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First in N eer Tonight Maximum, {ll WEATHER moderate “. Today neon, 41, eee and Sunday westerly winds. ure Last M Hours Minimum, 31. fair; wer the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star Batered as Second Class Matter May 3, VOLUME 24. NO, 13. We're wonderful! Such art! Such artistry! We're Bull” Montana! : glad we learnt it! ose IT’S UP TO You Dan Landon sald that we'd mever get into the movies be cause we're not as handsome as John Barrymore. LET THE fu BLIC CHOOSE! When our “movie” wked “Jake,” our photographer, fesert a picture of our little bull, Be negative. the movies made “at The Liverty, Dea't push, girls! 7 We hope that e want mity to see this great leather handbag left tn my parked on Park Owner can ba tisement fin. Now Se our little bull Gee, key. wan! Bow could she get off never was on! eee TODAY'S PUZZLE Dear Homer Brew Bes a Capper. what wi A. 3. & Dea A. J. 8 Ro wil: vrobably be a young Shimmy brew be the Ure at Fight of Royal Flush.” tle Star headline. Such | Just ‘We didn't know there was so much © acting In the movies, but now} was taken we) to but be. ax a photographer, answered in| the management mt raise the price of admission. to give everyone an oppor sereen Mayor Caldwell is back on the job we'll have a chance to & wonderful caoer was Mamie Me- | Be never was known to get off the Bie never was known (0 get off—aw, when she If a wobbly mar- oft. I hate to tell you, but “Poker Player Dies of Heart Fait - sane have Sai Jafet Lindeberg Granted Writ of} Habeas Corpus in San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO, March 11. —Superior Judge Harold Louder. | back today granted a write of ha- beas corpus asked by Jafet Lindebers, banker, wanted in Ta- coma, Wash., on charges grow- ing out of a bank failure there. The writ was asked by Lindeberg following his arrest here, three weeks | ago, after Gov. Stephens had granted | the request of Gov. Hart of Wash-| ington for extradition. | Lindeberg claimed that an attempt | was made to “kidnap” him and rush | him out of the state: that his extra-| dition was irregular, and that he oth.) erwise had been denied his rights. He has been lving here at the Thome of W. H. Metson, his brother. inlaw, and since hig arrest has been at liberty on ball Lindeberg’s attorneys declared insuance of the writ was a com- plete victory for them, and that it had closed all avenues “to Washington suthorities whieh they might return Linde- bers to the juriadictlen of Wash. ington courts, In granting the writ, Judge Loud: | erback declared that in the proceed: | Ings leading up to issuance of the ex: | tradition warrants by Gov, Stephens, | | no crime had been shown. He de clared that the evidence indicatea that even if the crime with which Lindeberg was charged had been committed. the bank, and not Linde | bers, would have profited. Deputy County Attorney Roudebush, of Pierce county, Wash ington, representing the Washington authorities, asked the court to stay operation of the writ for 20 days. He| permit granting such a stay. Washingion authorities have no appeal from Louderback’s de | cision, 1¢ was said by lawyers not | connected with the case, ax well | as by Lindeberg’s attorneys, | FREE SLAYER; HOLD WITNESS = If he hadn't he might shot. | t Hays, postmaster general, had | ‘ mi no sooner taken attics than some. 2 Leary Killer Not Blamed; y came along and offered him William Bethel Arrested $156,009. Don't betiev No one of. fered Co ciiman W. H. Moore that much to resign. Frank E. Leslie, 29, bollermaker. the bed ving -"s 1 Ferdinand st, who hot and killed John A. O'Leary, a former prize fighter and a member of the rmakers’ union, ear Fri Union wooden + : arnt that the harbor isn't large enough all of them. “ee SODA SONG oF The Decline of Poesy Lord Hiyron was a nanghty boy Whe guvzied gin und beer— Hie singing brought ushely joy His voice was sweet and clear Bob Barns drank And reveled every night His ballads wreathed bh And taught the world delight hhisky every day cats, the Nightingale, took wine, SPP Sheiley tippied, too— ‘At the their music was divine ‘They were a drunken crew! Now ail our bards are strictly pare brow with bay day morn did so in self-defen: ucoording to a verdict of a coroner's Jay noon ecutor Malcolm Doux arrest, in th t William Bethel, n, on @ enarge of pro It 5 lodged in the city jail or $500 ball. Leslie was the prosecutor, Douglas took the stand that O'Leary and Bethel had provoked the assault by reasor and following Lesiie to a lonely spot for the purpose of arguing with him. Mrs. H. H. Dawson Is | Slugged by a Thug ind go te santoth astieot On tnindit de! aha ord hey do not - e fool b . “4 hey do net play the foot t View drive at 8:20 p. m. Fr Prom soda bar to soda tar Mrs. H. H. Dawson Second They wend their quiet way— W,, wae taker ser home Set Tt matters y what they are— ‘ " Not what they have to way urday, where her condition was said Bay rar hedews each bardiet’s brow— | ioting Gat Mrs, Dawson He pipes with watery’ glee— poring AE oy lh a A pep-shep crowns © ympas he ft ay I I Dawson. Sh And Helicon f id the police that the bandit, after Figger (with newep ment, had rifled her purse but ou Henry, that ever to get any money. She wa } “Well, I'm sorry; but | notified, She ha bared toe t help it. If I quit drawing |gaturday ‘by physicians and her | ny brea 1 die, too daughter. ss.. 7 avis to Succeed Infant Is Tested Ys Rea as U Regent | y regent board in Knee-Deep Creek * ex H. Da rman of the c cor of th BELLINGHAM, March 11.—Be f repr ative 1s | Meved to ha been a tim of 1 t of the Unt-|eramps while wad in water that t ernor was just knee deep, the two-year-old 4 A. Rea, who,|son of H. W. vans, formerly of ¢ ppointment, served attle, was drowned in) Whatcom SATTL Ek, WASH. at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congr: SATURDAY we March 3, 18 enn . Per Year, by Mall, $5 to #9 ews—First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)—Call Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home--50 Cents a Month—Why Pay More? 1922, MARCH 11, GRIEVE OUT Johnny Fight. He's L, Folks A Foul, Pipe, Mother’ Bit Too * * * * * Fi ‘ghting Prof ession Mourns for O'Leary By Hal Armstrong Singly, in pairs, ir. downcast groups of three or four, all Rex! day yesterday and today to the county morgue went youths and men, mostly with battered visages and cauliflower ears a strange procession—sad, and, for the most part, silent. promoters, | was told that California law does not | referees, towel Loys and fans—went in, paid their respects, Boxers, trainers, sparring partners, fight and came away, quietly, with little or no comment. O'Leary Has Fought His Last COU NTED| ying, Stiff And Cold, On A Slab And Some Are Saying He Died In The Act Of Committing Hitting A Man From Behind }, With A Lead | But The “Loving In The Ring Find That’s A Hard To Believe. JAP LED FRAMING OF PACT Shidehara Chief | Author of Four-, Power Pacific! Treaty BY A. | United Press 5 (Copyright, 1 BRADFORD aft Correspondent the United Pree) | WASHINGTON, March 11 — The four-power Pacific treaty was framed around the arms conference table from drafts | submitted by Seeretary of State | Hughes, Arthur J, Balfour and | | Ambassador Shidehara of Japan. It is & composite picture of the drafts presented by the leaders. No one man wrote the pact, as has been charged in the senate, And The Men! altho the treaty In its final form ; more nearly resembles the draft He Met prepared by Shidehara, Its for. mation was prompted by Anglo dapanese sugre » that a new treaty be drawn to serap the An- gloJapanese alliance, | Thie is the answer to the question, | “Who wrote the fourpower pact?” —now the center of the-etormy de |bate in the senate which threatens to menace ratification of the treaty [Tt is based on information obtained when the United Press exclurively | wave ca the first news that | the tr amed and ap proved by the “big three” and on other information co! ted since the conference from reliable diplomatic sources. ‘The “inside story” jframing is this Prince Tokugawa, dapancse delegate, made the first pablic | suggestion that an understand ing between the United States, of the treaty’s Great Britain and Japan be framed to replace the Anglo- Japanese alliance. He then, at a dinner, broached the subject to Artbur Balfour and Sir Auck land Geddes of the British dele- Cold, dead, on a slab, covered with up with the union. He didn’t carry gation } &@ sheet, inside there, lay the shell of} no gaspipe. | The British approved plan him who had been but a few years! 4 GOOD, STRAIGHT bat gested there might be ago their idol of the ring, the rugged. | UNION MAN SISTER AND BROTHER MOURN FOR HIM and helped wash the some difficulty in getting it thru lightning-like, hard-hitting “fighting “He was a good, straight union the senate, Tokugawa replied it harp.” the Trish kid. Johnny | man, was Johnny. He didn't believe might be in the form an ai O'Leary lin borrowing money from the union derstanding,” not necessitating He lay there witn a revolver bullet |and then hing at ‘em. He went senate ratification, instead of a in the heart that had carried him|out there to talk to that man and| treaty, thru many a bi get him to join up with the union! fughes, early in the conferenc gloves up to the and act square, But he didn't carry |informed Palfour and Kato, chi ¢ profession.” nO KANT he wasn't made of that | Japan de that this cour “They say he hit a man from be- kind of stuff stood for the scrapping of the | hind with a gaapipe,” said one, as he| “That man packed a gun; Johnny jance and that the conference mig came out, bitter! I can't believe it | didn’t a gun. Do you mind he nd (Turn to Page 2, Colamn 5) not of Johnny O'Leary to Canada and won the While the procession passed thus, ship and then went to Cali solemn and cast down, all day, af and cleane all up, and sweet-faced, kindly woman, out went back Bast and licked the cham a home at 2405 Irving st. paused the we He d no often in her work to go quietly inte e, did y | the bedroom off the living room He wan alwa uch @ good boy RA PAGE AGAIN and close the door and dry her | are the house mother said tears and come out again smilin et ss ane athe bravely—Johnny O'Leary's ST ceca Fear Felt for Hundreds of Families | minority, “Two CENTS IN SEATTLE WIDOW’S SON Here's Albertis Peppard, Aged 9, Goin’ On 10, Who's Going To Be The Widow's Son In The Oratorio To Be Given At The Arena April 4 to 7. Montgomery Lynch Asked The Star To Find A Boy And We Found Albertis And We Think It Was A Pretty Good Job. Don’t You? Photo COME ON, K.K.K., (THEATER MAN SAYS EVERETT IS MURDERED Town Fails to Get Excited | Friend of Taylor Slain in Over Visitation the East CAMDEN, N. J, Mareh 11— Under mysterious circumstances, EVERETT, March 11.—Activities | of the Ku Klux Klan in Everett will not be investigated by the local au 0 der 7 thorities, at least #o long as those| Tecalling the mu: path Lc activities are of as harmless a nature| Desmond Taylor, John T. Bru- as of Thursday night, when| nen, a theatrical promoter and five white-hooded men interrupted | friend of the Los Angeles direet- services in the First Baptist church. | or, was slain here last night, nalb cnet: bed ed nacen vf Three men were seen to drive cverett residents apparen ly do not take the Klan seriously, | ™P 0 his home and later he was found dead. A charge of buck- shot had been fired into the back those With the exception “I would welcome a personal visit if they would leave an envelope of | greenbacks, like they did at that| of his neck. apparently from a church,” is an oft-repeated remark | sawed-off shotgun. that seems to express the general | Brunen was round some time after one of three men was seen to enter his home. No shot was heard by the neighbors and the sentiment | This refers to Thursday night's oc- | currence, when the leader of the five AIRMAN HURLS DEATH! ‘British Empire Is | Facing Revolt as Unrest Grows P ° LONDON, March 11.— |An Exchange Telegraph | dispatch from Johannes- |burg today says that an |aviator, flying low, drop- ped a bomb on a eal <a with strikers at | blown up and a majority | of those inside killed. LONDON, March 11.—The | Lloyd George government to- |day was faced with the fol- Pana! difficulties: Lax general strike in the Secincering trades thru- band ind, involving direc a and martial law indirectly, a in the Rand district of South Africa, where Boers have joined the striking gold miners. —Native uprisings momen- tarily feared thruout In- dia, following the arrest of the non-co-operationist leader, | Ghandi. —Irish factions threaten- i each other in both | North and South of Ireland. | p—Demands for restoration of the sultan of Turkey | and abandonment of the Brit- ish mandate in Palestine. (CONFLICT IN GOLD REGION JOHANNESBURG, South Afri- ca, March 11—Benoni and Brak- delivered a commendatory note and | “ ii "i fh ining a donation of currency to Rev. W arth penny t,he: to. Oot pan, South Ai sold y : ¢ the h away. centers, were captured today by E, Henry, pastor of the church ‘The slain theatrical man had strikers, aided by bands of Boers, Law enforcement officials, while] been seated near a window read- after a battle in.which 21. a0nn |stating that no investig of the | ing an account of the trial of stables were killed, according to Klan is contemplated, hint at @) Mrs, Madalynne Obenchasin for | feports reaching here today. change of front should the Knights! the murder of J. Belton Ken- | Fighting continues at Fords. of the Klan attempt apy lawless | burg and Jeppes, with heavy act tives called in on the case! casualties. ‘ pointed to what they called startling | Isimilarity between the slaying of ae —— Flee jBrunen aad the mysterious etarder th $30, 000 Loot of Taylor February 1 at his Los An geles home. The fact that in neither BROWNSVILLE, Pa. March 11 instance was Deputy sheriffs and state police | murderer seen after the crime led are pursuing six bandits who staged them to consider a possible connec: 1 shot heard nor the | It is feared the strikers may capture central Johannesburg. Casualties reported in sporadic bat- tles between miners and police at mining towns near here have reached a total of 40 killed and more | than 100 wounded, . a on D he dinin ‘001 went «wiftly to the bedroom, | te if ~ . i 4 by the H ning Me om ta f ts t room| a daring holdup on a street car near | tion between the two crimes. | LONDON, March 11.— Boers are indow sa arie © ex-fighter’s and came bac "7 | here today and escaped with a pay Brunen was known to circus and} i oct faust De ggyny Pho amis 7 pig aol a) aad : | here ‘0 olre 4 | joining striking gold miners in the younger a lovely huddie of pt dah A 2 Mi “ Tenn. March ss 1 | POU of $80,000 belonging to the W. J. | theatrical folk ag “Honest John.” He Rand, British Union of South Africa, damp misery i piece owe hades o ith b . eRe a Bi ci a Rainey Coal Co. at Allison |was said to have been friendly with|where 10 police were killed in @ Danny, the boy his famous broth See A sg have (ote jood stage in 36 Elmer Hill, a guard with the pay-|Taylor. He 48 years old and /pitched battle and martial law has er was training to take his adde Ee ae ees onli ee | master, was shot and wounded Proprietor of the Doris-Ferris travel-| heen proclaimed, according to a Jo in the prizering soon, hunched be | been going to aes fleeing from the lowlands in Tenne ing circus. sburg dispe tava his taneral nday at 9 o'clo s Arkar nd Mississippi. | jhannes burg dispatch today. hind the stove, crushed, utterty. . : es ge A F ¥ “hs barons ‘gr pea: | There were no signs of a struggle | DAY OF TERROR nd in the parlor proud old Job im, the saa om ry de parelliys ne familie < ed to the jin the room in which Brunen w nf ee ee eaten |{come—all his friends. It will be &t|nomes after the first alarm. Others im ihe room in which Brunen was | FOLLOWS ATTACKS YLeary, the father iken-hearted, | stary’s chur at 20th ave. and remained on high land as the river | AID TO JAPS be gadltnilies logit ntly eon seat’! A day of terror followed attacks grieved by himself, and thought eo st. And they can see him at | contin . slowly d reading when the murderer fired |). miners in the Boksburg area and Lan And continued rising y- from ind him, part of a charge and thought ‘a, the undertaker’s, all day OM ey — Malool: Pees chind Me (Benont. Bie 6° Saath ha vig, | Manning n ; | Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm | o¢ gmail} shot entering behind his pre t j : hit (Turn to Page 2, Column 2) : ° Douglas said Saturday he would|ear and tearing away part of his| 4 three months’ strike of gold an ee ag pipe, Proves : Convict 14 Men in probably appeal to the supreme |akull, It is believed he was taken |™inCrs in tae Randi sattict be to man with a as-pi pe how he c r a . in asing disorders between s' ers | rF Ae court the case of J. D. O'Connell in \ny surprise and shot without seeing |! " : didn | Fault Line Slip | Vigilante Rioting | wiich Suage Mitchen Gilliam Friday |p) Pree {end police. Gag: oeywasn Dice aa agreed Dad O'Leary, ve-| Cause of Temblor) prisxcwron, ina, march 11.—| handed down a decision that land | mG | wiiten: wale cibninated. Yenc enapeiaty boy wasn’t the wort] san PRANCISCO, March 11.—|Fourteen of the 137 men indicted on | held by a trustee for sale or dis-| THE MINNEWATHA CLUB and Gen. Jan Silitte peehsbas: ote to be using a gas-pipe. H hadn't fcientists tod: attributed yester-|a riot. charge following the activities was personal property and not | the Chamber of Commerce will enter- | union of South Africa, announced ts the need of it, had Johnny pres urthquake in the southern of miner vigilantes in this vicinity | subject to selzure under the étate| tain all Shriners and their families |the legislative assembly: He hadn't that,” she said, “Why, | nait of California to further slippage | last summer were found guilty by a/alien land law at Christensen’s hall, on Broadway, x * 4 . ae “We are faced with one of the he wouldn't ‘ve even hurt a dog, | on ¢) Andreas fault line, which | jury in Gibson county circuit This law was passed by the last|at a dance, from 9 p. m, to atur:| eravest crises which bas ever arene or let anybody else, not Johnny cuties e disastrous earthquake of |court here legislature to prevent the holding of | day, in South Africa.” i “What was that man that killed | 1994 | A xentence of 90 days and a fine| valuable property in this state by | - ‘The fact that parties Of Bows halal him carrying a gun for?” Dad The fault line runs thru the great. |of $100 was imposed in each case Japanese | ‘ 4 4 ins t ul ¥ : < joined with the strikers, who are at: O'Leary asked Ar 7 man. doesn’t | er part of ¢ niforain and prob; ly The vigilantes ve trom fe ie ne ented Saturday, Bvten TEXT SUGGESTED BY tacking gold mines at Brakpan, carry gun unle ne dirt'’s in|into the sea off the coast, with |southwestern Indiana mining district |las commented Saturday, “provides Fordsburg and Benoni has increased to him, to get him to go and square ' mountain n imported to take their jobs. for evaders of the law BE USED BY DIVINE Martial law was immediately ae Using the text, yne God and Father of us all, above all, thru Yr ! all, in_you all," suggested by Av ridge Mann, special feature writ er for The Star, in his® column SEATTLE has its Henry Ford [its rodent population, sue First ave. certificates. Pay) would cost $2.25, and those who|| March 1, Rev, Carl IH. Veazie W He is FE. Teesdale, cook by trade,| Hi lan is quite simple—mere} | abo labor and buy material with them. | neither toil nor spin would get that pastor of the Prospect Congrega [orator by avoeation and empire build. | the ption of Henry Ford's plan| Make them so they will pay taxes;/extra $1 The money chan, |] tional church, 20th ave. and Pros- inclination for the issuance currency on an|any money that will pay taxes is the temple hold the purse strings || Peet st. will preach a sermon at He says he will lead a delegation | industrial instead of a gold basis al. As the certificates come into{of the nation, They are the state,|| 11 & m. Sunday at his church from the Central Labor Council be- | He has modified it, of course, to con-|the city treasury in payment of] “The citizens of Seattle could re Avridge Mann sug ed that fore the city council Monday to show | form to municipal instead of nationai| taxes destroy them. By this meth-| store shipyard times in 10 days.” aS clatayanen setae. 60 the gand the city fathers how unemployment | conditions od it would not cost one cent to| Mr. ‘Teesdale doesn’t mention how || Ponts of the creeds to which they can be banished from the city as He would start by paving First] pave the avenue jthe city would make up the deficit quickly and ax easily the Pied |ave., doing the work on a day lk In the usual way, by selling|caused by “destroying the cortiti-| few Bebiy as hii Piper {reed the town of Hamlin of | plan instead of by contract. bonds, cach dollar’s worth of work | cates, Bib ane clared thruout the Rand district. In the Newlands districts, west of (Turn to Page 2, Column 3) ‘Mayor Indifferent to Election Rac Mayo. Caldwell, on his return to |his office Saturday after a two months’ trip to the Orient, again re- iterated that he for mayor. | He added that he had given the |coming mayoralty elections little con- jenna and would not back any was not a candidate of the candidates, at least until after the filings were closed ~ Benoni. The building was” “i a ye