The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 15, 1923, Page 7

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LAYER HELD IN PORTLAND § aged ( ‘aused by| Fight Against Long Hair Cuts Port aspect was k 5 arted, it is a Ww h alled another by th Harold § Jead, while James St await ing x a trag aimed two well 1, bystanders fo the pavement. ‘This time he @idn't move and died almost in stant TO ARBITRATE STRIKE THREAT Coolidge Plans to Thwart Famine in Fuel BY PAUL R. en Hammond, chair man | commis mine ation s received his in: Coolidge. ‘They rmment, while not at- tempting to force the two opposing factions into agreement, will lend its services thru the coal commission to arbitrate the diffictilties and press for a settlement, 2% Public needs will bo protected ill costs and fuel substitutes will be provided to consumers thru gov- ernment channels, thus breaking the full force of the strike : Hammond meets the miners and perators at the Hotel Pennsylvania ere at 3 p. m. SAILOR KILLED ON U.S. TEXAS ub, 28, sailor, was instant A. A. La marine, ously injured, and two oth- B Belle, are:| CONVICTS (Se | When Gov. he >| Jennings, one of the two convicts, acting as chauffeur. Donahey giving his order. the other convict, who now ac s! Donahe y household. lower shou | Zipriani, DE LUXE Donahey of Ohio went to Canada on vacation, took with him two convicts from the Ohio State peniten- K, Aug. ag a| tiary. Canada talked of deporting the two, and Gov, Don- oved today in ha ns|ahey issued an ultimatum. “If they'go, I go.” The upper | g Pp | Bhoto shows Gov. Donahey entering his car with E The to C. for the lunch cook for as HERE'S MORE ABOUT MARY MILES MINTER STARTS ON PAGE 1 interference. "The day he was found dead I went to the undertaker’s and saw him. I pulled back the sheet and looked at him, but he was waxen. I and kissed him). with my ch his. PLACED ROSE IN TAYLOR’S HAND thera seemed to come a touch of| warmth to it. He answered me. I heard his voice. *T shalt love you alway he whispered. Mary,” ained painful bruises J. 8, 8. Texas, rte a cap} line; Le leg, and two s could not | | | ot} tons Electrocuted as He | Tries to Save Man) SALEM, Ore,, Aug. 15.—Eli David-| fon, 45, and L, M. Cole lumber | mill employes, were uted yea- | terday at Westerburg station, nea Marion, l¢ at work in the mill. Cole lost his life attempting to extri cate Davidson from charged wires in Which he had become entangled, ectro HERE’S MORE ABOUT TARTS ON PAGE1 |} a | amount of asoline th e city may pur- chas aid. ‘The retail price i#| 19 cents a gallon and the city ob-| tains it for By purcha Books, the line for 18 ¢ slight margin in v operate Officials of the oil company de-| clated that they had received no in-| timation of another ch in the price of but uch | changes often came h no previous | warning, | Tindall says that with the 3.cent | margin, he believes the can be sold and delivered for 1 cent, which would bring the price to 2 cents un. | der the m Tindall * Middle West palities have business ket, states, where munict-| gone into the gasoline ith effective resul CONGREGATION WOULD FIRE CLERGYMAN WHO SHED COAT IN PULPIT Ve AILLES, K Aug. 15. Has a Paptist preacher the right to take off his coat in the pulpit? This is the moot question ina controversy between the Rev. I. Edens and his flock. The congre- gation has demanded its pastor's ation charges of vio. chureh doctrines allegations set forth that Rev, Edens took off his coat while preaching and mixed too free activities of the Women's sionary socie Rev. Edens fight the The y in Mis anriounced he will charges. | | and | marision that Mrs. Shelby and | which sound harsh,” | but you are n had suffered a slight relapse after | passed the readhig Mary's statement Sister Margaret, the “u/ lng,” who, Mary says, Mrs. Shelb tried to push forward in place of| with were not attracted to my sister |ready cat the beautiful little film star, when | yrarga: men callers came to the Shelby resi dence, denied herself to visitors. She “could not be seen,” friends told all| callers. MARY DOES NOT HATE HER MOTHER Mary despite the report of the re- lapse, Mary says her mother's con- dition is not at all serious. It was rumored about the Shelby Sister Margaret are anxious to avoid fur. | ther publicity, and will try to range settlement of the suit out af court, “Perhaps I have said some things said Mary. “I do not hate mother. I have no hatred in my soul—only regret that she thas made it impossible for mo to love her as I would like to. “It is good to have told every thing. Now I can walk down a street without realizing people are looking at me, shouldn't.” little red leather love diary, out her loneliness for the comely mystery man of tho m after his body kad been found in his Alvardo st. apartment. “Oh my beloved, where are you?” Mary two weeks after the while the sensational anc investigation was at its height. “You were to have bee mine! Had I,known you were to have been taken from me, no power) sobbed ry wrote murder, baffling know, my beloved, me somewhere, I leave and Where, I don’t kno’ not alone You could utterly hopeless, for: lorn!* later, Mary's dog, “Chummy,” which Taylor had given her, was stolen and ry wrote hey hawye taken away what you © me. How a dog can unde stand! Better than most human: In June of last year Mary left for Honolulu “for a long rest” after the ordeal of the murder investi- gation in which she and her mother were sd innumerable times, n days ga quizz While plaintive Hawalian trummed in w brilliant hotel, music Mary at outside by the waves of the Pacific, iting in her diary of the happy days she had spent with her lover “It ig night again, dearest, our) time of peace and surcease from |the stress of life that grows #0 weiry at times, Morning will be all too soon and with it will begin ar. | thinking things they | me| Janeg down, put my arms about him | heaymns. eek tolT can seo “His face was cold, but suddenly | nv. duck: | wiar and LATTI TAR alls Boy “Sheik’’; Youth Is Killed KIDNAPERS ROB DEBS TO SPEAK AND BEAT MAN HERE IN SEPT, | | Three Men in. in Car Attack | Venerable Socialist Leader Victim With Bar to Talk in Arena | Kidnaped by three men ty an! Hugene V. Dobs, venerable auto, who beat him into OD | of th oclaliat party in America, v clousness with an irop ba bed | be aker on the afte on 39th ave, N., early Wednesday Plans for his reception are in th morning, Sam Bolego, Puget ound | hands of labor organizations o: hotel, wa found by the pol at/ att which are co-operating in the 30 a. m. and was taken to th of his prog were treated, t: ism and Freedom.” Holego later told the police that A musical program is being pre he was. atar Weler at,,| pared un the direction of Mra near Fourth ave, 8. wh nree| Hattie W, Titus, A 20-p! hes men drove up in an tra will play and there will be violin jumped out and forced get | selections by Mme. Rizagara and a nto the machine al duet by Misses Violet and Rose The car was driven toward the hfort Adenly attacked. uspices of the Central Th rf the bandits ar eptember 14 ba: forind ‘ vered re 4 here indicate that Band Concert for Seward Park Picnic Rainier valley family piente 1 HERE’S MORE ABOUT being held Wednesday, will be given ‘ by Adama’ band at 6 p.m. The 7 STARTS ON PAGE 1 |‘) sioes ; | Mr. Wi th t tot naa 42 Mt ain Malden's I ie moval 0 victims to the Odd | Tabitaky morgue, in Kemmerer, was As! Herbert the cars came up the main shaft} *'ty Goosle “Eu 7 ig rb the thow i watcher urged thru Hack, Ne 0 Halt the guard r r 1 | The cargoes were more grim | | because on several caps of dead | miners the electric mine lamps still burned, casting weird shad. ows about HERE’S MORE ABOUT GERMANY STARTS ON PAGE 1 the bodies to Tho Kem merer was rough roads are « to a breaking of the popu ¢ is so bad for @ nation a But a pe th the great past whe mnianiet on {of 1 We st news of it spread. Ri SW CHANCELLOK | om furrounding camps| WARNS FRANCE In the weary task of life, Life ernment reacue car were| Throwing a warning to” Fran without you, dearest, ts weary. Our | q the scene. It was five|Stresemann sald it would not b love was like @ great white star| and a bh s after the explosion | safe to press the German people too that burns its way. across the | Defore of the survivors came to|far. Disruption, t would mean | the bolahevism, a poison that “would not They atp dancing inside Those who went into the mine [halt within German borders." them thru the window.| during the night fought their Dr. Cuno, it was reported, has} |The lovély gowns look like bright-| way thru debris, fallen timbers, | been 1 foned as the new German coloted ballosns against the dark| rock and earth to the scene of |anbassador for Washington, a post | background. Ob, Desmond, my| the blast with the greatest diffi. | be wo ly accept. wt not} culty, They found evidences that | Ber! aft so far fi a desperate panic underground | * minor cl e you #0 had caused many deaths, night, in which one man was wound. | OTHER SUITORS FAILED TO WIN “I kissed him and put a red roso| Despite the whispered words of in his hand. Then the door opened.| other suitors in the year that fol The undertaker was there. I went|lowed, Mary still longed for her away.” |dead lover, In June of this year Calm, after the anguish of reveal-|sho wrote: ing intimate details of her romance; “How long, oh long, my with the murdered man, Mary today | love, until you clasy in faced the world with a heart freed|your dear arn from the stifling weight it has borne| Telling of {th Ta: since the slaying. Hior, Mary sald From a curtained sick room of| “I first met him when I was 17 |the house Mary deserted to “lead/and knew he was the one man her own life," her mother, Mrs.jin the world for me. I felt h ihelby, let word go out that sh®| reciprocated my love. When I had adolescent became worried bec IT was pop tractive to men. men I came in contact | "The fe ret |for both her and mother. Margaret }is older and mother thought she |should have first chance. “That was the way it was when |I met Destnond. He was so tender | | | | | | n | }and understanding. has not seen her mother,| put mother soon | OVER E He called often. oticed his prefer ence for my company and put stop to it. Until then she had had only words of praise for him.” MOTHER F TENT “When Desmond and I engaged, mother was furious,’ said, “and forbade our seeing other. I was angry and told mond of it. “Your mother knows best, Mary,’ he would say, ‘I am an old man.’ became Mary each Des- “Then I would kiss his words | aw I wanted to be married at once. But he would caution: ‘Wait} a while, Mary, I don’t want to be blighting your career or break with your family.’ “So I met him secretly him passionate, impulsive ters. One or two were and publiahed—altho he kept them all. “Then mother took me to Hurope. Ho also went to Europe, but mother kept away from him all the cause and wrote love let discovered me 4| time. came back I continued seo him. Then one morning rushed into my room and detective had come to tell had been murdered "After we to mother [sald a her Desmond s received reports from|On earth could have ktpt us apart!) other sald some very mean things Jabout him and said it would teach mo a lesson about how to behave myself in the future. “During all the long questioning, mother and her attorney did all the talking for me. I was in structed to say nothing more than I had to. They had painted me as a littie girl who had only had childlike affection for Mr. Taylor. But it was the big love of my life and it always will be.’ Logger Accused of Robbing Book Store Accused of stealing a number of books from the Archway book store, |‘Third ave, and Pike st., J. H. ‘Tom lin, logger, was arrested In an book store at 622 Pike st, by | Patrolman M, W. Palmer Tu have Tomlin is alleged night been trying to sell the books when he wag arrested. He was held tn the county jail Wednesday on an open charge, stage mother |' This was a bitter pill} had secretly | In miners, fear t, had rushed blind! at until encountered Kases that were seeping thru the entries. | | Then they piled up hopelessly against | fired on a ators, | ome canes, groups |¢d seriously when pollc wd of demonstra madden y the | they the di |Ex-Congressman Is Coolidge Secretary an {impenetrable barrier and died SHIN Aug. 16-—C: Bas struggling, com Slemp, former republican con-| ESO! kressman, from Virginia, was ap-| sais pointed secretary to President Cool HERE’S MORE ABOUT |) taco yesterday | ] Sler retired from congress last terms ns re: | Virginia dis ntative of the Ninth t. For many years he] republican representa ia. He entered con STARTS ON PAGE 1 kson Counciiman I ‘ coming back to the} as of municipal govern Pardon fx present republican me, you have al-|state chairman for Virginia, i this city an inestimable _ ~ jamount of harm by the promulga | ANNUAL MEET ‘The the | institu eople stand for it? Our state | ions for people afflicted with mental diseas 6 filled with peo- ple who are many tines less dan-| |gerous to the community than your 18th annual convention ‘est of the Norwegian Singe: fon of the Pacific coast came or} jhumble self. close in Bellingham Monday | | nt with a banquet in the Hotol |AMUNDSEN DUE} tera Th oclation, with Prof. Ru-| h Moller, of Seattle, as director, |A T NOME SOON| | accepted the invitation of the Seattle NOME, Aug. 15. — Capt. Roald|Chorus to come here next year. Amundsen and the remains of his| At the election of officers Melvin trans-polar flight expedition are due|Sylijaasen, of Seattle, was made| to arrive here in a day or two, ac-| president, and John Sether, also of cording to radio advices from tho| Seattle, first vice president. Two] coast guard cutter Bear, Amundsen, the Bear dispatches state, 1s aboard | other Seattle men were put in execu tive offices, while one from Portland | |the cutter. Ho boarded it at Point|and two from Everett were elected | Barrow, where his base of supplies| At the close of the convention, the'| was located. |new president, Mr. Sylli | clared that with the attractions Seat tle offered, he expected to see more than 400 active singers with from 500 to 2,000 visitors from all over coast, including British Colum- in attendance next year. Mrs. Coolidge Worries | Secret Service Guard She Finds Being President’s Wife Has Its Discomforts; Likes to Go ) Shopping Alone |not run out like this It {#}momber we Polnt Barrow {s the most. norther. \1y point reached by the cutter in its annual pilgrimages, Nome has been expecting Amundsen to return to/1 Seattle via this route for some|th weeks, bia, BY FLORA G, WASHINGTON, Aug. orn 165. all alone, Re. are responsible for your hard to get used to being the presi-| safety. dent's wife. | Mrs. Coolidge gasped a little, then Mrs, Calvin Coolldge, living in the | she apolog m sorry,” sho said New Willard hotel In comparative ob-| "Hereafter I'll let you know when. the wife|ever I'm going out The next day when she went shop seurity for several years as | of a mere vice president of the United States, used to run out and do her) ping and for a little walk, she w own shopping whenever sho felt s0|accompanted, Mrs. Coolidge doesn't inclined. |'ke it. It seems so queer to her to When she camo to Washington | have someone following her when she suddenly from Plymouth, Vt. she|/has been used to so much freedom, found conditions changed |But sho realizes that's part of the Tho first day she was here Mrs.|gamo and thinks she will soon got Coolldge needed a marcel wave. She| used to it. always used to go to a little beauty | It was only Monday that Mra, Coot parlor across the street when she was|{dge's trunks arrived from North. here before, #0 she sald, “There are|ampton, She had very little chance so many people around here, I'll Just |{o assemble her wardrobe before com walk down to the second floor and|ing to Washington from Plymouth, take the elevator at the other end of| Her baggage up to this time is said the hotel and slip out the I° st, dgor|to have consisted of ono suitcase. all by myself.” |Newspapor correspondents will stand She did this, but when she camo | witness to the fact that no one would back the secret service men were|have guessed this, however. On ev: waiting for her. Very sternly they|ery occasion sho has been gowned said to her, “Mrs, Coolidge, yousmust | charmingly and in excellent tasta, | coming | Mitchel FINAL CLEARANCE OF All Summer Apparel DRESSES At Sensational Pricings: embodied in these os offer values Dresses of like Dre beaut! 4 from a host of materials for ashic popular $19.75, $24.75, $29.75, $34.75 Matchless Values in Sport Coats You'll marvel at the quality of material and the ¢ ptional smartness of these Sport Coats. They have been regrouped regardless of cost or former price, in order to sell rapids $12.50, $17.50, $24.75, $29.75 Complete Stock of SUMMER HATS At Two Remarkable Prices: $1.95, $2 95 Suits Unbelievably Low Priced Three-piece Knic erbocker Suits and Suits of Poiret Twill and Gaberdine are shown in this re-grouped lot. The Upstairs Store That Saves You Money Second and Union, Seattle, Wash. ar Want Ads sell, 'HOLD WALKER .2%.0"%, oa soe RITES TODAY |e-sitzace 20 Those who| Perhaps you need a. new: steno. Phone Main | Place 4 little Want Ad in The Star als jana you can quickly fill her. place. had lived in 8 was bor in England, America in 1862 nd the government service mountains | Idaho. Hel attle sin to as mail carrier over the Hupmobile Now on Display in. Our Salesrooms The great value offered in the Hupmobile enabled us to increase of wa northern Utah and a shoemaker in Seattle at the | 10 of the big fire in 1889. His | wife died three years ago, and he} is survived by three daughters sora two sons in Seattle. They are Mrs. | W. J, Atwell, 2412 10th ave, N.;| Jano and Clara Walker, and Wil-| our Seattle retail sales 309% for liam and Ernest Walker. | the first six months of this year The funeral services are under over the same period of last year. the ausploes of the Latter Day} The 1924 Hupmobile Is Saints Church Still Greater Value $1,420.00 in Seattle TAKE A TRIAL RIDE TODAY Sunset Motor Company Northwest Distributors Seattle Tacoma Hupmobile @ MONOLITH PLASTIC \WATERPROOF (PORTLAND: .CEMENT A number ot oil containers said to be among Work of this kind requires a concrete which is both the largest in California are being constructed of waterproof and oilproof, and has unusual s Monolith Plastic Waterproof Portland Cement The & same qualities which make Monolith exadly at the plant of the Pan-American Petroleum suited to the construéion of concrete oil Company located in . containers, also makes Watson, near San it admirable for other Pedro, California, ) Detroit Debutante to Marry General | DETROIT, Mich,, Aug.«15.—The| engagement of Mics Elizabeth Trum. | bull Miller, prominent Detroit society | debutante, to Brig. Gen. William | istant chief of the arm was announced here late a nir service, yesterday he romance started at the na- alr races at Selfridge field last tion Gen. Mitchell {is officially credited with being the first American flyer to cross enemy lines in the world war. For Sale by All Building Material Dealers MONOLITH Portland Cement MONOLITH Plastic Waterproof Portland Cement sanufacture two coms t—ene is Monolith Portland ha. eatery ie ve is Monolith Portland Cement, a utic Waterproof Portland Cement. aah grade nior Poritnd Filly guranted under tendard spcfatons. ering from sour dealer be mire to specify “which cement you desire. MONOLITH PORTLAND CEMENT CO. 648 Hibernian Building Write for Phone:, Pico 6156-6157 Los Angeles, Callan Booklet Plant at Monolith, Cal.

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