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ol SS ggaRREES ae iH ive H i moderate winds, Temperature Last MF 3 southu Minima: xlay noon, 51 “VOL U ME 2 2 On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise nd Clase Matter May 2, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie Wash, Ww /ASH., under the Act of Congress March Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 THU RSDAY, TheSeattle Star | ‘Two “CENTS IN SEATTLE , MISS BRAINERD a b> Weather Tonight and Frid rat |THOUSANDS IN LONDON WITNESS TOSTART =MACSWINEY FUNERA SMUG TOWN Declines | Millions SHAMED BY Won’t Sell Prince RULES FOR CYNTHIA GREY pONTEST Meter ase pointed 10 questions teken| from Mine Grey's mail. Every woman and girt in Seattle and surrounding territory is invited to ewer them, Write your answers on one site he ao} De nat cony the aucations. | 8 a questions “All answers to today's questions must office of The Star by Monday beat answers mes for tomag two each will be aocwers to today’s | Suet be recaived” by mast 1 am calling on} to help settic an argument, or to give your opinion. In our works a girl, pretty and full ‘@f pep, and very ractive to the Opposite sex. been seen lately In company with a young man i engaged to be Knows it. Is she doing right? Must think that taking a pretty has Out is a fine way to kill time.| ee hein the wrong, too? GRATEFUL. Question No, Dear Miss Grey: 1 am alone with jong. and T am so ig: Durial, etc. Wilh you me and obiige. oa. | i i H i Fs @ griev.| upon you. umber of | a | Lama I give all of my iy i 4 FI ci i i E $ l iy fe i g Hy t i I may this should u if g smoke, but she believes girl or any other who ap of smoking, wishes to daso in or co aornt else i is all that we would be inhospit- we should disapprove. 'e await your opinion of the mat- HUSBAND. gy" itt it f United States lone hin to vote if he has served a term tiary? D, M. C. 3 i ¢ Grey: I am a girl 19 at college. I am en- very dear saiior boy, and | base and wants me to! 1 want to wait until as he is @ college graduate, : it i He says that if f love him, marry him immediately. im very dearly, so please help EVELYN. Question No. 8 Miss Grey: Five years ago my husband regardless of ‘8 Opposition to our mar- Since that time she has been “polite” and distant towards One thing she insists upon is it na she does not care to have . I have a mother of my that I fairly worship and eall another woman “mother” is despised effort. Is it necessary that way? Ie it a Preach of social etiquette to one’s snother-inaw “Mrs, ——"? ¥ ane “e a 3 tat Dear Miss Grey: What initial should a girl embroider on the linen | ghe is preparing for her hope chest? DUBIOUS. Question No. 10 Dear Miss Grey: I have a navy Plue all-wool serge skirt. I washed it and dyed it. Since it has been dyed it will not iron. hottest irons and still it won't tron fice. I’ve also used a damp cloth by putting it over it, and still jt won't smooth out, Can you advise me how 4 remove the wrinkies in it? MAGGIB. RIENDS SE IN THER BILL NEW YORK, Oct. 28—August fs being sued for more than 1000 by personal friends. This in ‘their fags for involuntarily baths tn Lake George when Clark's motor married, and | And of course | how to proceed with) our home, My} 1d alno like to have that | 1 4o| call her mother, because as) call} I've tried the} IMPRESSIVE SPECTACLE IS STAGED Thru Streets as Citizens Doff Hats in Respect BY LLOYD ALLEN | LONDON, Oct. 26 —Strife | government policies was «tilled mo mentarily today while the soul of over imvalid mother who certainly can-| Terence MacSwiney was consigned delicious to his Maker. | Somber thousands knelt St. George's cathedral while an arch | bishop and asuisting bishops Intoned | the solemn ritual. There was no dis | turbance. The Irish hunger striker’s casket himy on its catafalque, its polished Acne. 4 and metal trimmings reflect ing the quivering candle light. flag of green, white and orange, add-| *d to the color of the robes of the . giatening In the dim light. Sinn Fein colors decorated the gar in those ornamental bits were obscured | im the mourning garments and bands All About Booze Drinkers Get Drunker Nowadays. But Not So Many Get Drunk. Smugg ling From Canada Unchecked. Much of the Whisky Is Poison. | * * * ; werbert Corey tok 0 leteurety tip from Seattle te New York te, cover the world series ive and Clow Iw vemtigation \ ay ey = a lndustey leaves the Cenedian bender ‘Oa his way he made = thore Me ie writing of this end other phases Of the fillet whisky business im seriew of | Cortege Marches 3 Miles atticles for The Seattle Star, of whieh this is the first, |} Drinkers get drunker | But not #0 many drinkers gut drunk nowadays ‘That is a brief eummary of | the Important phases of the situation erdated in the United States by the one of | # dead | passage of the Volutead act. The rea | son lies imbedded in human nature. Forbidden joys are always the moat Try to hire a boy to wateh from the bleachers a rotten game of} ball and he would sneer, Put a high board fence around that aume gume and he will wink his young eyes out at the knotholen. VERY LITTLE REAL WHISKY To this tact other vitally important one. | the stuff that in being peddied today as whisky in no more whisky than is the parent 1) Lioyd George le mayor of Cork, A] Lora Rodgers, wife of David Rodgers BY HERBERT COREY what Koc they believed to be bonded xin from a dependable man. One nd the other is blind. In other articles I shall go more deeply into the situation as 1 see it. ‘Daug hter Found by E ather She Had Never Seen TULARE, Cal, Oct. 28.—A father and his 34¢-yearold daughter looked must be added an-| upon one another for the first time Mont of |/here and are happily reunited today Fred Broon, a butehber in this town, The daughter ls Mr«. goodly share of it t# rank poison.) of St Louis. | Labets and government stampe are being counterfeited in wholesale Tack In the ‘808 FBronon aad his wife separated in St. Louis, a baby | fashion. The mam who thinks he is|came soon afterward, Bronon later buying good whisky beeuuse the bot.) heard he was a father but never ments of many of the spectators, but | tle looks as tho it came from a gov-| learned whether his child was a boy | ernment [shite coneesnune Sea Add the two warehoure is cheated in| or a girl euthedral. phrre—-ttie enirs Se eae to sotdiers stood the bettie mre rotin * Bronen's req furcloiled raw spirite--and you find| cerning the pe child. Presently republican ®uerd over the body. thrueut the services. ‘They wore their Sinn Fein uniforms covered by overcoats, Thruout. the chanting of the they stood rigidly at atten. The clowe associates of the lord Mayor, members of the Irish parlia- ment and hundreds of Irish sympa jthigers knelt in prayer with those sympathizers from London who had not known MacSwiney in life. A thousand of more, with heads bared, crowded their way to the cathedral entrance. They stood quietly thru- |out the long service, and afterwards | were admitted to the building to | view Mactiwiney’s face before the casket waa closed. ‘The lord =mayor’s relatives were there—all except the lady mayorens, | whose apparently indomitable com- posure was lost at last.’ She lay ill at the home of friends, in utter col The procession in whieh the casket was conveyed to Euston station, was looked upon aa the greatest Irinh demonstration in England’s history, Headed by a band of Irish pipers, the procession marched slowly thru three miles of the heart of London. Police had feared a possible hostile demonstration, but everywhere the cortege was greeted with the great eat respect. Pedestrians numbering hundreds of thouminds doffed their hats an the |hearss passed, and the only discord jance wan produced by hawkers who | cried their offers of Sinn Fein colors and souvenir postal cards SINN FED BODY GUARD | Following the pipers was a hody jruard of Sinn Fein soldiers, wearing the uniforms under overcoats. T uniforms were distinguishable under the outer garments, but officials made no protests. Wearing the uni form in Ireland is forbidden, bat the law does not mention its appearance in England, The motor hearse was next in lin followed by members of the Ma Swingy family in carriages, and aft er therm trailed a long procession of mare and organizations. Police stopped traffic in the est streets that the cortege pass unbroken. Starting from the cathed the procession moved up the wide spaces of Lambeth road and into the equally wide Black Friars road, leading oe across the Thames. The marchers: | next followed the curve of the river along Victoria embankment and pro. «led northward to the station thru Kingsway Still under guard of the Irish soldiers, the coffin lay in the station, to remain there until early this eve ning, when it will be taken by train to Holy Head, thence scroms. the channel to Dublin HARDING WINS ‘U’ STRAW VOTE of the straw vote for premdential candidates taken at the University of Washington show the following returns: Harding, 1,994; Cox, 848 418; Christensen, 106; Watkins, buted might Results Debs, 42, ere, representing Irish officials | and Western states. I have inquired dian border tron} Humas to Detroit. As 4 result I am personally con vinced that a condition has been ere. ated by the prohibition legislation which in, temporarily at least, far more dangerous than the one which existed by reason of the lawful sale of intoxicanta, I say thie condition is & temporary one because it in inconceivable that it will be per time. It is important that the peo- ple of the United States realize pre- | clwely, what thin condition is. ACIT DISTILLANG N EVERY CITY The smugwling of liquor across the Canadian border is going on un checked, if not unharassed, by the officers of the law littelt stilling {* commonplace in every city I have visited. ky—clin be bought with litte aim culty in every town, if the would be buyer has the price, The cost runs from $6 « bottle in Detroit for a fairly good Canadian liquor to $30 tn St. Louis, These of the cont scale as I have found them. The figures vary almost from day to day, however. In every town a “whisky ring” ts lin operation. 1t may consist only of a pair of dirty collared boot-legwers, lor it may be widely ramified and | mucked by reputable business men. Fortunes have been built up in a few weeks’ time by men who are willing to take 4 chance. 1 know a taxicab driver whose bankbook «hows $75. | 000, the profit of*six months’ partici pation. I have heard of a youngater | who made $100,000 since the Volatead act went into effect. The list might be. extended indefinitely. So many cases of this sort came to my atten. tion that I ceased to keep count, REGULAR ARMY COULDN'T MORE THAN CHECK IT | ‘There is not a square mile in the United States in which there are enough federal agents today to pre | vent thm manufacture or sale of good bad. whisky. The regular arjny it stands today is not large enough to more than check the smuggling over the Canadian border. In Mich gan alo jough fines hav {imposed on rum runners to x | entire cont of the “enforcement” of the federal statutes in six states. Yet Detroit ix flooded with whisky There in excellent reason to doubt | the honesty of a great many federal agents, I personally know scores of men who have bought and are buy ling liquor from these agents. | I do not know, nor’ does any one know, by widely the force is spotted by dishonesty. But no one who examines the | tially ean doubt that scores of nts sking & business of raiding | bootieggers and selling the bootleg to other men A quaint kink in the thinking ap. paratus of the average whisky drinker persuades him that because the stuff he buys ix sold by a dis been y the else fore reliable, drinkable. |bond whisky. His eh a little better than it hooteh in a dark alley. —tmillionales 20 Umex over—bought bottled nay be con mitted to exist for any considerable | Whiaky—or what is labeled whis-| are the evtremes | honest officer of the law it is there. | in| pousht his | Yet two men} into the booze facts along the Cana-/fsther since abe wns | | | | | | situation tmpar-| { ] | | | | | | | | the reason for hundreds of tragedies. | Bronon received a photograph of a In recent weeks I have visited the| woman. On it: was peaned “Your larger cities of a score of Eastern | Daughter.” Mrs. Hedgers, who had sought her 1%, hastened here. ) Hronon manifested his joy with a gift to her of $300 in twenty-dollar geld pieces and a diamond ring. FATHER AND DAUGHTER ARE REUNITED AFTER 30 YEARS’ SEPARATION FLINT, Mich, Oct. 28—A father and a daughter were re- united here today after a separ: ation of 20 years and efforts were being made by the daughter to effect a reconciliation between her parents. Jack Benjamin, working in a factory here, admired the pretty young woman he knew as Mrs. 8. ©. Diamond. They had been working side by side for a year. One day, when’ she handed him & package to mail for her, he noticed that it was addressed to the woman he had divorced 30 years before. “Then I recalled our three-year old daughter and sure enough Mra. Diamond was my little baby.” said Benjamin. What Do You KNOW About Seattle? QUESTIONS 1. What is the oldest park in Seat- te? 2, When was work on the Lake Washington canal first commenced? 3. What resident of Seattle invent- ed the famous “Iron Chink"? (Anawors Friday) ere PREVIOUS QUESTIONS 1. Rainier ave, is the longest street in Seattle, extending from Yesler way to the extreme southern limits) of the city. It is over six miles in length. 2. Seattle, first incorporated as a city in 1869, was bounded on the north by Galer st., on the east by Lake Washington, on the south by Hanford st, bay on the west. 3. Seattle's first electric railway commenced regular service on March 41, 1889. It was the fourth electric atreet car system in the world. Telephone Your Wants is to put af ad Just step to the pleasant-voiced, » your How ensy it in the paper telephone and a courteous ad taker will ta ad Call The Star at preferably in the morning. When central gives you switchboard operator, ask the Want Ad Department. You are as close to Star Want Ads as your phone is to you, SEATTLE STAR Largest Circulation—Best Results any time, our for and to the middle of the| GRY GIRL for Justice Brings of State on Narrow Local Critics BY RUSS SIMONTON NEWCASTLE, Pa, Oct. 28—This town that stamped with the die of red disgrace the name of Mra. Ada Melntyre, is trying in a emug way to undo what it haw done to make her 4 minerable and cringing out cant, Mra. McIntyre, not yet 22, the wife of “Sfeotty” Melntyre, Un-plate mill worker here, is a middie clase Eng- lish girl. She bas no people this side of the ocean. She fell among careless compan- fons and was with them when a mur- der wan done. MINISTER CONDEMNED HER TO DERISION For that “sain” the minister in the pulpit, the housewives of her neigh- borhood, the merchant in his shop and the schoolgirl on the street con- demned ber to scorn and derision. “They wouldn't even tell me the time,” Mra McIntyre ted me, The stains of ts of tears were on her would drive Up street in their autor and stick their heads out and mock Was dreadfully lonesome. Then the landlord told me I would have to move. I was afraid I couldn't get a plnce to live where I could have my little girl with me.” ‘Then, in desperation she wrote a letter to a newspaper here. “Granted,” she wrote, “that my ac- tions have been indiscreet; is that justification for the Christian people of Neweastle to shun me as a Pariah —to mark me az one who has gone beyond the pale of decency?” She had her answer from the pul- plit of the Rev. Dr. 8. 'T. Irvin. on | the next day. He looked at her when | he spoke and she cowered in the pew when he hurled down his denuncla- tion, "She haa asked for forgiveness from you men and women,” he said, an he pounded on the Bible. “She has told you how her soul was torn by the just condemnation of her city. I say to you that she is not a Chris. tian! She strayed from the Master's path and is wandering blindly in | outer darkness.” Weeping she went to him in the name of the church after the service | and told him she was a Christian. ATTENDED PICNIC WITH OLDER WOMAN All Unis because 10 days ago Mrs. + Molntyre and a woman much older, Mra. Harriet Olds, attended a picnic, met J. C. Abraham, a meat salesman, and with him and Roy Phillips, Mra, Olds’ brother, went for an automo- bile ride It is not denied that they had been drinking. ‘There was a fight. Abra- ham was killed, beaten to death, it is wad. The two women fled and came to town alone. Phillips was arrested and is held tn jail now, charged with murder. The two women, after a short detention, will be witnesses at his trial. ‘The news of Mrs. Melntyre's os. traciam leaked from this village in the tron hills to the outside world, and suddenly Newcastle was ashamed of itself, Pennsylvania people outside New- castle indignantly told the town what | they thought, and so, with many a shrug, they are talking now of “poor Mrs, McIntyre.” A secretary of the Y¥. W. C, A. told me: “I know her. ‘That is, 1 Know of her. Of course,I wouldn't have any- thing to do with her, any more than | just to help her live a decent life. Understand, 1 wouldn't know her if 1 saw her.” That is typical of the attitude of all the folks I have talked with, with the exception of Mrs. Rae Mutrhead, who was a religious worker with Evangelist Billy Sunday for many | years and who is now police matron here. | She says the town has shamelessly | abused Mrs. McIntyre, whom she has | take: nm wee her wine: | Appeal Wrath HE OBJECTED “TO EXERCISE W YORK, Oct. 28.—Mrs, Clin |ton L. Mundy, suing for divorog, \said her husband made her get up at 3 a, m, and march around the reom phe va he sang “Onward Christian | ‘The man who listens to. another | man’s wife's domestic troubleg is usu ally the cause of the ereatest infelic: ity, were released and | Mile. Lambrine and (inset) Prince Carol BUCHAREST, Rumania, Oct. 28.— Mile. Zixi Lambrine, morganatic wif of Prince Carol of Rumania, has re- fused to. “sell her husband” for $5,000,000. ‘That was the amount offered her by Queen. Marie of Ru- mania if she would quit the prince and marry some one else, according to a dispatch from Paris. The offer was made, it is said, in Prince Carol feels the same way his wife does about it. He recently returned from Paris, after a visit to the United States. He became so enraged at the offer to buy off his wife that he threatened to return to America and become a “plain citi- zen.” In 80 doing he would legalize his marriage and also legalize his infant the hopes that the romance, which son, born tn Paris several months has resulted in Prince Carol twice }ago. Mile. Lambrine is the daughter renouncing his rights to manian throne, would thus be fin- ished for once and all. | the Ru-jof a Russian general. She and the |prince were married in Odessa in 1918. Broke Quarantine to See His Sick Children, Charge Because he left his side of the house to visit another side, where his three boys lay ill with diphtheria, John W, Seibert was charged Thurs- day, by the prosecuting attorney, with breaking quarantine. Complaint was made by Isabel Mc- Kinnon, nurse for the county health officer, who said Seibert would not accept his assignment to a private corner, but insisted he had a perfect right to disobey the rules and see pis children. IS HELD FOR MBEZZLEMENT On complaint of George P. List- man, president of the Listman In- vestment Co, with offices in the %. C. Smith building, Herbert McDougall, former solicitor for thé association in Tenino, was held in the city jail today on a charge of em: vezzlement, Listman said McDougall had been working in Tenino until fecently, when he was discharged and the books and papers belonging to th company taken from him. However, Listman charges, two contracts were retained unawares by . McDougall, who later collected $380 for which he failed to account. DEATH THREAT ON SIDEWALK Painted jn red-on the sidewalk In front of the residence of Mrs. M. Hol- born, 2210 Franklin ave, she in: formed police today, i# a threat which fs causing her much worry. The threat reads: “Beware—Death.” An unintelligible name ‘= painted th. WOMAN UP FOR BAD LANGUAGE Complaint that Elizabeth McDon- ald was too careless of speech dur: ing a conversation Saturday evening at Market and 17th st. N. W., led to her being charged by the prosecuting attorney with the use of “indecent language.” ‘The words, according to the com. plaint, were uttered concerning one Margaret Clements, and were 20 loud that they were heard by Harold Bireh, proprietor of a nearby gro- cery, Birch and Ermine Kroesing, alleged listeners in the conversation, are named as witnesses, BEDROOM LOCK FOILS THIEVES Burglars had no trouble entering a window of the home of Mrs. EB. % C. Walker, 157 16th ave. last nig! she told police today, but a 18k on her bedroom door pre- vented the intruders fromy stealing her jewels. ‘The Church of England is ahead of the Protestant Episcopal church in its recognition of women in the chureh, WEST FOR TRIAL AS KIDNAPE Attorney Abandons Attempt at Habeas Corpus; Begin — Seattle Trip Tomorrow NEW YORK, Oct. 28 Miss Betty Branierd will 1 surrendered to Washing! state authorities and taken to that state trial on charges of kidnaping of the two- year ae son of Geo T. § Brainerd’s atto nia Kresel, predee day no effort will be made fight extradition here. will produce the young ' an at 3:30 p. m. the district atto: he said, and she return trip to Was 7:30 tomorrow ‘night. — Governor Alfred EB. Smith extradition papers in the case this morning. Miss Brainerd, in an appeal Sam Sadler and W. E. widely known radicals, who tenced to MeNeils island under commutation of their sentence — President Wilson, Sadler was found guilty of by force the authority of the States. On February 1, 1918, together with his co-defendants, Pass brothers, and Hulet M. was sentenced to two years In federal penitentiary at MeNeila, Mead was sentenced to five in the penitentiary on May 27, 14 According to the evidence bro ‘ out in his trial, Mead end at persuade members of the Sixth zy company, Canadian engineers, not enter the war, and is said to have tuéily secured two er three d tions from the Canadian army, He is a miner from Arizona, terday he called at the clerk's of the United States district and withdrew his membership and card in the I, W. W., which one of the exhibits in the trial pps Poeetoatatiewese = 2 eo JITNEY MEN ARE KN Seattle jitney bus drivers quietly but effectively knifed tn: judiciary and public utilities comumit+ tees Thursday, ‘The jitneurs had been assured that. if a compromise working agreement could be reached, it would be adopty ed by the city, The auto drivers agreed to withhold campaigning for ~ their own initiate Dill, which comes before the people next Tuesday, When the compromise agreement came before the committee it was summarily postponed until after the election. Councilman W. BH, Moore, A, T. / Drake, R. H., Thomson and Phil Tindall voted dn favor of pigeon: holing the proposed compromise action. R. B. Hesketh and O, T, Erickson stood by the jitneurs. It is expected that a final effort will be made to cooperate with the auto drivers at the regular meeting of the eoungil Monday, Little hope for reaching a definite settlement is held out. +. e For every 1,000 men between # ages of 18 and 45 years there are in women, in England.