The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 5, 1922, Page 4

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HEODORE BELL 1 HERE’S MORE ABOUT DEAD IN WRECK] 47 MINERS STARTS ON PAGE ONE PORTLAND MEET {Episcopal Triennial Conven- | tion Starts _ National Democratic Chief Drives Over Cliff ba of to have had access to fresh tut water placed in the various levels | hortly before the fire started. | Ss BAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 5.—Theo Rats fil the mine and altho @| PORTLAND, Ore,, sept. 5—With A. Bell, Ban Francisco attorney number eace 1 when the fire | the arrival here last night of Might Mationally known aeererees started, others caught on lo ved lev Rev. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, bishop & was dead today, the result|ots are probably still alive yw " vers a Te auto wreck on the Bolinas The tema te daily growing {°° Mi cotogenarian presiding county) road. more tense In preparation fer ee of the Episcopal chureh, the The car in which Bell was riding! the final shock which will elther | several hundred members of the over & 40-foot embankinent,| restore Its mon alive or ond the [house of bishops are today making according to Lucten Mintser,| last hopes | ready fo! fo river, bright lights of an ap-| The only hospital, which will not ned —— a ne Ing can drove him to the side {accommodate more than 30 persona, |of the 47th triennial convention of the road. ady and emergency quarters are | thelr churoeh, Owing to the aavanced age of | Mishop Tuttle, who ts 85, the churet ¢ fitted for others. Mintzer was also injured, but will | Bortyeight hours is the period Hell and Mintzer both were pinned | set today by a majority of mine | ha» elected Right Rev. Thomas F th the heavy car, They were| ers and officials as the time | Gailor, bishop of Tenn . wo ae by Ray Wheeler, bank clerk) which must elapse before the | as president of the presiding bishop the venerable of the details over| last drift will be cleared awa: With luck, some of the more san the task oan be accom counetl, and relieve lehurchman of many guine believe | of hin office, plished by Wednesday night | Great interest in manifested tn the Early this morning the 3,600.foot | forthcoming convention, not level had advanced 60 feet and the | ciergy and laymen of the & Ban Anselmo, who pa foad a few minutes after t and heard Mintser's moans Wheeler believes Bell was dead he reached hit. | twiee was candidate of the ne ao ratio party for, governor of /offictal bulletin posted by the com:| church, but also by the general pub ved also was widely ‘mittee of information sald it was 6x | tio, because of the many subjects of attorney for the California pected to break thru the last of the| more than sectarian interest which Grape Growers In thetr fight |hard rock today dee te be Gineunecd st prohihition ‘The ast round of shots fired in the| ‘The stand taken by the Rev. Percy ine by the night shift filled the Stickney Grant, of New York, on the Pl nnel with tons of loose canons of the Eptecopal church re Al On the condition of th has aroused widespread interest START MEET drift, which must next be penetrated. | yt in expected that the church dig end the exact time of the final eaking thru. |} If the @rift te badly caved it will have to be timbered and wil! delay this convention « will consider the matter of stm ing and abbreviating the Episcopal book of prayer, and it has even been Sept. 5.—Delegates mitaries during convention of the pal church are gath SALEM, Ore., the annual dist Eptsec here tod: for the openin€ ine crews perhaps until Friday said that the 10 commandments will B, which ts scheduted for) Oficials are hoping, however, that he placed In a shorter, simpler form morning. Jthe drift is only partly filled with| which may be used by the clergy at Tnterest in this year’s convention about the assignment of pas muck and that miners can crawl over | discretion, The services prescribed the top of this to work on the rate. itor tho marriage of members of the for the next 12 months. Dele |whiio others clear out the way b® | church may also be “edited” and the may that most of the pastors jin4 thom. eran eee eae @atisfied with their present as mt and averse to any drastic Bishop Shepard has al) nours, miners believe. Fecelved many letters request-| tn the 3,900-foot level, 18 feet of That pastors be allowed to retain |ariet has been cleaned out up to 7 present charges. a. m. and ft ts poxstble to craw! over “Examinations of undergraduates |i. muck for a distance of 50 fret, the conference course of study, 10 /hut this will have to be cleared out. of = Albert 8. I are] Conditions In the Argonaut remain way today F ve Tacal churchmen expect approst | wii Opening of the TS-foot raise thru soft rock will only be a matter of Yor several days a number of bishops have been assigned to com mittee work by Bishop Gailor, and when the formal sessions open the pered by detail work Today the registration of members of the house of bishops and house of depu ties, During the morning the binh lopa will hold an executive session tely 300 ministerial and 100 lay) ° | , ten to be present at the | Zoning Commiss and thie afterncon Right Rev. Ar i dhinininaicle prosviks to Hold 2 Hearings York, will take charge of a women's ulet hour service, for the delegater to the woman's auxiliary. The city sommg commission wil hold two public hearings this week, | as follows: t the West Seattle High ooneea | haw, 10 days out from * ‘Dear | TRuraday evening at 8, to consider | "s Not Indian; Gets Fishing ‘Fine| P PORTLAND, Sept. 6.—-Witliam T. Lawyers Favoring Rendon.” has learned that the (all of West Seattle north of W ° eo cagceh went | Brandon i saciuting ‘Youngetows.| Douglas Candidacy At South Park Field House,| Five hundred and thirty-cigut explained to Deputy Game) F. A. Daniels, of Chiloquin, |Fighth ave. 8. and Thistle st, Fri-| members of the King county bar as the Indians subsisted on|¢ay evening at §, to consider the/ nave asnured Malcolm Douglas of and fish, he supposed he would | ning plan for South Park | their support of his candidacy for re @ allowed to take a few trout from A representative of the sontng|eciection as prosecuting attorney, ac commisaton will also meet with the |< “tn good; Magnolia Btuff Improvement club| headquarters Tuesday. , Ninety at the church at Thorndyke ave.j cent of the lawyers to whom a writ land Newton st, Tuesday evening | ten indorsement of Douglas wan pre at 6. sented have wigned It We Tell It With VALUES FASHION Has Outlined a Host of Delightful, New Creations, executed with a rare and racy artistry, as presented by per is not with any local tribe of In- he paid $50 fine for angiing a license. UR NEW YORK BUYING ORGANIZATION, DESPITE A MAR- ket with an ig tendency, and in the face of rail strike diffi- culties, has been able to supply us with more than our usual shipments. If anything, these models are more intriguing than the most at- tractive we have ever shown. And yet, we are able to present them at With No Competition f our new Fall 8, Fur-Trimmed Coat, all woo! material, fail Furs of Quality It is no secret that in New Fall Coat, tatlored model, patch pockets, belted and button $16 Many still believe that we sell only “Sweet Six- trimmed teen” eye fn _ They are the keynote other stores prices are Not so. e have the to youthful smartness, I 1] i ° higher grades in large having received their in- en saci Here numbers and priced the spiration from the mas- they are priced the “Sweet Sixteen” way. ter minds of Pax “Sweet Sixteen” way. New York Portland Los Angeles San Frandiece 1023 Second Ave., Corner Spring St. ‘CHURCHMEN IN Girl, 6, , Up sets Tred ition EX- “HUSBAND AND She Is eppy fox School jeonvention program will not be ham will be mainly devoted to riding to a statement from Douglas | THE SEATT LE STAR ™, e6ee Paw sehteees!] Una Jeanette Carter Stxty-three thousand, sine bun-| {dred and ninety-nine Seattle boys and girls may have uttered the jtraditional juvenile _imprecationa lwhen they awoke Tyesday morning and realized t nine solid months of school were staring them in the facen, | But the sixty-four thousandth hopped out of bed long about 6:50, picked up the hem of her trailing nightie, and scampered to her | mother’s room, crying out: “Mama, jmame, get up! It's ‘most time for) | xchool.”” The sixty-four thousandth was Una |Joanette Carter, aged 6%, daughter of Mr. and Mra. A. L. Carter, 2646 47th ave, 8 W., who for months Bast hae been counting the days un til she would have an to start school. Plenty of other Seattle youngsters may have felt the same way about it--in apite of a well-founded popular opportunity belicf that, in the juvenile lexicon, | schoot and jail are synonymous terms That, however, doesn't nterfere with the fact that Just mbout 128,000 eyes are turned longingly—or soon will be—taward the red-circied date marked on the calendar as Thanks giving day. z Thanksgiving im the first holiday of the school year. Of the 64,000 odd who went to school fn King county Monday, tt ts ewtimated that something more than 6,000 were like Una Jeanette, getting thelr first glimpse of a classroom, H aggard Wives Wait News of Buried Men AT THE ARGONAUT MINE Jnckson, Cal, Sept. 6—“There will eurely be some word from them to night. I must be awake when it) tomes.” } And then the next morning, “I know the day cannot pass without lnews from them, and wo will stay “gel to hear it." Every night and every morning |atra. Catherine Miller has said it [She has not slept except for brief |neconds when she was overcome in |aplte of herself since her husband} jand 46 other men were trapped by |fire in the Argonaut mine shaft nine | jdays ago, | It i» her husband on whom the} town is depending to bring \the jburled men out alive, It ts he who aved 25 men from death In a mine; in Butte, Mont., y 5 ago. | Mrs. Miller had never known of! |her husband's experience until this| week. It was so horrible he had/ jnever told her of it. But men here) knew about itt. | | Miller's other siege did not last #0 | jiong as this one. And Mra. Miller, |grave and confident in the first days, | is breaking under the cruel strain, | eee fi In another of the stricken homes A haggard wife, keeping up for the | sake of her children. In the house/ with her comforter,” who says again and again, “It is the Lord's] | will and you must be resigned; your |husband is dead beyond a doub lyou muat just remember it | Lord's will.” A baby will arrive in this home in| |two months, ) | About five years ago this woman) Host her first husband, He died sud- | denly when another baby was two| months away. Her friends wonder how she keeps | jher grip on nanity, | | Since the first morning when she awakened at 2 o'clock, the time her | husband was due to come off shift, | |awakened and got up to wait for) him on the porch—and then learned | that he was not coming home—she has been bravely planning for the | future of her little ones, } one “a » but) is the) | For Mra, Oberg, the hardest Gay | was her wedding anniversary, Intolerable for her to sit and won. | der—to realize that her husband, if alive, must be lost in a maze of end. lens black how! long to her, must have seemed to | him a month or more, eee Mrs. Itta Fly has less on which "Mis bulld her structure of hope than any of the other women, For she knows her husband ts tubercular, and she knows that with his weakened lungs he could not live as long as any of the other men in the foul air. oe} | Cruel days, these; women have ever had to endure. For grief, no matter how seve eaches: at last the point they can conceal no he had of recovery jed on, roof of treasury on || Cor, Pine , more and is numbed in merciful ob livion. It is uncertainty that” Kills. and on, and again and again betray the groping follower and plunge down each time to depths more and mageiere: HE RECOVERS BROOKLYN, N. Y., Sept. 5.—Two | Years ago John F. Fearon's neck was broken in two places, But now he is as active as before the accident and back on his old job as photographer An exservice m Fearon, in June, 1920, went with two friends to Seagate for a swim. Without try ing the water, he dived from a plat form. The water's depth was only 11 inches. His arms only partly broke the plunge and his head struck bot tom. An X-ray disclosed that and that the apinal cord it if remained intact, The only hope was thru lying perfectly still until nature had re. built the broken bones: In « condition so precarious that the slightest jolt would have resulted in his death, Fearon was placed on water mattresses suspended on springs, He lay that way for two yours. WASHINGTON.—Fire which start- night of March 3 said by bureau of standard investigators to have been started by heaters being used in work at that time on the roof, PORTLAND.--Unidentified burglar shot and killed at home of 1. Allen by Special Officer Robert L. White: side. t's Dancy (o snappy mi at the M the worst any || The} will-o'-the-wisps of hope that lead on | the! fourth and fifth vertebras had been j FRIEND IN DUEL Nine Shots Fired in Young Battle Over Dog volver duel be 4 a result of « re eon an ex-bushand and «a male riend of Mra, May Bingham, 924% jain st, Monday night, William »bertaon 1, a laborer, was held t city jail Tuesday while police vere searching for Gene Bingham yho wan believed to have been woun The shooting occurred at Mra tingham's home when the ex-hus snd attempted to steal Mra, Bing vam’'s bulldog, It Is alleged visiting the Robertson, who war woman, appeared in the doorway ver and fired three times who then leaped be ind a telephone pole a opened ire at Robertson. Nine at were fired in all before Bingham took te Iimping slightly 4 the house and arrest his heels, Police rat 4 Robertson. » BRYAN SCORES RAIL INJUNCTION | Also Flays Private Owners of Roads Former Congressman James W Bryan, candidate for congress, speak ing to the railroad shopmen at the Labor temple Tuesday, declared that the return of the fronds to the prt vate owners withouw first allowing the demand of Secretary McAdoo for a five-year trial under government control, was the greatest blunder of | thie generation. Bryan said “The railroads had fallen down and could not handle the business b ught on by war emergen ey President Wilson tasued a proc jlamation taking over the as. When the war closed, the ratirosd jowners had received from the gov jernment, in direct payments for une of the raliroads, greater sun than they had ever been able to make out | of private It iw true, @ | deficit had accumulated, but during the last three months of government operation the deficit had been re | duced and the government was mak jing « profit, after paying the gigan | tle interest on the bonds and the div | idends to the owners. | “The private owners got the roads back, and altho they rained the rates about 28 per cent, they piled up in leight months of private ope ter additional deficit than roment had accumulated during ire emergency control, not withstanding the war time handicap of the government. Then came the Exch Cummins bill, and enacted a special privilege almost unthinkable | by guarantecing Uhene private own jers rates bigh enough. and the serv tee of railway employes at low enough wages to bring a 6 per cent | guarantee on al! the watered stock. | and full interest on all the buncomb bonds of the railroads. No other pri vate interest gets such @ guarantee, but if the railroads get by with this, demands will likely soon be made for & 10 per cent guarantee by the steel) trust, “The result of this guarantee ts operation that the men cannot live on the prof. remarkable injunction ever issued by an American judge. I refuse to be Monda. Blocked BY KENNETH W. CLARK congress by the house and senate conferees until after the tariff bill is) | Senator Smoot, Utah, joined with four house conferees in blocking con- | of Massachusetts supported the mo- tion to displace the tariff, The vote | le expected to be reported out the lat jter part of the week, will be held on the bonus report until the tariff is j Out of the way j Rid of Blackheads There is one simple, safe and sure To do this wet two ounces of calo= nite powder » any drug store wash the parts and you will be surprised how the blackheads have; fered wages in certain cases, and we Heve that the court will continue this DELAYING BONUS | WASHINGTON, Sept. 6&—The Aisponed of, the joint conference com- sideration of the bonus, while Sena-| wag five to three ntinuously before the committee way that never fails to get rid of aprinkle @ little on a hot, wet cloth disappeared. nes blackheads, littl have the present strike, and the most injunction after the hearing, next | Pathway of Vets’ Bill Is| bonus report will not be submitted to | mittee decided today. tors McCumber, Simmons and Walsh This neane that the tariff, which No effort can now be made to work Sure Way to Get | | Dlackheads, thag is to dissolve them: rub over the blackheads briskly / bine te they Blackheads are and dirt form in the pores of the The calonite powder and the water dissolve the blackhead the ¥, wash right out, loaving the pores free and clean and in thelr natural condition, —Adver- | tisement. ‘| Fac enon nora Saree Best Home Treatment || for All Hairy Growths |! nsinaiaibieaiiaandnccensaminasiinnianiinne? | (The Modern Beauty) y woman should have a small package of delatone handy, for its |timely use will keep the skin free jfrom beauty-marring hairy growths. | To remove hair or fuzx from arma or neck, make @ thick paste with |some of the powdered delatone and jwater. Apply to hairy surface and jafier two or three minutes rub off, |wash the skin and it will be free from hair or blemish, To avold dis- appointment, be sure you get real |delatone and mix fresh.—Advertise ment. poucnencnncioncucnoncncy "Bh just like butter Bluhill Green Chile Cheese MacDouga Swi SECOND AVENUE AT PIKE “The Store of Eternal Newness” Main 6720 Fall Fashion Show Tomorrow and Thursday 10:30 A. M. and 2:30 P. M. Wednesday Night, at 8:00 $25,000 worth of The Latest Style Creations Authoritative fashions from aris and New York ateliers Garments on Sale After Each Performance ee Children’s Orthopedic Remember jyenetit Show, Tonight 8:30 Fashion Show—Second Floor TOTTEN FIGHTS | SPECIAL TAXES Urges Stronger Support for, U District } “Retrenchment means economy and economy mi ment what it mear state as the principal beneficiary of educated citizenry, should bear the cost. Schocls are cheaper than prisons, reform schools and aly ses. Tam in favor of eiminating the tuition fees at this university, and To am in favor of increased appropritions to make it and keep it an ef- ficient factory for turning out useful citizens.” *, Department Store ‘Thin was the statement made William Phelps Totten, candidate for Workers to Dance ; the legislature from the 42nd dis eas a py a tae trict. at @ meeting of the Women’s|. =mployes of the Bon Marche wilt be guevts at a danBe to be gives ‘Tuesday night at the new De Honey | dancing pavilion, under the auspless | 1 Progressive le aa “Cut out the items which are not absolutely indispensable to law order,” he urged. “I shall oppose apprepriations, nominations or acts calculated to enhance special privilege and in- crease taxes. 1 am opposed to each and all the special taxes heretofore levied or proposed— the poll tax, gasoline taxes and license taxes of all kinds, of the Minnewatha club. ALWAYS TIRED NO AMBITION scweecsuwen ww “If our administration, with all the; wealth obtained thru the millions at? taxos of the past two years, must, thing Seemed toWorry Me. stil look for a new source of in} come, it 1s high time we were 4 How I Got Well horsing these leeches.” “I regret that such contempt for Larwill, Indiana.—*‘My back the public weal t* shown by those! #0 bad I could not do 2 may washing higher up, for it ls such contempt for the law and constitution that has) brought us close to industrial up jheayal. It t# Just such contempt am) has been shown the past 30 years by our legislatures, ignoring the con: | stitutional requirement for reappor- tlonment every five years—a breach of trust that has brought the west | side and King county (and particular. ly the district in which we live) t political bondage--ensiaved the wil of the so-called ‘cow counties’. It is! high time someone was sent to the legislature who will fight for the pro- jportionate representation guaranteed RS our constitution. You will find the guaranty to which I refer in| Soa 11, Section 3. ‘As a graduate of the Univer- sity of Washington I am greatly interested in its welfare. But I think I express the majority view when I say that every resident of Seattle and of the state of Washington profits directly or indireetly by its welfare and growth, The training of leaders for our industry, for our ness and educational institutions is second only to the prestige d advertising value given the entire state, TI believe in educa- | tion as an American institution and as a means of preserving American civilization. T believe every man and woman should have the privilege of securing a © education, and that the me looking so well. I live sleig do all my work, and ha’ vy Gree Be gitis to take care of. ete this medicine to my friends and know it will help ef if they’ © use it like I do."’ — Mrs. HERBERT Many women keep about when it isa t effort. They are ienys out and have no ambi- © you are in-this condition — on it on attention. Take ae Pinkham’sV Vegetable Compound, for it is especial "adapt ed to correct such troubles. Advertisement TEETH EXTRACTION FREE DAILY whalebone rubber, which does not cover the roof of the mouth if you have two or more teeth. Natural Rubber, $5. 00 set of teeth . Gum Lyke Rubber, a perfect re- |production of the human gum. wu. $10.00 Most of our present patronage ia recommended by our early custom- ers, whose work siving good satisfaction. All work guaranteed for 15 years, Examination free. OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS © Established 20 Yearé Ave. 6 versity St y—0 to 12 8 ia atill Willard | | SE NOT A ‘CENT! When we say that we} provide Free Battery Service at any one of | these 4 convenient |9, stations — we mean} just exactly what we! say —and no strings | attached to our offer aes Testing and icmouets You HOT [DERN BURIESS COLLEG BUSINESS at A CENT —and Bat- = tery advice by real were tw AVE — SEATTLE 4 recs experts | ‘ thrown in for good measure. Take us up. CANDIED’ LAXATIVE FOR CHILOREN OR ADULTS. 25950 | THE GREATEST AcTERS m HE WO KEEP THE LIVER AND Bowes 43 ALL GUUD DAKGUSTE ~ ee ei EAST PIKE 30 ano BLANCHARD 3222 EASTLAKE ADMIRAL WAYAT CALIF. note prpe) o- Me neares'

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