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“TWO, INJURED BY AUTOS, MAY DIE The 30- 10 ATAR presenta below a ans ments for the 20-10, prepar 6 Others, Including Woman, county auperintendent of nehools, . Sehool Code C the law te ba mminsion, nade t Are Injured Friday, while six other personas, fn eluding one woman, were recovering at their homes from injuries received Im a series of auto accidents, Thure- day afternoon and evening. While playing tn the street at 33rd ‘ave, & and McClellan st, Lela Prem. per § years old, 2016 38rd ave. &, Was crushed by a truck driven by George Educational dssoctation The e@rauments in brief follow Education Is a Ita effects have been calou- Bilodeau, 149 Melrose ave, N tahda ‘Yor every tetriat ‘The girl was taken to the Swedish ondition Friday was It transfers school support pital, gue ts wufforing from con- from district to state taxation uasion of the brain and internal tn- it ineures ow achool chance to every © Bilodeau, charged with reckless It lowers tawes for every Griving, was released on $100 ball taxpayer now paying above When his automobile collided with Aa share. two other cars at Westlake ave. and ns pads condi sale Wibdo- Highiand drive, Edward Rowley, M1 ob tn Feet chdle of tha Sao ‘@ sallor, living at 3705 Densmore ave. + Aad was thrown to the pavement, the ‘Blow fracturing his skull, He was in the city hospital Friday, also tn a ‘critical condition. Knocked down while crossing the street, Mra Elizabeth Kots, 4034 s8th ave. was severely bruised. The Automodile was driven by R. H. Dick tnson, Jr. hare ee bond Ltoyd George is now in the midst of the greatest polttical bridge near Tacoma Thursday night. battle of his career. An enthusiastic crowd greets him in| Miss Louise Stoser and F. Kramer, Manchester, where he began his attack on the new govern- 815 N, 43rd st. were thrown out and pone crease om. Thin measure will not upon the needs of our this measure suppl present plan the money can o special elections, other districts « dation, local control of the schools, But Will Adequately Support Injustice to Any The 90.10 plan was firat proposed by the Public Aehool Code a o o ne slature The #anatures Posst ’ t, @ man and yinienion, and falled to paws the lewisiaty cna iy ccutens A he pitala, (84,000) to initiate the bill were secured by the parent-teacher ES wh , organizations of the state in conjunction with the Washington INITIATIVE NO. 46 (80-10) Is a Measure for the Public Schools les the need from an equitable tax. U ‘The measure does not affect private schools It does not increase teac' INITIATIVE NO. 46 Taxpayer Anywhere. 10 Plan statement of the argu od by A. & Burrows, assistant who, as seeretary of the Public he statintion) studies upon which clear-cut State Function It raises the minimum term of school te 8% months It lowers the maximum dts- trict tax rate—3 milla. It meets every emergency. It disoontinues all unfair bonuses It collects taxes where wealth 4 It distributes school funds where children are. It will maintain present or better school standards total achool taxes which depend If the nchools cont more money, der the be secured In some districts by annot secure it at all hinder consolt nor does tt affect nor ors’ nalaries, Education Fairly Without Child, School or a —. | SEDRO ELOPERS 2AIRMEN | BLISS IS BRIEF a esgttal A heavy fog caused | STARTS ON PAGE ONE — jIrate Parents and Police J. D. Hunter, 8515 Ninth ave. N.| close to or touches these potnts: Block Romance By Jack Hall Once upon a Ume there lived « certain policeman who wore @ star and everything. And it happened that this policeman was net in sym pathy with the doctrines of Mr. Vol stead and delighted to look upon thy wine when tt waa red. And it came to pass that he kept a bottle of Scotch in his locker for medicinal and John Wurste, 223 Alaska were severely shaken and when a car driven by Thomas 4384 Second ave. N. W., col- with thelr automobile at Fre- mont ave. near the bridge, Thursday Ne Kali ” id, 416 cae cong. years olf, “ ‘Gnd internal injuries when he was! ro vion, Johnstown, Harrisburg,| Romance lasted « few short houre pmmaeked Gown at Eiehth ave. §. and) anton, Mineola for Winnie Dailey, 16, and C. R. Poe, st. by a car driven by Charlie) “They expect to make the trip in|2%, Thursday night. And then fate val ninloebe 30 hours. jin the form of @ long distance call zy °, The plane in which the airmen | from Sedro-Woolley, irate parents To Decorate City [ride ts a special army transport and « huge bluscoated policeman ta- re monoplane driven by a single : } _ for Armistice Day erty motor. It is standard in all| The clopers left Sedro-Woolley on ‘Opening of the Pacific Northwest | respects except the eapactous fuel|® © Northern train, @ fact that } exposition Nov.'11, and tne|tanks, which are built into the | Was quickly traced by the parents of 4 Ja-Washington football game | wide wings of the monoplane. These | the couple and communicated to Se- | Will give added importance to Armis-|tanks, when the giant plane left ttle police. Patrolman C. O. Beott, rat Cop Penalized to Teach Him to Share His Booze Day committee, Day, in the opinion of the Ar-/the ground, held 725 gallons of gas te and efforts|oline, 25 teing made to have the city spe-| gallons of oil Gecorated for the day. The commisstoners will have the inty-city building decorated with ies and bunting. The parade will Promptly at 10:30 head of Second ave. The lItne & m. from depot guardian, stopped the happy | pair and escorted them to the police station. They were held Friday for return to thetr homes, NEGRO FIGHTS / TEXAS RETURN jiens of water and 3) Lieut, Kelly piloted the great in the takeoff Last night at 10:30, when the waiting | aviators learned that weather | conditions were faverable all along their route, they tossed a purposes, And he healed many tile by imbibing thereof. And the fame of his cures was spread thruout the land. Now {t happened that other police men, being sick with an unholy thirst, did remonatrate with him con vorning the bottle, saying, “Verily thou should open up thy bottle and Emarch will be down Second ave..| coin to determine who should Accused of shooting to death a| five M0 to crak, for we are erie gountermarching on Second take the aS, op Me ty ~ He a good sport and haul out the a ~ to Pine, the responsibility of get- | negro named Tubbs, after he had lost |*,% ood "hart Sn tee eee of North on Westlake, past the re- A ° of Betraying Girl Nov, $—Trial by jury |}0n# trip. @ charge of having contributed A heavy cushion weighing tn the! pain, of Centerville, arrived in Beat the delinquency of a 1¢-yearold|"elehborhood of 35 pounds was re-| tie Thursday night for the prisoner, demanded to-|™oved from the plane shortly be-|who was arrested recently by De Crabb, 69, in.| fore the start of the fight to make ‘an East Denver high|the load lighter. Home Brew {Continued From Page 1) put mighty fine material in some of those old cars. stand. pfessor Accused school girl was N. who has a wife and six|the ground today tt raised a com vehemently denies ht wi ee i soon be Armistice day. Doughboys will parade down First Sve. to remind ‘em of the front line trenches. “Bullet in Eye Extracted by Mag-|flight today under the direction of |!"# Sunday afternoon. fRet."——Headline. They should have| Mechanic Dworack and the fliers. left it in. Think of the hard looks this lad could give a taxt-driver. THOUGHTS OF A MIDDLE-AGED | *@fety of the fiers and for the suc GUY ‘These soulmates that adorn a book ‘They started a hasehall league aboard the Noah's Ark, but the first game was called on account of wet the ting the heavily laden plane off | his money in a game of dice, three the ground. years ago, Jess Campbell, colored, Several thermos bottles filled with|/ who has been held in the city jail water, hot coffee and @ large Sup | since last month, began « fight Frt- Ply of sandwiches will be the nour) day to prevent his extradition to ishment used by the filers on the | Centerville, Texas, to face a charge of murder, Deputy Sheriff R. N. | tectaves? T. G. Montgomery an4 | Charles Phillips, Campbell denied that he had ever been tn Texas. He te charged with robbing Tubbe of $45 bined load of 10,860 pounds, the| after the latter had been shot to heaviest load ever taken off the! death, ground by a single airplane motor. | ber tthe plane. monet isnt Octo’! Margaret Stahl a Y. M. C. A. Saturday weighed about 10,700 pounds, estab. Ushing one new record for the Miers already when they took off today. | Th? second number of the Y. M The plane and motor are the (CA. lyceum course will be given same as used in the Might Octo. |Y Margaret Stahl, dramatic Inter. ber 5 and 6, when Kelly and. |Preter of New York City, Saturday, MacKeady broke by more than |November 4, at § p.m. tn the audi 14 hours the then existing ree. |torium. “Six-Cylinder Love,” the ords for sustained flight by |POPUlAr automobile comedy success staying aloft 35 hours and 18 |of New York, has been chosen by pon war her for this occasion, Every part of the ship was over.|_ She will interpret “The Dawn of a hauled and put in shape for the| Tomorrow” at the men's mass meet Miss Evange |Iine Cook will sing at this meeting, t McCook and Mrs. Henry Landes will address the Friendship supper on her exper. |lences in the city counetl. When the giant T-2 took off from The plane, constructed field, Dayton, Ohio, has every possi ble convenience and device for the Sir Gilbert Parker cons of the flight. Gasoline is supplied to the motor About the only law that is upheld] fixed to the seats the Miers occupy,| English literature and politica, will line, oft and water supplies Ive been installed in the plane, but their details are held as govern ment secrets. in the English parliament, Sir Gilbert in making a spectal limited lyceum tour of the United States. Tickets for the lecture, which will mulish temperament, laughed them to scorn. And it came to pass that the other copa took counsel among themselves, mying, “Verily, this bird is a two minute egg. His atinginess ts all Brother Officers Burn Door Off Locker and Get Bottle, Says Jack consuming. He ts the chipmunk’s| collar button, Let us fall upon hie locker and make off with his hooteh.” | Diazed with a good fla held 0 they door thereof was burned with « large hole. And they rejoiced greatly and were comforted, for they reached inaide and grabbed off the nowe polish. And they made merry far into the night. But when the owner of the boose returned, to find hin locker ruined and his mnake-bite stolen, he was ex | ceeding wroth. And he filled the air |with lamentations and prayers for | vengeance, But it did him no whatsoever. And he removed hin be longings to another section of the butlding and did fortify himself with an all-steel locker, the whereabouts Of which he kept to himeelf, And he gréw exceedingly cautious when he desired to test the potency of his Medicine from that time on. POST “HONORED” BY POINDEXTER Vets Adopt ‘Resolutions in Praise of Senator Resolutions declaring that John R. Monaghan Post No. 61, Veterans of Foreign Wars, “regards it as an honor and a priviloge” to have Sen- | ator Miles Poindexter as a member, were passed ly that post at Spokane ‘Tuesday night, according to Philip ‘Tworoger, Seattle attorney, who at tended the post mmeting in the Inter ent of saving Poindexter from expul. sion after a proporal to do so had been erroneously reported as car ried. ‘The resolutions, orought to Seattle | by Tworoger, were as follows WHEREAS, at by three methods, to insure a con-| . han Post, No. Seldom or never learn to cook. | stant supply should any one system | Here Monday Night be Menater’ Mile eee get out of order. Parachutes are| Sir Gilbert Parker, prominent in if hie expulsion an honorary member of sald port, fi New Jersey is the unwritten law.|#0 that in changing seats the para |deliver a lecture in Seattle next | eart scctatinn ‘was net tabled at that eee chutes will be in position for use a#| Monday night under the auspices of | time w: ndance, and Every time we look at Little one the filer ts seated again the Seattle Teachers’ association. WHEREA! eotetsan @e . Homer Brew, Jr., he geeds a new Many other safeguards on the Famous as @ novelist and equally | 2 er ‘ tallat! iy a Jonn PL Monaghan Post or the optnion pair of shoes. installation of the motor, gase | wel) known thru many yoars rervice [of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and WHEREAS Her Mir elected an honorary mer ne of Foreign Ware under Hecti 2. Article & of the constitution of t order by reason of the renedered to the veterans generally Poindexter per of the grounds. The complete flight is expected to! be delivered in the Masonic tem: tenoders pe ere Gee ate oe AG ed take about 20 hours If no adverse |are on sale at Lowman & Hanford's.|reason of the HAIL! HAIL! weather conditions are encountered ig tne Jenn as We ran into a novelty yester- ford's, Should the fliers run out of gasoline | metnber of the United Htates senate, and day. He was a man who said | before the end of the flight at Mine-| WHEREAS, since becoming an honor, that he was a wet not because |ola a landing will be made at either} Waterhouse Heads ary member of the Veterans of Forel because he thought the working |cording to plans announced before | City Club Council generally and the Veterans of the i Sir Getkese be‘ Teimesell wep con sede Members of the Inter-club councti |!" Baty Be ented ene. elected Frank Waterhouse president ings. Fords would be more expensive|tO & mesenge received here yester. | club, than Holls-Royces if they sold ‘em|4ay from ©. ©. at five cents per rattle. rouge. LI'L GEE GEE. TH’ OFFICE VAMP, SEZ Never ask a girl for the mak- | They get their tobacco | all mixed up with face powder | [Ver the Baltimore & Ohio railroad | | and li 1,000 CARS ARE _ ss netnt steaty's"anin | to discard the former method of hav- ON WAY WEST ing its membership made up of three | WI 2 | representatives from each club. The OLYMPIA, Nov. 2.—One thousand | president of each organization will be freight cars are moving westward |it« representative hereafter. Other officers elected were Stephen I. Mil- ler Kiwanis club, first vice prestdent; | [tO salvage the Northwest fruit crop 0 all cy f ey nt, rights protected without any expense to without the Mmtervention an ot 4 WHERMAS, in the matter of the Ron land relieve the congestion in the| Worrall Wilson, Rotary chib, second mig allyl atta yy! odin eg Hanectea Pree) section's jumber market, according | vice president; Eldred Ireland, Gyro | Ril Petore the present congress Benator treasurer; Frank Kannatr, traffic! Mutual Business club, secretary. devart- | Calderhead expert of the Washington ———$————— Honus Bill, whenever the said bill came before congren# and direct votes taken, t he refused to become a pi votes which did not mean the p ee ment of public works, who is now in| of said Bonus Bill, but merely the Did'ya ever dance the Russian| Washington, D. C., pleading for roll-|* UNDAY OKEHS Sear ae St See Pee reson te oe offer to hamper the administration ar Bolsha? It’s just one revolution |'/n« stock not with a view of benefiting former after another. Professor O. Abel, while admitting | that the primitive history of the| 900 in frost-proof storage and 225,000 seal is obscure, says the most prob-|DOxeS in able supposition is that these crea tures originated from bears. IN PANIC AS WOMAN SMOKES HER BACON fire trucks dashed to the scene. By this time the guests had run BIBLE VERSION COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 8 Sunday, famed evangelist, took tame today with California courts which barred the “King James version” of the Bible from the public schools. A critical condition is reported in the Spokane district, where 482,000! boxes of apples are in orcharda, 476, storage not frost-proof. Seven hundred refrigerator cars are needed in that territory at once, with ourt’s ruling, “There is no basis for objection to use of the King James transla- from the Pennsylvania system inte Chicago for routing westward, arrested at 1629 Boren ave. Thurs-| The Callfe day night an@ held in the city jail) King Jamer + nia court declared the rion a sectarian book ~Billy | pers, Jonn RM | truthfully Poindexter been expelled no immediate relief in sight. Calder. |8¥Nnday, conducting meotings in Day- |p” Member of the John R GUESTS FLEE HOTEL [head wired that he was arranging| ‘0% telephoned his protest to the! 'ilisoLVED. therefore. that Join R gph L Inited Press here, when he learned | Monaghan Post No. 61, Veterans of For- for refrigerator cars to be rushed of thle elgn Ware of Bpokane, Wash. tn meet Ving annern tude of Be: n legislation 4, hereby endorse the atti nator Miles Poindexter on vet and activities and his " tion of the Bible in public schools,” |attitvde on the Bonus Bill, end be it Clouds of smoke poured trom | Two Held by Police | sunday deciarea r “g 5p ER ERERE SE hE EC the basement of the Haas hotel, “The King James version is abso-| Post No. $1, Veterans of Foreign Wars, 4106% First ave., early Friday on Booze Charges |iitciy true to the orginal, It has |rerards It haan honor ana n priviegs Morning. An excited pedestrian | Charged with ponseusing a part|not the slightest bias. It ts based |[%, Dave on ite ho pnd beings. She turned in a fire alarm and several | of a still, Henry Dyckman, 61, was| upon original manuscripts.” | } “a Poindexter, Be it into the street, screaming in| Friday while officers of the special|and ruled its use in public schools VED, that a copy of thono r panic, The firemen rushed to the | detail made an investigation | iMegal ww to Henator Mites. Po tmsement with several lines of | Wred Green, 28, longsh n, was | dexter eent to th hose, and found the landlady | lodged in Jail following u police raid| In the eyeletting department Ge daar ont 6 aier bees, Benuals calmly smoking bacon over a at Beeond ave., where Green is|the shoe industry an expert work Ke with the request that small wood fire, lieged to have been dispensing| can finish 2,600 pairs of women's “ be published |moonshine from pop bottle, shoes, or 48,000 eyelets, in one day. november, A.D. dee” Nt Mat day of “PUPPY LOVE” CULT BROKEN Three Boys and Three Girls Under Arrest LAFAYETTE, Ind, Nov, 3.-—The “contract marriage” trust was broke | today: Three boys and three girle appre- hended im mid-west towns were back home with their dreams of marital | blinw shattered. They had all signed agreements providing for six months of “trial” marriage Leadera in the “puppy to | declared that their motives were the highest and that they belleved that the contract marriages would have | been the stepping stone to permanent * eult marriage. In at least one case, the marriage may result later. Levan Cunningham, 1% teader of the cuit, is doing penance for a year jin Kansas City, After that time he may be allowed to marry Alice Moorehouse. The two were arrested jin Bloomington, Il, after they had | dened their marriage agreement | Leonard Johnston, 16, was arrested |in Kansas City Mabel Cartwright, 14, was arrested in St ith Glen Cunningham and May Zuffall, Mabel was paired | with Johnston, but the latter desert ed the party after he learned he w | Mabel’s “second chotce.” [DISTRIBUTION OF CARS NEXT | OLYMPIA, Nov. 2.—The depart ment of public works will co-operate jto the fullest @xtent with the four | Northwestern railroads and the pub le service commission of Orego! and Idaho tn obtaining an equitab’ distribution of the available refrig erator car supply, Director EB. V. Kuykendall said today, following re- jceipt of a copy of the telegram which the interstate commerce com: mixsion sent yesterday to the prea. |dents of the four carriers, directing them to follow advice of the state mmission in allocating the car supply. La Skagit Prices Up on Oats and Hay MOUNT VERNON, Nov. 3.— Prices of oats and hay in Skagit county have risen because shortage of cars has turned the British Co- lumbia demand this way, dealers and farmers say. Oats are $36 a ton, hay $18 and straw $8, |Four Painters Hurt as Scaffold Breaks Plunging 50 feet to earth when a seaffold broke from the roof of the Hall of Sciences at of Washington, four the University Thursday afternoon, painters, Herbert Wharmsby, 711 Winthrop st.; Harry Nagley, 34, 1818 Terry ave.; Lewis Rye, 48, 2789 Third ave. N., and Raymond Iman, 20, 1406 N, dist wt, were se verely injured. Whormsby sustain # broken arm and spinal injuries Nagley received a broken leg. Rye's finger was broken, and Inman was injured about his spine. } | | And they proceeded to light « fire | cussed va on the lid of an ash can and when It | ders | the locker close upon it, untll the| been comm! | 1 | | Bleanor Reinhardt Mills, sin- A recent and hitherto un-| published photograph of Mra.| ger in Rev. Hall's choir, who} was murdered with the rector. | MILLS BELIEVES CIBSON WOMAN Says Slayer of Pair Was) Relative of One NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Nov. 2.—James Mills, husband of the mur. | dered cholr singer, stood on the scene | of the Hall-Mills erie today, and Geclured he believed there ty a “great | deal of truth” in Mrs. Jane Gibson’s | eye-witneng story { “My wife and the Rev. Hall were murdered by someone very close to one of them,” said Mills, who has | thrown aside his meek demeanor and is demanding “justice” in the case. His form straightened and his eyes flashed a spark of fire an for th first time he went to the Phillips farm and without emotion coolly din us phases of the mur- “The murder could never have ted by a #tranger,” he! deduced. “The person who killed} my wife and Rey. Hall evidently | wanted thelr bodies to be found and identified immediately. Otherwise | they would have thrown them into! the thicket of locust bushes there,” he pointed out “The murderer, in my opinion, was related to one of them,” Mills maid MRS, PHILLIPS ACCUSES PEGGY Declares She Struck Blow That Killed Woman BY LANSING WARREN LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 3.— Mra Clara Phillips, who claims Peaxy Caffee, the state's “eye wit- nee” struck the blow with a ham mer that felled Mre. Alberta Mead- own, begins today her dramatic fight to escape the death sentence, The girl, who testified that Mrs. Meadows before her death admitted plans for an elopement with Armour Phillipa, the defendant's husband, was to face a supreme test in form of cross-examination by Deputy Dis trict Attorney Fricke to 2 Padded of Poll Charges that the county commis- sioners have been packing the pre- cinct election boards with republicans representation were to be aired in ©. J. Smith and Nicholas Schmitt, democratic candidates for state sen- ator Presiding Superior Judge Austin TWO-PANTS SUITS = RAUL IS i carieiceitelaiatimaaenbiell Sounds too good to be true, doesn’t it now? A good, serviceable suit, well tailored and smartly, styled, WITH TWO PAIRS OF PANTS, for $25. And at this low price you have a splendid line to select from. ROCHESTER combined purchasing power does it. Our merchandising plan saves you real money. Investigate. Two Pairs Pants With Every Suit in Our Entire Stock $25—$30—$35 OVERCOATS $20 to $35 And astonishingly good overcoats at this remarkably low price. For $20, $25 and $30 you have choice of the season’s ultra- smart models in the most favored ma- terials. Try the ROCHESTER way and 3ave money. TWO PAIR—DOUBLE WEAR ocheste CLOTHES SHOP O12 SEC AVE. Dill Will Address University Voters C. C. Dill, democratic candidate for United States senavor, will address voters of the University district at Little's hall, University Bank build- ing, Friday evening. At the same time Edgar C. Snyder, democratic candidate for congress, will be ad- dressing a meeting at the Labor secured a writ of mandate from temple, “Dal wil eee at Oe Labor temple ameeting immediately after his speech in the University Control Up Today the exclusion of democratic party perior court Friday afternoon. iffiths, Wednesday afternoon, di- Following this cross-examination, | recting the county commissioners to Phillips plans to take the stand and | appear tn court and explain. district. bare bis alleged affair in an ef-| County Auditor D. Ferguson poe foMt to free his wife of the murder | tated that of 294 democratic names | charge. Mrs. Phillips, alleged to have kill od Mra. Meadows while in a fury of | jenlouxy, was racked with sobs as she told her story. Fricke declared he would attack | from every angle her story that she. Miss Caffee and Mrs. Meadows, went to the secluded “death scene” after Mrs, Meadows admitted her love for | ¢ty Phillips. In the struggle that followed, Mrs. | P. Meadows had her at her mercy tered voters. Funeral for Miss sephine Prince. | We Mrs, | mortuary bmitted to him, only 73 were rogis- | We Are There When You Want Us Sheet Metal and Roofing Prince Today at 3 services for Misa P. Jo- former superintend- t of Minor hospital, who died inesday, were to be held at 3/ m. Friday at the Bonney-Watson | Miss Prince took her! Funeral Philips testified, declaring that/¢arly training for nursing in Se ‘. Peggy came to the rescue from a|attle. She is survived by three sis. | Repairs nearby automobile and knocked Mrs, | ters, Mrs. Howard Luby, Mra. Mur- Meadows down with a hammer. |ray B, Holland and Mrs. Joreph C.| PUGET SOUND Pegey previously denied striking the | Hoe blow ricke will dwell on the fact that ers est Park, and Hazen Prince of Sea- arris of this city, and two broth. | Hewlitt B. Prince of Lake For-| SHEET || METAL WORKS Clara declared she did not remem. | bold, Bainbridge island. ber anything following the first blow _ ROR of the hammer, which as photo-| BUTLER, Pu.—stubbing toe while | Main 0176 out hunting. Ira Sankey, 43 accident- | graphs show, was apparently wield ed many times Mrs. Griswold to Head Dill Meeting Mrs. W. 8. Griswold, state prest dent of the League of Women Vot ers, and for many years a republi can worker, was scheduled to pre. side at a noon meeting in the Wood- d theater, where C. C. Dill, can- didate for United States senate, was! to speak Friday night Dill was to speak at the Labor temple and at Little's} hall, in the University district. | jly Other democratic meetings were arranged for Odd Fellows hall, Des Moines; Burien hall, Lake Burien, and the McKinley Hill Community house, j Five G. O. P. Rallies in King Co. Tonight | Republican candidates and speak. | ers in their behalf will hold fi rallies in King county Friday night, ! aceording to Warren H. Lewis, chairman of the county central com. mittee. | Meetings will be held at Preston, | Georgetown Mraternal hail, Olympic Heights Improvement club, Civing ton Grange hall, and A. 0, U, W hall, 1409 Ninth ave, Carrigan to Talk San Juan Islands | The San Juan islands as a scenic | ven for tourists will be. discussed | by M. J. Carrigan, assivtant secretary | of the Chamber of mmerce, in! charge of the tourists and convention department dress on “The Logical Deve of the Sun Juan Islands, » given tonight before the San Juan County Com- ber of Commerce ut Friday Harbor. | noun a shoots gun and kills self, THE PHILLIPS BOYS 1313 Third Avenue, Opposite Pantages Building Where Your Dollar Does Its Full Duty Your THANKSGIVING , We are here to serve you. not complete without a pair of the Phillips Boys’ FOUR and FIVE DOLLAR shoes. WOMEN’S PATENT STRAP PUMP, with bamboo and steel gray quarter, Cuban and $4 00 ° Louis heels; all leathers; all styles. ... Women’s Patent and Satin COLONIAL PUMPS, Louis heels. Patent Pumps with bamboo and steel gray straps, Cuban and Louis heels, FOR— $5.00 (These Shoes fit like a MILLION dollars) Felt Slippers, all colors; padded soles.........$1.00 Shoes—our business, and we are proud of it! THE PHILLIPS BOYS * 1313 THIRD AVE.