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for ation of jon ina jer cltis xlucers Bho can m to jo their y the weeks nition, ter be. 'S » ‘Anything © consid. minds, THURSDAY HARDING NEAR Gary’ JUNE Will Make His First Speech on Tour Tonight EDITOR'S NovE BY LAWRENCE MARTIN ¢ ON BOARD PRESIDENT HARD. ING’S SPECIAL TRAIN EN no YO ST. LOUIS, June 2 Hardi will reveal on the general out © comprehensive The investigating oo as one to nether the 12 fe day was a hardship, an the 8 oF 10-hour days ea. rogram than he has Harding's ideas on prove more muieting to the ir world on which he will unt Ww les than his the steel n court apeak is in the od, bitterest home | BY HARRY B. HUNT | QUARY, Ind, June 21 Tho child disagrees with the par ent demo Gary contra is impossible at this broadly the | Hanling’s program, tt hat, time trend of Mr be stated portion of to disclose en if even a small | ne sry, the s adopted, the United | town, ads with Gary, a much more active | the steol man both the desir of | Ability and the necessity of the 12 | hour day in the steel industry As head of a committee of the American Steel States will play over hastening settwment than it has up to world problems is time " Iron and by himself, organized ai vent of President Harding to wasingly impressed recent Yen In the the fact that Europe's |“ ine hour nud, are like: | United | affect al workers, | italists of this | has tnformation of institute ant sort concernir Euro He } if long co: flex in the ary workers rithheleer jority of the imposes no unreasonabd! ip on the it in not injury to the phy mentally 0 problems will not total failure | 60 and 70 1 an effort being msde from | day. The | Atlantic to prevent | remainder wor up of the forces | adjustment, which = believes is vital, not rica but to world’ welfare. reparations allowed to end in without nt work a J ARE MERELY SLAVES Mr.) TO THEIR JOBS ¥ “The result is | portun aking: that they 4 for nelther home nor com: The presidential party ts due at | munity They have no time for Louls late this afternoon, and | recreation, They are merely slaves to night the speakii ‘our will be} their jobs. It is bad for them men formally begun in an address at the | tally, physically, morally. It is not Coliseum of that city. Mr. Harding j only bad for them individually, but will take part In a cornerstone lay, | it is bad for the town and the whole THE SSATTLE STAR Does Not Return to Home After Work | Explorer Should Arrive in Seattle Next Fall Wd Amund board the They easy, kill time, in order to thru thelr lor must slack, take June % hold trick The loss of thru that one factor,| 8 a vill return chooner he o'clock Wear day after noc Mra, Hunter, 1 N Thur da. awked the attlo productivene ording to word in my almost If not com wirele from dded output of|the Aftenposten, ‘The against an S-hour/ that Ar day over the pole after defects developed GARY WOULD LOWER n hi trial fight IMMIGRATION BARS Bee But as a scolal lem the The fourmnasted hour day in © important] Holmes tet than as an industr one with a | judgment pl offsets the mH 12hour day a th ave plane " police to in the hooner C. 8, Seattle a month ago record cargo of fright sound, and the farth point The steamer is owned and commanded by Capt Backland, 499 = Kinnear and carried Backland metal * airplane left Judge shortl immigra-| Kotzebue Gary lower the Wednesday to go to Firat and Ser ca nt, to pers, It, was his firet timb at the Meehan job for over his mother sald, as he was » aceldent in hospital for from tion bars, to let in more immigranta, while the city of that the 12-hour day ho his industry the greatest glo | Place barrier to the Americanization Capt. foreigners here. In other words, Gary, the town,| North with him a€ Wainwright a Jia finding its prosperity and well:|year ago and he furnished informa. | Month : ‘ : hurt in an aute [deine 8 a “model” industrial eom-|tlon on the equipment of the ma. | MU , munity, blocked by the labor policy! chine when a recent report was sent dip esc cd jot the wito Jaid it out and/from Germany that it ome ti ion of the bralr | wave it Mra. Hunter t him to return ur Gary is ting ADO: John nell pa no radio , landed tho all already Amundsen — took Clarence being | "Steel," saya Gary, the was an old mach| man, “ean't] According to Capt be on an Shour day plan Backland the was new and had two netw engine da huge quantity of ton an 8! equipm Cay Backland | “Steel, days Gary, thetown, “can | hour day." ‘ that Amundsen would Which n . € fight, when he left Beat (Here's MORE ABOUT ) itis)". V8 ummer DIRECTORY | /sex°teturms on the Huimes he wil » DOPE DOCTOR tng, chine IS ON TRIAL: ing narcotics to po could almost dress himavlf out the new direct y collectix Slippérs, Stockings, Hatts and Capps SATURDAY NIGHT BATH AND TUBB, Occupations whith become | ¥ of individuals are Lawyer, | lor, Banke Boxer, Barbe or, Dyer, Miner Painter, Baker COUPLE, f year, Dr. R ARE FOUND , feattle phi have federal McKibben with ne and Pearl ns federal offclal HERE’S MORE ABOUT at the new city club shortly after a ving at St. Louls, ALASKA WAITS GREAT EVENT! FAIRBANKS, Alaska, June 21 ska today stocd ready to “ost in such a frenzy as has not witnessed since the days of the id rushes, when President Harding | es But until he does arrive Alaskans are going about their business, re- fusing to get excited. A large proportion of them still ex- pect that word will come any minute that the president has abandoned hia trip and will not visit them. “For more than half a century Mlaska has been annually threatened with a presidential visit, but golf or fishing has interfered,” inent Alaskan told the “Not until the president is known to be on a boat bound for Alaska will interior Alaskans program his enter- | community." Gary, w made up of 1 to demonstrate poesibilit h its pop 5 national! s of the “me pot’ in which divers p aces are | posed to t blended into Ame But Gary {s not a melting p is a furnace which burns men } not a crucible in which they led. The difference, socio | insist, is chiefly due to the HEAT. NOT VOICE LEFS.OF TOWN I came to this steel town, fou and fathered by the czar of the industry, find if Gary, the town, agreed Gary, the man, on these quest ness, commercial, social and ing scores of worke: citizens, is that: tion of 65 ies, might be something Whose name it bears, to My conclurion,” after inaytry | tending thru the mills, thru the bust. organtzations of the town, and cover-| and ordinary | 509,000 mark, in 1925, Plummer, Carpenter, Braader, Spin- | 4 ner, Weaver, Workman, Boss, For man and Brewer, There are not so many Brewers as ther but the others show a healthy in crvane. 000, used to be ting sup usal of the pages re that night Bath which it is hoped may ne Mosars. Cheetham and Ski finds a High, a Lowe and Jacks. There is Tite a are on adjacent out, | COUP go Into usiness together are Swin One many much distance 1 Loose, but C: between in and Abel vagen with no un toward results to date. Vacations, Days and Knights brovght ¢ Hunters and Fishers Lens than one-half of 1 per of the names in the directory Beers, but Bross states t by the time Seattle has nded steel with fons. ox civic at perhaps parsed tho there may be | more Beers, more Brewers, and per Tubb. A trio! was given for the recovered by wert Dr. MeKibben w federal grand jury f rest, and was re hi gb drng the operatives, they Indicted by lowing hin od on bail & United States McKibben tm sald t drugs the star wit government in the tria 0 of the police agents to whom have old the Thurs was Japan Says Russia Must Pay Up Debts TOKYO, June 21 grant recognition to the Russian soviet government unless Russia settles with Japan for the massacre of Japanese at Nikolalevak and r ognizes the debts of tho czarist re gime, Foreign Minister Uchida of Japam. deciared tod: Japan will not STREET CARS STARTS ON PAGE 1 | negotiate with the bondholders, but my plan is to offer them what their bonds about 60 it up and ven at that are ac worth, ntx on th | wet rid of a bad ba c councilmen were with their 5 ing ahead ans to prene gency ordina propriation of pensen ¢ of the council whole, Frida ton, before a m } as committe Fay mittee of th introducti > regular meeting of the council, oppor the nd Councilman 0. T. Erickson declares that tt tn legal Judge William Hickman Moore Thursday said that when he Gary. the steel man, does not voice | haps ® few ansorted Wines. | tho bellefs of Gary, the steel town. ame demands|*#4 on the bench here he rendered ja deciaio in the case of J. jon WR, The City, which prohibits spending | money for such a trip. These are the which Japan made at tho opening Jot negotiations with Runsia looking 12-Hour-Day Law \MUNDSEN 10 11 Year Old READ STRIKES ST. LOUIS STOP. Condemned by Citizens Steel Town Is Opposed to Financier’s Policy of Long Working Shift in Mills RETURN HERE Boy Missing AT ACCUSERS ce 2 He men Would Evade Law wn inte fecision in the ano’ han the qua men, the organized and the gan’ Confesses He Fired Portland Apartment PORTLAND, Ore. spl Ma me ine WRECK OF LAVA | IS CONTINUING). Molten Stream Still Ad- fl vances on Helpless Towns PAGE 9 ; | | ‘FEAR ANOTHER 3ROKER CRASH alth Head Says Dair One hundred mi 1 « ot market € great blaste seugit “ as suspended ‘ ‘ na of thousands of Sf Hivsm 4 Benjamin Ale molten Beas for violation of the rule tr from the voleand hange 1 helpless towns ile Edward M ‘ uiniets today, ucketeer.” in 9 4 in 4 nders still felt ati from the mountain; in streams of steams moving with Mea round Mount i@ sddenly shot out Mie nch, which js now agai Gilliam on the hamlet of Lavineliael . yction of 16 tle townl- Hi? Yeggs Obtain $100 =e ceminect. | | a From Tacoma Firm work continues, with the ing Victor Emmanuel TACOMA, for the thousands tained $100 when the d the of. whose homes He bee fice of Benetts Motor Co,, yester- | neath laval Jakes that stilt They blew the and smash- spread as t ed open the cash r diminished homes, at became | One : failure, He | tr start serv sing until he tell | br of the m hering | injunetic rfering with asked in court, Unie settled, Judge lured he would make a matter before He then advised Keane ther application for Philp to ma woroger, who Kenne, said riment was leagued ttorne June ecemen ob: uption goes on with ensity, FREDERICK und other ‘oups of mille rr two & unor kept It FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET quirements judge c 1 nitary or not , June 21.—Con- jon that he started the fire which os of 35 tenants of rtments Monday was made yesterday by Aschenbrenner, held in fail in . necording to messages re- sheriff's office admitted having con- red with his sister-in-law, Mra. reoret La lemsee of the apart nt house, to destroy the structure they could coll on the $12, carried on the furniture, angered the | Bozanta ay urance the advices stated T 8. der ern day cha frot Every jis guarded by armed militiamen, ROOPS RULE IN SAVANNAH AVANNAH, Ga., Juae 21.—Un- control of @ strict military gov- ment, annah was quiet to. following rioting in which one 1. Tho clashes started y night when a mob attempt: o wecure a negro arrested on rges of attacking a white woman m custody of jail officials, road leading to the city Another Shipment of Attractive * -GINGHAM FROCKS | tainment. exerted economically and otherwise, “But when he really arrives end/to keep Gary, the town, subservient we know that Mr. Harding is amon in ali things to the demands and de us in the actual flesh, well, the peo-| sires of Gary, the chairman of the ple then probably will go crazy. | board of the United States Steel cor- ‘They'll entertain him a-plenty. | poration. At Juneau, the capital, the visit of | “What is the offect of the 12-hour the president is accepted as more of day on the business life of the a certainty and there arrangements | town?" I asked John Warner, secre- for a formal welcome have been tary of the Gary chamber of com. made. merce. Those in charge of entertaining the; “Very bad," was the {Immediate | president have a program arranged | sponse. crammed full of novel sights, rang-| “Of the more than 12,000 men now ing from a trip over the route cov-| employed in the mills here, between This in spite of tremendous pressure, | Son of Wealthy toward . recognition and a trade i] Family Arrested “00 ato mus | cee | S@cond time within 24 hours, Walter| with other world powers (0 sfo-| ON PASS PLAN | L. McDougal, sclon of a wealthy Buf.| guard railway operations in China ¢ mT When the weekly pass plan ordin- falo, N. Y., family, i# in jail here on}! Officials Debate ance comes before the city council & charge of contempt of court | The man was arrested first Tues Soldiers with fixed bayonets patrol the ‘Temporary, breastworks,. surmount jed by v Was positively identified by his vic tim. fron pects, wection around the Jail, AT THE SAME UNUSUALLY-LOW 1} PRICE: a $3.95 machine guns, are in piace. r Lee, the accused negro, He was picked by the woman m & group of a half dozen sus- jday on a warrant sworn to by his| | ex-wife, charged with stealing their child, Walter 1. MeDougal, Jr. The second arrest followed the for | mer Mrs. McDougal's affidavit that alimony of $150 a month ordered by ee + {for final action Monday, it will have British Wet Ship vaivitea ropot oe the uty une, WASHINGTON, June 2i.—A con-|committer attached. Councilman ference of customs and prohibition | Oliver T. Erickson, author of the or- officials of the treasury department | dinance and Councilman Phil Tindall, to decide what action shall be taken | one of its staunchest supporters, both | when the British liner Olympic ar-/ voted favorably on the measure at! y- Logger Is ‘Killed by Falling Tree, RIDAY the Downstairs Store offers a fresh ship- ment of the same smart styles in Gingham Frocks offered a week ago. Every one of these | Frocks is crisp and fresh from the makers and are |]| unusually attractive values at $3.95. ered by the adventurers who sought gold In the Yukon, to views of giant giaciers; inspection trips embracing public works and personal interviews with Esquimaux, who may have fo After a l2hour day in the mills | the court had not been paid her for a man has just two desires -to eat, | %¥eral months, then sleep. Recreation? Study? In | terest in commumity or civic affairs? | Social contact with other men? First | Germany Protests \the ability then the desire for theso French Repression rives in New York with a full cargo | Thursday's meeting of the city utill- of liquor under seal for passengers on the return yoyage, was called to- day by Secretary Mellon Believing that the British govern- ment seeks an out and out test of American liquor laws ani regulations Ues committee. | Mra. Henry Landes and Council- man A. Lou Cohen both voted against the proposed plan, on the theory that street railway finances are In such a condition that the sys- be imported for the occasion. |to the mills again. That Ss his life | FLORIST. TO | ‘This not only six days n week, but FACE JURY for approximately half of the 12-hour men seven days a week. Charged with possession of a large| ‘The result js a minimum of min- number of counterfeit revenue strip| sling between the diverse groups and stamps, with which he is alleged to| nationalities that make up this super. have sealed bottles of his own make! industria! city. A community of of moonshine, Frank J. Bell, Hillman | more than a score of distinct “seo City florist, was bound over to the/ tions,” the inhabitants of which soon fe “ia srand jury Wednesday, after | jose all interest in or desire to know waiving his hearing on the charge} e hatovs (Onited’ Btates Commissioner | Petter the other groups or individ. A. C. Bowman. Bail remained at| als which make up this city of $1,506. [slaves to steel. Bell and Richard B. King, arrest-| GARY SAYS WORKERS ed by federal agents and city detect-| LIKE LONG HOURS ives as he was transporting 288 taels| “The workmen,” Judge Gary stated of opium acrous the city, are believed! in hig report, “prefer the longer by operatives to be working together in the moonshine and narcotic traf. | hours because it permits larger com. fie. | pensation per day.” are burned out of him by his 12-hour | workday. Food, then reat, then back} | BERLIN, June 21—Germany to- | on foreign ships, Mellon hopes to de-|tem should not be interferred with day sent a protest to the allles| cide on a course of action before he| for the prerent against severe measures of repres-|saiiy for Europe Saturday. The ordinance provides that passes |slon instituted by the French in the | = good for as many rides as the holder Bonee cares to take during the week of is- ‘The German protest followed an | Estimate Crop at sue, be sold at the offices of the | fauncement from Russeldorf that) 94 00,000 Bushels set railway utititien department |General De Goute and other French 4 she {for $1.00, Tho ordinance is moc |and Belgian authorities aro working | TOPEKA, Kans, Junc 21—The| er $1.00, The ordinance is modeled {Cot a acheme whereby.all industries /1043 Mansag wheat, crop. was.esth | 564° complete mucossy I over |of the invaded areas turning ‘out re-|mated at 94,000,000 bushels by the | Proved © complet esa parations material will be confiscated stato board of agriculture today, |” : 8,600,060 bushels below the estimate | |for Inst month. | Erwin Bergdoll Is secretary of the J, C. Mohler, . | Two Professors at Hate board sid the wheat crop | Released on Bail AS CITY, Kans. June | Amherst Quit Jobs | "48 suffered the past month from} KA | AMEERST dane June 21.—Pro, |Nerally excessive rains, floods in|—Kawin Bergdoll, free under $10,000 | aioe Walter: 32, 7 utr a oy if jSoutheastesn Kansas and the Hes-|bonds following his arrest on leav- fase Jou $a Gaus have vs Ein sian fly and Ainch bugs. Ing Leavenworth prison on @ char lit was announced today, as a result e Eis igheioe cates Ao the drate |of the resignation, under pressure,| Son of Cleveland wan on’ route to his Philadelphia | of Dr, Alexander. Meiklejohn, presi jhome today, | and worked by forced labor, According to federal agents, a part | of the opium which King waa trans- porting had been buried prior to his arrest on property owned by Bell. The latter acted as bondsman for King and secured his temporary re- lease. King was again arrested and his bail raised from $1,500 to $2,500. Woman Captures Burglar in Home EVERETT, June 21—Mra. J. L.} Ketchum, wife of a storekeeper at Silver Lake, captured a burglar whom she found hiding under a table in the store, with his hands full of money. He attempted to escape thru a window, but she strugk him with a poker and he surrendered. The wo- held him until the police ar- rived. Woman aan Five Children Killed SNOXVILLE, Tenn, June 21.— Mrs. Shelby Sniith and five childron were instantly killed yesterday when their automobile was struck by a| train near Somerset, Ky. Something New FOR AUTOISTS SEATTLE-LUDLOW Starts JUN » Colman Dock Daily 10A.M.—6:30 P.M. That point of view, so far as I/ dent of Amherst college. Other res | could learn, somewhat distorts the |jenations are attitude of even those men who do} In his farewell «peech to alumni. |acquiesce in the 12-hour day. Meiklejohn said the trustees, they put it, they prefer the 12 for hisx resignation, would |day because at the present hourly | come to t their action seale for unskilled jabor they could| ‘yiop President of. the not earn enough to support their | states Calvin Coolld jfamilies on an eight or 10-hour day.| the hoard of truste They approve the 12-hour day not) Moikiejohn'a right j because it gives them “larger com: | tentively to | Pensation,” but because it gives them |i retiring president told of his ee to live. struggle to make Amherst a college | An eight-hour day at the present] o¢ ijheral education, jscale, all agree, is impossible. What is desired is an eight-hour day at a LIVING WAGE. . “The 12-hour do in touch with the situation in the big Illinois Steel Co.'s plant here,| | declared, “results in a tremendous| | loss thru intefficlency and labor} turnover, The men enter th }to serve a 12-hour SE | There is no enthusiasm and loyalty, “Instead of trying to produce the} best and most that is in them they | try to get’ by with a minimum.| They say, probably with truth, that} Don’t Be an Old Man at 36 $4.75 xpected United & member of sat on Di, and listened at address, in which If your apartments are too warm a not move out to a little cottage * & man Closely | song the Inke short? The Want Ads will help you find one little} Arm Chairs m Our USED DEPARTMENT —at— Get the A.M, C. Protector and be a young man at 75. No more Jame back, no medicine, The A. M. G, Protector is worn next to your body. Will not interfere with your work or clothing in any way —in fact, you will feel better fri day you #tart we ing it. The A, M. ¢ Protector in under Money ref not satinfactory, Price 85.00 THE A.M. C, PhoTHCTON Cb, 4238 Thackerny Ulace, Seattle, Wash. ‘These are exceptionally and suitable for ory or home une, good lobby, Also n large line of older style 1ON AT wiern Weds in Memphis | MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 21—Miss | Ellen Douglas daughter Bishop Thomas G dof the Epiccopal church in the United States, and Richard land, son of former President Cleve land, were en route to New York today on thelr honeymoon. ‘Th Jcouple was married by the bride | father here last night. | 10,000 Bees Killed | by Earwig Poison PORTLAND, June %1.—The ea wig pest, being battled in Portland | by a small army of college boys, Jone unusvally vehement denon today. |. Police Inspector C. H. Tichenor is blaming, the earwigs for the loss of | some 10,000 of his best bees, An am | bitious hunteman scattered some of | the poison prepared for the pe Into the water supply of the ‘Tiche nor aplary, killing large number of his best honey produce Lightning Ruins Telephone Circuit RED BLUFF, Cal, June 21. Lightning early today struck the telephone central office here and put out of commission all telephones in the Red luff ¢ ret. The exact amount of damage has not been es. timated, The telephone company was the heaviest sufferer from the electrical storm, which played thruout this sec- tion during the night. Orle A. Jonson, 7, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Andrew Johnson, with residence two miles northeast of Avoca, Towa, was attacked by small horde of bees and fatally stung. Folsom Cleve. | | The millionaire slacker had just completed a sentence on a charge avading the draft when he was nm into custody on the | accusation, second |Three Youths Admit | Shooting 4 Priests | POCAHONT. Ark., June 21, |Three youths held in jail here, |charged with an attack on a Cath jolic parish house, in which four priests and a layman were shot, | have confesed, Sheriff R, H, Gullett announced tod: The shooting fol }lowed a@ disturbance at a chureh so- ter which the The victims youths w are recover Wisconsin’s Dry Repealer Killed MADISON, W June 2 Tucker bill to repeal the Wisconsin | dry Jaws was killed by the senate | late last night by a vote of 19 to 12. | '$12 Per Day Is New Wage of Bricklayers | NEW YORK, June 21—Twelve! dollars a day wages for bricklayers| Is the result of a strike here which | has ended, ‘The bricklayers will be} paid at the rate of $1.50 per hour, KANSAS CITY, June 21,—One woman died In Kansas City, due to the hottest weather of the season. Mrs, Rose Chandler collapsed and died as she was preparing to batho | to escape from the heat, Many others were overcome. | | Paul Manship, American sculptor, recently finished a bust of Mary Pick. ford, | Herman L. Ch: | dead here tod ing tree. C ing saw twined with the tree which had been | cut, ing ANCOUVER, Wash, June 21.— ® logger, is result of be. | id by a falling} The new struck’ on the ina harles stepped back™to avold be- hit by a tree he had just helped y shipment comprises: Frocks of Fine Tissue and Plaid Ginghams © wide range of most desirable shades, Sizes 16, 18, 36, 38, 40 and 42. The styles, trimming effects and workmanship are down, when a smaller one, inter-|1 far better than might be expected at this low price: |] $3.95. | —DOWNSTAIRS STORE was pulled to the ground, strik- | him and crushing his skull. ! FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET RIGHT EQUIPMENT Will Add Much : to the Pleasure of a CAMPING TRIP OTHING—except a cheer- ful disposition—will add- Desert Water Bags, 2-gallon _ size, $1.45. Kenwood Sleeping Bags, $25.00. Aluminum Cooking Kits for two per sons, $14.10 and $22.95. Tin Cooking Kits, $6.25 and $8.50. Camp Grids, 75¢ to $1.50. i “Kampkook” Stoves, $6.50 to $15.60. Tinned Steel Knives and Forks, 85¢ dozen; Table Spoons, 60¢ dozen; Tea Spoons, 30¢ dozen. Camp Pillows, cretonne covered, 69¢ and $1.25. Pocket Knives, 25¢ to $2.50. (DOWNSTAIRS as much pleasure to a camp- ing or short outing trip as— the right—and most practi- cal—equipment. The equipment suggested here has been selected be- cause much of it is essential, © and all of it is helpful, to a — thoroughly enjoyable outing. For instance— Auto Tents, $32.50 and_ $35.00. Folding Auto Tent $12.50 and $15.00. Mattresses for auto tent beds, $8.50 and $15.00. jf) Auto Luggage Racks, $1.50 | to $5.00. f Auto Running Board Trunks, $13.00 and $30.00. Hawkeye Refrigerator Baskets, $8.50 to $22.50. M Ingersoll Watches, $1.50 to $4.25. © Alarm Clocks, $1.25 to $4.75. Stanley “Unbreakable” Vacuum tles, $6.75 to $12.50. Oe. Vacuum Bottles, $1.75 to Electric Flash Lights, 95¢ to $4.00. There is also a good selection of ” camp clothing and shoes for women, men, girls and boys. Ba Camp Furniture (Fourth Floor), Portable Phonographs, $22.50 to $55.00 (Fifth Floor), STORE)