morn jing reasion was made by Miss | Margaret Bondfields, secretary of the National Federation of Women } Workers of Great Britain woman delegate ever sent from one leountry to another as a |tative to the workers’ | Support Strikers | The law Britain jeare for will not by the years The lution the first represen convention Great women four years in proved that own interests. We the standard raised in the last hundred torn down,’’ she said adopted a and have their allow men to be Say AACS Noo bs ae ore ae ed convention pledging sympathy reso i sup: Kissing in public is profane. port of ite 4,000,000 members to A kiss is a sacred thing and|the telephone and electrical workers | shouldn't be paraded in public in their strike which has Seen called So it's very bad manners to kiss in|for next Monday the park A | No—this is not highbrow transla | tion of a park policeman's comment ommittes was appoint hone workers’ ington in an to ac com attempt company a tel mittee to Wa It's the philosophy of Constance|to settle the threatened strike be Binney, who r ntly puckered her fore Mon y pretty eyebrows in protest against ic “cauveiilens seed’ * park spooning in New York and! resolution indorsing Basil mamped ber high. ly, hairman of the w Hee liga ta Ale bor board, and de play Rast,” wh forts to have him ee £80 Severs : Davie, President Wilson oo pe pe re eae at Edgar Fenton, president of the Woodland park on the moonlight | Oklahoma State Fodern ‘ Ta Tho young tady in the pleture Is) detail. “Why should everybody want |N0r. Introduced a resolu ; Constance Binney, who disagrees | to how! at the park spooners? When a the hands of 1 with Roy Davis, Seattle park police | they're really in lowe, and it’s sum jon. committee providing th man, in academic discussion of that) mer, and everything. I tom bother c charter he r favorite summer sport—kissing In ‘em. The real kissers never hear or| Policeman's union in ¢ oma the parks. Davis is pletured below interloper, like me, hanging for th kida who may t t program is the building trade Allied Answer Is Ready for Germans of Labor here to Will Hold Monster Meeting Samuel Griggs, of the Stone Cut A semi-of re ote at 0,000 building trades workers Were na 3pr’ dle dar olution t by . iT t o on federal b dings can be r " . Ae tres aah pete Griggs thinks that will ; “gy Work on 108 federal buildings is he Bu A ha lecided to reft being held up because congress re mee r t 1 If building is resumed J v t t n it will find ition Y juit 1 Be fi passage by the con a in req er en terday of a resolu 1 rd! mar he tr June 18, | ton wing war-time prohibi « ' Hugh « 1 tlor t g Ju 1, and asking ex v . s emption of nt beer from : « U. S. Going Dry; Deputiiicas! ae 5 they fuk oe , He Swallows Poison **'"!"""™ babi pate ; : LOS ANGELES, ¢ June J semonatiatior the capitol build sce Ee for 9 ut t t ; 1 trains will be run, and Senate Committee ae pas Hes , , , Favors R. R. Bill mn Wilson Can’t Get HINGTO itt valid et i ie) Home Before July bly $750,000, ! | WASHINGTON, June 12 ; re deee the ruse tw t ! for th ing for home befe Ju 1 ) c ee bill | ls LOE to private adyices from the I eouitat ohca $0 Bet te OT) aid Perry told them White House, LATE EDITION POLICEMEN ASK FOR UNION CHARTERS TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Per Year, by Matl, $5.00 to $9.06 a $a a "Weather F orecast: renthe northerly winds HART AGREES TO TAKE CHARCE OF More than 30 witnesses,| A liquor manufg ing including city and county plant, said to be the most officials, have been sub-\complete discovered in poenaed to appear before | King county since the the grand jury, which will | law went into effect, oper begin its investigation, ating boldly in the op next Monday, of confis-|within 100 yards of cated liquor thefts. |main highway, was Anticipating that several of ed late Wednesday she witnesses under subpoena Deputy Sheriffs ntend to flee from the juris- Ramage, Julius Von diction of the grand jury,|anq F. J., Hughes, Prosecuting Attorney Fred | ¢ *. Brown today ordered cer- miles southwest Renton. tain witnesses placed under| | 25 heavy bonds. Some of the| Three 40-gallon stills, ¢ bonds range»as high as of which was used exclusi 7,500. Neither Brown nor|for distilling the water fe any of his deputies would'the liquor, oil “stove divulge the names of the wit-| mense coils of copper nesses who will be placed|an automobile and under bond to insure their/equipment were seized presence when the grand jury nearly 2,000 gallons of ‘calls them. ‘and 95 gallons of grapo When Presiding Judge moya 3. destroyed. Boxes of Tallman convened court this morn: GRAND JURY and a keg of finished grap were brought in as Tompolio Pellegirni, Wodesto legirnt and Amando Burralll, POWERS fans, were arrested. The plant was located on a farm A grand jury has the absolute |) by Mrs. E, Marker, power The deputy sherifis reported To summon any person within | beoze plant was immaculate, the state of Washington to tes- | shack in which it was housed tify under oath. ing been specially constructed To examine any witness in |/the purpose, and all the € vay, being up to date. * ‘o return a “true bill” against . r any citizen of Weshingtiin, dca Going Full Bing which the county prosecutor is Evidently believing thes were expected to draw up an indict- |) suspected, the three Italians « ment no ettempt to conceal their » demand and inspect any | ations. The stills were going books, records or other papers ||/biast when the officers oop ‘ which may aid it in its investiga- |/ccwn on the plent, end the men — tion cffrred no resistance. 4 No attorney ts allowed to have Suspicion was aroused when access to the grand jury delibera tions except a the state Such att neighbors reported to the sheriffs office dozens of automobiles and heavy trucks made regular trips to 0 the Marker ranch and carried away) | a representative of ney is present merely as an aide and advisor to the|| heavy loads concealed under seane grand jury, and is not entitled to || vace Investigation also showed w vote when the inquisitorial body |/that aicho the ranch had sen pet ha eae ae ee renie. =r more than $100 a yeare Bet pt hy ro i, | heretofore, the Italians had offered ime limi ving the place would be guarded, or t outs might tip one of the most |ofi the booze makers, the deputies rrieye inthe tate, 160 up carefully to the ranch and his appointment made a dash for the little shaek utor in the court-|They found the three men quietly eraoge operating the stills, they I am ready to accept the appoint: | said Ment as special deputy prosecutor in Value Is $5,000 this matter, since it is the unani-} A test of the confiscated grapo, mous wish of the superior judges of | it was reported, showed it to be of King cour Hart told Judge 1-|a grade superior to any yet seized man. “It goes without saying that m moonshiners. i will leave no stone unturned to get he value of the grapo confis- at the bottom of this matter.” cated and destroyed, at present Stilt in 1t bootieggers’ prices, is estimated at The impression gained grouna|*™ $6,000. ‘The stills and other Wednesday thut the proposed ap. {¢@uipment were valued at mote pte asne Special Prosecutae (han $2,000 and the mash destroyed Hart would eliminate Prosecuting |!" ¢stimated at about $1,000, Attorney Brown, as Sheriff Stringer odes had been eliminated from the ca: up ‘ociety that he suits me from the ground wife of Owen D, Wells, dentiat Tam in this case with both f enue and. Hart ere ee Brown said Thursday morning. si will in the grand jury room during}, AMong the men and women whe every session, and [ will assist Mr, |%&¥e been summoned for grand jury Hart. He will have charge of the {uty next Monday morning are sev main examination of witnesses, 1|¢ral widely known residents of Se am not eliminated, as is Sheriff 4 BP a See Stringer, because of the inte Se) Sie po rv has in this ca It will be my duty — oe eee to advise the grand jury at any time | WY High School, George Mi 4 matter of fact, I don't care who | V88s Co - Pca “ AN I want is action, ‘This| MP EB. L. Blaine, wife of former investigation will be no whitewash | Councilman Blaine; Dana W, Brown, ind nobody is going to leave town | S°cretary of the West Seattle Land if a bond can keep him or her here." | & Improvement Company; Mrs. Flora C, Doig, wife of Frank C, Doig, see- They're Friends retary of the publicity bureau of the Lrown announced that his assist. | Chamber of Commerce and Commer: " and investigators already have | ct! Club; Mrs. M. M, Gallagher, wits Atore alre “Ave of the former deputy prosecuting at- weuN to marshal evidence in the | torney; L. M. Gallinger, auditor ioe much discussed whisky thefts, and | the Border Line ‘Transportation Came will be ready to present evidence to| pany; Dr. H. H. Smith, dentists Mee: the and jury as soon as that in-| Viola ‘Trick, vice-president of the quisitorial body is ready to receive it. | Trek & Murray € Mrs. Poart All fT want is results led n, wife of O, J. C, Dutton, Brown John B. Hart will get re of the King County Bf sults if any one can, and I may add ; Mrs, Anna BE, \elle,

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