Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MEMORYTO - BEHONORED Body Is Received at Cork and Lies in State Pending Funeral Ceremony a CORK, Oct. 30.--Terence # May's body lay in state ity hall, where in life he sided as tord mayor of Cork. After a day tn which the Wis the cause of fist Nehte, had been rejected by Lrish Queenstown and Cork, ¢ Or's remains rested tn a place of hon @r. Rolatives claimed the body Inst Right, only after military forees had Tireatened burial in the © t racks. FUNERAL PARADE 8 LIMITED Cork was quiet today. @oldiers were brought to quel! poss! Die outbreaks, but apparently the ex tra forces Were not necessary, Au thorities made strict regulations «ov erning the funeral, which will be het tomorrow. Among the rules was thar the only Sinn Fein flag permitted Will be that draped over the casket ‘The funeral procession was limited Ohequarter of a mile, and no mili Jaty display will be permitted. The MacSwiney mourning party Weached Cork yesterday severq! hours fer the lord mayor's casket bad ar At Queenstown and then been here by an admiralty tux. party included the mayor's rel and leading Sinn Feiners, in had pre casket oF Art O'Brien of London and} “Arthur Griffths, acting president The family attitude was at first ‘that the government had engaged in Seow! 3 body from the funeral Strain at Holy Head yesterday morn forwarding it direct to Cork Water instead of permitting it to landed in Dublin for « funeral lord may Additional | atching in forcibly removing | 33 Hero Medals Being Awarded by Commission PITTSBURG, Oct. 30.--Thirty. | three heroes or their depend day were being notified of awands by the Carnegie hero fund comrisison meeting here, Three silver and go bronse medals were given. Cash j awards inoluded pensions to two, ag gregating $1,020 annually, and other money grants totaling $20,000, Ten of the heroes lost thelr lives Those awarded medals for rescuing rowning persons Included: Elbert avin, Berkeley, Cal; Lioyd I Ventura, Cal, and & Mackenzie, Los Angeles. Cora Drahim, Portland, Ore., recommended for an honor medal for ha {tr was saving @ baby from the path of an} automobile Spokane MacSwiney Parade Causes Row SPOKANS. Oct 20. — Having failed, after a fiery stesion in the city councl! today, to forge & halt in |e proposed honorary funeral Sunday for Lord Mayor MacSwiney, oppo They asking the injunction on the ground that & funeral cannot be held without @ corpae, It is proposed y Irish sympathiadrs to stage a com. plete funeral procession thru prinel: | pal streets | ‘The procession, unless enjoined will be heavily guarded by police, Chief Welr announced today |M’Swiney Memorial Meet Here Sunday In honor of Lord Mayor Terence | MacSwiney, Ireland's martyr, a me mortal meeting will be held Sunday at 3 p.m, at the Crystal Pool, John | L. Fitapatrick will be chairman and | Rev, William Quigley and Dudley G. Wooten will speak, Father Quig ley returned this week from a five | months’ visit to Ireland, and he wil! of conditions there as he found them \U. of W. Are Praised The soldier boys in the University R. O. T. C, are equal to any college Row: | Margaret | THE SEATTLE STAR * BIG WINDUP T0 HOPE OF MEXICO) S. A. CAMPAIGN Believe U. S. and Powers! $125,000 Drive Has Whirl- Will Approve wind’ Finish RY A. 1. BRADFORD WASILIN »N 20. (RECOGNITION IS | Thusiness men, war veterans and cikw staged an enthusiastic windup nition by the principal allied powers | Saturday of the Salvation Army soon will be won by the new Meat | Campalen. The drive bee been in can government an the result of | Progress since October [the virtual promire of recognition| With the slogan, “We started the by the United #tatea, representa-|100 last year-let's finish It now tives here of the new regime de | the men who have boom fighting for jolared today the Salvation lansiea’ dream of 4 While several of the Routh Amer. | #trlw’ home here, made desperate of fean and Central American govern. | forts to raise the $125,000. quota ments have recognized Mexico, the | Which bad been allotted thin year, |qreat powers, such aa Great Britain| _Whlle the offiot palen perked and France, have withheld « lclowes Saturday evening, headquar It" wae understood they have been | (re At 207 Hoge Annex will remain open next Week to clean up all details Awaiting definition of the attitud of the United Stated @ Attitude | oe the campaign. Subseriptions -will Observers here were rkeptical of the confidence of Mexico in winning early recognition by the other great powers, pointing out Great Bri never granted recognition to C | reo. Ovt Recog |! had no far. | Committers of Wilkes and Sist Dt the opportunity. to egntribute be give day | a ey | Leweht | |eel) Uckete for the event. } 50 COPS WANTED « Firma in Ballard, Teommunieation to the efty eouncl! Friday, Med his objections to the removal of the fire station at Third ave. and Bine st. to its proposed) Civil service comnilasion announced |new location at Fourth ave, and] priday that 80 appomtments an city | Battery st \firemen and 50 appointments as pa | Chief Mantor declared that i wns) troimen are to be made effective dangerous to remove the downtown! January 3, 1 carrying out the station fo far from (the congested | counctl ordinance which allows they tends to keep on hammering buainens distrtet Plans are being rushed tn the board of public works for the new station \Eyes Badly Burned |When Fuse Blows Out Hin eyelids severely burned by « |fuse blewout at the Jefferson at. power house, Clarence Lowery, as | |aistant operator, was slowly recover. | a —— jing in the Seattle Generat hospital! HENRY DI MAN will give his last jtoday, Doctors sald he will not lone | lecture on “Marx and the Social v bis sight. Me lives at 1525% Third | olution” at the Labor temple at § ave D. m, Sunday | members of the departments one day off duty in every eight An examination for firemen will be held on November 33. 4. The salary ranges from $145 to $165 per month, The examination for patrolmen will be held on No vernber 20. Applicants’ ages are placed at from 22 to 34. The pay ranges from $145 to $166 per month. {be recetved from those who have not} | | | vision men are flooding the city with | for fF | Uckots for the big benefit dance to| presidential campaign with a night t the Armory next Sathr: | apeech at Memorial hall | Weert Seattle and the Unt} place of his | Yeraity districts have volunteered to| thru Dayton, | | rats HARDING STARTS' HIS FINAL TRIP Continues Hammering Away) at Wilsontsm BY RAYMOND CLAPPER WITH SENATOR HARDING EN hOUTEH TO COMLUMBUB, Obie, Oct 30.—After renting at hotel in Cineinnat! until noon, Senator Mard ing boarded the traip for Columbus whore he maken the final speech of his campaign tonight fenator Harding slept unt 9) and took breakfast at 10. There were no statements fortheoming from | bis immediate ad hin the candidate or ee CINCINNATI, Oct. 80,-—fenator }, Harding was all set today fina) dash down the home publican candidate will start umbus, where he winds up his en route, he pasuge thru Middletown, the birth yponent, Gov. Cox, and the governor's present home, Speeches may be made by the candidate as he goes thru There in @ feeling of uncertainty) here as to what the last hours of the! campaign may bring forth. Senator Harding and his advisers are pr pared for any last-minute strokes from the opposition camp, and altho! they are closely watching the moves) of their democratic nents, they feel confident of meeting Instantly any development which may take place To the Inst, Senator Harding In- y at the Wilson administration and the league of nations. He has scarcely altered hin original line of attack, Applicants | Inunched in his spetoh of acceptance must be between the ages of 20 and/ Hin last sentences are the mame an he has been uttering thruout the campaign, Senator Harding has fol lowed thls polley consciously, to « large degree, expecially in his discus sion of the league of nations, because of the persistent charge by his demo ent that he has “wob- bled’ question | Alfred 1 the mandate PORT ANGELES.— Body of Hugo Saarinen, drowned Tuesday, found. COX PLANNING BRISK FINALE Plunges Into Whirlwind Finish of Campaign BY HERBERT W. WALKER CHICAGO, Oct. 10—Gov. “Jamen the final speeches stump campaign where Senator Harding was nominat od, ptated that he woud consult with Senator David f Walsh, of Manna ehunetts; Bourke Cockran and Gov Smith, of New York, and Others as to “the cause of Ireland” Gov. Cox arrived in Chicago short jack this igh it Was In response to Inquiries from organizations in w of Ris whirlwind in the Coliseum. }York as to what teps he would take to obtain action on the league of nw tions and the Irish and Jewish ques ons, His reply was “If Tam lected, I shall recognize for entrance into the league of nations, 1 shall work out that solution in conference with the senate ful reservations as are necessary to secure that end, 1 shall consult with Wilson, Taft and Root, and any oth ence, can render helpful service. POLES START ANOTHER WAR LONDON, Oct. 20,—EAthuanta te rallying to the colora to repel Polish invasion, the Lithuania legation here waa informed today. ‘ ‘With Vilna, the ancien capital, in the hands of Potish invaders under General Zeligowski, and Kovno threatened, the old men and rtudents alike were reported joining the army Several attacks op the Kovno Vilna line have been repelled, the legation oud 1t was admitted large German de tachments had arrived in Kovno, anxious to ald the Lithuanian ferces: Thin help was declined, according to with acceptance of such help: | [BRIDGES SAYS VICTORY HIS At Final Rally ‘Declares He Will Be Governor Robert Bridges, farmer labor party candidate for governor, claimed vic ¥ IM. Cox, here today to make one of tory in his gubernatiorial fight day evening at the final rally of the third party held at the Armory, | Bridges opened his remarks with 4 denunciation of the Bech-Cummings law, which h the increased freight rates. He anmerted hin belief that the railroads and the ators are joining in @ conspir [acy to ruin the farmers. Bridges held up Northa Dakota a» | Ja shining example of legislative per fection He mid that he would |pledge the eredit of the state to put [into effect a new industrial program | here. | William Shert, president of ‘the | State Federation of Labor, completed ithe program. Short devoted most of his time to a denunciation of Gov Hart, whom he charged with being |controlied by special interests. 6. 0, P, DRIVE jore who, by virtue of their expert: | ENDS TONIGHT oe | One big meeting Saturday night at the Metropolitan theatre, with smal! er mectings in various parte of the city, will mark the end of the main jcampaign of the republican party | Small rallies will, however, be held |in many communities until the ele Uon is on, Speakers at the | theatre will include: Senator Wer ley L. Jones, Gov. Louis F. Hart and Congressman Jobn F. Miller, Other meetin, Syturday night will be held in Neacen Hill church, 16th ave, 8. and Forest at; Wash ington hall, 14th ave. 8. and Fir st.; | Thorne hall, B. 72nd st. and Wood land ave. and at Richmond Beach. Metropolitan | BAY CITY.—Luther Jonesboro, Ark. sentenced to two years in federal prison and fined $6,000 for profiteering in sugar, Ellison, of | RATURDAY, OCTORER 3, 1999. HARGED WITH HITTING | troiman ¥. W. Speir when the lat | wan seeking to arrest him for disore¢ dorly conduct, William Comrada wae fined $10 and costs by Justice of the, gle Peace Brinker Priday, : : Ll ne COLOR RETURNED TH HER CHEEKS |Mrs. Weger Tells How Girls | Who Suffer From Thin } Blood Can Recover Glow of Health There t form of anemia, of n blood, that affiicts growing ris, causing them to lose color and ng in digestive disturbances, of weight and many unpleasant mptome. To suffer from thin cot is entirely unni ary is a specific remedy for it, statement of Mra, Alice M, |Werer, of No, 332 Ethel street, |Giendale, Calif, whows. She say: | “When I was about fourteen years ‘old 1 was in an anemic condition Jand suffered trom wtomach trouble and fainting spells, I was colorless and was a# white as death, There | seemed to be no blood at all in my lveins, I kept losing strength right jalong and at times had severe head, Jaches when I would give right: out and faint away “My appetite was poor and what © did eat caused sour stomach and @ burning sensation. I was extremely nervous. | “My mother gave me Dr. Wik lame’ Pink Pille and after the fin |box I could see a wonderful chang My appetite camd back and I could eat a good meal without the heart burn resulting. I continued to take the pills and the cojgr returned my cheeks, the fainting spells stop. | ped and I became strong and well |again. I can truthfully recommend Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills to any one who is suffering from thin blood and I think they are especially good for growing girls.” A valuable booklet, “Bufléing Up the Biood,” will be sent free upos request. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pile are sold by all druggists or will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per box, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co, Scheneo tady, N. ¥. a thi lon titer the rillitary organization in his division =. declared Col. M. M. Pulls, RO. TC officer of the Ninth corps, Friday, after conducting a two-day inspection of the local unit. © Phe Sinn Feiners, acting on this, | to take the initiative on ar-| ef the body here. At Queens & large crowd saw the packet steam up to the dock Jeaders refused to take charge the body in the absence of rela x ler some delay soldiers trans tarred the et carefully to a gov. t tug@rhich steamed up the to Cork. The tug’s fag flew at Thief Loots Home; Neckties Stolen A bunch of necktion, sight boxes of shotgun shells, a flashlight and $3 ip cash were plucked by a burglar led the population in prayer as tug pulled up the river SECOND NEAR SENECA William Gillette’s Stirring Stage Play Pjcturized by Paramount HART'S ELECTION MEANS INCOMPETENCY AND MACHINE RULE AND BRIDGES, AT BEST, MEANS TURMOIL AND DEADLOCK, WHILE JUDGE BLACK, AS GOVERNOR, WILL BE LEVEL- HEADED, FAIR AND PROGRESSIVE Bob Bridges could accomplish nothing. Partially elected this fall. The senate holdovers em certain to control the legislature. Under Bridges the entire ste govern- ment would be deadlocked just Mke Hart has deadlocked the minimum wage for women. The state senate is only But Judge Black, who 1s a successful business man as well as a square deal judge, will be able to work with the legisiature, and, like Governor Lister, accomplish « large share of his * progressive program. THAT’S WHY THOUSANDS ARE TURNING TO BLACK. Judge Black Has Always Given the Poor Man the Same Treatment as the Rich or Prominent His Record as Judge Indorsed by Official Labor Paper “Judge Black doesn't hnte corporations nor does he fear them His whole judicial attitude has been one of impartiality, He makes no distinction between rich and poor litigants because of their wealth or lack it, but decides on the merits of a case and the plain statutes laid down to govern him in his decisions. It is because his court decisions have been singularly free from obstruse legal phraseology and have been besed on @ clear con- ception of what was right und just in the case at the bar, that _ he has won the respect of so many people.” From the Wverett Labor Journal, Ang. 2, 1913. VOTE FOR HIM (This Ady. pald for by Democratic State Committee) Jack Holt, Agnes Ayres, Wanda Hawley, Lewis: Stone, Robert Cain, Clarence Geldart, Walter Hiers and Lillian Leighton! MALOTTE ON THE WURLITZER March — “Diplomat”. -». Sousa “That Naughty Waltz” vias . Levy “Pilgrim’s Chorus” from “Tannhaeuser”.... You Know Me? een eeeee A Southern girl, supposedly a widow, falls in love with a captain, who ar- dently returns her love. Then her hus- band appears as a spy! “Old Pal, Why Don’t seaeaweses “A Tray Full of Trouble’—De Luxe Monkey Comedy. ainitticiorinn natal ‘ nonpguaeranmenamnen en senerereserwanene omoneromeeeon Re NNN LER ROE RN Se NPR SM