The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 7, 1916, Page 5

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BE FURNISH YOUR HOME.ON.LIB RAL CRE JUST 8 50.00 Worth of my 15.00 Down, PRE- clap ape SALE _ eset furnishir every sect f thi ete mefu 4.00 Per Week nisl cep al value Our Usual Easy Terms of Payment Will Apply During This Sale Wandhouse-Grinbaum Furniture @.- ins 4167 424 - Dike Tienes: COME PICK THE WINNER TONIGHT CRYSTAL POOL VS. ELKS Real ex results are when real return yme if Reserve Your Seat Now! Regular Admission. . Reserved Seats (on s Seattle Natatorium Second Ave. at Lenora DENTISTRY THAT LASTS TORPEDO BOAT SINKS ° beret wir.” “SUB; THEN IT SINKS .. Our prices for the very best work: ve ROME, Nov. 7.—An Austr mar ed a troc was sun a aport, the 1 toda The t © badly damage pedo boat wa : it sank later. 22-K. Crowns tural Crowns idgework, fp ped damage » boat's crew igi , note were saved and the crew of the grater” marine taken prisoners $5.00 to $1 With All fates Guarantee Work eve PORTLAND, Nov. 7 dawned cold and t i Threaten "4 Pp Fourth and Pike ons were that a heavy Open Sundays, 9:30 to 1 P.M. | ‘ote 9 GOING UP! i flated prices bring them down in STAR—TUESDAY, NOV. 7, PAGE 5 YANKEES FLEE ‘WILSON VOTES FROM MEXICO EARLY WHILE CROWD LOOKS to the bor BY ROBERT J, BENDER Villista ban U. P. Steff Correspondent west and PRINCETON, N. J, Nov. 7 Villa It required 16 men, three au 1916. EL. PASO, Nov, 7.—Only four Americans remain in Chihuahua City today, From every part of the state Americans and other foreigners are flocking der, panic-stricken by the atrocities of the dits. The entire portion of Chihuahua state, is dominated and overrun by outh of the capital, followers, Mining companies, with ere, today were send oir few re tomobiles, four hours and 54 gallons of gasoline to deliver of abandoning the city, but on eparing for @ |tlon Wilson's vote for himself here today. The pres bodyguard of se nen and retinue President 1K Messages the contrary, Ww matoing emp imn dent, with hi eret service of newspaper corretapondents United have nment officials ports that Villa's forces | re than 4,000 split into} is in Chihuahua state. | | president reached the polls, he The booth made trip from Shadow Lawn early in the morning, and altho it was only 9 a. m. when the |many b [Official admission of th Alarmed | evacua nding evacuation reports of the im of the Chihua-|tion of Parral by Gen, Herra’s Car was the 50th voter capita Gen, Trevino, the | ra mmand was contained tn a foreign consul that city waited | bulletin issued at Chihuahua City in| '# ina fire engine house on bim in a body to ascertain| which it was stated that Herrera} The president's arrival was the facts. The de facto command: | was “concentrating his troopa near} quickly learned by residents here er assured them ne had no inten- | Escal n to meet other gene fale.” jand « big crowd of people gathered ie ea she Rune Pee 2 cor the han ova ALLIES HOLD GROUND e e ceee ru the ate of the elty TAKENALONG SOMME © lf or received ‘his anny) LONDON, Nov Contin \ ued activity on practically all CONTINUED } fronts, with severe fighting at some points, has marked the JURY FIXES BLAME taide. The developed strong dete party left at once for Shadow with what appears to hav gratifying success in some in By a peculiar colneidence, wed at the entr FOR |. W. W. DEATHS °°" VJ. Preston 2 WV. WY. artially | nter attacks ried Mr Grover Cleve ecked French and Britisn|! the last democratic that had swept erman trenches there has been ny V. W's and Mediator , What Does It Mean? Hughes Casts Vote No. 13 in New York NEW YORK, Nov. 7,.—Re- publican Candidate Chas. E Hughes voted ballot No, 13 at 7:03 this morning in the Vic torla laundry voting booth on Eighth ave. between 44th and 45th ets. He aro at 5:45, took an hour to dress and left the Astor hotel with Carl OD. Sheppard, his publicity agent, and two detectives about 6:50. The little party went at a brisk pare wa ‘ od rs R apparent Piwalk on 45th st Fike Oxy Y 4 et lefeat corner to the li oped red Laomu # signs that tell the w ppear to have) letters that Any Gown fons won in the}, Ke Dry Cleaned For $1.60 drove the price being printed in glaring omy out of three villages |erimaos ted the straight republican cree. tick at The sun had not come out wo other| strong as Hughes stepped from the 5 testimony. | booth, and the room looked mighty testified he belie | AMONG FEW IN |dingy. It was hardly big enough the first shots came from "the lfor a man to change his mind tn, wharf. He sald his position did not) jbet this did not stop a dozen cam command a view of the bow of the r ~ etapa By $ McRae od movie men from jamming Haywood to Come W. D. Ha ‘ of was heard cameras 2 e BY HENRY WOOD the flashlight explosions United Press Staff Correspondent k ' re With the French Armies TACOMA TO HAVE | DRY ELECTION DAY | TACOMA, N who has been a pronounced 1 days, switched his night and opened WITH THE FRENCH FOR EIGN LEGION France, Oct 19.—(By Mal!.)—Eight hundred odd Americans enlisted in the famous French Foreign Legion In the early part of the war. A Seattle lieutenant is one of ma the only four remaining of the | wet for first 100. , committee sted the Ludiow mas een asked to invest ret* situation—not to local I. W. W. lead telegram was rv: 4 wow stand dur he The legion, which is one of jon ele a dry. He says the finest fighting regiments | Tacoma njoy a “gen in France, has participaed in | er fa y to vote nearly all of the big offensives The early balloting, consequent to date, and many of the Amer. y, was heavy ican volunteer® were killed or permanently wounded in these LOSE A DIVISION actions The American contingent suffer | “ Nid |ed especia y LONDON, Nov German ry on the Rumanian frontier tr last tem be he ree Jul val fighting have ex 4 itnelf with 1a division and a half, wire stated today Bucharest Many Become Aviators nee f the Amer A German arm offi flourished a car eritt McRae was be oir discharge H ed them to AND BEAUTIFY IT present mo bet Rid of quiet sections of the Fre where th just in front of one of the mo bee itiful and most historic cha-| us of France. The chateau it elf has been comple tel troyed | appears and hair stops coming out. His which the ladon grote itiful as ever. |remain almost as bea Having Quie The transfer of t this ideal spot for a quiet trench figh i pense for the brilliant part y by it in the early part of the me p, where it au | Try this! Hair gets beautiful, wavy and thick in few moments, Thousands Report Relief and Cures Through the Use of Pyramid Pile Treatment Within Their Own Homes — t ¢ If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant | with life; has an incomparable soft heay |ness and is flutty and tus Almost the first man whom 1| panderine met in the legion, after the officers,| Just one application doubles the us a 19-year-old boy of St. Loul beauty of your halr, besides it imme Altho a member of th legion for) diately dissolves every particle of mmly the _ t nine month he is dandruff you cannot have nice, W 1 wearing t n y, healthy ha if you have ion of the Cr iruff, This destructiy the hair of its 1! dtrength and its very lif American vol |not overcome it produces a fever 1 from New York|ishness and itching of the scalp u August 4, 1914,\the bair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fe If your hair has been ne and is thin, faded, zeta Kno Danderi tore or toilet counter tle as directed and ten minutes aft er you will say this was the best investment you ever made. We sine of every jif you desire ffer« d net charge on th Of the criginal 1 ‘ sn immediately following the deel tion of war, only four re a lieutenant of Se special treat for a bullet thru the t of New Orleans ieisco and a ’ These ar tle, box | Who is une too oily at any drug ment at apply a lit PRE SAMF PYRAMID DRUC 44 Pyramid Ig. M ame a Free A Pile Wrent. | ohare wrapper. of the four battalion commanders were killed, the remaining one,| ful hair and no Weddell, an ish-|—no itching sealp and no me man, having been decorated with| ing hair the Legion of Honor for his brav-] Danderine jery now? illiant bayonet} Somme, three out Commandant you must use Knowlton's If eventually—why not th Nacsa tee in. The governor saw he was outnumbered, so he stood ow smiling—and choking—as click aft hru the gaseous haze produced by | The weather. | Spend 25 cents! Dandruff dis- trous, try LABOR CAN'T BE FOOLED Republicans’ Final Eff ort to ‘‘Deliver’’ the Labor Vote Exposed There appears in the leading newspapers of the United States today a page advertisement containing alleged labor testimonials in support of Candidate Hughes and censuring President Wilson. This is the last desper- ate effort of the Republican National Committee to hood- wink the public into believing that even one reputable labor man of prominence is supporting their candidate. A few days ago they were gleefully quoting a six-year-old statement made by John M. O'Hanlon, editor of the offi- cial organ of the New York State Federation of Labor, even after Mr. O’Hanlon had issued a public statement calling attention to the fact that for months he had. been supporting President W ilson. This time the Rey Scans are leaning upon Frank Feeney, named by Mai M. Mulhall in the famous lobby scandal at Washington’as his “closest friend and adviser,” while Mulhall was the strike- breaker and legislative agent of the National Association of Manufacturers. Feeney is notoriously known as_ the labor agent and political henchman of the Penrose-Mc- Nichol machine in Philadelphia. Mulhall swore that he had Feeney on his payroll, and that he had documents to prove it. Two weeks ago the Democratic Chairman, of Pennsylvania publicly charged that Senator Boies Penrose had been put in charge of $400,000 to attempt to influ- ence the labor vote of the country, and that Penrose had objected to “doing the dirty work” with so small a slush fund. That charge has not been denied. Nearly a week ago the Democratic National Committee exposed Frank Feeney’s employment by Penrose in this campaign to cir- culate fake labor endorsements of Mr. Hughes. The al- leged resolutions appearing in today’s page advertisement of the Republicans are the work of Feeney and his agents. The Chicago Building Trades Council did not adopt the pro-Hughes resolution quoted in the Republican ad- vertisement, and the Republicans know it. The false report that such a resolution had been adopted was promptly denounced by Simon O'Donnell, president of the Chicago Building Trades Council, and by Edward N. Nockels, secretary of the Chicago Federation of Labor. The alleged pro-Hughes resolution, offered at a meeting in the Philadelphia Building Trades Council, was defeated. Leonard Kraft, Feeney’s closest friend, then drew enough proxies from his pocket to jam it through. A week later, November 3rd, the Council officially denounced the act as a conspiracy, and repudiated the alleged pro-Hughes resolution. Feeney tried to get similar resolutions adopted in Cincinnati and other cities, and failed. When the attention of Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, was called to the Re- publicans’ page advertisement last night, he issued the following statement: “To the Workingmen of the United States, Greeting: “As predicted by me a few days ago, there'is some. scheme to spring a canard upon you when it will be too late to dis- prove and prevent the falsehoods and fic- titious allegations or declarations. “The information comes to me that a pretended labor leader has secured some fake declarations of a few supposedly labor organizations attacking the charac- ter and the policy of the Labor Representa- tion Committee of the American Federation of Labor, and that they are to be published as advertisements in the newspapers of the country tomorrow (Monday). “The American Federation of Labor has, without a dissenting voice or vote, proclaimed the political policy to stand by the friends of labor and justice and to de- feat its enemies. “In this campaign Woodrow Wilson stands for all that is true to labor, justice, patriotism, freedom and humanity. “The false friends of labor will fail in their purpose to deceive.”’ | <Q RR PREAERERE EES AP ERORT FD ORR e EER T Ree eeeTe

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