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On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Sta Bntered a2 Becond Class Matter May 9, 1899, ot the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, ). Per Year, by Mall, $6 to 69 VOLUME 24, NO. 102. <i SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1922. TWO CENTS IN SEA’ Woman to Be Hanged as Georgia a iS Men’s Protest Against Suffrage! SOUTH RAG She Saved Soldiers From German Bombs Pi] MURDER [Southern Jury Astonishes a Tonight and Saturday, fair and wormer; fresh northeast- J erly winds, ‘Temperature Last 24 Hours 66. Minimum, 54, noon, 66. ing 5 ‘Held Ready f Ee : +8 State by Decreeing That! puiy in mine Elsie Janis and Legion Hobnob Monday, (fF ()FFICIAIS | Husband-Slayer Die; Sex Mine Falls From Its Pedestal ey By Dudley A. Siddall TLANTA, Ga., June 23.—Twelve Southern men | have voted to hang a Southern woman. This in Georgia, a state famous for the chivalry of its men to- . , |ward its women. Date of her execution is set for July 28. unds exist for the statement of Col. William joward, prominent Atlanta lawyer, that women are ing from their man-created pedestal and must pay the penalty for crime as men because of-— Woman suffrage and invasion of men’s fields in business! He cites Georgia’s well-known antipathy toward the suffrage movement, in spe a the in. the case of Mra, Cora Vinson, She and killed her husband, Dr. W. D. Vi , in his Atlanta office last March. ety tor to the jury, ‘‘and I wor pats i { recommendation of mercy. quest wal’ tn effect, 70 4) feos Bs ily / cB a life sentence. car " t : re ¥ Yet the jury returned with a women. They have held women on verdict of guilty without a» \* pedestal. In the past this chivalry recommendation ! Assassin of Sir Henry Wi Golf balls are now being manufac- tured that sell for $9 a gross. This fant much of a holp. We can’t even hit a gross of golf balls. eee for mercy. |has been carried into our jury There was nothing for Judge | rooms. It has been almost impos- John D. Humphries to do but | sible for a jury. of men to find @ Wy y With China and Ireland witnessing om | hae Se investigation all sorts of horrible assassinations, | im Oe oak ctue notion: aver! ae tion, unverified, that O’Brien is a sentence Mrs. Vinson to hang. woman guilty of a serious crime. pecogdee pans strikebreakers here wai > ate Sail a tee tree United States citizen, Lawyers, officials and citizens, “But of late years,” Col. Howard re ys happens except a few lynchings, A great round-up of Sinn Fein | were amazed at the action of the| continued, “the women of Georgia, His Sew could be learned, f suspects in London continued | Jurors. As such crimes go, this was like women of other states, have agency had yet made a move to tots ders a week? mine riots and pur e ish those guilty of the attacks @ murders. Be: Officials took the attitude that #i would be impossible to obtain - fication of any of the mob due to the evasiveness of-the att this evening. Seventeen, eap- | 2° more shocking than scores for) shown a tendency to come down tured last night, who were to | which women have been freed or|from this man-created pedestal. have been released, were held at | sent to prison, Only once, 50 years| They have demanded equal rights, the last minute and others are |80, has a white woman been in politics and business. In. every sought. | hanged in Georgia. j way they have indicated their de- THEY LOVED EVERYBODY Elsie Janis coming to the Metro-| Ppolitan next week. Elsie was “the sweetheart of the A. E. F.,” no mean title, for the U. S. sure had an af} Other prominent British officials,| COMB. DOWN OFF sire to be treated as men, fectionate army in France. Inculding Lloyd George have been| OF THEIR PEDESTAL “Why then should a woman—sole- Seseltes 1 Blepsctr cai of obtat Serle marked for assassination by an Irish| Col, Howard, native Georgian, | !¥ on sex grounds—be accorded any | ODM w gree wait F. Almost time for June wedding} | rebel murder ring, the police believed | keen student of public opinion, | *Peclal privilege by a jury Bgeyy seein me not : rings @ be exchanged for something | today from disclonures following the| three times-a member of congress | Col. Howard's views are partly) \ii. ne bh be y po 4 serviceable in divorce suits. murder of Sir Henry Wilson, Ulster| and engaged by Dr. Vinuson’s son| borne out by an expression from Feel a we ad eee defense chief. |to aid the state in prosecuting the| ©. L. Bradley, who was foreman of eeling against C. A. McD The London police have captured | young man’s stepmother, played an|the Vinson jury. cern rd « ata who was sensational documents disclosing a) active part in the trial. He watched| “I believe," sald Bradley, “that aj p70 10") Oat. wae 8 eo bitter conspiracy to kill several prominent! every move, Here is his interpre.| Woman should pay the same penalty | in that his body was moved to | morgue in a neighboring city personages, as well as plans for @/ tation of the causes back of the| for crime as a man. There have)” on: | jury's verdict been recently several atrocious mur. | °Te¢Y: Officials feared that the Love may not shower ‘ Us old guys with But we all may thrill | To the radio kiss! | —O. Heck. campaign of outrages thruou' | i “ee gla |" “The men ot Georgia have always| “ers of husbands by their wives. pigeon pac angen = “Fifteen Sailors Lost."--The Star. The inquest {nto Sir Henry Wil-| been noted for their chivalry toward | (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) body precipitate @ drei rn S@ SGP Ne new outbreak. | son's murder will be held Monday. | —- Reecvobmerrsdchoah'w | ‘The nlayers of the famed field] STREETS OF MINE PE There goes the other half of our shart keep their heads down,” | marshal were given. a preliminary TOWNS ARE QUIET - sho fj ‘The morals of the Dr. Orlando} climbed pon on a table and start. {Rearing in Westminister police court || @¢ : ¢ + 9 Streets of southern Tilinets aia Miller party are shocking, dectares| 1918. x of her Inimitable dances, | today and were remanded for a week LC. un erriesS towns were quiet today. \ Mrs. Reid. Well, isn’t he trying to The 15th field artillery—the his Ske asipoul-an her werd Three factors led the police and A few small groups which start a moving picture company? unit in which Maj. Malcolm Down came the facee—and the | Military authorities to suspect that ou che: streets of Marton. Sen Sag Douglas, the prosecuting attor- rom Wilson's death may have been only 4 other mining communities fi bigs ~nagge Sesetag |the first blow of a widespread mur After Death Riots |which the mob of 2,000 was recruited, That’, just one of aw doren | der plot against opponents of re talked in hushed tones and usually im © aint eee roc te It was during the summer of ] i | We'll bet that Baron Kagene Fersen | mey, served—was in the lines, doin’ » lot of hard cursin’. back of Chateau Thierry for = stories that former soldiers love | pubiican Ireland, pre at ¢B sacl rng deg) | | to tell about Miss Janis, And ; ieee be ‘arene ene a x : j Life’s secrets he'll unfold— | brief breathing spell, and Elsie | Z : | A quantity of arms and muni The strike ‘aympathioecs SA But Doc Miller dido’t mins a live person.| " f that’s Just one of the many rea |tions, including band grenades and| HERRIN, lll., June 23.—Seventeen O'Neill, riding in @ small auto, |that the guilty will not be punisheds ee | Janis, musical comedy queen, why it's expected that the | Geiinite, within a house a stone's | bodies lying on crude stretchers inj toured the country for miles around, “They committed suicide; they J. H. B. thinks that Doc Brown, had come up to the trenches to Metropolitan theater will be pack- (throw of where Sir Henry Wilson |an improvised morgue here were the | traveling at high speed, sounding the| attempted to escape and they wouldn't be so peevish if he had at-| amuse the boys a» bit. ed Monday when Miss Janis, with | way shot down, was discovere jonly evidence left today of the bitter | call for the meeting. Today he de-| were shot,” were the two ex She had just been introduced to her all-ex-service cast, will give | 2 mvidence of 16 men and a wom-|mine battle fought on the outskirts | scribed “those who had gone berry planations of the killings most tended the Chehalis convention Sure, he'd be in better spirits a Letetegypers when the whir of a a benefit performance under aus- jan, arrested for questioning last!of this dreamy country village. picking.” frequently given by anyone whe a. os airplane was heard over. | plees of the American Legion, | night The sleepy, quiet town, with | The meeting, Willis said, was held] was found that would talk, pet, poediagenbge connate yea ep your heads down,” the co Elsie Janis which has bought out the house | 3—stories of witnesses to the| bungalows and homes and fe | two miles east of Herrin, ina grave.| For the most part, howdver, the to stop the # of liquor on U. 8.| sole OP Aybarite m2 Awad al roma and is selling tickets, shooting of Wilson agree that appar: |of being a mining community, was| As these were discussing the situa-| striking miners remained in thelr ~ ships. pany officers shouted—for the de No one knows what might have| Monday noon the American Legion | ent accomplices of the assassins were | peaceful, There were no miners with| ton, a commisscry truck carrying | hones. Th a! The first thing we know | tachment would certainly be spotted | nannened if Miss Janis hadn't sensed | will give a luncheon in honor of Miss |in the neighborhood and attempted | guns on their hips, or carrying sticks | Provisions to the strikebreaking min-| Even the local papers failed ta” ig they'll be trying to stop the sale of|!f they displayed their white faces|in¢ peri and taken charge of the| Janta at the L. C. Smith building rv«-| to divert the chase following them. | Gr dynamite. | * | ere passed the grove. give the Miltage tno ieee whisky here in Seattl | to the German aviators. The men! siruation: taurant. The public has been invited,| It was authoritively stated today| ie pite demands of leaders that| ‘The total number of bodies recove eee knew their danger—but their curios. |” rates tars inate rinereesaernsrame —Jthat the assassins, James O'Brien| The day was hot and about 75 rowA make no’ deertstration| dwredsarna heceeet: uae anna is ; ——m | 'ty was too much for them. Up i ih and James O'Connelly, operated in|™eM Sat around the city hall in over-| the commissary truck was fired on|Seventeen were in the morgue af” | RADIO MOTTOE:! |turned their faces—a great white conjunction with a large organiza. |%!8, smoking pipes. and the battle which ended 24 hours | Herring while the others were taken “God Bless Our Dete sea that provided an admirable tar mitra wer as |tion, Both were connected with the| ‘The morgue, located on a little side | jater was on, oe ee , + oe 6 ae ee Irish republican army; in what ca-|street, was locked The indifference of the Herrin peo-| Altho some reports reaching Colo- Our idea of a sickening sensation . pe seta oe gong r ae A few curious had faces pressed) ple to the battle was astounding. nel Hunter, representing the Nation a defeated candidate looking at Plent oO 1 uofr' “Connelly had been employed an )against the windows, looking at the! No newspepers carrying accounts |al Guard here, placed the total deaiiy , ak eaeabihies Ginter el times a pisht watchman at Richmond |sheet-coveréd bodies within. of the battle are allowed to be sold |list as high as 40, the military offie on an alley fence. | | Inae Just oppodite the entrance to|, A* mie union headquarters the | at news stands, cials believe all bodies had been re eee “Mr. Busch can talk all he {American ports. That being the ca ow Hh he ayaa yy ih ka | 200r was bolted. An old gray-headed| A jury was Impanelled by William covered. * As the U. S. shipping board, not F VOTE: wants to. But as long as Uncle {they can't understand why their life-| Dow ewe residence Iw located. Horn [kUstd said all of the boys were out | McGowan, coroner. After the jurors| “One’ or two bodies may be found Tennyson, wrote it i | Sam operates transoveanic pas- |iong habits should be changed just | tiers it wow said, resided at | Picking berries.” had been sworn in today, one mem-|in the woods, but I believe most of || And may there be no closing of the} senger liners in competition with | hecause there happens to be a Vol-|Crovdon, near the alrdrome, f ded at) “Ww. KE. Sneed, state senator and | ber said: those reported missing have em var | fi ae" | ‘ompanies he’s got to sell | stead act in the United States Croydon, near the alrdrome, for seme chief union, official in this district,| “Well, boys, let's adjourn until |caped,” Hunter said. When I put out to sea [Opposition to Hotel Leads) his ships.” “Take an Englishman, for .In-|. Predictions that the government’s|&# gone to Springfield to consult /Sunday.” And edjourn they did, VICTIMS’ BODIES pis ge | Chamber to Activit That's the way that Capt. | «tance, going from Victoria to Yoko: | existence would be jeopardized by the with state authorities, The only bitter remarks heard from | TERRIBLY MUTILATED bt ‘Thousands Slaughtered in Chinese y “Mike” Jensen, veteran master |hama. He's not an American and {death of Wilson, owing toa revulsion | Hugh Willis, a member of the|strike sympathizers today | were) Hodies in the morgue were terribly” War. wspaper | of the Admiral liner Pine Treo | j,6's not touching any American ports jof feeling against the present Irish |executive board, was the next rank-| against tha dead McDowell, first to} nutiiated, Arms or legs were mise At last China has become civil! Chamber of Commerce officials| State, now in port here, sums up | on hin voyage. Can you imagine him| policy, proved apparently unfounded |{9& Offictal lett in Herrin. He told pn in the haa ling and they were bullet-ridden, | ized |were busy Friday trying to per the |taking an American ship, if he|when commons, by 107 to 95, de \the union side of the story. McDowell was the only mine su-}arost of the dead still unclaimed were Sie |suade the Seattle Real Estate asso-| between Adolphus Busch and A. | couldn't get his brandy and soda on |feated a motion to adjourn | “Last Wednesday T went out to|perintendent, union leaders claimed, !rrom Chicago. They were sent here IVORY IDA SNORTS clation to reconsider the action it] D. Lasker, chairman of the ship: |it, when he knows that he can ‘ the mine of the Southern Tilinois | in Ilinois to violate his contract with |). a jabor agency and no step had Many an egg is cooked long | took Thursday when it adopted | ping board, over the operation of | aioard a C. P. R. liner? Not much Coal Co, ane palled on Bugerintend te ere rec i ob operate his|peen made to return them today. enough, but not soon enough. |resolution opposing the erection of| bars on American merchant ma- i | ent J. B. McDowell to ask him to ow 4 ent wen oul ee . a otal ob any land ‘net Owaed ou) TAS Bie And Americana don't steer | GAS PIPE CANNON stuns operating with atrilcedreakers,” |. ‘The 17 injured are being well cared | 7°, 0a" postponed Sata Speaking of wealthy men, this fel-| right by the hotel e ny. “1 don't mean to say," Capt. Jen- pe wud her Posey eopllgreday | EXPLODES; BOY IS he said, “McDowell told me to ‘get |for in the hospital here, Delos Duty, prosecuting attorney, low Hugh Baird must have a pile of| Members of some of the largest! sen hastens to explain, “that people] i.6 Wolstead act may be awfully” | ’ to hell out of this propert B.D. Miller, a former policeman in | seated he was quietly conducting an money to have so many Fords with| downtown realty companies ex-|crons the Pacific Just so they can get} 11 TOM A De PUT IN HOSPITAL ||. Willis then related how telegrams Chicago, was suffering from four linvestigation and that he expected ta his name on them pressed the opinion that the asso-|a drink; they don’t, But, when they | es a patent vold. Van jwere sent to John L. Lewis and|bullet wounds and was near death. [nave results within a few days. cee Cation had acted inadvisedly and| have to make the trip anyway, and| ‘ld that mericans avold Van |] Marshall Whitur, @ 16-year-old |/ Frank Farrington, international] “I was shot when the miners came} srerbers of the mob of attad Pou flock in Western Wash-| too hurriedly on the matter and are| when they have the choice of two| rn ra a aay can 6%) 8 schoolboy, was in the Lakeside || union chiefs, asking them the status |over the top after we had waved the] o°"cotnered from all the — ington are greater than ever before. | urging a special meeting to take up| ships, one that sells liquor and.one| Sr “ere. hospital Friday with a badly cut |) of the men employed in the mine, | white flag,” Miller said, “Three oth: | rene eee nities in the southern — But ft is only fair to state that the| the question again. that doesn't, they're naturally going| “I will say one thing, tho. We/| jg, He, together with other jand the reply was that they “were ers fell at the same time I did. section of. the state, “and Sate Ga touring season isn't really under way| Frank Waterhouse, president of!to take the wet craft. They may not! don't sell nearly as much Nquor on »ys, placed powder in a gas pipe || common strikebreakers.” “For to or three hours I lay in the ieved it would A practically on ae yet |the Chamber of Commerce, has just|want to buy a drink all the way | Ur outward-bound voyage, when|| cannon near the Fremont bridge. | “A meeting of the local unton was |mine, thinking that eternity wax at |ever 1 Wot bride thet Rt aa on elected chairman of a commit-|across the Pacific~but they like to|™ost of our rageensecy are Ameri-|] The pipe exploded into hundreds | called," Willis said, “and we decided | hand. on ares Gat Be maior. baie ¥ ‘ TACOMA.—Traffic conditions o of 26 business men who will|be able to get it if they should hap.|eans, as we do between Oriental|| of small pieces, four of which || that we did not have authority to| “Finally I managed to roll down a 3 state highway to be discussed Med conduct a campaign to raise $2,700,-| pen to want one. f Pl jorty and on the way home. The|] struck the Ind in the Wg, inflict. || act. A mass meeting was called.” [hill to a swamp, where I tay half cert crrene rat bag on Washington and Oregon pe ofti-|000 for the hotel. W. L. *Rhodes| “Another thing: A large propor-| Americans usually have thelr wives || ing deep cuts. The other boys George O'Neill, a union miner, was | Submerged, until help came.” oftic pe pare 3 =v re ie cers and court officials at Olympus!is chairman of a citizens’ commit-|tion of our passengers aren't Ameri-| With them--and that always cuts}) were only slightly injured, appointed the Paul Revere to sum-| There is no state authority in Her.) Was over; Panky ne; Bote! June 30 tee which will co-operate can and they aren't traveling between (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) mon miners for the defense, rin, None is wanted, (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) L