The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 29, 1922, Page 7

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CHARGE BODIES ARE MUTILATED Corson Accused of Letting! Autoposies Be Performed | « 1 Charges that hundreds of b SABOTAGE PLOT | BEING PROBED Five Held on. Charges of Murder FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Aten CHICAGO, Aug, 29.—Tederal au nal have been mutilated by young phy-|thorities today acted to prevent « na f cans anaes sictans and doctors doing exp tion-wide raflroad sabotage plot | S ai I) }mental work at the county morgu A sweeping investigation was vw 3) * | tives of the deceased, we made to.) whether the wrecking of the “mil _ —_—— — eee — jday by Dr. Sylvester Wilhelmy, can- | tion dollar express” at Gary wae part jth r coren of a national outbreak of mmnun ; Corson, the present coroner,” | ist viole mM, joharged Dr, Wilhelmy, “allows! Five men were held on chargen of um, Jautopsy upon autopsy to be per. murder im connection with the Gary formed for no reason except that wreck which killed two trainmen ing young doctors desire to practice upon and sent 23 expr cars into the t or the bodies of the dead held the ditch. eas | hin in what might hap | BPive other men were held pending real {night under the present ayater investigation today, and authorities 8 “Your father or mother is cross-|Wwere looking for two more ing the street. An automobile speeds! Ratlroad officials indicated that re," around the corner and runs them/the death pénalty would be asked q down Within a few minutes they When the men were brought to trial tc are under the care of some physician | Ba iets jyour family has never h or known r _ ) a [Retore, “Betore a famny doctor cani WAGE) PARLEY con: arrive the accident has t ‘ 4 VT He codort sass es som CHICAGO, Aug. 29-—Malntenance Black and Brown Kidskin — reach rel of way men lost the first skirmish In| 4 tenced wants to know what caused thelr fight for Increased wages when und it ne death, He ta afraid he diagnosed | | ing wage” as & basis for fix When Miss Marion Berry, of Cleveland, arrived in Soissons the ‘aw sieach no * va ee oe 8 ing w Wage noale |as a member of the American Good Will Delegation she found | a gute the poreiosten. Wi bh covey : a bee | the prize baby of the district dressed in the Stars and Stripes. UNUSUALLY cc arg es Uwe tind thatthe ving | ‘Bia Four Chief. LOW-PRICED . neta [eu same off im ent of aku fac: |TST Otay laws we mil adopt || COME ON, NOW, SEEN ||" Scour a tmhe ‘ hetr ; [tre oF concunsion and {he bay or est he supertigous to an! MRS. MIRACLES FUR? Start New Parley IDSKIN Oxfords made on a comfortable last, with “Dia ”" K |ribly mutilated in the quest of im s “LEVET.LAN "4 hal ri ‘ nm een peer ve nne |possit ie internal inju that might eat Mave you found the purse and Chiets ar re hea ri ures Seth leather Cuban heels, as pictured, in an exceedingly i le internal injurie at migh © you found the purse ang jefe of the big four railroad broth z BY BOB DORMAN considered a promising contender for |have caused the death m the request of President yy. || little gray fur of Mrs. Katherine ||erhoods and the iwitchenn's. tnlen, attractive price offering. ee NEW YORK, Aug. 29.—What does! the bantamweight title, but he de-} “After determining the cause of, PUN 08 rublens HMO Oe IT Mir ceuncilwoman? opened their conferences here short- | BLACK KIDSKIN BROWN KIDSKIN it cost to see Broadway? A thousand | serted the ring when he Inherited a/death the doctor next turns his mind (dere ‘ ‘ them Saturday afte ly before noon today to determine SKIN ? SKID @ollars a night, says Broadway's| fortune of balf « million dollars. Ito some experimental operation he the, beard, feauseed. watll 16. e'elock tt At - de i ° futur Meier w d th hopmen’ { q - : ft mabetaeiinr inenel / Pe peodlagengetnss iggy ical ge we Wednesday morning || sttending: the Gedientory. ceremo- ||future policies toward the shopmen's Sizes 4 to 8; widths A to D. Exceptional values at wieghey uf m mune 7 aed » “ee |] ales at idweod "ar in con strike. — ae eee Marty” otherwise | next day he is to remove « tumor or| || nection with the completion of || When the conference adjourned $3.45 pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE m Mactn Kline theatrical “anes|(— HERES MORE ABOUT ) farm seme etter sereal-eoere-|(TANNOT MOVE || tw tare" asninaion’bouiorar.||snortiy after noon no announcement and real estate broker. * tion on some patient. He tmmedi-|\* | Mra. Miracle offers a reward. was made except that the meeting I ought to know,” he says, “for I ately sets about p aring for that | | would convene again at 2 p. m. COAL|— have spent $150,000 along Broadway in'the past five months. I have been the kind of a fellow they love along | the Great White Way—«a spender.” | 43 MINERS “Diamond Marty” wears a 35-karat STARTS ON PAGE ONE || fiamond ring. a stickpip thet looks | ake a headlight, and ro many other | where the entombed men were work: menting upon the bédies held there | FREDERICK Ferns that he ts acclaimed as the ing when they were trapped. lawaiting the arrival of orders hia. cabinet today considered Insuring domestic con: | ind industry against suffer successor to the late “Diamond Jim"! ‘The imprisoned men, it was potnt- send them to relatives in distant | Brady. Kline sprang into the lime ed out, had one chance to save them: | cities or pending actual Mentifcation, |" Sie 6 shut down. ordeal by performing the same opera tion upon the dead body of your rela tive 7 ‘ ENOUGH WASHINGTO! Aug. 29. |} Warned by Secretary Hoover that “It has become common practic? jing raijroads cannot move the coun for hospital interna to mpend certain |, Yi rement of 12,000,000 tons nights at the county morgue expert-| (7) ° TTeree a saent Harding ‘A New Shipment Fall Utility Coats For Women and Misses light recently tn a legn) battle over &@ | selves. This chance was entirely de. | champagne bill in one of New York's | pendent on their phyrteal condition Siided palaces, and cool-headedness, miners said, “Broadway ts still alive—tf you | and consisted of the possibility that know the ropes.” says Kline. “ they had sought refuge in one of the spender hax an exciting time. I lke |runnels leading off at a low level of | “If T become coroner this practice | will There will be no un-| necennary autopsies and in where a belief that the person has been poisoned or some other similar ciroursstances makes an autopay Harding has been told by ver that the task of moving| 9,000 tons of coal weekly is too| big for the rutiroade tn their present | lerippled condition, due to the strike jot shopmen, crane cases to watch the way they go after my money. the different schemes and tricks they use. Why, I've bought quarts of champagne asd had them stolen right under my nose and taken back to the kitchen and sold to me over again. “Parasites, men and women, flour ish in Broadway's night life. Many @ man tn fashionable rig hasn't the price of his next morning’s breakggst. | “And many a girl, dressed In'the latest mode from Pa: te wondering where the landiady’s rent is coming from. “It amuses me to see the deference I get from the captains tn the restau- rants, the way the waiters bow and scrape, the affability of the managers and owners themseives. @ “When I come in, the orchestra, ven tho in the middie of a piece, | wilt stop and play some favorite tune of mine. They know there'll be « fifty for them. “Should the floor be too crowded for comfortable dancing. the captain will have them announce that “Dia- mond Marty’ Kline will give an ex- hibition dance, “Royalty never receives more at- tention than the spender does on Broadway. “But to maintain your honors, you must skimp nothing. What your guests desire must be provided. And|tombed underground, has not left the jeffort to make the mine and then had bulkheaded necessary it will be performed onl with timbers and earth the entrance to the tunnel. In that manner they might have }been able to make a cell for them jsetves which would be free from gases generated by the fire and con. tain enough air to keep them alive luntil help comes | Shirtly after midnight a party of | ten men, led by representatives of the | United States bureau of mines, equip. to the 2,100.foot level where they re- ported the fire seemed to be gmdu- jally rising. They encountered amokb and steam tn quantities at the 2,500. foot level; were able to establish a temporary base at the 2,600-foot level, ;and from there penetrated 100 fe deeper for periods of five minutes a! } @ time. Canary birds, which they car- ried with them to detect gases, came up dead. The men were we by their oxygen helmets. ylight today saw redeyed, wives, mothers and relatives of the men. Mrs. E. Elly, whose husband ts en | ped with oxygen helmets, penetrated | after the family physician has been conmulted and given an opportunity | to ameiet.” BITTER FIGHT ‘IN GALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug. 29.— IWith clouds of vituperation trailing tn ite wake, the bitterest senatorial contest in the country draws to a close here Tuesday, with Senator Hiram Johnson the favorite by con tiderable oxdde. | © C. Moore, Johnson's opponent, |formerty president of the San Frar- cinco Exposition, has given Johnson & good run, but even his sup porters concede him only « fighting chance of nomination. This ix a campaign almont without any real political imues. The one iNEW PEACE PLAN MADE) PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 29.—It was persistently reported that a} plan for a new peace in the anthra cite con} fields acceptable to both miners and operators has been de-| vieed, that the joint conference of | Operators and union officials will reconvene here tomorrow and that! new agreement will be signed be fore the end of the week if this & accomplished, there & & possibility that the 155,000 miners! who quit work Jast April 1 will be back in the mines next week. cee Trainmen Strike Settlement Made JOLIET, IL, Aug. 29.—-The'strike big imeue ix Hiram Johnson himself. Folks out here are either proJohn son or antiJohnson, and their per sonal prejudices anent the Califor. Mian will largely determine their votes. True, Johnson's opponents, live ineues, in an have when they get tired of local color, «| vicinity of the mine for 14 hours. | framed a set of 13 questions ranging motor trip to the seashore is the| With her are her five children. She |from “Where was Hiram when the thing. “But don’t think that I have any Miusions as to the stability of Broad sobbed continuously. Mrs. William Fessel, young wife of one of the buried men, bought a steak “day friendships. When your money /for her husband's supper last night, $= gone, you'll soon be forgotten. The | cooked it to his taste, set the table Newberry vote was taken?” to John laon’s alleged relations with William Randolph Hearst, the publisher. But Johnson has ignored these questions, He has set about to con ones that today eagerly seek you out, ‘will pass you on the streets unknow- ingly. “But as a study in human nature, there is no greater field than Broad. way. And I get my money’s worth in its study, It'g the one amusement that I find in life.” Kline at one time was a boxer and === The real “Community Kitchen” A great deal of wom- en’s kitchen work is now done in the spot- less Heinz kitchens. Bean baking, for in- s8tance—in real dry heat ovens, the good old way. HEINZ OVEN BAKED BEANS with Tomato Sauce and still is awaiting his coming. WOMAN TRIES TO KI | band Is fighting fire. He may be—but |from the underside and not among | the rescue parties. Mra, M. Gujovich, wife of a Slav- onian miner, with difficulty was re. strained from carrying out her threat to throw herself down the shaft where her husband t# held prisoner. All night long Red Cross workers served coffee to the relatives of the imprisoned miners and cared for their needs. Others gttended rescue workers as they came to the surface near exhaustion Superintendent V. A. Garabini of the mine, flatly refused to dis- enss the accident or give out any Information when he returned to the surface at 3:30 a. m. today. “To hell with the public—this fs the business of the company and the miners,” he told newspa- per men. A movement to demand federal and state investigation already has started among townspeople and the relatives of the miners. gation would be aimed to determine the cause of the fire, which still is unknown; the conduct forts at rescue, mine was operated in accordance with state and federal safety laws. CHARGES MADE ABOUT MINE Charges were made today that the mine had not complied with the law requiring mines over 300 feet deep to have a secondary shaft, thru which men can escape should the main shaft become closed. ‘The old “Mul doon shaft,” located next to the Ar- gonaut shaft, was used for this pur- pose, but is alleged to have been nex- lected to such an extent that it was useless. . ‘An air vent was sald to be located at the 4,200-foot level of the Argo- naut mine, leading to the Muldoon, but it was not of a nature which would permit an escape Formerly a connecting tunnel leading to the Kennedy mine gave another outlet to the Argonaut, but after tne fire in the Argonaut, three years ago, damaged the Kennedy workings, this tunnel was closed. ‘The Kennedy mine now has a suit for half a million dollars’ damages pending against the Argonaut, as a result of the fire, and the Argonaut has a counter action against the Kennedy for three-quarters of a mil. lion alleged damages caused by flood- ing the Kennedy property, the water spreading to the Argonaut, ‘An investigation would be designed to determine whether these legal dis- putes had any part in making this disaster possible, This investt. | of early ef-| and whether the | vince his following that Moore's can didacy i# nothing but an attack on him personally The campaign has split the Call fornia republican party wide open on entirely new lines. A let of Johnson's formerly most ardent supporters are fighting him today, while a batch of former Southern Pacific machine potitictann, whom Johnson used to sacrifice on his political altar every election year, are now working devotedly for him. Johnson himself is worrted, but his friends are confident Success at the polls is virtually election to six more years in the sen- ate, if Johnson wins, for the demo- erats are making no effort to place a real candidate in the field . JOHNSON FIGHT BEING DECIDED SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 29.—Cal {fornia voters had their fling toda when they went to the polls to de leide who shall be | governor, United States senator, and le Mat of state and county offices at the general election in November. Chief Interest centered on fight between Hiram W. Johnson and Charles C. Moore for the re- publican nomination for the senate. A spirited campaign haa been car ried on by both Johnson and Moore Second in importance to the John son-Moore contest came the race for |the republican nomination for gov jernor between William Richardson, | Berkeley, Cal, newspaper man and at present state treasurer, and Gov. ernér William D. Stephens. Contests for congress attracted lit tle attention. Julius Kahn, military affairs committeeman in congress, land John I. Nolan, labor spokesman in the house, were without oppo. sition. In Los Angeles Charles H. Randall, formerly prohibition mem ber of congress, was making a spir ited fight for the nomination for congress against W. I, Lineberger, incumbent LOS ANGELES, Calif, Aug. 29.— |“I dreamed I shot myself,” said An- thony Slumick, 27, a painter. He had, and surgeons removed the desirable, candidates for|shopren are.tighting for the very life the| The message deplores that the 12 of trainmen on the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern railroad, which has tied up the “outer belt line” serving Chi) cago, for more than three weeks, wan settled today The men will return to work at 3 p.m Settlement wan reached when of. ficlals agreed to move troops on | duty here further from the shops. | The strike was called when troops | arrived here following a riot inj which two men were killed. CHURCHES GIVE STRIKE VIEWS: WASHINGTON, Aug. 29.— The church is called upon to exert its ef- forts to the utmost to bring the Christian epirit of fairness and good will Into the economile order, to teach Christian principles, and to insist upon thelr application to industry, in the Labor day message of the confi mission on the church and social | service of the Federal Council of Churches, released here today Frankly, the message expresses | sympathy with organized labor in| the coal and railway situations, say- | ing that both are due to the inade- | quacy of earnings of the men, That | the financial conditions of certain of | the railroads may have made the re- ductions for their employes appear it says, adds only to the seriousness of the situation, The declares that meanage the of their union, and that where such | a war of extermination is waged, em- ployers can only expect moral defeat. hour working day is still in effect in | |the steel industry, and asserts that “apparently it will require all the continued moral pressure of the! church to complete the reformation of the industry.” The message, however, closes with the declaration that “there are distinct signs of hope and progress in the industrial situation in Amert- ca.” Earnest and courageous em ployers are at work on constructive experiments. Employers’ organiza. tions and labor unions are conquer- ing the old psychology of fear and force, and are seeking more soclal ends by much more social means. The workers’ educational movement and the new Interest of labor unions in solentifie research give much promine. A paragraph devoted to the pret says: “The press, sharply eriticized and often justly so, for partisanship In labor disputes, shows signs of greater fairness and discrimination and in some instances of moral lead- ership. The new role that is being gens from his head. || OVERHEATED CANINE RIDES ON ICE CART, HE’S REAL HOT DOG |] ST. PAUL, Aug. 29.—Sport, a fox terrier, on hot days rides |] around in an tee wagon. On cool || | days he ignores the wagon, | played by the religious préss in this connection is specially gratifying.” 3,000 Odd Fellows Will Come to City Three thousand members of the Odd Fellows’ lodge are expected to | be guests of Seattle during the in ternational encampment of the or der here Saturday. Meetings will be held in the Shrine temple, FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET | 300 | China Silk Sofa Pillows With Applied Flower Decoration (As Pictured) spECIAL $2.25 racu HESE Pillows are filled with pure Kapok, covered | with heavy China Silk, and trimmed with metal | braid and contrasting silk-and-velvet flowers. They are full and fluffy—and measure Choice of ROSE PINK | diameter. | GOLD MULBERRY BLUE 99 22 inches in MAUVE BLACK —Special, Wednesday, $2.25 each. ~~Alsle Table, Firat Floor Low Prices on | Good Aluminum Ware ALUMINUM RICE BOILERS $1.35 and $1.50 Panel-style Double Boiler, as sketched, with retinned handles on each receptacle, The cover fits either utensil, mak- ing it possible to use them separately if de- sired. —114-quart size, $1.35. —2-quart size, $1.50. ALUMINUM COVERED SAUCE PAN 65c Two-quart size cov- ered Sauce Pans, of good quality aluminum, with substantial riveted han- dle and fit-on cover. Exceptional value at 65¢. ALUMINUM OMELET PAN $1.45 It is easy to turn an omelet and have it come out of the pan in fluffy perfection, if one of these Aluminum Hinged Ome- let Pans is used. Very good value at $1.45. This pan may be used for cooking two different foods in the two sections, over one burner, if desired. —~THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE | | $13.75 RIMLY tailored Coats, as sketched, are developed of Herringbone coatings in Brown, Tan or Gray, with shoulder linings of good. qual- ity sateen. Suitable for business, street or school wear, and excellent values, at $13.75. —THE DOWNSTAIRS, STORE Exceptional Offering: ~ Women’s Ribbed Part-wool Heather Hose Special 75 Pair reat values at the price, wide-ribbed Stock- ings of part-wool weave in Green-and-Blue and Brown-and-Blue heather mixtures or plain Camel's hair color. Sizes 814 to 10. Special 75¢ pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Boys’ Corduroy Knickerbockers Special 95c ELL-MADE Knickerbockers for boys to wear for school, of good-quality Cordu- roy, with double seat. Sizes 8 to 17 years; ex- ceptionally-attractive values, special 95c. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE

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