The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 21, 1922, Page 5

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER SLU TVITULVUNUUVNUUUVNAUUUUERAUOARUUUTRUUAEAUUAE UAE MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAL GRUNBAUM-BROS FURNITURE Co. INC SIXTH AVE. Sciween PIKE ond PINE 21, 1922. = COLLAPSES AS SHE IS FREED Mrs. Brunen’s Guilty of Murder Declared Cleared BY RERLIN ourt at Leipalg 0s M. OFIM Dec, 21.—The In & secret sew jencrals Von Geliwits, Von Mack ensen, Von Linsingen, Von Buelow and Von Dickut and Professor Goetz were among those whone dropped Many proceedings were stric allied representatives were no ent The court declared the defendants had been proved neither guilty nor innocent of crime against German law witnesses were heard but Seven hundred and seventy-one cakes are pending Made tn Our Own Workroom trial include the Two and « Quarter Vards Prince Ruprecht of Bavaria, accused of deportations from northern Excellently finished. Priced France during the war, and the Duke be tocar 2.35 66 Wurtemberg, who ordered troops maasacred at Namur, and other fa mous officers The allies drew up « long list of | those considered guilty and required | the Germans themselves to try them To Close Mechanical Toys =r 195 Cents purchase one of these be§ values up to $2.00, of- fered tn this sale. |Claim New Mineral Well as Cure-All PITSEKA, Eng., Dec. 21.—The min- eral waters from a well on a farm at Vange ts sald to heal many aliments | Bitherte requiring medical attention OLYMPIA. -—Bxamination for archi tecta to be held by department of |Meensas December 72-30 in Archi tecta’ building, University of Wash ington. NM AA A A = = = = = = = = 2 = |= eattle ICE CREAM Enjoy these specials: Xmas Roll ina Xmas Brick Four flay P; and Nut aschine n layers tachie Cranberry Sherbert Ma Cherry Xmas Melon Mould Pistachio, Two quart Raspberry Sherbert and Vanilla ice cre ze Xmas Ice Cream Cake Three Raspberry cream cake Vanilla Nut Custard, Pistachi 2 layer ice Sherbert and and 3-quart sizes o All ** so order Specials” made on special order only early from your nearby dealer Whether Ice Holiday fita in SEATTLE be had in bulk as well as in brick your Dinners ase sumptuous or moderate, Cream just right; may Seattle Ice Cream Co.—Main 6225 Brother Held | Grunbaum Building MOUNT ms LY ! o ma : Friday and Saturday 2 "2.02". _— SPECIALS — P22 WM. A. ROGERS CARVING SETS = ae ae ; = " “he 93 ‘WAR BUILT Mapecial ats. ‘e248 High German Generals Are supreme | today, diaminsed 93 “war guilt” cases | tried in accor with ine Ver sailles treaty cases were THE SEA TTLE STAR PERFECT SAXON BEAUTY | of England has been found in y which is most characteristic the features of Mrs. C. E Eaton, prominent London society woman, by a committee of artists GERMANY IN 1923 Industrial Colossus Sits in Reichstag Hugo Stinnes Scored Eight-Hour Principle by Social Democrat Strongly Defended Stinnes Demands Increased Production | BY MILTON BRONNER | | BERLIN, Dee, 21.—Imagine John D. Rockefelie sitting in the um of representatives at Washing and ening to a speech by « or leader like Sam Gompers, also [a congressman, and You have some idea of what It te ke to see Germany's industrial |colosmus, Hug ren, #itting in the } hatag and hearing himself de 4 by & social democratic The Rockere of Germany, the ‘}man who owns mines, steel works, street railway systems, banks and |Rewapapers, also finds time th be a of the German member | body | 1 heard him vigorously scored by Dr. Rudolph Breitscheld, one of the | intettec the social demo als in cratic party. merically in i was 8 to be-forgotien |acens, not onty because of the person ality of the 1 Involved, but be cause they represent ciafhing inter onte in what ts looked upon as one of the most important and bitterly contested problems of present-day Germany. Hrettacheld started cut by axcort ating the German Propie's party as & Btinnes party “1 warn you,” said Breitechei4, potating a long, menartng finger at Stinnes, “that the working men and women of Germany will not allow you and your kind to tear down the sight-hour law or to destroy the eight-hour principle” | All the time Bireitachetd t# speak ing, Stinnes abows that the dynamic existence he han been leading in pil ing up vast riches has begun to tet! on him. His dead white face never shows a trace of cul never still Atinnex did not reply to schetd. He simply laetened One of the first things the work ing clnases won in Germany, when never banus are Breit more than eight for over jan excuse to work jhours and get double {time pay the biggest party nu-| the republic was esxtatlished, was the! enactment into organic law of the eight-hour statute Managers of great Industrial plants have always unecred it was merely Not long ago at a meeting of Ge man industrialists Stinnes made a speech in w be sa the Ger man mark was ever to ¢ Germ be stabilized was to pay the repara tions demanded by the allies and thus get rid of the armies of occupa tion, if she was ever to set her own} house In order, she would have to produce more goods and to do this| her pe would have te work longer hours He said o one we 4 dream of disturbing the letter of the German eight-hour law ut jerman work: | nen would simply have to make up their minds that for the next 10 or | 15 years they would have to work at| leant 10 hours @ day. And he didn’t | stress very strongly anything about | getting extra pay for extra hours; This apeech was at once taken up jas a challenge by the labor forces all over the country. There are per haps 12 million men and women who |belong to labor untons. And the most of them are affiliated either with the social democratia the centre, the democratic or the com |munist parties —which together have & big majority in the reichstag ‘The social democratic party as a | party formally declared itaelf against any tampering with the eight-hour law or the eight-hour principie. Fut the Stinnes proposition tan’t |dead yet. Stinnes ts a bulldog for pertinacity In the meantime other big em ployern of inbor have been feeling jout thelr workmen with two new | proponitions: | Firet-They would continue to pay their men for the regular elht our day Put for the extra two [hours they would pay them in goods. For Instance, a worker in a suger re finery. would be paid overtime in |Sigar; a worker in a flour mill in flour | Second—Payment tn products ts jobviously Impossible in many indus tries. For ine *, an employe in a rolling mill wouldn't want to be paid with a steel bar In such cases em ployers would pay the men their Jovertime in marks TOMORROW: Another phase industrial troubles, a *“*‘Horrors of MARION, IL, Dec. 21.—A phan. tom of the “Herrin massacre” wtalked before the five men on trial lfor murder in clireult court here | yesterday Bearing the scars of seven bullet wounds and a gash across his throat, reminders of the “bloody 22na of June,” listed how he had faced the firing squad and miraculously escaped. The witness described the march from the Lester mine to the “power house woods,” where the victims were lined up before a firing squad jand ordered to “run for your lives.” | O'Rourke ran thru the ter being shot twice in the abdomen, only to be captured a few minutes later by armed searchers. “Six of us were marched along the road to Herrin by a mob of more than 500 men,” he asserted, “They tied us together with « heavy rope and forced us arch as fast as possible. they commanded us to get down and crawl with our heads close to the dusty road. Thru out the march they hit and kicked uy repeatedly “We started down the streets of Herrin until ne said the shee iff's men were coming. W |then taken back another street out into the country “When we got opposite the ceme- tery, they lined us up across the Au we ana DAYS TILL FATHER BOUGHT HI@ GON A TOy, BUT IT% NOT ON TRE GHELF. ING TEAD OF HIDING LT Away, WE PLAYS WITH TT HIMSELF Described by Mine Guard Joseph O'Rourke re-| woods af. Herrin’’ Are {road and a bunch of fellows fired a volley of shot into our bodies. | “Il was shot in the ankle and crumpled up ina heap. The others| fell, then, too. I remember giving them my mother’s name and address | and asking that she be notified of my death.” O'Rourke was unable to identity |any members of the mob. | “I had my eyes closed most of the time because of the intense! pain,” the witness exclaimed. “Once when I was lying there in the road, I remember looking up| and seeing the blade of a knife near my throat, I shut my eyes and a moment later I felt a man stooping | over me and felt the cold steel cut- | ting, my throat,” | The witness removed his collar and walked before the jurors and} allowed each of them to perceive the wound Counsel for the defense asked | jonly one question on the cross. | amination | “Were you one of the guards who! came down to the mines sometime in June, 1922," Angus W. Kerr asked ‘l was,” ho replied, |Finds Husband Is Jap, Gets Divorce SAN FRANCISCO, Dec, 21 Mrs. Irene Aquina secured a divorce today from Julius Caesar Aquina after testifying that two years after she had married Aquina she found he was Japanese. She declared he had told her when they, were married that he was Portujuese and of the nobility ‘They were marrie! in 1917 in Yo kohama The Portuguese consul was one of the attendants at the wedding, she said. Aquina is an accountant for the Standard O11 company in Japan, susieneeipuiioemniatbesenipantvmatiiiisin WHAT’S IN THE AIR iRAM FOR 'T DECEMB: 2p. ™m KFC 10:30 to 11 a KIR—5 to 6:30 p. 10:30 p, m KHQ—T:15 to 816 p.m a© Tae RHODES ©. Friday’s Ideal Gift Offerings Ties Scheaffer Pens { Special \ $3.19 For men, women hildren Main Floor Women's Kid Gloves Special i $2.50 | Main Floor Women’s Petticoats Special $5.95 Fancy Silks in this giving! Second Floor $1.00 \ % | CT St Rc more Mk EE EERE a: PAGE 5 Vanities Special $2.89 As sketched, Main Floor Men's ’Kerchiefs 6 ina bow Men's Coreagil SAYS HE CAN NAME SLAYER 21.—Little credence ts attached by polloe to the| who daime he knows the murderer of William Desmoné ‘Tayler, movie Hollywood TOLEDO, Ohio, Deo, story of John Marazina, 35, Strector, slain in hie home last February Marazina, held for following his arrest night, around homes, the announcement the Taylor slayer. on Marazina, according to the police, story of his in Denver «| Of 1921, briefly narrated the meeting three men month ago. in a drunken debauch, third, a as Taylor's slayer. When the men recovered, he said, told him. he fled Ohio. From there he went to Lima and had kill they realized what they him and threatened to Afraid of the men, he said, to Chicago and then to Ada, from there came to Toledo, investigation Tuesday when he was found prowling startled police with he could name He said two of them, | named tho! Los Angeles dope peddler, U. S. Shipyards WASHINGTON, Dec. 21-—While jadministration forces battle in the senate to obtain passage of the ship @ubsidy bill, the ship-building indus- try of the nation is in an unprece- dented slump, statistics compiled by the commissioner of navigation re- vealed. Tho slightly higher than tn pre. war years, due to delayed commer. celal work during the war, construe- tion of steel ships during the past fiscal year amounted to only 688,292 gross tons, Compared to this meager total, 2,000,994 gross tons were con- structed in the corresponding period which was considered unt- versally as a year of depression in other lines. King George Last in Grouse Shoot EDINBURGH, Dec, 21.—-To out- point the king in any sport is not good form, but King George was de- cisively defeated tn shooting on the famous May grouse moors under in General Slump | Needle Carried Body for 50 ARMSTRONG, Mo, Dea Forty years ago, Bob alt Paper editor and politician, | a on a needle, the point off in his right foot © probed for it, and the of Walton poulticed his f time, hoping to draw it Ra: it remained. Recently Walton felt @ on the point of his rights with an itching? sensation’ @ Just before going to bed scratched the sore spot hard pointed substance, | Out came the plece of ni gone into his right foot century before. say? hiimorous circumstances, — take the word was passed fellow guests that the king hs en all records and then ti “went to it.” Asa result t in with full bags. The kim only thre grouse. The | ed the duke of Atholl, Lord and other famous markemen. ———ao In Every Way, Every Day We Are Working Faster and Fast TOO MANY DOLLS $3.49 D | Included are Mama Dolls, Bisque Head, Kid Body and Baby f Dolls. SHOP EARLY. A Fine Dolls JUVENILE BICYCLES A REAL GIFT FOR THE BOY OR GIRL— Specially priced for Friday’s selling at... 26-inch frame, strongly constructed, ball bear. mud guards and coaster brake—a big value. 26-Piece Set of Amherst Silverware Underpriced at Regular $10.00 Values These sets are late arrivals which came without chests, hence this low price 0. D. or Deliveries An ideal gift. No Phone, ©. GENUINE CUT GLASS VASES Specially Priced at We have several counters marked very of Cut Glass low. Selection Imported and Biconiusie $24.98 tore Hours—8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M. | a ry Low Priced at For We have arra $5.98 A gift that Ss TEDDY BEARS 75c and 98c They are excellent values at these low Foot Balls and Soccer Regular $6.00 and $7.50 Values $4.98 to please. $2.69 Regularly Sell at $450 is Wil! make a dandy gift. Complete with vee. x the Little Folks : nged them in two special lots a Kxtra Special at is sure pecially Priced at

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