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és THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1919. BRITISHLABOR ‘TWO ATTACKED STRIFE DEBATED IN FRISCO ROW = Decision Rests on Three’ Im- | Police Rescue Two Imported GARY REFUSES TO ARBITRATE “Can't Talk Compromise,” Washington's od bo EMPRESS UNIVERSAL AIR-BLAST HEATER! —the heater that bums the your ol. stove range or heater taken es part payment on a UNIVER- SAL AIR-BLAST heater! OVER ORAST AIR CHAMBERS MOT BLAST ‘SOE UNING EXTRA NE AVY VENTILATED 261-111 South 1228 St, port Bodies of 4 eS, Ariz., Oct. 2.—(United bodies of Lieuts. Con-| Marie y and Waterhouse, lost army|wife, indulged in, @ little lore, missing for weeks follow- it over the Mexican or. | room ip jave and Jackson st. fere found buried near Bario de | es Bites Wife’s Finger » Lower California, on} while he bit his wife's finger. 21 by Joseph Alien! Booking officers bards, an American, Hed details to war and i representatives here today. |They were both booked. 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(New Jersey) 50 B’ way, N.Y. 4 bottles bear Ali arue * Warnings Neictisgeitenir ios Bets. tosiet on Nujol, You may mfer from + For Constipation Sickness Prevention in Family Quarrel ji Mejia, 31, a Mexican, and ejia, & negress, who is his reial suffered a scratched face, Butterworth & Sans who re-| Mejia return to Mexico where fight state de-|ing is considered a noble pastime ; tite of Molt. He Tells Senators (United Press 8 WASHINGTE Compromise or arbitration of the steel strike was flatly spurned by Judge EK. MH. Gary before the senate labor committee today. cannot talk about at the Gary declared, “much as I regret it.” | “If the investigation could be made more simple for the benefit of | the committee it ought to be done,” | |Gary said. “There ia danger of misunderstanding upon the part of | | the workingmen as to the purpore of the investigation “It might be desirable If the repre sentatives of your committee make a thore investigation of our milla, tak: | ing two or three weeka.” “Do you think the committee ought not got” Senator Kenyon asked } “No, I don't say that,” Gary re plied, | Kenyon reminded Gary that he had | referred to a newspaper article, aay ing that the proposed trip of the senate committee to the steel dis | triet would prolong the strike. “I am inclined to think there may | be something in that.” Gary said. He then read letters he said were) received by the employes threaten- ing them if they did not strike. Gary stated that net profits of the United | States Steel corporation in reognt | years are as follows: In 1914, $58, | 267,925; in 1915, $107,822.016; In 1916, $302,449,476; in 1917, $253,608,200; Inj} 1918, $167,662,280. | Gary said only 82 men out of 191, }000 in the manufacturing plants | worked a continuous 24-hour shift at | any time last year and only 344| | worked an 18-hour shift at any time, Gary bases his refusal to meet at-| tempts at settiement of the strike on his declaration that the union lead- ers represented a minority of the men. | “Why don’t you leave tt to the | president of the United States to de |termine whether they represent a/ minority or a majority; ixn't that! fair? Walsh pressed. “I want to know If you dire convinced that they represent 50 per cent?” “I don't think I'm required to }of them, acting upon the existing circumstances, utilising @ compara. | tively amall minority of foreigners, | have brought about this strike, which | |i an attempt on the part of h/ | minority to secure control of the em- ployers aa well aa the employes,” Gary said deliberately. sorry to press you, but that's issue,” Walsh persisted. | “The closed shop is the tasue,” |Gary returned. “I want to know if! | you appreciate the danger.” | “I certainly do and I appreciate | | the danger of your refusing to meet | the workmen,” Walsh fired back. WHO WILLGET HOLT'S MONEY. |Murdered Man’s Statement Is Locked in Safe pene | | Continued From Page One | -* motive to commit the crime with which he is charged.’ Counsel for Deaver—Harry Martin—is likewise concerned about |the will, #o far as it would throw suspicion towards the accused hus-| band. Others A concerned are Hugh © family | Todd, attorney, appointed special ad quarrel Thursday morning in thetr| ministrator of Holt» estate, who han the Jackson hotel, Sixth| Placed an armed guard in Holt’s de in South Alki, and undertakers, |who took charge of the body after serted grocery suggested that|the coroner had finished hin task. and who are trying to locate rela-| Beside these, a host of West Seat = | tle people, whoxe interest in the cage |had been aroused months before the | | murder, are awaiting the opening of | | the will to satisfy their curiosity as/ |to whether Mrs, Deaver is the bene | fleiary Fairy Well Fixed | Just what Holt’s wealth conslats ot, and how much he was worth will be unknown until the will is lopened for probate, but least of all| concerned in finding out is Mrs.| Minnie Deaver. She alone, of ail) those connected closely with the| || case, has made no effort to learn. !| Holt is reputed to have been “falr-| {|ly well fixed.” Many of his former | women customers at Alki are sald to j}have seen his diamonds ‘on more than one occasion. is said to have bei of his to invite women customers to look at his collection of gema. them, it is said, in place in his little |rear of his store. || Some people, on the other hand, | contend he had Ilttle money. By | way of proof, they point to the fact that the automobile which he pur chased recently, and which Mra Deaver was ning to drive, was recovered immediately after the mur. der by the firm from which he was purchasing it the installment plan z | | @ secret hidin Can't Find Relatives ,| Attorney Hugh Todd estimates| |Holt's estate to be worth about $4,000. | $10,000, | Efforts on the part of Butterworth | & Sons to locate relatives of the| |dead man, have so far failed. In quiries thus far b aulte in th | discovery that Holt was born som where in T Nessee, and that Jearly age he v aken a# an orphan |into the home of an elderly uncle in Rome, Georgia. The |aince ‘dead, and the e has wired th [ther effort is being ‘them in Tennessee, ve uncle fe long police chief at other relatives ed away, Fur quick relief He kept || apartment in the || Others s«y it will amount to | at an|| portant Conferences BY El (Unised Prone orreapondent) LONDON, Oc pon the re mult of three conferences today hangs the question of industrial war or peace in Great Britain. Representatives of the railwaymen reassembled at Unity house at 11 o'clock this morning to consult be fore their meeting with Lioyd atn when negotiations ai & settlement are to be re While the rallwaymen conference the Transport Federation continued its meeting, awaiting the ult of the parley be tween Lloyd George and the strikers! delegaten. If negotiations fail, it Is expected the transport workers immediately will join the striking railway em ployes. In the Meantime industrial stagna tion prevails in Great Britain, As & result of the strike’s effect on Other industries, 650,000 men are idle benides the railroad employes. ‘This Humber comprises 400,000 miners, 150,000 iron and steel workers, 000 tin plate workers, 20,000 text! workers, 40,000 dock hands and 10. 000 engineers In government cirotes it was de- jelared today that the railway men's | return to the conference room, after Lioyd George's statement that he would not negotiate until work was resumed, was tantamount to a con- feanion of the strike’s fallure. The problem now in to find a solu. tion which will enable the strike leaders to “save their faces.” The ministry of transport an nounced that 2,000 grains were op erated yesterday and that double that number would be run today, ‘The diver has a practical way of fetting at the bottom of things. 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Bliss Co, Washi ton, D. C, f | Greatest | Array of | PEPLUM BLOUSES! Evér Displayed in Seattle Printed colors and tistically ored. Goorgettes, hand-painted. designed and plain Ar co} Prices range from $9.85 to $19.85 Hurry, while they last! Market Blouse Shop 107 Pike St, made to locate | || lockout || Wash,, || open Strikebreakers SAN FRANCISCO, Oct Unit ed Prew wo wtrikebreakers im ported here from Oakland, Ia., for work on the waterfront, at | tacked and wounded today by a mob lof stevedore atrike sympathizers | wh received a deep cut ». The wound Iaid his were n £rom ,nowe to ear hin partner, was ihe Roth men were taken to hospital for treatmentwand left later with a detective for the waterfront to identify the men who attacked them, Maresh auld 20 men surrounded him as he walked from a ¥ 42. Two men, he said, him with revolvers, while other slashed him with a knife and | tilt others attacked Moline. Police rescued the men. UNION MAN IS ~~ SHOT IN FRISCO \Fired On While Driving in Automobile ’ SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2—Nel {son Denning, a union sheet metal | worker, was shot and killed early today, shortly after he had left Pier No. 7 with hin brother, W. D. Den ning. The latter had been super intending of the steamer Washington | The two started home in an aute |mobile. They were followed by an Other machine, and Denning was shot in the back ‘The ship was being loaded tn deft ance of the stevedores’ strike. W.| D. Denning, traffic manager of the| Little River Redwood company, said his brother merely had watched the |work. The dead man was the father of four children. the unloading 2°7155,000 ARE OUT INS, F, STRIKE BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2.—More | than 55,000 men are on strike to- | day ip the San Francisco bay dis- | trtet. | . The number tnctudes 50,000 ahip- lyard and metal trades men; 1,100 lemployes of the Key Route, includ- ing the ferry men and Onkiand |atreet car men: 2,000 longshore- men; 450 ship clerks; 1,000 tailors, @00 river boat men and 175 steel workers. Say 2,000 Portland Ship Workers Out PORTLAND, Ore. Oct. 2—Union leaders cinim that 2,000 metal trades employes of contract ma chine and iron shops and two ship- bullding companies in Portland are latriking on the second day of the latrike, The strikers are employed by concerns which refused to ac- cept the agreement for an 8-cent increase in wages. The walkout promises to be a long drawn out affair. \Portland Deckhands | Are Out on Strike PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 2—All |river boats in the Portiand harbor jare tied up as the result of a strike of deckhands shis morning. | The strikers, who are affitiated | jwith the International Longshore- }men’s unton, demand a 10 per cent |wage increase and better sleeping jaccom modations aboard the boats Two hundred are out, | Aliens Asked to | Meet at Y.M.C. A. AM mass meeting of native and for jelxn-born residehts of Seattle will be | held at the Y. M. C. A. auditorium at | lock Thursday evening, for the purpose of gaining er idea of Americaniam Carl Croson will be the principal speaker, The meetting will be in the nature of a o ration of the ninth year opening of the “Y" in| Americanization, 8 ac course Georges Quien to Get Second Trial PARIS, Oct. Quien, recently sentenced to court-martial for inge with the Germans ay traying Edith Cavell, the English nurse murdered by the Germans, will be tried ag An appeal against the verdict court-martial has 2.— Georges ton treasonat been uphelk 'Strike Prevents Magazine Output NEW YORK, Oct day of the combined strike of 6,000 pressman in York today resulted in the nouncement that ¢ ry one of magazines published uid suspend until the labor was relieved Many of leoncerns will be unable thelr November issues. BURGLARS BLAST — VAULTS IN BANK! LEWISTON, Idaho, Oct Search continued today for burglars who tunneled thru the brick vault wall of Baumeister, Volk & Scott's private bank at otin six miles from here, blasted the #teel vaults and escaped with $3,000 cash and $7,000 in Lib and New an the here situ the popular po tion |jerty Bonda, Family rrels would not be so bad if other families would keep out of them. For Superfluous Hair | Ue DELATONE | |. Seller for 10 Years QUICK -- SU! SAFE--RELIABLE | sh as Wanted | || Ask Your Dealer — He Knows | vnainnumsonunaninn a caf a E a a Fs] 5B | | | | SPOKA? |bomber, pi a States oft for Seattle “Three hours to ed Leading Dentist I am a graduate and licensed dentist. Fourteen years of unequaled practice in which to gain ex- perience. Financial ability to install in miygoiice the best known equip- ment in dentistry. A reputation in my profession which insists that I advertise only what I can live up to. CHURCHES, STORES AND BANKS ADVERTISE A bank will give yo ju a statement of its business. I will give you the statement of my qualfty of service,and no bank can boast of ‘service more exacting than mine. YOUR STORES advertise a price for certain merchandise, and live up to it, but not any better than I do. YOUR CHURCHES advertise to get attendance, and I to get more patients and on getting a larger volume of business I can maintain f Come into my office, rices at their wonderful low figure. Read them and you will admit they ave no competition. Best Crowns, $5.00 Best Bridgework, $5.00 get a crown made, have a three or four-tooth bridge made, not asking the price in advance, and you will be charged only $5.00 per tooth; then if you have had previous dental work, compare mine with your other work and see for yourself as to quality. Best Plate, $10.00 Any color of the best rubber and the best standard known teeth used by men of reputa- tion is what I will give you. Every business has to make a profit to sustain itself, but they do not have to make 50% to 100% in doing so, and when I say I can give you the above work at prices yuoted with profit, and I have lived well, without question it is easy for you to figure how much more profit your high-priced dentists make. SAVE MONEY ON DENTISTRY AND BUY CLOTHES Examination Free rim Rain raining again this morning. Obey That Ever- BuBelenees 2.—The Col E, Oct yted by around the scheduled at noon today. Seattle,” predict- trip again nel the trip. delayed Catarrh Of The Stomach Is Dangerous n cannot mix with the The second } r whict hydrochlor esp k And whe w An tio y thei da ¢ rface and tu form “, surate: n fol irated fall wd Ton About we ple suffer more at tter cructa ach acidity nd call it indigestion, when in real- to gastric writes a r trouble ts due gtomac danger- embrane f the yma vickened atin vers the flu digest eds un Gastric ulcers a quently an and fre of the gn stom hot water Washes the he h walls and od stomach from the stom nucus and in- of the bh Moreover t d Magnesia will serve as a 1 but antacid I neutral any acid that may and sweeten sy, natural @ distress of any kind shou low. Bisurated Magnesia is to mail out|not a laxative, is harmless, pleasant | and easy to take obtain- Don't with magnesia, milks but get it in the pure 1 form (powder or tablets) y prepared for this pur and can } eal drug somehow gets away, about the sine of it, will hear them say1 business, ° | » DRESS UPSTAIRS Second and Unton, 810! First Ave., opposite Colman Bldg: Martin, Hartz on |}) United | fF) to hop It's n they catch a little fish! Insisfent Impulse and Visit Dr. Wilson Today J. T. WILSON «cc Elliott 1833 Don’t Just Believe ‘Investigate and Find Out | The Prices You Pay for Clothes Depend { on What and Where You Buy | Overcoats $35 and $40 } These are special valanl and well worth inspec. jj tion. Late - styled, a| fabrics in the best colors. |] Young Fellows’ Snappy Models $30 and $35 H There is a dash and go to i} these new models, Snappy mixtures in greens, browns, and grays in waist seam, belted and fashion features. Boys’ Suits Two Pairs Trousers . $12.50 Biggest Stock of Boys’ Clothes in the West. Full Line of Sam W. Peck and Joseph Skolny’s Celebrated Suits Store Closed Saturday—Religious Holiday Do Your Shopping Friday AFER BROS. Seattle’s Largest Clothiers | Whole . Block Long SH Second and University First and University