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[ REMEMBER JONES! When Senator Wesley Lusitania Jones became one of the "little group of wilful men representing no opinion but their own" in the great national crisis in 1917, it was not the first time he was in that sort of company. He was a member also of another "little group of wilful men" in the vain attempt to save a seat in the U. S. senate which William Lorimer bought and paid for, but which an aroused public conscience demand ed he should not occupy. Jones voted for the corruptionist. And then he made things worse by joining with the kaiserites. REMEMBER JONES! fQf Weather mmm ■ ■ Tonipht and Saturday, 11 111 fair; modrrato north- I I 111 westerly u ind«. JI I 1 1 T«n|wr»tiir* Laat ?l Hours lll " Mulmum. 73. Minimum, M. * 9 W Todnjr mm, U. VOLUME 23. STORY*} XA DAT Holding Up a Train C*M fright. 1919. »y PouUfdav. Page 4 Ok; pubHihed *W iprnal »f --rufram Mtlk IM Wheeler a dtcntr. Inc. mm bt tub kmtrbi rirw o. AL J**Sl»oo. luhm MMM, to hmi *nW tha dm IrtH, m 4 Ml It i* t pel IMw. »w !«■>■< It Willi the mmk UM H - ■ f mM writ* "Ilk. that." a* O Hit r»-wrwte It tw Ikt iMfll Iw Hail • kaak jelium* mvM eopee* a ■MI luM tw »■< It *wM. TV oete MaJMallm la Um aoe nllla »» O. (Vote.—The m« wk* ton me them tkingi mi for aoorraJ yemr■ ,•* oatlotr h the Mouth torit and a /■Bownr o/ the pmrsuit he ao ft am* )y describes Hu dcerripftoa o/ tka waAli oprraadi tho uid protr inter -otHno. his commeel of rwlae fo the pnientiml »•—eager ta tome future trMi« Hu Mttanlr of the fit—meet of (rata ro»Ma>* wM lif<ll induce any m« to adopt if m a profruto*. I ite "ory ta akaeii exactly hie *tm word* OJtj IfOR poopta would aay. If thalr iu opinion waa asked for. that f-'fii op a train would bo a hard f*. Walt. It taat; If* mm- 1 h are ooatrtbuted amo to tho oooeaUtae «f lalbtuda and tbo UssasnnO ot a*- ■raao eompaaiss. and tbo MM uwa Wo I ever bod afaftUt • hotdup was tabadag m'imm'T'i fS|i» T |£mini tk* H |( thojr are hustlers. bat five la •boat tbo right number. The time to do It aad tbo ptaoa ispsnil upon •#itwbl th'ngr , Tbo flret -stick-up' I waa ow In riappancd In ISM. Maybe tho way k I got lata It will explain bow mota ■train robber* aurt In tbo buslnsss PriTo out of aU Weatern outlawa are just cowboys out of a Job and cone wrong. The aiath la a toufh Jrotn tbo East who drcaaoa up llko * bad «Mi) and play* aone low down trick that glvaa the boy* a bad nam* "Wtro fence* and 'iiliri' made ftra ■•f them, a bad heart made tho sixth J fern 8 and I were work In* on yths 101 Ranch In Colorado Jho liter* had the cowmen on the go. Thar had taken up the land and lalartait officer* who were hard to 4Pt alone with. Jim and I rode Into X* Junta oae day. lotni aouth from jaVtnd'Up. We were having a little tfua without malice toward anybody krtMß a farmer administration cut In ■aad triad to harveat uo. Jim abot w deputy marahal, and t kind of cor mborated hi* aid* of the argument hve fklrmiahed up and down the iSßaln street. the boomers having had jlwck all the tone. After a while we tleaned forward and ahoved for the down on the Cerleo. We were ] [llilnf a couple of horse* that • couldn't fly. hut they could aatch , third* • A. few daya after that a gang of 1 rife* la Junta boomer* came to the mncti and wanted a* to go bark with It hen. and before we were done re i fusing, that old 'dobe waa plumb full tof lead. When dark came we fagged •em a batch .of bullet* and ahoved Out the back door for the rocka -They aure nmoked u* aa we went |W« had to drift, which wc did. and Sounded up down In Oklahoma. WWell, there wasn't anything we "tould get there, and. being mighty hard up. We decided to transact a little buaineaa with the railroad*. Jim and I Joined force* with Tom and Ike Moore —two brothers who had plenty of sand they were willing to convert Into dust. I can call their name*, for both of them are dead. Tom waa «dw>t while robbing a bank ta Arkansas; Ike was killed during the more dangerou* paatime of at tendl/ig a dance m the Creek Nation. •elected a place on the Hanta Fo where there was a bridge across a deep creek surrounded by heavy timber. All passenger trains took tratar at the tank close to one end Of tho bridge. It was a quiet place, the nearest house being five miles •way. The day before It happened. We rested our horses and "made tnedicine" a* to how we should get i •bout it. Our plans were not at all •liberate, aa none of us had ever •ngaged In a hold-up before. The Hanta Ke flyer was due at the tank at 11:49 p m. At eleven Tom and I lay down on one aide of the track, and Jim and Ike took the other Aa the train rolled up. the headlight flashing far down the track and the stenm hlaelng from the! engine. I turned weak all over. I ' would have worked a whole yesr on ! the ranch for nothing to have been 1 taut of that affair right then. Home Jbf the nerviest men In the business have told me that they felt the same tray the flrat time. The engine had hardly stopped fTurn to Psge B, Column It BOY KILLED IN FIGHT OVER DWELLING Four Are Held During Invct tigation of Murder in Bat* tie Over Cottage VENICE. Gal. Sept I —Mr*. May belle Ho* «u formally chargfd with murder today following to* finding of th* coroner'* tnnumt over the body of McCvllough O Uraydon. Ln An(»tM raal eetate desier, who died from gunihot wound* sustained la • free for all fight over poaaeaatcn Of a aommer cottage her*. Mr*. Rm abot Oraydon with In tout to do crtat bodily barn, the formal verdict aald. TBWIC®, C*L. Rapt. Foilr per aaao war* at til bolng bold by the pollen today, ponding on Hiqaeet freer tbo body of MeCullough O. Oraydon. Uam Angele* real eatate dealer. who dlod ytwterday from (On •hot woundo received la a froo-for'olJ right over pooaooalon of a auremer ootla«o her*. Oraydon wao that by Mr*. May bono Roe. according to tbo dalmo of Mr*. Oraydon, wtfo of tho alaln man. Mr* Julia Marshall, bu alaUr. and B. U Adkina. Tbooe bold pending the Mr*. Roo. Mr. and Mr*. a. F. Doano and O. A. Bow*ra. f Mr* Ooaao la tbo owwer of A mti ta ** r «i^T»ad'oo«sSt ,on *" d trom which*!* iTan^red" kauckkoo, and finally a tun. w«d» I uaod. lo ox ported to bo daacrlbitf at tbo ooroaer'a hearing. How Can Hotel. Chap Get That Way? She Ash HFTRKKI.KT. Cal. Pept. I Mtw I.tinUe Carpenter, II year* old and prattjr, who aays her btlwr Is t ilwMlt lumber roll) owner, wu held by police here today, accused by a Man Franclaco hotel keeper with Call ing to settle a bin for t&O. •"Of all the crmxy Ln considerate people, that hotel man to the wont." ahe declared. "Ha haa all ay be longing*-—aomethln# I wouldn't take hto whole dnrn hotel far.** Hhe said the came here to enter the University of California and lout what money aha bad Is an oli land venture* Mr*. Peter Carpenter, mother of tolas t*aclll#, said at the Monmouth apartments. IM Ycaler way. today that ahe had received a telegram froan her danghter two days ago aay lng ahe had loet her money. "We wired back that we would sand her money to come home." Mrs Carpenter Mild, "and that Is the last ws beard from her. 1 shall see Po lice Chief Hearing right sway and have my daughter released." Carpenter, the father. Is the own er of a lumlier mill in South Park, tolas Carpenter, who had been work ing as a stenographer for the Rainier Klectrtc company here and saving her money, went to Kerkeley about a month ago, her mother said. In tending to enter the university. Accused Falsely, Asks for $5,000 Just because Gordon Prentiss had Cornelius Mehan arrested on a charge of stealing a Ford automobile. Mehan wants 15 00*1 dimagra Me han alleged that he languished In jail for the first five day* In June before the charge against him waa die missed. Fall River, Mass., Is the largeet cotton milling city In the t.'nltad Ms tea. The Amount of Land Is Limited— But Population Has No Limit The land of the U. ft, If equally divided, would give every man. woman and child In the V. H 1» acres And yet more than one half the people of our country own no land. Our population will double be fore many years. The landless proportion will increase. Are jroa landless? The safest thing on earth to own la a part of the earth. On Classified Pace today are many eacellent offers In farm lands and land investments. In vestigate some of them and you'll surely buy. v - . On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star M |MN< CIM Htllo May i lift, *1 lb* PnMaftlc* tl SaaJU*. Villi, m4ii th« Act ol Congre— March I, 1111. ft Thi, br Mall, II I* I* Center Shots i From Speeches by Malcolm Douglas, Candidate for Prosecutor The prosecuting attor ' NEY should be a Nemesis to the guilty, a guardian of the innocent. That is the way to develop a higher respect for law in this community. Let the people realize that no in nocent man will be tried for a crime, and that no guilty man will escape. What we need in King county is an honest, efficient, common - sense regime of law enforceanent. • • « 'TWERE MUST BE ai new prosecut- ing attorney. The incumbent starts too many things be cannot finish. Even capable assistants fail to ac complish results with an incapable chief to determine the policy of the office. No matter how godd the crew is, the ship will never get anywhere un less the skipper knows his business. The prosecuting attorney should THEY can keep a THEIR GOATS SAN FRANCISCO, Bept. I.—iflan Franciscans need not worry about losing their goats any more. The supervisors' health committee'peeeed an ordinance permitting dtlaena to keep gnata In their back yards. Ruth Christensen IT/af ITII 11th ava W.', *ho disappeared from her home yeeterday, la being Bought by the polloe at the request of her father, C. Chrlaisnsen. Hhe had about t\2o In cash, li waa stated. SEATTLE, WASH.. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1920. Mmleolm Douglas in Action Gerard Heads Demo Finance Committee NK* TORK. Bept. ».—Jamaa W. Oerard. of New Tofk, former amhaa •odor to Germany, haa been appoint ed chairman of tjia finance commit tt* of tha democratic national rnm mil tea, It waa announced her* today. Gerard, who waa a randldate for the presidential nomination, will aa auma hla now dutiea at onoa^ About 7MM.MA cell, of dry bat tarlaa will ha made In thla counter thla year, according to eatlm<it#a. DOPE ADDICT work in harmony with the police, the sheriff and the mayor. Their com mon ideal must be to make die coun- ty a better and a safer place in which to live. TX7HEN I GO into office, I shall bear no prejudices and play no fa vorites. - Every person, regardless of his sta tion in life, will get a square deal no more, no less. No one Will be eble to staknpede ae into starting a case that ought not to be started, and no one will be able to cow me into stopping one that ought to be prosecuted. And let me say this: The prose cuting attorney should be able to try cases in person, as well as by proxy. We're had too much of the "Let George do it" policy. I'U try some of the people's cases myself—and you will find that now and then we'll win one for a change. CELL HIS STORE; ° PAY ALIMONY CHICAGO, Sept. J—R. R. Ohar rat'a attorney* doped out a way to pay hla ajlmony. They auctioned hla drug atore, giving the proceed* to 'ho e*Mra. Gharrat NTANPORI) AU MM, meeting at Blanr'a cafe Thuraday, planned for regular monthly meatlnga of Stan ford men and Waahlnglon men who have attended tha tinlveralty. An nual gatherlnga of the antlra mem harahlp will ha held on dataa Im portant In tha university <-i lender. SUBMARINE MEN SAVED FROM DEATH Crew and Officers of S-5 Are Rescued After 35 Hours Under Water LEWES. Del, Sept. ».—The die abled aubmarine M. In tow of the battlrihlp Ohio, wa« a abort dlatance ouUlde the Delaware breakwater at t;lt p. m. today. It wai reported that the aubmarine waa tilted at auab an ancle that one end of It ww draxgtng on the Attorn, mak in* towing very diffirult. PHILADELPHIA. Pa, Sept I The ateamer Alanthua la having trouble bringing the dieabled aubtna rlne M up tie Delaware river, ao cording to a wtreleea received at Ue(u« laUod nav/ yard tbla after soon. I'ontoone war* being eent to Del* vara breakwater to aeelet In floating the aubmarlna. The crew of the ■abourilM baa been removed from the Alanthua and placed aboard the battleetoip Ohio, the emeaage aald. The followuig radio mreaage wu received •» League laUnd from the Ohio, mm «t the warablpa which ruabed to the reacwe laat night when U* M tar betptwa en lb* batten Off Oape Healopen ViUl Its crew Wrmtm 1X !9S&£ Saatßn trjr tow M Into ahallower water brfore proceed lag «p Lew—. Wo*ld recommend roeh pootoona to aid." The bettlreblp Ohio la proceeding to Norfolk. Va.. with the S i la tow. according to the lateet wtreleea re ceived at League I eland navy yard. NEW TORK. Bept I.—Rearned from a living tomb at the bottom of the Ma, tha oWwri and crew of the t'altad States submarine M war* being taken to Philadelphia today on tha steamer Alanthua, whlla behind them, on tha and of a tow cable, trailed tha diaablad submersible which sank off Cap* Henlopen and nearly coat their three. The steamer Oeneral Ooethals. which aent out tha first 8. O. 8, fdr tha sunkan Hi. glayatched the foi- I«w1m wireless misaags today, which waa picked up by the navy radio station here: "Crew' and officer* of submarine S-t all eafe. RS at inclination of about M degree# now aecured to i. 8. Alanthua. being towed tn Dela ware breakwater. Crew and officers still aboard Alanthua." The reerue was made possible by a war Invention—a buoy, which wan released when the submarine sank, according to advloea received here this afternoon. Officers on the steamer Ooethals saw the buoy. A boat was lowered. The men in the small boat rowed to the buoy, and by means of a busier attached to It communicated with the aunken sub marine. The Alanthua was the first to swer tha Ooethals' 8. O. 8. The ahlps attached grappling hooks to the submarine and raised Its stern so the air hole could be bored. THRILLING TALK OF HKROIHM AT SEA Details of the aocident which came near becoming a naval catastrophe, coming In by wireless from rescue ships, unfolded a thrilling tale of heroism at sea. Thirty-five hours after the 8-5, en route from Boston to Baltimore, on a recruiting expedition, had slipped to the bottom off Cape Henlopen. the ateamahip Oeneral Ooethals broad I casted a radio 8. O. 8. The message . asld the submsrine was caught be- ' neath the surface and help waa i urgently needed to raise her or to rut a hole In the hull thru which the crew might be saved. David L>. Moore, an amateur radio operator at Ksrmington. Conn., sit ting beside his instrument, picked the cry for help out of the air. He communicated at once with the Bos ton nsvy yard and with navy offi cials st New Haven. Destroyers were dispatched from Boston and from the southerb drill grounds, where the message was relayed to battleships. RATTIJCBHTP OHIO GOIM TO RKSCI R The battleahlp Ohio turned north ward at one*. Other deatroyera darted out from navy yarda along the eoaat and headed toward the apot In the general vicinity of latitude 3* north, longitude 74 weat, about SO mil** eaat of Delaware oapea, where the aubmarlna with Ita human cargo waa raported reeling on the bottom While navy reaeua ahlpa plunged thru tha darkneaa to tha aid of tha HI, tha ttaneral Ooethala atood by to land what aid It could. Tha aub marlna waa found to ha at a aharp (Turn to I'rise I, Column %) 7^l BREAKS BABY'S RIB GIVING 'TREATMENT TO STOP HIM CRYING POKTr.ANI>. Ore, Bept I.— George Kraker, shipyard work er, la charred with assault and battery nK.Unnt hla two-month a" old mn In warrant* iwum out by offifwi of the Orrßon Ho mane aoolety, who allege that ha cruahad on* of the Infant'a liba In an effort to make .him atop rryln#. Kraker told the humane %jffir«re he l>ad been advlaed by fellow worker* to clve the baby raliat benlra In order to keep It from frettln*. IRELAND MAYOR IS NOW DYIN6 Terence MacSwiney Nearly Lifeless, in Prison IJOKDOS. Bept I —Terence Mac fwlney, lord mayor of Cork, waa vir tually llfeleaa In Brixton prtaon to day On tha tint day of hia hunger strike he showed no slgna of life aave an occanlonal quiver of an eya- Ud Relatives who were at hia bedalde declared that to all Intent his body waa dead but that "hia spirit aUll lingers." t Mai-Hwlney developed paralysis of the .rlgjrt aide lata yesterday aa the result of failure of circulation, and phys*rtan* expressed the fear that It soon would extend to the whole body. -IT 18 TOO UTK nmamoHr "It is too late for clemency now." ■aid the lord mayor's brother. Zan. Father Domlnlck held holy com munion for tWa awning, Mid to MMd U wna far the Mint iMMayi wtuSTmh haunt the oaU. Serious divergence of opinion be tween King Oeorge and his ministers has arisen over the question of re leaning Macfiwiney. accorjling to ru mors circulated today. It waa reported that at the inter cession of Queen Mary, the king threatened a royal proclamation free- j tag MacSwiney. Premier Lloyd George was said to have made a counter threat to hold up each a proclamation. RIUTINH PRKMIKR RKFTHIOH TO TIRIJ) Home of the ministers were alleged to be willing, and even anxious, to revoke the governmental order against releasing hunger strikers, hut the premier was said to fee ada mant. Robert Smiley. William A damson. Robert Williams and other British labor leaders, appealed to tbe Lloyd George government today to release MacSwtney. "Failure to release Lord Mayor MacSwlney jeopardises settlement of the Irish question and stains British honor tbruout the world," they stated. "His continued Imprisonment Is an outrage to public sentiment every where His death will bring about a terrible explosion of anger and fur ther bloodshed In Ireland. "We fear it Is too late to ape the life of this Irish patriot and martyr." POLES SMASHING 100-MILE FRONT General Advance Started on Lemberg Line WARSAW, Sept. S.—The scop® of the Bolshevik defeat In the Umbari reclon continues to grow, according to the official communique iimued today. Crushing of General Hodcn ny north of Lemberg haa opened the way for a general Polish advance and the Pole* have gone forward from 1& to 40 miles on a front of more than 100 miles. POLES REJECT BOLSHEVIK PEACE TERMS LONDON. Sept. S—The Polish delegates to the Minsk pence confer ence have formally rejected al! pro posals of the Bolshevik delegates, the war office announced this after noon. The Polish delegates, how ever, will leave Tuesday for Riga, Latvia, where the conference will be resumed. Hubby Kicked When Friends "Ale Grub" Recause, among other things, he told her he wouldn't have her friends "eating up his grub," Alma M. Wal bridge began action In the superior court Friday for a divorce from tx>uls Wslbrldge, who rents boats on iAke Washington. JACOB Seiver 21. s druggist living st I*2o 18th ave„ died last night at the Seattle General hospi tal. Until funeral arrangfunentaare made the body will remain at the Bonney-Watson establishment. TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE ARRESTED AT CHINK'S DOOR WITH BIG KNIFE Says He Has Been Using Narcotics Several Months; Hope to Save Him Caught sneaking into ft dark h«fr way leading to a Chinese den at JH Ollv# «t., lata Thursday night. P. M. Anderson 11. said by th* polio* t» be th* youngest bop-bsad tw caught In the city, waa WT«M Just aa be was about to rap far « trance. Tha yoa'h was ca light la pany with Walter Cameron. M, aatt to b* an old offender. Tb* Chin:** joint, knows to OH poilca aa a prominent r—Ft tsy many months, was being wtiakai !by Patrolman S. P. Anderson. *f th* police narcotic squad. Tb* «•» ! fleer was hiding la a shadow staa the pair mad* their appMMA LONft WWII nan rocNO ON BO* Both were promptly MrdNl and a long bowt* knl/e—the blad* BM mm uring fly* lncbe* waa fMMS sheathed mrhe boy** etoCUfli. Wk carri*d a second knlfs to *a* m, hi* paoket* and a hypodanM* na» die and outfit war* mwHI la atfl another pocket. "How long hay* yon b*aa as tka Junlt?" the officer asked. "For several months BOW," M|. the sullen reply. The slun boy. all sari) dkovtig traces jpt th* ashec gray a* char acteristic to narcotic users, wa* whlrked away to the count? where he waa turned over tr» !h* Juvenile authorities, who betters. b*> causa of his extreme youth. It win be possible to break him of th* terrible habit Cameron, on the other hand, waa thrown Into a cell ID tho ctty Jafl. He will probably be tried on a stat* vsgrancy charge. H* recently tti iahed a 30-day sentence In th* steak ade. He had no sooner gained kin liberty when he waa arrested at. First are. and WE. /thing ton *4. Hp Patrolman A. A. Gray. CAMERON GETS TWO HOI KS TO LEAVE TOWX Cameron toM Acting Polioe Jttdgv Allen Thursday he was trying to' get out of town whea he was ar rested. The court sentenced him t* 15 days and than suspended sen tence. allowing him two hours to get out of town. • He was caught the same night. with a small quantity of naroottas and an outfit In hla possession. The polios declare it Is a cot»» mon practice of old narcotic user* to get a youth "o nthe habit" and then send him out to obtala money by stealing or any other method for the purchaae of narcotloa. DOPE HASTENS [SHOW PROMOTER TO SUICIDE ; - « Hans Evers, secretary of th« m# boy*' union, returned today frfll Tacoma, where he identified the body of a man who committed suicide In a hotel there August. 21 f that of Charles Soash of thia city. Listed aa James Miller on the Ta» coma police records, the body of 80- ash waa buried in the potters field there yesterday. It waa being exhumed' today and will be brought to Seattle by relfe tlve* for burial here. . , Lietters from Ever* which Roaah hid under the carpet and nailed down before he killed himself wer* found when house cleaner* took up the carpet yesterday. soosh. Ever* said, failed In the pro* motion of a number of carnival* re cently. His last loss was in th* newsboys' carnival here August II to 29. "Hi* losses worried him." Even said. "He took to using dope and finally ended hi* trouble* the way he did." Hoash leave* a father, mother and sister here, who were notified of hi* death by the Tacoma police. DOCTOR AND DRUGGIST HELD ON DOPE CHARGE Secretly Indicted Wednesday by the federal grand Jury, Dr. J. E. Godfrey, with offices at 103 Second ave. 8., and Charles K. Kelly, pro priotor of Kelly's drugstore, at tha corner of Second ave. 8. and Wash* ington St., were arrested Thursday afternoon by Deputy United States Marshal Frank Colligan. They *a« (Turn to Page I. Coinma ■