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GTON, May 20.—«United today bowed in BH tribute to its heroic dead a th Of congress, at the Unknown dead in Ariing F At KOM of the ship ‘and in every city, town and Of the nation, there were cer befitting a memorial for the BAcrrifice of the country’s Members in Washington tribute to the heroes the | war. swith & significance deepened by f but consecrated by the Of what the loss of so best of young American Das won for the world, Me this year brings to the full realization of the price -t rid the world of autocracy . Daniels. game time {t brings expe. te those whose dear ones paid murs Price, a proud know! } America took her rightful pin the world events of the past all her mighty power and and that our gallant boys A decisive @art in shatter. ollern dream of world ayn awa Raker said I progress of America | by our addition of fresh Ft this day, set apart to me. BS the nation's heroic dead. RO division of its ancient but fresh meaning is who have diéd on for. Perpetuate the liberties § their ancestors gave their Their Work” y our hands are clasped, not FOM coast to coast, but over aid Secretapy Wilson. From Page One| marchers, in paying tramp, tramp, @owntown streets was the throngs which lined ave. and Pine st. the hed south to University, te Becond ave. Bast marchers proceeded to ¥e.. on Bighth to Pine and tte the Masonic temple. on Harvard ave. ‘ t with a snap ow = A. R. veterans ap- | Sid formed a lane, thru “boys” filed into the Ma- Dall at Heres’ Homes letded with flowers ’ following the parade, their pilgrimage thrucut their blossoms at those who lost a loved the American the woman's American Legion of greetings and heart. of men to fight for eountry, but it is priv. ‘ou, as joys pur: is of J the deeds of its of our real of your ‘honest admiration of the the man that you gave the earth might Dead Sailors ‘the sailor dead of the na- red. While services }. A. R. are being heid Friday on in the G. A. R. cemetery ? , and in other burial t o'clock, members of the ING GAMES (CAN LEAGUE R Mm Ez Pig | 4 0 4 0 06 feson and ik. toni BK 2 % Thormahien, Shawkey ; Robertson, Johnson and R H EK. a rene ie af uth and Schang; id McAvoy NATIONAL LEAGUE 6 Cadore and Perritt, Schupp and Me RM a 7 2 ANT Nessie ae i 6 15 2 ackard, Prendergast Quillen, Keating and be read. be demonstrated by the “free show" | of the attendances 3) It will be, therefore, at leant the lof agricultural moving plote to be | atteries Bri + Ring and! latter part of next week before the|given for the benefit of the boys’| Order may be heaven's first law, } Miller and Lee, Ructher. | defense opens. Iworking reserve, at the Clemmer the: but it js earth's last realization, rf ’ ‘ " a . F \ ‘s ‘ ‘4 ; . r } » ‘ oe ) 2 Bows Head to |Welfa er Departed Heroes) Abroad Visit Seattle oi): 2m mite oS pion Sorel eis ost ty \for demoeracy—they died for free -_——— : | America. The child is the father of the Two other delegates from Great Th 1 d stem the mighty flow of carnage, |" Sblet of the Juvenile labor ¢x:| | Sailors’ club im-| ‘the sacrifices you have! re Experts From Federal Building _Motorship Oregon _|Capt. MacKail Wins | Aske That Woman to Be Remodeled; = Sold to Gulf Line! High Belgian Honor| Rush to Bedside | SAN FRANCISCO, May 30—~The! Capt. Murray K. MacKall, with A let n prepared by Gar: | chief of poliee, rev oe a 04 Friday morning, oske that el wer ‘ rie Darr of ttle, come at presented Gen. Pershing, once to the bedeide of Marold Hal building It {8 Brdposed to move the parcel | nin compe it f® annour to-| the Belgian dee@tation of the Orde nont section to the south end of the drank acid at one of pose tion to th ath end of day, the price being approximate of Leopold, according to word react building, to add three windows to the 9506,000 ply fe tee tayrtcapey.| camy ar that cit hursday, The pom mapt be wapinnad ter was waned by Theresa Burney n motorship Oregon, the first | the Fourth engineers of the federal building, for the re y ~ « ¢ wort const, has been sold by the| wearer of the dist Today we commemorate not only ling of the entire first floor of | 4), . Mall and Steamship com ]&s & nation this holy day of. memory ij“ but our memorial includes the val leys of France, the fields of Flan ders, the ruins of Belgtum,e and | reaches out in a network of sympa thy that stretches around the world To labor falls the high privilege the noble honor—of carry on the] work these boys began ey died 4 to add two win navings bank Upon hef completion at Seattle Uap : Work on the changes will begin’ the versel was commandeered by nore often the hushand’s cross F . ed that Hak |Monday. ‘The cost in ertimated at|the government and operated be-| grained atrenk than the wife's e« took polsor™after being Jilted by | approximately $4,000 tween the Coast and Hawai ing that spolla the dinner dom—for the cause which knits the | | world today in the common brothe hood of humanity, It is for us contir thelr work--to carry out their plans—to do our work con structively, with the same teamwork spirit, the same steadfastness and courage tbat characterized our fight ing men who died Hold Special Session “While the war was on us, our! slogan was ‘Labor will win the war In this period of reconstruction it ts | in labor's hands the tools are given.” Congress observed the day with special session in the house devoted | to tributes to the Americans who | made the supreme sacrifice to the country's wars Lieut, Reyal Johnson, congress man from South Dakota, who was wounded in France, took the speak er’s chair at the special request of Speaker Gillett. Representative La Guardia, New York, major with the Italian air forces during the war, was one of the principal speakers For the civil war veterans, Repro: | sentative Isaac Sherwood, Ohio, a |weneral in the Northern army during | the ‘608, was spokesman. The héuse will consider the resolu | | tion submitted a few days a, by Republican Leader Monde’ ing the thanks of congress tq all Lady Newsholme, wife of Sir Arthur Newsholme, peer of world wide | Americans who 1 share In the] ehild welfare work, accompanying her husband on International Child war, Welfare conference. This iy Lady Newsholme's first visit to ul, te BY CYNTHIA ¢ iY {maternity hospital during the war They are Ronald ©. Davison and Wartorn nations that have given pe ¢ Mrs. Eleanor Barton. Dr. Davison | the flower of their mant to To France, to England Hel active leader In «he Woman's Co | Union Dames will set forth to seatter|gium, America and even the Par |0Perative Guild, an organiation flowers on the surface of Elliott bay which has a@ivocated very strongly |from the West Seattle ferry for the ¢p protection of maternity and child heroes of the navy lthe moat im: hood. | portant factor in the At 6 o'clock Spanish-Acnerican| world today, No effort should be Have Important Memage | War yoterans duplicate this cere|spared to give him every opportun.| This delegation hax an important | mony, and at 6:30 o'clock, from Hell!ity that he may bec meesage to Seattle. Among | ‘ st. dock, the ladies of the G. A. R./man of tomorrow, intellectually as|the reforms it wishes to establish j will hold a flower service and strewj well as physically nationwide are, age minimum for! Penseme en the bay. | ‘Today Seattle is welcoming a dele . | Remember Confederates lgation of child welfare workers of ational! minimum, physica mint | | int tional r mum, hours of employment, mini The sons of the Southjand. the international renown. mum wage, placement and employ boys in gray who died fighting for) This delegation ty headed by Sir! ment supervisior pulsory choo! | their idea of the right. were not for! arthur webolme, world leading | atten © laws, care of dependent gotten, either. Daughters of the|cnig welfare expert, M fy e ide |ehildren, care of illegitimate chil | Confederacy decorated the graves Of) xuion, officer of the french war! dren, rural. social work, mental care their boys Yn Lake View cemetery jaenartmént, in charge of ecru of defective children | today with just as much reverence, |ment day nurveries, is one ofthe! The delegates met at Meany hall . { | Suat as Geep sorrow. as did those Who) deiegates. From Belgiim comes Dr. university campus, at 10 o'clock nearby paid tribute to the boys Ini none Sand, professor of industrial Friday morning, where they con-| |biue. And the: . be Y were joined in their b “<< | a |hygiene at the Brussels university, ferred with thone engaged in prac | service by members of the G. A.B. lang Mise L. EB. Carter, princi tieal child welfare work in this city | the largest girls’ eohool in fs brought home the lesson t the’ child i# the most vital e the ing children entering employment, ‘edu a? e sels. Japan is represented by Rak-| At § o'clock Friday evening, ar DEAT TAKES Jayuki Nam officer of the Jap other meeting will take place ato | | lanese department of interior. Italy| whieh the public ts invited to at lrends Prof, Fabio Frastetto, noted) tend. Sir Arthur Newshoime witt| COL R BACO jsetentist, and professor of anthrop speak on “Protection of the Hyalth | @ ° o tte of at the University of Bologna.|of Mothers and Children. Ronald Dr. Radmila Lazrevitch Miloche-|C. Davison will talk on orking viteh, eminent woman physician of Children and Education.” Mina I. *. Dr.) 6. Carter on “The Children of Brus Serbian | sels Du the War. |The Former Ambassador to! siiscvevicen nat chase | France Dies in New York | eee ee Pi x Psegeteger ses [Eble Lady of Sewautt Ring “’ If you are looking for a comfortable, day, Col Robert Bacon, former | Rules Jungle Beasts in Circus || ar . . ‘ Seed” aeSeaty te $e———— *| homelike place to room—a place where the Se, ee wen nd bed is so soft that you are glad to climb in at a reason- ~ ble hour and get up in the morning fit as a fiddle after a night of genuine rest, or— | were at the bedside when the end jcame, Col. Bacon was born in Boston, July 6, 1860. He was graduated from Harvard in the class of 1880. In 1883 Mr. Bacon married Miss Martha W. Cowdin, of New York city. His three sons, Maj. Robert | Law Bacon, 07; Capt. Casper Gris- wold Bacon, "0%, and Capt. Elliott |C. Bacon, "10, are al! Harvard | graduates. | Col. Bacon began his. diplomatic |iffe in 1905, when he accepted the position of assistant secretary 4f state under President Roosevelt He served in this capacity until 1909, when he became secretary of state for a brief period, succeeding |Elthu Root. ‘ ° . If you are looking for a place to board © where good food is the rule and not the ex- ception— where the flapjacks are brought on in a steaming stack and no normal appetite is sufficiently large to compass enough—where variety is a deep-rooted habit, or— (CHARGE EFFORT TO EXPORT GOLD | Customs Officers Arrest) | Man With $485 | | Charged with attempting to smug gle $485 worth of gold out of the United States, Bert Bearkley was ar rested at Blaine, Wash., Thursday Night by federal officers, under the direction of George Fllsterman, as- sistant collector of customs at Blaine | Bearkley een under the sur | Yeillance of secret operatives for a long while, according to Capt Thomas B, Foster, head of the secret service here, When he was obyerved to take a train late Thursday after- |noon for Vancouver, B. C., the cus tom house officials at Blaine were | notified, | A law passed by congress at the| beginning of the war made it illegal to carry American gold money out of this country An officer will lew If you are fond of music and congenial company and desire both room and board, the place to look for a list’ of such places—the kind you have long desired—is the Classified Columns of the Seattle Post-Intelli- gencer, where the PREFERRED Places to Room and Board are Found. Dainty Little Martha “Florine This little lady lady t# with the|quainted with her playmates from big Al G. Barnes Wild Animal|the wild Friday night for Blaine, to bring the | Circus, and is Al prisoner back to Seatt ein Jungle Land.| Al G. Barnes has more wild an m Also this little mi of a girl Only |imals than almost any other cirous, ] I | 2 ite weighs 97 pounds, nd subjugates|and each animal is taught to per ’ 2 30 wild man-eating African lions in|form tricks and etunts that ace Ford’s Evidence Is 3," nga t monster is large| wonderful and amazing, L Still Continuing |°"°"*" to crush her with its pon’| horses, tigers wrestle with their a trainers, huge elephants play war a MoU CLEMENS, Mich, May | Miss Florine does not know|dramas, Mamas, laepards,. jagguars, \ (39.—(United Preas.)—No court #os:|what fear ix, As Alice in Jungle |polar bears, black and brown bears sion was held today in the Ford mil-|!and ‘her playmates are all wild beasts. | hyenas, wolves, monkeys, ponies ‘ami | Hon dollar libel sult against the Chi-|Mixs Wiorine is a great friend of and horses are all there perform | cago Tribune. the little kiddies, and has a kinder-|ing in the big three rings. t | ‘The fourth week of the trial will|garten of the little jungle bablew| Al G, Barnes’ Wild Animal Cirous| | open Monday, with the plaintiff still and holds receptions for the little will be here three days at Fourth| | presenting his case, boys and girls to let them get ac-lave. and Lenora st Edwin i, Clement, of the Ford ed le ueational department, has been on the stand a whole day ana wilt con. GIVE DEMONSTR tinue his evidence on the Ford pay ATION probed on Saturday morning, at 9:30} That the city boy ix at least : PREMIER ADVERTISING MEDIUM quis, of the Ford sociological.depart-| ‘That life on the farm under mod: | to ment, is expected to follow Clement, ern scientific conditions has attrac: and then several depositions are to! tions for the elty Bboy is th tickets made to the school prin cipals, according to Vocational Di faet to | rector Kivkpatrick, who has charg