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Workers are being sought to eireulate petitions to place on the ball the fall election ould also enable cities to sell eur the ballot at the fall election [would alao enable cities to sell wu PROPOSITION From Police Vigil| in the Court House} Called Suspicious) 3 alive) man ihey nocum sand wonpartinan Sian tay taaae wane ae aoe Mra. Jane Lapp, in @ complaint| Nabbed by Sheriff Matt Starwich| CINCINNATI, Ohio, April 28-—~| WASHINGTON, Apri) 28--Rep| Ie pons prit aha in state cea” conan menaure also takes away tho Power! goeakers favoring the Montiake-|filed ‘Thursday in auperior court|in the corridora of the county-city| Government inepectors investignt:|resentatives in congress of Rien Prior nursed severe brutses fee “4 of any state board or officer to T® | wadium bridge bond, proposition ¢ > 5 - loan '| Minslanipp! valley flood area met | ga ineiicted by @ whip in ment. Copies of the leva, panedna ST eaaaaie” m bridge band, prog ©. \aqainat Patrolman 1. A. Sands and |bullding ‘Thursday, ¥. D. Grade, |ing the Island Queen, on which Mimeemibny valley tune Alas Mis Ti | day, Ive been received by W. Srametabe outs wer ursday “noon at the|Chiet of Pollce William Ht. Hearing, allan G. If. Osborn, ie held In the) peaent Harding and party were|to outline @ Sy of flood preven. |nands of Mrs, V Werton Lane, chairman of the commit “This sin iyro, ng = Men's publican, asks that the police be restrained! county jall Friday while charges of « h j Sire, Chaties Ghatéay tee in charge of the measures, - | Young ® Business, and Engt-|trom keeping too close a surveillance |forgery are being prepared against | scheduled to journey to Point Pleas: | tion thru le tive action, , ge gt clared today, of the utmost | neers’ clubs and the Real Estate A t The plan was to formulate @ pro] The two women lashed ane being distributed portance haa rend j lube an vata *\upon her rooming house at #14%/ him b; onecuting Attorney Mal Amitted today they | 514 Le. senitt liding. an c ‘+7 Jay | erciation Youler way colm Dou * celdent in which 20|eFam of legislation, the enactment| while Mra, Shadday's hus . te . " . e 7 ob oo! ne 4 Pri 8 aus rule enenwere, tf efept|> Suan wep Nag mere rl od Speaking at the Young Men's Bust)| patrolman Sands, Gradke had been sought for three jured “auspicious.” |of which would be designed to obvi |Iooked on. ‘They sald Prior ae an ness club luncheon, A. J. Quigley |prowled about the |weeks. Ife had been called as a wit pointed out the veanel/@te the danger in future years landered ther. ef by the voters, will enable cities, &f they desire to do so, to establish Municipal markets and cold storage Plants and deal in food products. They would also have the power to @stadlish coal and wood yards, and ould engage in the transportation METROPOLITAN TODAY AND TOMORROW SMART MUSICAL COMEDY dustrics, It will give cities the power to conduct thelr own business, The very existence of such power will go far toward preventing profiteering.” The non-partisan election meas and county elections, tf it carries Candidates will have to stand on |i thelr own merits, No party label | | will appear upon the ballot, but the | voter may express his choles free election. Ther requirement th: party affiliations In order to be per, where needed; to have power to | SUNDAY NIGHT Seats Now Selling MAIL ORDERS Second Annual Production of America’s Gayest, Fleetest and Most Ant'c Entertainment | the polls on election day.” Poll tax petitions may also be ob- tained at Lane's office. NGE. Sparkling Ae Sun Dodger ) Now Dead! | coe '\Faculty Censors Blush | and Deal Murderous Blow to Comic BY HOMER BREW Naughty, naughty! ‘The Sundodger, University of | Washington comico monthly, hes/ ong deen banned by the faculty for} | Cectaring in favor of the freedom of | the knees. “Sunny,” as the publication ts af- fectionately known, ie said to have | gone beyond the threesmile limit of | humor. James EB. Gould, dean of men, reaa the latest number and blushed a fiery red. Other members of the faculty said that the pictures of campus fap- pers brought a Mush of embarrass | ment to their chaste brows. Dean Gould defended his action Leal declaring that comic magazines are | out of place tn a university. | “I have felt that there is not suf-| fictent comic material about a college | to enable a humorous magazine to | survive,” said the dean, as he gazed | Jat @ green-capped freshman being tossed tnto the fish pond by ebullient sophomores. | “1 have been opposed to the maga- zine from the beginning,” he added “College life ts a place for serious! meditation. There is nothing in-) trinsically funny about the campus.” | The dean gazed penstvely at three; members of the faculty. “And sometimes,” he confinued, “the periodical has even exceeded the bounds of the proprieties. Why. in two successive issues, ft hed drawings of giris showing their knee | capat” THEY AND OH MY! }__A group of coeds trashed past the professor, short skirts flying tn the What Is Sold From [7i1%,,4 Sart of mccinetion marks “Of course,” he went on, “fhe Sun- P : Coast to Coast in the acigee tne toon quoted iinarciiy: tn Cereal Food Line? |‘* Literary Digest, but you know * | the ribald nature of that publication. Both Judge and Life have clipped Many paragraphs from the Sun-/ | dodger, but neither of them really | represents in a serious way our nw tional consciousness.” The Sundodger was established Its tame and Its name are DOW | in ree years ago, after many abortive | @arried to all parts of the glob*. attempts to start a humorsus publ. | It is one step toward going back | cation on the campus had fulled. It to mature for the good of the |has been unusually popular among the students and has had a wide sale | on downtown bookstalls. Practically every uther targe col tere in the United State has a similar publication. The Harvard Lampoon, the University of Califor. | Mia Pelican, the Cornell Widow, the | ‘Williams Purple Cow, the Dartmouth | Jack o’Lantern and numerous other | humorous pertodicals, have given the | undergrads an outlet for their ef. | fervescent epirits { “But,” repeated Dean Gould, “there Is nothing funny ahout a unt- versity.” The dean could not see himself, OW JUDGE’ LL PLASTER FINE} “I never was #0 mortarfied in all my life,” sighed Bizedik Friday, | |when he was conducted to a cell in| PHYSICIANS OF ALL SCHOOLS the city jail. A policeman had found RECOMMEND ROMAN MEAL. |him asleep tn a mortar bed and ar | |resteda hi hi ft 4 BUY FROM YOUR GROCER. pie Faas rt al wr esperar |ness, The super-refined foods must be| barred and the coarser foods, lke! Roman Meal must be used or con-| stipation or indigestion will get still more victims. BOOK—accurate and depend. able—by the Editor of the Scientific American. Specially written for the amateur. Tells what to buy and how to operate Radio Telephones—and how to listen in. Get your order in today. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN CO. (tuna & Co) 236 Broadway, New York |s.nesen Ariens [URGE BRIDGE _ [Woman Seeks Relief said tn part: |pltce as many an Montlakestadium bridge should be land ar | butlt ts the necessity for re-eatablish: | whom, she avers, have left. ing direct connection between the | university and the terrttory tmmedt ure will abolish party lines In state! ately gouth across the canal. That| Bs. C, Police ‘eves territory, which ts eparsely bullt up, sion of the Univeretty district. ink in our boulevard s#ystem. ly, both at the primary and the! peautitul drive over Montlake olga vtonettege afternoon, when the chtet| will be no further! vard to the Laurelhurat district as | of police, two sergeants and atx con-| white cards & voter declare Nls| welt as a shortcut from the main | stables were notified t boulevard to the University district be out of a job at the mitted to exercise his rights a and the Bothel highway would be af-| | forded tf the proposition carries, THE SEATTLE STAR “Among the many reasons why the | evenin Is Ordered Ousted NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.,| “Also, the bridge is needed as a/ April 28 badly needed to allow for expan- t they would | 4 of May. A recent organized “|on local stores and Vancouver real-| | denoes, during which @ woman was) Breeding grounds of mosquitoes tn | arrented but allowed to go, prompted| ing welghs about six times as much for volunteers to circulate these | Canadian marshes have recently been | the police commissioner to demand | an the food and drink he consumes | discovered by meann of at lanes. | more action. F ugitive Arrested ness in @ civil mult, and waa leaving | flashing his electric Neht|the court room when seen by Sheriff | about that ing the guests, many of | Starwic ch. Motorist | Gets 3 30 Days and Big Fine Thirty days tn jail and a fine of $100 was the sentence meted out to The long-threatened shake. | Clyde Givens, 90, in police court for up of the leoal police force happened | driving his auto into « etreet car, The following autolste lost thelr BH. N. Burt, Charles M. Culp, Ken-| |neth I. Soule, Ernest Wing, Alfred | day night. oplifting rald| Christopher and Charles Mattalnt, in the same p Workers Sought for Home Rule and Nonparti: number juring three persona. enth ave, N., - BUILD! ied.» who Is in feattle this week. | Get “Value Received” for Your Cash 100% Values Plus The Fahey-Brockman organization is dedicated to the proposition of deliv- ering Better Clothes for Less Money to the men and young men of the Northwest. In other words: The successful operation of this business demands the daily delivery of 100% values plus to our customers. Get that! When you buy a suit or overcoat at a Fahey-Brockman store you can absolutely depend on 100% value and then some. We not only say that—we also guarantee it. And thousands of satisfied customers swear to it every day in the year. Now, about your spring suit, Sir! The material is only worth so much to begin with. The hand of a master cannot add a single day to its wearability. It can only render a certain service. And that service is only worth so much money. Don’t allow yeur vanity to camouflage the facts. The big clothing manufac- turers employ the highest-salaried tailors on earth. These skilled craftsmen have revolu- tionized the clothing industry—just as their daddies revolutionized the shoe industry. They deliver quality clothes, of excellent material, fit for every gentleman in America. Today, the world and his wife are both insisting on value received before parting with their cash. Common sense is in the saddle again—a plain sign of real prosperity: Because this growing in- sistence on “value received” drives straight for ef ficiency and economy in business. Impress these facts on your mind, Brother! A high price does not necessarily mean a high value. A modest price does not necessarily mean a modest value. For instance: An efficient organization, like Fahey-Brockman’s, operating along economic lines, can offer amazing values at modest prices. F-B CLOTHES Greater Values Than Average 9% Valnog oO AITO “ F-B CLOTHES Greater Values Than Average | Fahey-Brockman Building, Third and Pike Ship Accident Is city of 8,000, and only | prwel oP w gyn Od aboard curred this year, Decision whet were when the supports gave way and|to ask congress for immediate relief |ing m seldom traveled roa4, wi upper decks crashed, seriously Hungry Bandit Gets Smoked Ham, $20 A hungry bandit, after poking «| auto whil |revolver tn the face of D, Ogawa, who operates @ grocery at 225 Rev: took a smoked ham and $20 from the cash drawer Thurs ‘G of an automobile high- Alr breathed daily by a human be | way in Mount McKinley park, Alas- ka, in urged by Col, J. G. Bteone, pres-| Oregon is immune to smut, the plant) bia, wae tn session Friday ina ident of the Alaska road commision, | disease that hag ruined many bump Flood Area Solons Two Weinen Lach @ Seek Preventive ‘The man was invited to go for automobile ride by Bhadday, FR wuch dissetrous floods as hav in-| also was to be made. were produced and Prior was Su aqonmesaer to take his medicine, He 4i4. [Two Charged With | n Driving) Alleged to have been driving an intoxtoated, Fred Boner, Former President of France Is D PARIS, April 28.~-Paul Descty 18, laborer, were arrested early Fri-| day. day at 12th ave. and Jackson et. by! oe rerregl Bergeant HB. W. Pielow and Patrol) SIXTEENTH ANNUAL man J. R. Moore, A revolver was| VENTION of the Pacific const found in the side pocket of the car sion ¢f the United . Btates | Trades association, including Ba New warlety of wheat grown In ington, Oregon and Bri attle hotel, The meetings will er cr tinue unt!l Saturday night Perfect Tailoring These clothes are well-tailored clothes —no mistake about that. They are hand tailored clothes at every point or seam where hand tailoring will add to the intrin- sic worth of the garment. And machinery, tuned to uncanny precision, effects great savings in production costs. Here’s where the Fahey - Brockman Service is fitted into the economic scheme—in order that these savings may reach you. But we’re not content with that. We also effect startling economies—in buy- ing and selling. The sum total of these sav- ings makes F-B Values literally incom- parable. If you’re not too pread’ to save $10 or more on a suit, of course you will see and study FoheyBrocknan's Spring Dis- play. I¢s abear! But—scrutinize the offer- ings of competition—compare them with the showing at clothing headquarters—re- flect on the difference in price, and your own good judgment will do the rest. Yes, Sir, you'll join the correctly-dressed throng of F-B customers—get value received for your cash and then some! Fahey - Brockman _ prices are always rock-bottom. They’re never varied or averaged because we be- lieve in treating every | man square — giving him his money's worth plus ten dollars in actual value. san Petitiong Man They Accuse mechanic, and Marcus Whitmore, |former president of France, died