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MINE PEACE Cupid Defeats Movie Lure CONFERENCE |Spurns Stardom to Marry OPENS TODAY Operators Are in Confusion While Strikers Show Solid Front BY HARRY G. BAKER CLEVELAND, Aug. 10.—Peace negotiations will be opened here late today between miners’ lead- ers and the minority coal oper. ators of the central competitive fleld without the insurgents of Minols, Indiana and Western Pennsylvania, No further attempts will be made to bring in the insurgents whe are holding out for wage Agreements at the mines er in small districts. As the time for the final confer. ence approaches, it was apparent that the ranks of the operators were | im confusion, while the miners main- tained @ solid front, | Refusal of the Illinois operators to | attend was a setback. Announce. ment had been made that the Dan-; ville, IIL, district, with a tonnage of | about 6,000,000, would have repre-/ sentatives here. The policy committee of the United Mine Workers met at 10 a. m. today to discuss the situation in Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia. » ST. PAUL, Aug. 10.—-Executives wim Of Seven states today faced the neces- ity of keeping more than 6,000,000 people warm and busy this winter. Drastic recommendations may come from the conference of govern- WCrnete arer ba Sever “E want a home and a husband of my own,” she says, “I would never feel that I had either if I became a movie No movie career for me, thank you, to choose between the two. And she chose—the minor role! “The joys of keeping houne appear t 5 mays the former/to me to be the greatest thing life Sioower that the Nerthwest faces an |ye.5 Hanley, 18, who won a/can offer a girl. Unprecedented emergency with re gard to fuel, The administration wil! | Ceauty contest here in which 700) “My life, my heart and my soul be asked to take any steps nécoo |" O° entered. As & reward a movie |are centered in my home, I'm here ad company sent her a contract for « \*"4 I'm going to stay put. Sl ent eettt and tdearete raliag *j!eed part in a big production. “For I love my husband Governors Nestea ef North Dakota, But she turned it down, rejected) “Right now we are living In apart Biaine of Wi in Kendall o¢[@2umerable suitors, leading mem-/ments in the various centers where bers of the wealthy society set here | my hubby rides, But it won't be long Towa, McMaster of South Dakota and ‘and married before we mettle down tn a place of Preus of Minnesota were here. Gov-) Jockey. my dreams.” eee “/$ 10,000,000 Loan for Western Wheat Men vernor Fepresentatives. WASHINGTON, Aug. 16. — the} q W OMAN SUICIDE war finance corporation today went | Rage ti - ere’ association ¢ o jontana te the wit of Wenn war | wheat growers’ association $1,500. Takes Gas in Evangelist’s|srowers: ansociations, badly in teed | p59: North Dakota wheat rowers’ Home and Dies of funds to assist In marketing this | association 000. Washington wheat growers’ asno- elation $2,000,000; Idaho wheat grow year's crops. The corporation an-| These four associations have al nounced it had tentatively approved | ready arranged for advances from the following advances of cash. the banks in their respective states ied, age “thal eae Wetnesday afternoon. Detect /PLAN POWER _ (LANDS 3RD LARGEST Cin of the cose sad'tarnea teat | FOR HARDING!) Trout Ever CauGHT Mrs. Hadlock had been despond- | WASHINGTON, Aug. 10.—A bill! IN UNITED STATES! transportation systems during the ehh are, 6. |traee atrike emergency is under While at work Mrs. Hadlock locked | stood to have been drafted by Sena. | herself in the kitchen, opened the tor Cummins, Iowa, chairman of the | gas burners of the range and died senate interstate commerce commis: | with an apron over her head. Miss| 41... | Grace Smith, her invalid sister, was) tho Cummins refused to discuss upstairs when she smelied gas. Missi tne question, it wan learned that the Smith found her sister dead. Mr*./ measure will be introduced in con- Hadlock had threatened suicide a few | Meas", Nl Me ‘house reconvenes, | days before. Funeral arrangements were being ie gg both republicans Wate, Papeete. and democrats, are understood to ve assured Cumming and Prest t Harding that any legislation tlegger Given «4 | seeking to relieve the twin strike cri Thrashing by Girl |<; will be speedily passed by con-| OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla., Aug. 10. | gress. —Miss Elizabeth Thurston biacked both eyes of a bootlegger and broke his nose for selling liquor to her father Big Bill Hart Is Winnie’s Cream F. Puff No Longer LOS ANGELES, Aug. 10—Big BM Hart, two-fisted, twogunned man of the movies, has separated from winsome Winifred West over, who called him her “cream puft” when they were married last December. Hailed as one of the real love matches of the celluloid world, it became known today the ro- mance was biasted three months ago when Bill went back to sis- ter and Winifred to mother. The man from the flickering bad lands played true to the role in which he is worshipped by millions of boys in America when he said concerning the charges, “I can now appreciate the feel- ing of a man accused of murder when he knows in his heart and shin Wd soul he is innocent.” Big Bill fumbled his hat with embarrass. ment when nnpronched concera- || MUST GET TICKETS “Sautery surrounds tne charges|| TO HEAR COOLIDGE WHILE IN SEATTLE that Mrs. Hart, herself an act- Persons jring to hear Vice ress, hax confided to her attor . cm President Calvin Coolidge make THE FRATERNAL Aid union and neys and closest friends. She is uote quoted as saying that in spite of | |the Bluebird Social club will hold a inches, weighing 31 having a girth measurement 26 inches was caught by Mak Hain, of Patterson, N. J., in lensby pond, six miles from pounds and of Fi this Bar bour. Hain and Barbour were trolling with a live minnow five inches long, from a seven-inch flint bamboo pole. Their catch is the largest fish ever caught in New York state and, not only that, but there have been only two larger fresh water fish caught in America. These were taken from a lake in Can- ada and from the Lake-ln-the. Woods, Minnesota village on the estate of J. E. Fineworks Unlawful Here After Sept. 9|COOLIDGE TO Mayor Brown hag signed the ant! |, atavor Brown nas weved the ant! PATEK TO VET | by the council, ana the bill will be-| Veterans of battles and skirmishes come effective September 9. After on foreign soil, men who struggled that date it will be illegal for anyjup the sun-baked slopes of San dealer to keep fireworks of any de| Juan, thore fought in the scription in stock, sell or offer them (tangled wilderness of the Argonne for sale, or for any person to use|and who swept mines in the ice. them within the city limits [strewn waters of the North sea, will PR RA wees |gather next Wednesday at 8 p. m. i in the old Orpheum theater at Third |Unfilled Tonnage ave. and Madison st. to receive the of Steel Increases | sutations of the nation’s chief ex- NEW YORK, Aug. 10—The Unit. |ecutive, borne to Seattle by Vice 4 States Steel corporation an. | President Calvin Coolidge nounced today its unfilled tonnage increased 140,630. The unfilled ton nage on July 31,totaled 5,776,161, against 6,635,531 on June 30, and 4,830,324 on July 21, 1921. who merce during hin stay here, the vice president is especially anxious to greet the thousands of veterans | who will begin swarming into Seattle |this week for tNe opening of the *% im ee wit erans of Foreign Wars on Monday. lecture here Sunday at 8 p.m., at the| Veterans may secure tickets after Theosophical society's headquarters |9 a. m. Monday at the Chamber of in the Lippy bidg., Third ave. and Co lumbia st. His topic will be “Theo sophical Suggestions From Recent Electrical Inventions.” Third ave. 3 Autos Crash on Rocky Mountains PUEBLO, Colo. Aug. 10,--Three automobiles were in a amashup 5,000 | feet above sea-level In the mountains | west of here. One car stopped six |tnches from « 900-foot precipice. A guest of the Chamber of Com-| 23rd annual encampment of the Vet. | Commerce Information bureau at 702 | the fact that she expects to be- come a mother in Septemer, she could no longer stand life with Hart. Hart maid he had made ample Provision for the support of his wite. “Mrs, Hart and myself sepa- rated three months ago,” he sald, in @ statement issued by his at- torneys, “and a few days later Property contracts were oxe- cuted, making sample provision for her maintenance ax well as for our unborn child. Whether she contemplates divorce pro- or not 1 have no knowl- his only public speech while in Seattle may obtain tickets for the || Picnic at Beward park Sunday, Coolidge meeting after 9». m. Fri. || ag day at the Chamber of Commerce Tourist department, 702 Third | PORTLAND. — Fraud indications discovered in vote recount on re |publican primaries in which Gov. Admission is free, but is by only, The charnber ts the ave. ticket handling arrangements for vice president's vinit Coolidge will speak in the Wood | Oleott and Chas. Hall seek nomina- | tion. WASHINGTON. — Germany pur- ward. theater, Third ave, and ||Cchases steamer Pocahontas, former Madison st., Wednesday at 8:30 ||!y the Princess Irene, now lying at | Gibraltar, “and which was seized p.m. He will be the guest at a Chamber of Commerce dinner in his honor at the Matnier club at 7 p.m. but will make no address on that occasion, jduring the war. | ‘ VANCOUVER, Wash,-Every un- dertaker in clty running for coroner of Clarke county, SEATTLE MISSING GIRL SOUGHT HERE Disappeared From Train on June 22 THE OREGON'S RODEO. IS IN LIMELIGHT Many Notables Expected to Be at Pendleton red, but her fath ground that wood Hroun and Ktuth Hale, news: | before |paper and magezine writers; Freder.|¢> had objected on the ick O'Brien, author of “White Shad: | #he was too young oWs in the South Beas”; Charles Han Every elty along the coast has non Towne and Dr. Walter E. Trap. | been searched for the girl rock (Geome Chappell), both noted 3 writers, have made reservations for J, G | the three days, and other prominent people will be here also. ap enera Already the livestock ts being brought to Pendleton in preparath for the staging of the outdoor drama Two carloads of Mexican longhorn steers, whose chief characteristic is & decided hostility to the world in general, are being shipped to the| Round-Up City Vets Will Receive | Maj. Gen. H. Haraguchi of the Japa . a lnese army if the commissioned per Visiting Delegates | sone! of ine Nipponese forces wax Plans for the reception of delegatés | Well trained from the ground up.” to the Sst Division Association re} The general answered an union, to be held in Seattle Aug, 19/ hour later, when he mpanied }and 20, are practically completed, ac- | Adit. Gen. Leslie Kincaid, New York |cording to committeemen in charge | ational guard, down @ line of 7th of arrangements. Representatives | Teeiment = men from all over the United States are | 500.yard range expected to be present, with large| The detact numbers from™ all Western states, | Men Were prone; It was raining: the ‘Alden to meet the delegates were ap.|fiting line wax a quagmire. In the pointed by Lleutenant-Governor | Center of the line lay « private, mud nWee" Coyle, president of the anso.|#meared. and every time he fired a clation, at a meeting of the local or ganization Wednesday night. | Scores 10 Bulls _ on Army Range PEEKSKILL, N. ¥, Aug. 10-—An | Am “an army officer on the na [tional guard rifle range today asked major | flag waved over the target, informing him his shot had missed the mark od again and again, and the Japanese general amiled "May I take the soldier's rif ie?” he asked the adjutant general General Kincaid nodded The private maluted, handed his Auction to Be Held in Tent if It Rains) Rain won't be permitted to inter j fore with the property auction which | rifie to the major general and moved to} | George Francia Rowe & Co. plan to the rear. Into the muddy hole jhold at 2 p.m. Saturday at Hender:| slid General Haraguchi, resplendent son. In case of bad weather, it war/in his parade uniform. announced Thursday, a huge tent] He fired 19 sho | will be erected on the lot to take! leare of the crowds, soldier telephoned o oe “Ten straight bull'seyes. Bome | shooting, buddy.” Mayor Puts Foot on (7 ee cea with mud, . | edt Card Room Licenses |"! ns ae Mayor Brown announced Thure pager Bis Netrwealen ee day that he would sign no more card |room Heensen. | “I am convinced that the new. or dinance granting Meenses to oard jroome is & mistake,” the mayor raid. ["it is already resulting in a vast number of card placer springing up Uke mushrooms about the city.” Laughter Breaks Up : Ku Klux Klan Trial Item for Auto Drivers LOS ANGELES, Aug, 10.—Disrup- RY PA tion in the proceedings of the trial |. WASHINGTC Aug. 16. jot 37 alleged membere of the Ku lowner of each individual automobile |Kiux Kian was precipitated today {in the United Staten mved $7 a year jby laughter and disturbances among jas «9 result of « twocent cut in ens \the courtroom spectators. t | Judge Houser, following = pro} longed burst of laughter, ordered the | wational Automobile court room cleared, and in the scene! Commerce on the b |that followed contempt proceedings | consumption supplied by t loomed as attorneys for both sides | o¢ mines | protested interruptions \ The | MOTORISTS $7 2-Cent Reduction Is Big K. MALLON Chamber of figures of he bures vehicle average consumes Council Considers of the bureau. Some run as high ax ! But the average is around 350 Park at Fauntleroy and figured ‘on this ba | Members of the city counci! and|¥idual saving on 9 the park board made a tour of in would run $7 to the individual, apection Wednesday of the proposed} Collectively American motor. (ea saving of 500. the [new saltwater park near Faunt-|!%« public me jeroy. The site includes 130 acres |? on & twocent cut. Th are and is offered to the city, on the| More than 10 million persons enjoy cany-payment plan, for $130,000, |!9& the pleasure of automobiles now, according to the bureau. ra feel the greatest bene since they own not only care in the stationary The offer will probably be taken up by the budget committee in a few! weeks } me one-third of the motor but consuming also 0} Woman Files for gines County Treasurer — _ Mrs. May Avery Wilkens, 9701 Beach drive, filed for county treas |Medals to Reward urer Wednesday .on the democratic Students at Camp tieket. + > cWI1s. ¥ 0 Special Others filing were Patrick J. € wetiehs Tei Tad Wheat ED ang ory ii Maynard aye, state Senator: . izens’ military training camp who Seattle precinct, republican. | | encampment lOut-of-Town Vets Join Parade Here |Engineer Poisoned Working on Sewers W. E. Hope, construction engineer | |for the American Laundry Machine| Veterans from Bremerton, Tacoma |company, was feported euffering| end many other sections of the state have announced their plans to take which will be a from severe gan poisoning Thursday |euntained in cleaning sewers at the|part in the parade | Everett plant of the compa feature of the Veterans of Foreign | Hope ia confined to his room at|Wars convention in Seattle next jthe New Richmond hotel lweek | SEALS OVERRUN ISLANDS | Just a few of the thousands of seals that have become so plentiful in the Pacific that they are overrunning the Coro- ‘nado islands, south of San Diego. PENDLETON, Ore, Aug, 10—The| Mrs, Katherine Binenhart, police Pendleton Round-Up er fails »| protective officer of Ban Franciaco, attract many fa un people who are | wos in Seattle Thursday, looking for among the thousa who ne | 17-year-old Helen Met um, of Peta big show, and the 1922 present juma, Cal, who mysteriously disap. | Beptember 21, 22 and 23, will be no | pew June while on her way exception home from Chilloguin, Ore | Ben W. Olcott overnor of Ore-| Mra, Bisenbart i» working en the! fon D. w Davis, governor of | theory that the girl may have en Idaho; Wallace Irwin, Saturday Kve-| tered a Seattio hospital, to learn to ning Post writer; ree Palmer | be @ nur Bhe had expressed a de Putnam, publisher and author; Hey-| sire to profession shortly at practice on the} pent of national guards. | From the pit under the target a The |] Thin ts the deduction made by the! about 360 gallons on lowest estimates | ; FREDERICK & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE r | Misses’ White Twill Middies 75c OR all kinds of outdoor wear, and for early school days, too, these White Twill Middies that launder so well are especially prac- tical, Fashioned with double yoke front and back, long tailored sleeves and sailor collar, as pictured. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Ex- ceptional values at 75¢. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB | | Low pri ‘These inexpensive floor coverings are designed with Blue, Brown or Green stenciled patterns on natural color | { In two styles—with front or back fastening, are these Fleshcolor Brassieres of medium-weight ma- at 30¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE C i A Chai Chinese Grass Arm airs fortable Woven Grass Chairs—a Chair for Poreh or Living-room use. at 85.60 each. 9x12-Foot Grass Rugs ing. Excellent values at $3.95. $3.95 —THE DOWNSTAIRS BTORE ‘A Value Worth Considering: | 95c | An extra pair or two of these Oxfords—just the thing mother has August vacation. In Brown or Smoked Calf, sizes 5 to 2, extremely low-priced at OB¢ | Bandeau Brassieres, Special: terial in novelty design Sizes 32 to 42—Special, Well-bullt—attractive—and very com- —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE $5. 50 ground, the edges bound with carpet bind Children’s Calf Play Oxfords been looking for to finish out the pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Waste ‘This tnrgesize Jelly Rag i» i]! compleié with 18-Inch retinned ‘Thess well-made metal Waste Getachable frame, as Paper Baskets in heavy Jap- / indicated = inthe anned finish, are 10 inches’ high rete. (Avery: Som Cc and 11 inches tn diameter, In venient accessory, and low-priced at pleasing shades of Mahogany, Olive Green, Gray or White. Exceptional —Housewares Section, THE DOWNSTAIR: values at STORE Metal THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE” Women’s Jersey Jackets $3.95 ELL-CUT and carefully tall ored in Tuxedo style with small tucks at back for shap- Ing, and narrgy belt, are these Jackets Jersey in Navy or Black, Bizes 36 to 44, good values $3.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Tweed Sports Skirts $4.65 at Excellent values in these good-looking plaided and striped Tweed Sports Skirts with fringed hemline. Good colorings—well-made— tizen 24 to %0--reduced to $4.65. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB “Home-Size”’ Carpet Sweeper $2.50 An unusually low price for @ — Sweeper of such good quality—«¢ | with good stiff bristle brush, | mahogany-finish case, ei plated trimmings and braid binding to protect furniture, An exceptional value at $2.50. Housewares Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Basket dousewares Section, PLANES USE RADIO PRINT WASHINGTON, Aug. 10—Devel CLOSE ON TRAIL OF LONE BANDIT | distant land station, is announced by Deputies Hunt Single Man Who Escaped Gun Battle |,,, navy department. The message asipintoe will be picked up by the ground sta- LOS ANGELES, Aug. 10—Deputy |tion, where it will be reeled off in were close on the trail | print. sheriffs toc of the only bandit who escaped the fatal gun battle with officers who frustrated the attempt of four men incalculable, it is declared. Military pilots, by means of the device, will named “Teletype.” Swallows Her Ring © to Hide Identity In an effort to hide her identity — ja young woman giving her name @s__ |opment of a device by which an|Frances Diorchard swallowed her laviator, using an ordinary typewrit- | wedding ring when arrested Tuesd er, can flash messages by radio to a|>Y Police on a charge of diso | conduct. ‘Thomas Running, insurance Aso was srrested and booked on th same charge. be able to keep headquarters In- The value of the new invention is|formed of the progress of infantry troops at all tines, The device is to hold up the office of the Union t night. Flennor, gunman, and ee Dick") Reese, were shot jand 4 and Ed Burton, another | notor gunman, was in the county | hospital, expected to die, today. J. W. Kilkey, said to be the leader of the gang, was captured ulnjured, while a fifth man escaped after aban doning their car. ‘he sensational ambush was made | after officers had learned of the hold- | ups’ plans, and nine deputy sheriffs | armed with shotguns and revolvers were hidden about the plant when Ken | Louis |the bandits entered and ordered }Rathman, 20-year-old cashier, to) stick ‘em up.” When $700 in.eash had been count-| ed out from the safe the’ deputies | charged the room and a hand-to hand} gun battle followed as the bandits| sought to fight their way out. | he driver of the bandit car out-! lo escaped. Kilkey was said to have made a confession afterward | to a number of holdups and police believe the battle has broken up one | of the most desperate bands of high: | waymen in the city ' Imported Tea Kettles are DOLLAR QUITS SHIP COMPANY To Enter Business on Own, Account, Is Report | want to buy. VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 10. According to a dispatch published to- | day by the Vancouver Province, Mel ville Dollar, of Vancouver, head of the Canadian Robert Dollar com pany, and a powerful figure in coast ALUMINUM Tea Kettles ON SALE TOMORROW One Day Only! One of the best values we have ever given, and many women tell us there is no place like the Western Importing Company to buy Aluminumware. where you will, comparison will prove that these possible to find elsewhere in Seattle. Drop in tomorrow and look over these fine Kettles. They are well worth looking at, even if you don’t Look better values than it is jshipping affairs, is leaving the Dollar company and will shortly announce | plans of*entering the shipping busi ness on his own account It is understood that he has re-| signed from his position as manag ing director of the Canadian Robert Dollar company and is also retiring | from the position of treasurer of the | Pacific Steamship company, in which the Dollar people have large stock holdings. Dollar will continue to reside in] Vancouve it ti tated It is alte. *, >. I vather probable that. some changes |) Central Public Market 1420 First Avenue Between Pike and Union Streets In policy in the Dollar company may | soon be announced following the r Urement of Melvill# Dollar |