The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 14, 1922, Page 1

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JNORT WEATHER Tonight and Tuesday, generally fair; moderate west. erly winds. Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 66, Minimam, 53. today noon, 58. Watson! Perhaps you Tee that the cop be still at the . . nded by Rob Repath for hip in the Polson Ivy club is tie lisard who breaks his headlight aed leaves the pleces on the read. 4 ar | Brown says there ts an engl. | in the street department who | pothing but chase earwigs in le. } | 1 | but we never saw an ear. im an automobile oe BULLING THE MARKET HINGTON, Aug. 14.—Prof- Evans Burrows Fontaine Miss Fontaine Sues Whitney For a! Million | Dancer Says Wealthy | Man Is Father of Her Child BY P. D. SCOTT 2 ALBANY, N. ¥., Aug. 14—Action | *E weuld give up all the beer iM lor Gamages of $1,000,000 against for a good plate of fa> | Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney was a Hogan of ‘jinetituted In Saratoga county today speaking, if the an- deficit of the ferries is $400,000, ‘of the 100 residents of Bellevue wc have to ride 40,000 times a fear at 10 cents to make up the befielt. This is 1,095.89 rides per . It can't be done. per day. hey march of the political incur. pas Degun.”—Mayor Brown. march eee iE TO A WARMER CLIME qmother dear, I'm living stilt, loving angel | | sweep not! on gravestone at Beabeck. ose pe win by Evan Burrows Fontaine, who ‘Hew about ai! the beer tn America? ciaims Whitney is the father of her oe -_ jenild. Little Homer Brew Was) rhe action wae filed in the county Then there would @l- | went at Ballston Spa and alleges that, ttle jack in the hous*. [aus to promises of young Whitney m8 siete Sate to marry the dancer, he was enabled NOTICE |to betray Miss Fontaine, who was ; folks contemplating su) | narried to Sterling Adair, Dallas sailor, at the time of the alleged : — te te, some fun courtship. ALLIED MEET ENDS IN ROW BY WILLIAM R. KUHNS LONDON, Aug. 14.—The allied premiers’ conference on Euro- pean financial chaos ended this morning In failure to reach an Automobile agent can demon-| “ETE iin cabinet met this with a car for $ months 494) sternoon to consider their posi- Rew, but 3 days after you get it.) tion ‘& weed car. . ° | NEVER MIND THE GUARD! Morning session, the premiers offi clally stated no further meetings had | Annual convention of the Vet jieen arranged. Secretarial forces of Foreign Wars opens this ncn packing up, preparing for de- | parture. “The conference is finished entire * one high official declared ed, however, that the ing of the British cabinet may alter the situation We are veterans of foreign , fought the battle of eee ten the corn.on-thecob and lon seasons, Little Gee Gee noticed the dry spell. ee 12, ENTOMBED “Robin Hood” is coming to the) IN COAL MIN Mezopolitan. No relation, however, a. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 1. Twelve men are entombed in s ’ ‘ormed ee at set “who that| ¢cave-in in a coal mine at Evarts, all @eputes settled by it would be Ky., 12 miles from Harlan, Ky, ed veerned?| secording to reports reaching Swetly satisfactory to al! concerned nine Mine officials at Middleboro, ‘The world has too many cranks and not enough self-starters. Ky., said they had been unable to get definite details of the ac- =— “8 | eldent early today. TIL GER GER. TH OFFICE | — ‘The mine at Evarts was oper- VAMP, SEZ | ating in spite of the coal strike. ‘TWO KILLED IN [BLAZING PLANE | DAYTON, ©., Aug. 14.—Lieut. L. R. Mortarity, New York, and | W.P. Stonebraker, a civilian fly ome On @ vine or two | er, were killed when @ flaming D Aad let the juice come leakin’ thrul| airplane crashed at Wilbur 4 “teats Wright field here today wUMOR Hundreds of spectators, gath- you looking #0 WOT) rad for a speed test of the ill fated plane, witnessed the trag- edy. ‘POPE PIUS XL CATCHES COLD ROME, Aug. 14.—Pope Pius XI. has contracted » cold, it was announeed here today, and daily walks of the supreme pontiff in the Vatican gardens have been A lawyer x a fella who gets two other fellas to strip for a and then runs off with clothes. fight When I dead and ia my grave, SHIR watermelons will 1 crave; Back —"Why ar » dust lost $4,000 In & poker he feriticall y) Much in those crepe de Chine dresses He (alsoa critic)—Ah, my dear, but POU Never looked at them in the right | light! | suspended during the heat wave. I never could see! oe WHY MEN LOSE THE TRAIL Little longer skirts, and men Will be looking where they are iLevy Mayer, Liquor Lawyer, Found Dead He—it is my principle never to ktss| CHICAGO, Aug. 14.--levy Mayer, & piri, | millionaire, an@ one of the best She—You can’t expect any interest | known lawyers in the country, was from me, then, found dead in his room at the A wife is like a baseball umpire.| Blackstone hotel early today. Physi Is hard to make her believe her hus-| cians declared death was caused by band is sate when jheart diseane. ° Mayer for many years repre Wisconsin has a new law prohibit-| sented the liquor interests thruout ing the placing of a foot upon a|the country. He waa senior mem rail while drinking a nonaleo-| ber of the firm of Mayer, Meyers, beverage. In that state you're| Austrian and Platt, Rot even allowed to amagine, years old, he is out o- Following the adjournment of the} Mayer was 64| fering from shock On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star Watered as Beooad Clase Matter May 8, 1999, at the Postoffice at Seattia Wash. Under the Act of Congress March 8, 1819, Per Y, SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1922. NORTHCLIFFE DEAD AFTER | BRAVE FIGHT ‘British Publisher! Succumbs at His, Home to Strange Malady BY LLOYD ALLEN | LONDON, Aug. 1.—Viscount | Northeliffe died at 10:17 this morning at his residence at Carl | ten gardens. ‘The famous English publisher, who | |has been on the verge of death for | over a week, succumbed peacefully |in the reef top bedchamber which was bullt to give him the benefit of | jall str posnibie. } Northeliffe grew weaker thru j the night and scarcely opened LORD NORTHCLIFFE’S RULES FOR SUCCESS Concentrate your energies and work hard, Launch out ments, Never be afraid to have the courage of your opinions. Fix the lines you want to travel along, and keep on them, That's all, } | in new expert. | | | | his eyes during the long vigil kept by physicians and nurses from a hastily constructed hut on the roof beside his chamber, ‘The publicist, who has been fighting for weeks against a mysterious malady, with which he was stricken on his trip around the world or while trav- cling incognito in Germany this spring, was scareely able to speak during his last hours. Suddenly stricken upon hie return from Germany, Northcliffe was hur (Turn to Page 7, Column @) COAL PROSPECT | BRIGHTER NOW Only One Point Still at Issue in Strike ‘Badger’ Game Is Charged by | ATLANTA, Ga, Aug. Me BY HARRY G. BAKER | Charging goercion, Walter T. CLEVELAND, Aug. 14.—-Hope for) Candier, son of Asa G. Candler, [Peace in the nation’s coal fields) “soft drink king,” today entered sult to restrain Clyde K. Byfield, Prominent Atlanta automobile man, from realizing on a note for $26,000. Candler claimed he was co ereed by Byfield Into giving him & check for the amount, which was afterward exchanged for a brightened today as the mineroper lator wage conference met te fron out differences on the one point holding up an immediate agreement That point is the tssue of strike) Prevention measures. The operators desire to include dis- | tinct clauses in the proposed agree-| [ment here providing that wage par-| |leys start some time in advance of! note. ithe expiration of the old wage agree The restraining petition set ment next year, in order to avoid an-| forth that, following a cham. ether strike. Pagne party on board a steamer bound for France in July, Cand ler wandered into a stateroom [Armistice Offered | {sonnets 8 By field. *. | Byfield entered a moment later | Hard Coal Miners and demanded $25,000, Candler | PHILADELPHIA, Avg. 14-8. D-| ciaimed. |Warriner, representing anthracite operators, today invited the striking miners to enter a peace conference HUGE WASTE, Wednend at Philadelphia. Warri ‘ner’s telegram was rent to John I SAYS MAYO! | Lewis, president of the United Min | Workers, at Cleveland. That more than $200,000 worth of expensive city machinery. has been | Jallowed to lie, neglected and rusted, jin the Chartes st. stables, was the leharge made Monday by Mayor E J. Brown | | if “The place is literally packed with 1‘ jtractors, street cleaning machines and implements of all sorta,” the |mayor said, “I’m going to have an appraisal made of the material and sell all the stuff that the city can une.” Brown pointed out that there ts room in the Charles st. stables for 260 automobiles FIND DIAMOND ("rie tout was returning to seatle!| — RING BURIED lerom her course, She struck the Cre:| BELLINGHAM, Aug. 14.—A dia lonote dock about 30 feet from the |™Ond ring, believed to belong to Mrs. end, cutting the long structure vir- {1+ H. Hadley, wife of Congressman | tually in Made Hadley, was found yesterday in the / ‘4 . 0 own corner b: | After ascertaining that little dam- | earth at a downtown corner by Desk age was done to the steamer, the cap-| S¢ret. Bert De Haven. The ring was tain proceeded to Seattle, The Tour-|!ocated by means of a map given by is was on its usual run Monday. & yergman to Dougias Gould, of New York. It is believed to have been | - jatolen by the old South Bellingham \D’ANNUNZIO BADLY HURT) 4 Scores of “Seattle People Barely Escape Death ‘not | Scores of Seattle ptonickers | rowly escaped death Sunday even when the steamer Tourist, of the Pu get Sound Navigation Co. crashed }into the long dock at Creosote, Bain | bridge island. | Viayton Dodge gang GARDONE, italy, Aug. Gabrielle d’Annunaio, poet-air- man of Italy, was sertously in- jured in the head today when he fell while walking in his gar- den. Falls 1,600 Feet : Parachute Fails Him! |] for quick results. ‘There little ada : Prof. Le} FORTLAND, Ae Msi toi | | Often handle very big propositions | Strange, a stun ° Read the want ads regularly and | 1,600 feet here yesterday, while at-| Buy or Sell Do you want to sell your furni ture, your car, your piano, your 00ks, your lawn mower? Do you want to buy « house, a phonograph, a piece of machin ery? Use the WANT AD SECTION fo drop with a|| Keep posted on realty prices, the jtempting @ parachute Pp eo ada edly Bo |neries of three parachutes at an lamusement park He was rescued Star Want Ads Bring Results — lunconscious from the Willamette river. Physicians said he was suf. ‘The last of the three parachutes failed to open. | Wealthy Youth PASTOR CHALLENGES MAYOR Rev. Philip E. Bauer Photo by Price & Carter, Star Staff Photographers eee Rev. P.E. Baiié? | Would Debate Vice Question “I would be pleased to engage The Kev. Philip FE. Bauer, whose charges that vice is run- ning openly on the streets of | Seattle has aroused Mayor Brown to quick denial, paused to obey the photographer's “Just » conference with Mayor Brown and Chief of Potice Severyns,” he resumed present. | ly, “and Iam sure we are agreed on the fact that vice In Seattle must be cleaned up. But the | mayor and I are at variance on | the basic causes of vies, and per. haps on the best means of better. ing conditions. “Mayor Brown contends that | vice problem can be solved by solv ing the economic problem. I hold |that while the economic problem en |tera in, nothing less than moral re generation is the final solution.” The Rev. Bauer is not a “re former” In the sense of an im practical idealist. For more than 20 years he has been dealing crime and criminals. For years he was chaplain in the Oregon state penitentiary at Salem, under Gov. Owwald West, whose prison re. forms struck the keynote for modern treatment of criminals. “1 learned a good deal thru my prison experience,” Dr. Bauer | said. “For instance, I found that | at least 50 per cent of the men | behind the bars are far worse than you could possibly imagine could be. | It im curve that many good men | may be found in prison, but the ma- \ jority of the inmates are in the three jcan be regenerated and will come out | (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) ConfiscatedRum Set Afire by Hot Street | CALEXICO, Cal, Aug. 14.—~More |than 100 gallons of confiscated | Hquor, poured into the streets by cus. tams officers here yesterday, caught fire from the extreme heat of the! | pavement | The first few gallons poured leaught fire and another tank ex- ploded as flames flashed across the | flowing liquor to it. The thermom. jeter at the time was registering 120 in the shade. Five Drowned When | Scow Is Overturned | SLAMAR, Colo., Aug. 14.—Five per: |sons were drowned in a lake near |here yesterday when a flat scow |from which they were fishing over turned, The dead a Mr. and Mrs. @haries Williams, thelr two-year-old baby, Mra, C. R. Donaldson and 4, BR. Donaldson, of Bristol, Colo, the| | right place, and by proper treatment | | Jat midnight detto |bombs seven shot« were fired. OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST HAVE ELECTED THE STAR THEIR FAVORITE SEATTLE NEWSPAPER — BY 15,000 PLURALITY HCOAST LIMITED WRECKED AAA LAA RAL ARPA PLA ALAA PAAR HOM iil EDITION HARDING WASHES . by Mall, 06 te 60 SATTLE HIS HANDS OF R.R. STRIKE: ONE KILLED IN CRASH President Will Let Trains Meet Near Roads and Men | Butte and Many Fight It Out Are Hurt WASHINGTON, Aug. 14. — “ Balked tn his Intest peace more, | rt taarngere wore stighaty in President Harding has “washed | jured when the castbound North his hands” of the railroad strike. | Const Limited, crack Northern For the present, at least, he has decided to let the railroads and the 400,000 striking shop crafts- men “fight it out” between them- selves. tedeng-en-the railroad execu- tives demonstrate their ability to maintain service somewhere near normal, Harding will keep hands off. WH the transportation sye tem shows signs of breaking down, and both sides remain ob- durate, the president will ask congress to sanction federal seiz- ure of the roads, The foregoing constitutes the Present program of the admin- istration, it was learned today, following the collapse last night of the negotiations between rail- read executives, leaders of the (Turn to Page 7, Column @ e's 3 HELD AFTER YARD BOMBING ROSEVILLE, Cal, Aug. 14.—Three men have been arrested on suspicion following explosion of three bombs | in the Southern Pacific yards here They are Nello Per nest Basott! and John Gar he three were taken to Sac ramento for a hearing Following the explosion of the The man who lost his life was AN eXpress messenger, Dozens of Seattle passengers were aboard. Doctors and nurses have been sent to the scene of the wreck, the wire stated. 20 INJURED IN | TRAIN ATTACK) NEW YORK, Aug. 14.—Twen- ty women and children are in hospitals today, victims of bombers who hurled three charges of dynamite against crowded excursion train on the West Shore railroad near Little Ferry, N. J. State police and railroad de- tectives are looking for two men in an automobile observed near the scene of the bombing a short time before the attack took place. In the absence of Commander [HARDING SENDS) wecesice, it was considered prob- Jable that John Walker Jones, senior |vice commander, would be called No} |upon to preside thruout the conven+ one was injured and no property was | damaged. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 14.—The | tion | federal government will not counte-| At $:30 p. m. Monday was sched- | headquarters in the Hotel Butler. At the Jast minute word was re jcelved that Robert G. Woodside, | commander-in-chief of the V. F. Wu. | Was called back by strike troubles in | Atiegheny county, Pennsylvania, of which he is sheriff, and will not be, | abie to attend the convention uni its closing days, if at all. « Altho the program proper does not begin until Tuesday, a pre liminary session was held in the Woodward theater Monday aft- ernoon, and the carnival and cir- cus at the Arena was opened full blast. ducci, F IN THE SOUTH with ;Southern railroad are also expected | eee MEN WALK OUT nance abandonment of trains and |uled a public reception at the Butler | their passengers by train ctews, ac-/|for delegates and their wives, under cording to a telegram dispatched last |the auspices of the Women's auxile |night by President Harding to Gov. |iary, Veterans of Foreign Wars, | Campbell of Arizona |whose ninth annual encampment is ¢ A | Harding said he had been Informed |being held in Seattle this week. 3rotherhood men on the Cumberland | that several trains were marooned at| Tuesday will see the formal open Valley division of the Louisville @/ snction points on the Santa Fe, in|ing, with addresses of welcomé By Nashville railroad quit work today, / Arizona, and that if the state could |Gov. Louis F. Hart, Mayor Edwin 2, acoording to reports received here. | not rescue the travelers from the des- (Brown, Lieut. Gov, William J. Coyle a bres J iain Gotestve pebh were €M-/ ert, the federal government would be |and others. Business sessions will Ree Le cores o Obemnen be held and the delegates will take : | forced to drastic action. ee ape On the Maoxyille . part in patriotic exercises at Wood: / . freemen the 1.0 0. “and on the! land park, where the annual picnic PEACE PARLEY (02:2! bes mite neg, Dane: ing, boxing and other entertainments PUEBLA, Colo., Aug. 14.—Brother. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Aug. 14. - to walk out tomorrow. eee Rail Telegraphers Voting to Walk Out have been arranged. Wednesday's program will in- clude an address by Calvin Cool- idge, vice-president of the United jhood leaders and officials of the Mis-| States. INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 14-—Big/sourl Pacific railroad here were to On Thursday a reception will Four railroad telegraphers are voting |hold a conference today in an effort] be tendered Coolidge, and public }to end the walkout of firemen on that road between Pueblo and Hor. ace, Kan | Twenty-five men refused to take Edward G. Whalen, general chair-|their runs because of alleged defect man of the Big Four telegraphers, |ive equipment. As a result, two pas- will announce the result of the bal-|senger trains have been annulled to walk out, according to incomplete returns from their strike ballot, {: was learned from union sources here today installation of the Women’s aux- iiary will be held. The annual banquet is sched- uled for Friday, and a visit to the battleships in the harbor will be made. Election of officers is announced lot Wednesday or Thursday, it was Efforts to reach a settlement last ! tor Saturday, the last day of the sald. night failed, jconvention. This also is the day of : i rer PE eA I kB Rh ee | the big Americanization parade, |when it is promised that no less than |18 bands will be included in the line lof march. | On Saturday, also, the Veterans of |Foreign Wars will join with the | Ninety-first division's annual reunion, and many of the delegates will ac- ‘company the Iatter on their trip to {Camp Lewis for an inspection of the old training quarters. VIOLENCE FLARES UP OVER WEEK END IN STRIKE Violence in the rail strike fiared up over the week-end. The St. Louis & San Francisco railroad bridge across the Sac river, 15 miles northwest of Springfield, Mo., was dynamited, Several guards and deputy marshals were fired upon in the Santa Fe railroad yards at San Bernardino, Cal. by unidentified men. Three torpedoes were exploded on trains near the Santa Fe station, Three bombs, believed to have been hurled at a West Shore passen- ger train at Granton Junction, N. J., injured at least a score of per sons, principally women and children Damages, estimated at $1,000,000, resulted from a fire in the round: house of the Maine Central and Boston & Maine lines, at Portland, Maine, when 15 locomotives were destroyed Rioting broke out midnight in the shops at several hundred strike sympathizers cornered Shots were fired. The wife of a foreman tn the Lehigh Buffalo was probably fatally wounded by dows of their home Five bombs were thrown into Southern Pacific yards at Roseville, Cal. age Is Biggest Month for Tourists As big a month as July may have | been for tourist bureaus, August, ac- jcording to those in charge, promises lto be bigger, Woodland park tourist lcamp officials, reports of the Aute- mobile Club of Western Washington and those in charge at the Chamber of Commerce declare this to be the | biggest year in tourist travel. More {than 300 visitors a day are suld to be handled thru the Chamber ef Cem- merce bureau, Ashley, five Pa., when strikebreakers. Valley roundhouse at bullets fired thru the East win: * wre 234,

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