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as nd ities ‘HAR national oo on ee nd ry, and ust be agree legista. regu: by Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 80. Miiomum, 5 Today noon, 60, Alaska pur for. fe and heard had 9 Entered as Second Clase Matter May #, 181 DING IMPROVING! Gt the Postoftice at Seattle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March %, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $8.68 { ON ene rors No Le The Seattle Star SEATTLE, WASH,, MONDAY, JULY 30,| 1923. re “TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. | British Cooperative Movement, — in Spite of Fierce Capitalistic Opposi prlying ind do- ina Seattle Ship Is S tion, Thrives Amazingly supply UT. 's ype q ome | y velop- RITAIN'S Deranve ovement is Next they entered the producing and porte. LP spre e a forest While un- manufacturing fields. Now they own farm ondi- friendly interests vainly attempt to stamp », it breaks out anew in it out in one ¢ tions. their own industrial plants. lands, raise their own crops and operate aes oth s eee For nearly a century it has| Declining assistance of financial Anterests lation Saye “ efforts oe it. that had sought to crush them from the ° re little grocery of 18 nas given w very beginning, the co-operatives became ’ } *: night r re—a a i . ¢ : < é ‘ Fie to a mighty Tab sredyie powerful orga’ their own bankers and brokers. », they attle Captain at ‘This sation extending into the remotest corners | formed their own insurance companies. F J 15 fy a: oo ptt ; ne The British co-operative movement has Nome Gives Re . hose 2S industrious, poorly paid crafts-| been the model of-many similar plans fos- j a ‘ indus 3 ‘ any ar plans fos: . as- ; pie men who brought it into being, long since | tered in America and other nations. port of Big Mas edie are jead. But 3,494,385 sturdy followers With the co-operatives gaining new sup-| sacre itl gay on. " Si _ | Porters daily in the United States, a detailed) * : é Scattered thru: England today are 1,195 | explanation of the operations of the English | Disbatehes traas wosde,canalved (i me retail co-operative companies. The majority stem is unusually timely. ls ie Monk : Bef relating i the storms of war days and the| Milton Bronner, one of The Star's}. masa of scores of persons reg am depresaion They alone suc-| European reporters; has obtained an in- ae : She mbatted gouging profiteers. timate knowledge of the workings of this}. sie z meet exorbitant prices de-| system. He is divulging it in a seriés of \d-for. manded ne middleman, the various re- | six ticles. must tail societies banded together and estab- You'll find his stories highly entertair heir own: wholess se: teir own wholesale-houses, | ing and instructing. * Here is his first one, N= lof 1 ee ee oe *'° * & cise Z 1,195 Shops Now Handle “ Fifth of English Buying" « Bins In 90 Years Institution Founded by 28 Men Hc cg staff Has Grown Till It Serves 3,494,335 |selzed. ‘The BY MILTON BRONNE! s! ration, ngstarier od has cir- eumvented Joe's clever scheme to catch the intruder. But ix all lost? est fa. Never! Hon o¢ doesn't recognize the word Painfully the weavers gath gether a capital of $140, half the money on. fixtures rest on flour, butter, suga “|meal. By the end of th membership | tive Good Old Joe! on top, yet! He'll come out represen| increased to to $150 per week. How were thelr resources their first book hown “You must not story Was Carrying His Dinner Pail ETROIT, Mich., July 3 Ford, maker of automobi! V's richest man, ix 60 years YE DIARY ¥ was observed only his lifesyans ceremony. \ Ford born in Gr and hi idays working on his| pH abi i Ford always shared and helped him t But today she re’ on the road near “hi Mrs, bile busi 20 years ago. DEVELOPED CAR IN HIS HOME He fived In a simali house (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) of the modern motion frequently re. are still NO CEREMONY MARKS DAY movies ‘ mark, it mark, it | th ENTIRE PARTY STRICKEN ABOARD SHIP; ATE TOO MUCH CRAB The illness from which the president is now suffering first developed just a week ago and appeared to come simultaneously with a small epidemic among the members of the official party aboard the Henderson, At that time it was blamed upon too free indulgence in crab seulpturing when Praxit oles sculpted. Dees check 191 meat. Since then, however, Dr. Sawyer has ‘ if || expressed the belief that it was partly due to Harun ib pe canned goods eaten on the ship or in Alaska, H and oat year the and the shop had sales amounting | wii p meager Twenty Years Ago He Was Penniless and tut ia = other days in|t near isfactory ed shortly change in go beach where ir) Blue Ses on the Sibert [he said. turned whi urd | Seattle's 1 r talk with newspa men, |t unregu t fic | ie tage st: atitomo:t # ia proud of her husband, but oye . ' istry, capltalized at $100,-| dislikes t) amount of pub | hucksters, P licity accompanying “greatness.” {f bas the “pleas-| Ford has a magnificent home on | of ae i to or his “car-| the bank of the River Rouge, on the | flee ith ey iia aac Ford auto-| outskirts of Detroit 1 today re Pree i And in his work Ford ac-| tired to hig home. He could not be | i 3 vom that had it not been for| reached by interviewers. The home |? n as deal and: sp devotion and|i# in contrast to that,in which he THE NEWEST ART Uree HETeiehe sata mae hata lived when he started’ his automo: se and 0 As an excuse for the multifold AO, paises ee: 2 | ing of produ: inspected. mits farmers ireet It inspection of }to put all such bh ‘Heavy license. wieures John ft Silver teamer { aside from the schoon belon| was] ma } It tw trot © of the wonder LONDON, Wily 30.—-Nearly 90) Stories of modern times. pir ¥ ard-working, poorly | NO LEG/ , P rs in the Lancashire] PROTECTION an, aby t ndale xa | ter Bear, that ever ver govern ‘aighte have ene irre, jan coast at cutter weal is ted pede k and garden truck by unlicens who buy “direct tre and sell direct to the hom city, according to a petiti Council: prdinance: Hucksters are operating unclean gons in their business, th urges, and in addition c nt 1 nder the to sell t to. the |hucksters, the petition eh | veal unfit for human consumption with ,the elty health department be: owing up an ordinance | wigned to ‘eliminate or r is all propo) mmars hat to his com- property to be rex are farther said, adding ved a mes. oO ast guard ything wan sat The Brue Sea may have 1 xince that time dent but I will be releas nent at A jone where the Yukon. Nn ont whatever resulted from gular officials, wan frozen in the ice during the winter, and was se the Russi sult of ler ex- assacres are sald off N orth Cap r Bear has eep away from jroll and fit Meat Being Sold endangered by ding of mi an Robert Hesketh Monday by Seattle whole }aule food distributing concerns and] _ The petition asks the city | i! to regulate this practice by | jas never W law whic heir , the 8, buy » sold and sters urider \u | E.| eized | Nattina ¥ ‘RUSS HOLD BOAT é | Trene Castle does not appear fatigued by her divorce court cperiences, but she may find pleasanter experiences abroad. One Train Kills 14 in and and Cart Bandits Kill One, ‘Hurt » that ¢ Wave was reported as the two men w heir) being seized and taken to Anadyr . banking bu 10) The dispatch also stated that’ check a cents ¢ach r their services every | f half a million dollars on the re ounting to m week | Swenson company was found on a . fn ollarn; § The Rochdale pioneers believed tt} colonel in the White army. Swenson e > er England and ¢: possible to ruma shop ¢ we the! cha erized this as bunk, saying b Turn to Page 7, Column 6) [that he had never written such 4 s carmined the soft contours - ee Tata mmeRa Te pe a. B93 —— | check and would not send checks in 28 somebody . jo Ford Is World’s Richest | .2.".0es.02% ex Sunday, bearing word of the killings II, tennis ie ° . edb weigsdxrg ? expected Monday nigt Man on60th Anniversary °52.08 jjIn a t trie pal day kt four o! |satchet }up thet jwho ru |down WOMAN SHOT MOTORMAN WOUNDED sh The mo Three Cras (Copyright, 1923, by IRTY-TWO persons were k when they hes Sunday were struck by: spe ! ainy crashed into casualties occurred when the n grade crossings. © from St New York then hit a man, killed four making 14 lx and u a second, killed when their auto stalled in on Long Island. nesville, Ga 1 four at Poplar Glarabore J,, two at Augusta, d one in Detroit, Castleton Corners, and a man were ean train Bluffs, Kan,, Vt, led at ¢ ere killed N.C. Atlanta, ! LUMBUS, I on the Penn Mlinols er, 4 s Killed in crossing accel: last 24 rin Indiana in Davis, nd William it a Pennsyl. July ania railroad in 5 today 4 Aboard Speed Train Thy Bear w"| Dennsylvania Desperadoes Snatch Payroll of $85,000 and Make Escape . Pa,, July aboard a speeding el ger train, five#findits to ed w passenger and wounded “ i Heteeh atbisy snatched a tat she is” not ‘expected to live, containing an $86,000 pay: | ‘Tie other wounded were: aiped into thé hills was shot thru the heart and fell The woman was so badly wounded Phillips Scherider, passenger, shot pending settle. | Posses of police ‘are rushing In| thru the back years ago, on his 40th| July 30, His nts were | ment of the troubles. pursuit Patrick J, Durkin, motorman, shot fa wax a poor man. He| moderately " prosperous, but ot . v hile: the train vey epee nta ed ther onaat r t 1b + ne etrol y yhood y along tht an wooded section, eo NY bad justiquit a Job with the Detroit | wey His entire boyhood was} along then Bib ns tS ehuk Hla ial pa Vouaatne oes (nb aboard her the only | Edison’ Co,, wh: ad worked for ‘ tive ‘men suddenly drew guns: an in the wort i a end . nize the Ford|*Pent on the farm, but farm work} ldemanded that all passengers. hold | West End Coal company, shot in the ry : | to bis liking. | | ir hands. ‘Then t began a | hip. 4 working as « master Hig re leigh tga |nearch to ascertain whether anyone Kdlson electrical vet as oo ag | had weapons arrying his dinner pail Nani tattina cde Gre | | Some of the passengers”1 Was proceeding trom inte die Pang A bers ° n’ en-| 3 and the bandits opened fire. ‘There | soranton to Wilkesbarre on its usual a eae ia { Met & cumbersome road steam’ en-| Aes: ETS | Bord ‘ 5 us 5 a month, Ford was spending His |. ine ptopetied ander ite own power, | Wholesale Men Charge Un-|was a scramble for the doors. Men | in. tittle after 10 a. m:, when it shed at the bandits were shot sige dre site sing south of Moosic, the ban ‘avrying out their plans, aros€ Jed their pistols at the pass. AND woman, Mra. Rose Kratavits, | sat in her seat ntorman fell woundéd and the oting up the roll satchel, which lay the sidg of the paymaster, wound- train came (o a stop, giving tho |e and dashed’ off into tho woods, Nise erbaer 39h Hage nash ty and state polico immediately Edward J. Murphy, rep W A after A cottage ulate such {had been reprimanding her for lying (to require |in bed and neglecting him, The wife's: nude by cottage train he FATE PUNISHES Brakemart Mangled in Train’ ° organized pos to, begin the chase, (1 they are beating thru the hills hot on the trail, M a passenge IFE MURDERER ANOTHER GOOD OFFER TODAY - Here is a good USED CAR that is being offered at a sacrifice. ccident, Confesses and sell it to hotels, cafes and meat) y \xhops in the.outskirty of the city.|) PITTSEBURG, duly 80. Patrick WSSEX ‘TOURING The Inw requires the inspector's] Coyne, tortured hy loss of Hi leR#)| We aye proud to offer thi late stamp on all yeal handled thru regu-|and the memories of a death strug: | model Mssex touring car, in |lar Heensed food dealers gle with his 18:year-old bride, whom |] wonderful condition; hax only “Their wagons or trucks are unl-|he murdered, today confessed to the URE iden formly unclean," — the —_ petition | erime. many extra. charges. The cripple, a patient in a hospital and terms are easy Councilman Hesketh will confer | here, told of shooting his ght wife scuttle in their” honeymoon || at Port Berry, He sata, he) | The you Want mor Ad Columns will tell about this cae and Who will demonstrate It for you ody was found tn the locked | few hours after a Srclantt cut off Coyne's legu. train they | SUFFERING. ONLY FROM! BIG STRAIN Physicians Issue Optimistic Bulletins, — Saying Executive Needs Rest and — Soon Will Be Completely Recovered — From Severe Attack BULLETIN WASHINGTON, July 30.—President Hard- ing will return to the White House as soon as his illness permits, White House officials were advised today, in a long-distance telephone conversation with Secretary George Christian, at San Francisco. ' t* * 4 SAN FRANCISCO, July 30.—No further bulletin jwill be issued by physicians attending President Harding until about'6 p. m. today, it was stated at |12:25 p.m. At’that time no one was able to give any additional information as to the president’s condition, — but the fact that Dr. C. E. Sawyer had retired for rest _ and that some of the other physicians were not in evi- _ 'dence around the hotel was taken as an encouraging sign. * oe BY LAWRENCE MARTIN |, SAN FRANCISCO, July 30.—Physicians attend ing President Harding, ill here, this morning issued jan optimistic statement on his condition. The statement follows: i “The president had a fairly comfortable night, with several hours’ sleep. “His temperature at 9 a. m. was 101; pulse, 115; respiration, 33. “The abdominal symptoms following the diges- tive disturbance which he expewienced while on the boat are now localized in the gall-bladder region. |There are no peritonital symptoms. The lungs are clear. The white blood cells number 10,800. The |kidneys are functioning satisfactorily and there are no disturbances of the nervous system except those associated with fatigue. ; “While his condition is acute, he has temporarily overstrained his cardio-vascular system by carrying on his speaking engagements while ill.” |TH HE’LL BE AS |WELL AS EVER SOON | The bulletin was signed by Drs.. C. E. Sawyer, Joel T. | Boone, Ray Lyman Wilbur, Hubert Work and C. M. Cooper. | In.plain language this means that the president strained” his heart, but there is nothing organically wrong with it ani jas soon as the acute indigestion is cured and he gets a little trest he will be as well as ever, according to physicians. .IN BAD HEALTH |SINCE YEAR AGO < An official statement, covering the plans for providing complete rest for the president, probably will be issued | during the day. The microscoping and other medical \diagnoses, which the physicians made, indicated that the |president never had been in complete health since he suf- ‘ ‘ \fered an attack of the grip, about a year ago. |BLAME FOOD HE |ATE ON SHIP i | The strain under which he labored during Mrs. Harding's jillness and the arduous duties of his’ office prevented his — return to normal health, the examinations showed. q |. The present condition was, of course, brought on by the food he ate aboard the Henderson and the fatigue caused |by his strenuous activities since leaving Washington. | It was emphasized, however, in unofficial comment by jmembers of the president’s party on the phySicians’ state- ment that the searching examinations made had showed ~ no chronic or organi¢ trouble. -} The prime requisite now is for absolute quiet’ and com- iplete rest. | At a conference to be held later between physicians and” members of the official party, a decision probably will be reached concerning’ the length of the president’s’ stay in an Francisco and the return to Washington. * ¥ 8 SAN FRANCISCO, July 30.—President Harding has suffered a serious turn for the worse, following the illness that attacked him in Seattle. RS Serious heart symptoms have developed. After consultation of physicians here, early this morning, the president's entire Pacific coast program has been canceled. CITIES NOTIFIED HARDING {UNABLE TO VISIT THEM : George B. Christian, the president's secretary, then issued a statement canceling Mr. Harding's entire California pro /gram, announcing he had notified local committees at Los / Angeles, San Diego and other points the president was to visit, saying the chief executive would be unable to carry out his program. " se The president’s illness took a somewhat sudden turn for the worse. A few hours before it became known that can: cellation of the California program would be necessary, Di Sawyer had stated to newspaper men that the president ha {shown decided improvement as a result of a Sunday rest. | Dr, Sawyer at that time said there were three stages i \the digestive disorder from which Mr, Harding was suffers | (Turn to Sage 5, Column 4) a i