The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 7, 1921, Page 7

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—] "7 a & i 5 al : a Ls nt oer ER SS Ed f i f y _ York city delegation to consider a) | stirred American conscience to ac THOUSANDS ( ASK UBERTY FOR GLORIA “at Gov. Miller of New York Re-| ceives Petitions From All * Over the Country BY WHIT HADLEY ALBANY, N. Y., April T.—-Gover not Nathan 1. Miller of New York has officially received a total of} 10,000 petitions signed on behalf of | Baby Gloria O'Del. | These petitions ask the governor to free Pearl O'Dell, the baby’s mother, ho is a prisoner in Auburn pent. | tentiary, because Baby Gloria ts) confined with her. es James O'DeN, the baby's father, is in the deathhouse in Sing Sing pris. on under sentence of execution April 25. Tho O'Dell ts ready to die, be is going mad from grief and worry over his wife and child. ONLY THE GOVERNOR CAN INTERVENE Only the governor of New York R can intervene between the three | Ruling O'Delis—one an innocent baby born | arte . CHICAGO, April 7 © her parents’ offe and their | commen labor on the railroads of the | RAILWAY WAGES CANNOT BE CUT No Arbitrary Slashing, is jcountry must be arbitrarily interrupted an} stashed, the Un tates railroad | important conference with a New| janor board ruled today Both sides of a wage controversy Great bundle of petitions sent in by | must come before the board and pre-| Feaders of The Seattle Star and ®) sent their cases and a ruling of the dosen other newspapers. | board given before a wage cut can “It is the baby’s future which has | become effective, it was declared. | The decision was made in the ap plication of the New York Central. which asked 4 of comm per cent, retro active to April 1, without a hearing | by the boarc tion,” read a tter accompanying the petitions “It is the baby’s Fight to life, love and the un fettered pursuit of happiness which is focusing the nation's eyes upon) you.” | For abor 25 a thme Governor Miller med speechiess. He was not en-! Mtirely familiar with the fucts in the fase. He knew there had been a Murder. He knew that a man and; & woman stood convicted of the| ‘luding the ahief roads and largest crime. He knew the man was to| *™Ployers of labor in the country @le and the woman was to stay in| SsTeed that the New York prison for 20 years. But he didn’t | *2Ould start the case, and if success know about the baby, sharing for |! Wages on these line likewise two years at least, the same fate as| WOU! be reduced, If granted, wages of labor would have been cut from 45 and 48% cents an hour to 33 and 35 cents, | The board did not rule that a cut in wages was not justified because oer —— endl og ttle girls | of reduction in the cost of living Tes| a iow Se thrilled by | ruling stated that it was authorized, — Pars emanating from) under the transportation act, to cut thousa merican hearts who| wages only after both sides had had asked him in signed petitions to be/an opportunity to present their cases merciful to mother love, to redeem) at « hearing. the already blighted future of a lit-| The board set April 18 aa the date tle child. <a-Wola the tnktton ‘ob, oe egotien | “I am greatly impressed,” sald the | tion of the New York Central and the other carriers to reduce wages of common labor will be held. Carriers will be allowed eight |hours’ oral presentation of their/| case, as wif the rail unions. Both the difference in pay would be made up. Twenty-five other trunk lines, in| Governor Miller ts a kindly man. sent briefs and written testimony. ‘This must be on file before the board by April 20. burean, *|Boy Jail Breakers Shot At, Captured EUREKA, Cal, April 1—Willle Clark, who has gained fame as the champion juvenile jail breaker of the j Pacific coast, was captured today at _ | South Fork, 606 miles south of | Eureka. Railroad men found him “beating his way” south aboard a freight train. Several shots were fired at Clark before he was captured, but he was not injured. He ts expected to reach Pureka about noon in charge of officers. -|Entertain Wounded Camp Vets Tonight} Tonight's the night the Calbank| Staff club goes to Camp Cushman | }to entertain the disabled veterans} there with a peppy program. The club is recruited from’ the a ane SUR force of the Bank of Chlifornia. TOKYO —A thousand refugees| The entertainment will include from fire that destroyed the Asakusa| music by the bank quartet, and| section of Tokyo are quartered inj jazz orchestra, an Oriental dance / Asakusa park today. and humorous readings. HICKORY WAIST AND GARTERS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS Every mother appreciates Hickory | at 1048 Summit ave. N. Wednesday. Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced. “Unquestionably the unexcelled undergarment of to- day is the Hickory Waist and Garters. It’s our biggest seller by far,”’ says the buyer of one of New York City’s largest department stores. The body of the Hickory Waist is made of durable, high gtade materials—wears well and washes wonderfully. | ailored in the faultless full body model as well as in | the popular style illustrated. For all ages 2 to 14. Each | garment fis perfectly. All buttons are genuine unbreak- | ou vee 5 we! pin - ee soomete the garter | pin from bending or reaking. ‘uaranteed to give you absolute catiddation. | 50f and up Without Garters 75¢ and up With Garters You should find them at your dealer's—in the notions,’ boys’ or infants’ department. If not, please write us. A.STEIN & COMPANY GARTERS for men CHICAGO NEW YORK | Coal -}ence with transport workers today THE |FIRST AND LAST WORDS IN AUTO DEVELOPMENT A glance at these two pictures shows the rapid stride the automobile industry has made in its 25 years of existence. Below is shown one of the fitst “horseless carriages” pro- duced in the United States. It is a Selden product, patented in 1895, and is now on exhibition at the national museum in Washington, D.C. Above is the last word in automobile con- struction—a $25,000 Pierce-Arrow th a special Lee body. BRITISH STRIKE |WOMAN FREE WAR SPEEDS UP) TO SUE ROAD Mine Negotiations |Insulted and Attacked by Break Down Railway Man, Charge BY ED L. KEEN A fury in Federal Jodge EE. LONDON, April 7.—Attermpted ne |Cushman’s court Wednesday defined | Mina Lunette Langiols as a citizen gotiations for settlement of the Brit-| opt, “lie ce Washington, thus ish coal strike broke down complet | opening the way for the young wom ly today. an to bring sult bere against the Miners’ Jeaders, in conference with | Chicago, Milwaukee @ St. Paul rail 0! G 4 fused to) W8Y for $20,000 reparation for al Premier Tage fei Pb Tiiery (08S? insults and mistreatment by meet the primary demand of colliery | raitway employe owners that steps be taken immedt| yrisy Langtols, then 18, was bound ately to prevent flooding of the/from Tomahawk, Wis, to Seattle mines. Nov. 3, 1920. The tratn was wrecked. She lost her ticket. Boarding anoth o proposed minerowner meet eee ‘eqnsudi. gee jer train with a paas to Seattle, she Was put off, ab { Marmoth, Railway men called for a confer |i", gape tg to determine on the most effective| At Marmoth, according to her method of aiding the miners. story, she wan attacked in the St. The two groups, with the miners, |Cbaries hotel by D. D. Spayde, train form the “triple alliance.’ "There | master, after he had forcibly enter were fears they would declare a aym.|%! her room. Previously, she says, pathetic strike. he had posed aa a benefactor, promis ing her a ticket to her destination pak ge When he had left ber, abe alleges, AS arent, friiaials piseerabions| ine found a ticket to Miles City, Pe ag fon na ko ght hen ont. and finally reached Seattle for “iad ye a Trial of her $20,000 muit for dam- rushed to atrategic points, great food 1% Was opposed by the raliroad on oa po! [the ground that she was a citizen of EATTLE STAR PROHI AGENTS _ ANGERED TOWN | Lynching Talk After Veteran Is Shot Down SPOKANE, April 7—"If 1 had given the word Kella@ people would have lynched John G. Montgomery and William ¢ emt after the Em fey shooting,” declared John it Hovereign, editor of the San Poll Bagle, on the stand at the trial of ‘the pair of dry sleuths for the kill ing Sovereign declared that “Vest wa two sheets in the wind if he wasn't drunk,” on the night of the shoot ing. Defense in the case opened today and will attempt to show that the dry officers shot Emley after he had tried to escape them Ernest Emley, ex-eervice man and |war hero, was shot dead at Keller on the night of May 1920. The state charges Montgomery and Vest bse manslaughter. ee CAMPAIGN FOR BEER AND WINE Organization Seeks to Re- move Prohibition NEW ORLEANS, April 17 Committed to the task of removing the prohibition on beer and light | wines, the Anti-Blue Law League of America, Inc., granted a charter in Delaware, will begin work immed) ately, its president, C,H. Ella, aaid | here yesterday, The league, he claiins, “wants to kill blue laws that are destroying the Uberty of America and to bring about a sensible, liberal and reason able construction of the prohibition awe” | “We awe Caine to Make New York Dry” NEW YORK, April 7.—"We are going to make New York dry! | ‘This was the declaration of Police | Commissioner Richard E. Enright to- |day as he took up « task at which the United States government apparent ly has failed—enforcement of prohi be here. With the ink searcely dry upon | | Governor Nathan L. Miller's signa ture to the new, state prohibition en forcement law, Enright set in motion the machinery to put It Into effect. | An even dozen arrests for alleged violations was the prompt remult, 'The Duchess Has Nothing to Say! SAN FRANCISCO, April 7.—With 27 pieces of lugrage, maids and nothing to may, the duch- | | cisco today Newspapers anxious to ak her if| Tumors of an impending divorce ac. tion against her husband, William | Angus Montague, duke of Manches | ter, were true, found the doors of her | apartments ¢ sed to them, and not & word leaked out from any source, ‘The duchess, who was formerly) Helena Zimmerman, of Cincinnati, | bile from Paso Robles, Cal, It was! understood she ts planning a trip to the Orient, * Alleged Gunmen Are} ens of Manchester was in San Fran: | arrived here yesterday by automo |f) "| had hoped to a | stores were collected, further cuts in | transportation were made, and light- lean nighte were 5 The premier personally attempted to persuade the miners to change their position. At a long confer ence this morning Lloyd George used all the arte of argument at his command. The miners declared they wish to reach an understand ing with the colliery owners and were ‘willing to make concessions, but they could not meet the pri- mary demand of the owners. Premier Lioyd George today ap pealed to the F government thru the industrial crisis precipitated by the coal strike “The government will use every means in its power to meet the situa tion,” the premier declared. “It is relying on the assistance of the great mass of British people.” Lioyd George, in his conference with the miners, told them they were threatening the life of the country “There'll be nothing more left here than there is in Russia if you destroy industry,” he told them, “Where will the miners go if Brit ain becomes only a home for eulti- vators of the soll?” he asked. “Back to the land,” retorted a miner delegate. “It's not flooding of the mines that you are doing,” the premier declared. | “Jt's flooding the nation’s industries “This ix an industrial country. It it coases to be industrial it is destroy. ed. There will be no home for min- ers or anybody else. “England then will become what It was hundreds of years before her in- dustries were developed. “Then where will the miners go? What country will take them in?” That demand was that, before ne- gotiations be attempted, safety workers should be installed in the mines to see that they were not flooded. ‘The destruction of property, their spokesmen told the premier, is their sole bargaining power now. Short age of coal will exert some press ure, they said, but the weather pre- vents its full effect The miners de George that the government should guarantee a national wage board and national pooling of mine profits before pumping is reeumed, FACTORIES WILL SHUT DOWN Arguing that the pumping Is nec- esezary to prevent the destruction of vital properties, Lioyd George re fused to consider any such proviso He demanded that the miners ac cept the duty of saving the prop- ties unconditionally Industry immediately reacted to the setback tory owners, who ert a shutdown, pre- pared to close their businesses, And Yet They Grab the Festive Franc PARIS, April 7 notes worth a total of ab a Paris scientist has cc 000 germs. Even if p has depreciated inv: don’t seem to hav ded of Lioyd ut 14 cents od 897,260, yer curre: , the “bug: about it, Wisconsin. The Jury held that this state is her home and that the local Taken by Policeman inh people to aid the | On three French | federal court has jurisdiction to try the issue. The railroad has asked for a new trial of the jurisdiction matter, Tom Marshall Will Come Here to Speak Vormer Vice President Tom Mar. shall will come to Seattle Saturday, April 16, and will deliver an address lat the First Methodist church, the Y. M. C. A. announced Wednesday. manks, G. H. Reynolds, 35, and F. J. | Burch, 21, were arrested single handed by Patrolman 8. J. Jorgensen day night. charges and are being investigated by detectives. A mask was found hanging to the | aide of the police machine when the | men arrived at police station, and an-/ other in alleged to have been thrown out by one of the men. Reynolds is| accused of having the gun They are held on open | ‘THE OHIO proves in design. be ready for baking in time the fire is kindled. will be an abundance of & NE The Ohio Range In the Four-hole Model Pictured | $98.00 good qualities suggested by its efficient Every day, year in and year out, the Ohio will The Ohio pictured, complete with water coil and connections, $98.00. FREDERICK FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET actual performance the eight minutes from the In fifteen minutes there hot water. ~THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE LSON In posseasion of a revolver and two |) at Ninth ave. and Spring #t. Wednes. ||| FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET 65 Patterns of Wall Papers In a Clearance |AT SHARPLY REDUCED PRICES | M ANY of the Papers involved in this clearance are imported, and of very good quality. They range from 18 to 30 inches in width. All are from our regu- lar stocks. Domestic and Imported Bedroom Papers Dining-room Papers Living-room Papers —in a great variety of patterns and color effects, in¢clud- ing novelties which reproduce the effect of linens, canvas, crepes and grass cloths, some with highly effective over- printings. For convenience in choosing they are Grouped in Five Exceptional Lots Reduced to The clearance is scheduled to begin Friday morning. 4 retinue of |}) Women’s and.Children’s Knit Underwear : at Moderate Prices (THIRD FLOOR) HESE -lower-priced lines are thoroughly representative of the lar weaves, the seasonable weights and the approved styles in en’s and children’s garments. Specimen values: ton tape, sizes 36 to 44, WOMEN’S FINE>RIBBED COTTON VESTS, low neck and sleeveless or in bodice style, sizes 36 MISSES’ UNION SUITS of fine-ribbed cotton, low neck, sleeveless and tight- knee style, sizes 4 to 16 WOMEN’S FINE-RIBBED UNION SUITS in bodice-top style, with band WOMEN’S SWISS-RIBBED VESTS in low neck, sleeveless style, with cot- P WOMEN’S FINE-RIBBED UNIO) SUITS, low neck and sleeveless, band top, in sizes 36 to 44; bodice-top style with me strap over shoulder, and Ext Union Suits, in sizes -46, 48 and —$1.00. WOMEN’S EXTRA-SIZE UNION SUITS of fine hard-twisted ¢ low neck and sleeveless, with knee and band top, sizes 46, 48 50, $1.50. - 25¢. to 44, 25¢. years, 50¢. trimming and silk ribbon shoulder straps, sizes 36 and 38, 65¢. WOMEN’S COTTON UNION SUITS in tight-knee style, low neck and sleeve- less, with band top, sizes 86 and 38, 85¢. WOMEN’S FINE-RIBBED COTTON UNION SUITS in band-top bodice style, with mercerized draw tape, sizes 40, $1.25. waistline: and knee, sizes 36 to 44 $1.00. 4 BOYS’ OPEN-MESH UNION SUITS in ecru-color, short sleeves and knee — length, sizes 24 “to 34, 50¢. BOYS’ FINE-RIBBED COTTON UNION SUITS in ecru-color, short sleeves and knee length, sizes 26 to 34, 85¢. —rHe powNSTAIRS STORE strap and 42 and 44, FOUR BANDITS — STEAL $500,000 CHICAGO, April 7.—Postal authort- tles and police all over the Middle West today were searching for the} four bandits who made a raid on the United States mails which will proba- bly reach close to $500,000, The robbery was staged in broad! daylight yesterday evening at the! Dearborn station, in full view of a} dozen mail clerks and scores of pass- ersby. Rehabilitation of Workmen Forecast} Rehabilitation of — broken-down workmen will be the great con-| structive effort of the country in} the future, Dr. John A, Lapp, editor | of Modern Medicine, told members | of the Rotary Club Wednesday | | He | spoke on “Industrial Efficiency and} National Health.” i High Court Orders | Hearing on Killing ‘The supreme court Wednesday re- versed the King county superior court's refusal to hear the claim of the administrators of the estate of 8. Okanishi, killed by a street car, because the address of Oka nishi’s widow and child in Japan was not furnished, ave. S. and Washington st, men at 110 Cherry st., and to men at 407 Federal bidg, Best foodstuffs for the Boldt's.— Advertisement. Army and Navy Men Get Victory Medals Without red tape Victory medals for former service men are being distributed on presentation of dis- charge papers to marines at First NURSERY STOCK DOWNTOWN SALES YARD (Just a Block From Our Store) PERFECTION CURRANTS, year-} lings LOGANDERRIES, Strong rooted tips For Latest Reduced Prices See Our New Planting Guide Free on Application 85 per 100 $45 per 1,000 SEEDS, FERTILIZERS, SPRAYS Mall Orders, Phone Hillott 4325.

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