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jetum ly to > re him he Bidn’t hin eit the the ume the truc- page oper, west is in rred ‘ans. sive oa was jorial r. the low. nked puns cing ain't had hely. pon ich. hair, boy dn’t the the all art id. Temperature Maximum, 63 Today noon, 68, Last “4 Hours Minknum, 5 done Brew \ TEACHING OF WIL PREPARE Howdy, hurry. Don’t bother me, Gotta catch boat, Gotta buy groceries, Gotta meet wife, Gotta get—er—grapo juice, Come on, typewriter, do your stuff! PoM k Klay's nose 1 like to poke; He whistles when I've thunk a joke 0, ma'am, “Which Is None of them, ma'am m Grey gong home for I wish to i. Out on Jackson st bakery bear Und “WE PAY HIM $100 A WEEK” ins “And he's worth every cent of it, Gases here several years ago asking for a job. | I gave it to him. Then one soy 1 eet | ® letter from the Int Reewing schools telling me, tae Ne ‘had | enrolled for a course of distilling. I pay | him $160 » week now and he'll soon be earning more. I wish I had more mea like him.” How do you stand when your employer cheeks up his xien for promotion? Ask yourself this question: fairly. One hour } ‘After supper in your own cellar will pre- Pare you for the work you like. With- Cut cost or obligatios, Just mark and mall this coupon: ‘ING COURSES | et thé course in which you are Interested and piace gn X after It, Moonsbining. Karwig Ranching Teethpick sharpening. uber of Commerce Presidenting. | ming. Pretael Twisting. This morhing we asked Li'l Gee) Gee, the budding young golfer, wha she went around the Jefferson park course in. Lil Gee hours." five! Geo replied, “In POM This Lester Hun } Will get my na Whatever T want, He hasn't Wanda. Thanks, for the match. —Do I get money for doing this} stuff? Yes, ma‘am. Aren't I afraid] I'M lose my job? No ma‘am. I can always go back to work in the stone quarry,— . Li'l Gee Ge ¢ doesn't like these rules which women golfers from the links during certain hours. She says she believes in the freedom of the tees. POME | The boss is here, And this poor bosh | Ain't finished yet, | My gosh! My gosh! | ter ie —No, ma‘am, that is not the city editor. That’s the office boy. The church editor? That's him over at that big desk, reading the Police Gazette, soe We read two lines—it was cnough— Here's what them two lines be: “In clegant simplicity And quiet dignity.” (1) It may have been a dog fight Or it may have been a tea— We didn't learn—te quit right there At “quiet dignity.” Now we don’t claim no roughneck | wreath, We hope we ain't no boor— Why horrors, no! We've no intent To make the “Elite” sore. sure—we'll ne'er be-| But one thing grudge Our “high sassiety,” It's “elegant asimplicit, And quiet dignit | see | Gov, Al Smith signs the New York “wet! bill. Now the Bronx can live up to its name, . . Both Al Smith and Henry Ford are potential candidates for president. Ford will run on a platform of 26 miles to the gallon, and Smith on a platform of a gallon to every miles, 25 oo POME Well, well, the col- um’s almost done, Just one more li Ain't we got fun? 7 We wish they'd hurry up and build} the new community hotel. After eat-| ing at a cafeteria, there's no place to | lounge now, TAXI! | which the | shortly | student,” | murdering jand Mrs, Wert | the operations of the » GERMAN OKEH, ~ RULES COURT ‘| War- Time Statutes in U. S. Knocked Out; Convicted Man Wins Case chool instructo jand punished for om Iowa and Ob ded on t asix of th The Ohio suit w H. Bot © and te brought b: and Emi! Pohl, eld Heights, ted and fined each in September, 1929. The sult from Jowa was br by August Bartels, private uuctor PAIR CONFESS SAFE STEALING, Admit They “Took Strong Box at 1418 Third Ave. Arrested after a itians down Third! ave., during which shots were fired} by the police, two men and two wom- en, Jimmy Baker, 19; Harold §&. Allen, 21; Mra. C. M. Diedrich, and Mra. Jack Lance, 21, were be- ing held by ectives Monday fal- lowing the alleged confesaion of the |two men that they bad stolen a safe from the Ideal bowling alleys, 1418 Third ave. Saturday night and had obtained. from it loot totaling nearly $2,000. Patrolman George Reynolds, with | Lieut. Gus Hasselblad and Patrolman Charles Whiting, pursued the auto in four people were riding before daybreak Monday hen they saw it speeding down hird ave. The officers chased it | several blocks in a police auto be- succeeded in stopp \ KNEW NOTHING OF CRIME The two men had $555 persons when they were police headquarters and they were locked up on an open char The two women had been joyriding with the mon knew nothing of the robbery, they sald Captain of Detectives Charles Ten- nant and Lieut. W. B, Kent obtained a confession from the two men that they had stolen the safe § (Turn to Fage ‘ Column 5) ng it. their hed at on sea. Student Murderer to Be Sentenced) IOWA CITY, Iowa, June 4.—Rob- Leeper, Drake university “honor found guilty by a jury of his father-in-law, Roy Wertz, will be sentenced June 19, Judge Ralph Otto announced today ‘The verdict recommended life im- prisonment at hard Jarbor. Mrs. Mima Wertz, the convicted man's mother-in-law, and Beryl Wert Leeper, his wife, were also indic estified at the trial t she shot Wertz as he attempted tack her and her daughter. Leeper was a war veteran, He was accused of conspiring to obtain a share of the Wertz $20,000 estate. Will Hear ‘Sugar Case on Nov. 12 WASHINGTON, June 4.—The preme court today set November 12 as the date fo on the government's suit to enjoin vew York cof- fee and sugar exchange, charged with being responsible for the high sugar price: Want Ad Bargain Why wait any Jonger? Why » at home every Sunday when all the folks around you jump in thelr machines and go for a ride? Look at this: Lit OLDS Tr a Positively lke new; with 6 prastically’ n tires and ny extras Nile in the hest y in a light colored Hote we have on many cons, Cloned ar nearce, and will be impossible to get Inter on, #o hurry, Hany terms, WIL trade Want will you, equipped ord Ads NOW demonstrate the who for to see Turn and this car su-| hearing of arguments | SE ATTLE, WASH, MONDAY % Yer Year, by Mal $3.60 The Seattle star DEFINITE BOND OFFER TODAY Mayor Meets With Committee; May Override Carfare Ordinance Veto By John W, Nelson. May Brown ad ler Stone & Wobster inte on the dollar for the railway utili the committ consist he mayor and Councilmen C L, Blaine, met th@hbondh after pass the yoon the councl highe omimittog al of the | may or's bowl would reduc »roximately year fo and would yea FITZGERALD ime BLAD AGREES ‘S$ PLAN Councilman Fitzgerald Monday ee that he has agreed with Blainc urge the acceptance of | $1,000.00 annual payment plan, Both |Blaino and Fitawerald declare their main hope of muccess in entering ne | gotiations with the bondholders i to} eubmit a plan which will meet with | some measure of success, “The carfare situation can be me- terially }holders with @ business-like prop that will decrease the pres burden upon the car lines,” Counci! man Biaine 1, “We should not make oursely ppear ulous if we hope to accomplish | While the important quest | negotiating extension of time in which to meet the bond payments is still in indefinite form, council members Monday said that the high er carfare bill Was sure to pass over the mayor's veto at Monday's coum cil session. NO CHAD N ORIGINAL LINEUP ppeared to be in the original lineup for whieh included all but Coureiiman 0. T. Erickson and Coyncitwomas Kathryn Miracle in} favor of it. The fare, providing for | 8 1-3-cent ‘akeka will undoubtedly be come effective July 5. While preparing to deliver his an: nual address to the council, Brown said that he did not expect to} offer any suggestions which will per the higher fare advocatea to an no change suade y | postpone their vote. | An added compli car tangle has developed. in the de {mands for increased wages which have been presented to Superintend- ent of Utilities George F. Russell by| the municipal rail- the clerical depart- jail employes of | ways excepting | ment. DEMAND INCE: OF ABOUT 20 P The demands for proximate 20 per cent ployes and would bring of oneman car gripmen and conductors up to $228 a month, Russell said. Georgétown shopmen and affiliated crafts, in- cluding painters carpenters, ma \chinists, armature winders, car re pairemen, welders, upholsiers, black smiths and pattern makers day and a five and with pay for six. now receive from $5.87 to day. Helpers want an from $4.50 to $5.25 which they now to $6 @ day with the 44-hour increases for all em- the wages | They $6.37 a recei week. Linemen demand $8.50 a day and the 44-hour week, They now re- jcelve $6.7 to $6.87 a aay. Fore nak instead of $195 a while laborers want $6 preseut. # TO COMMENT DEMANDS “Tho increases, if granted, will | total between $500,000 and $750,000 a Supt, Russell said. “The sta- {tintical department ts making. a study of the demands and the exact figures ; Will be available soon,’ City councilmen refused to com- |ment on the application of the em. ployes for increased wages, but Mayor Brown intimated that the de mands of the men make his conten | tions that the contrnct of purchase 1s an impossible contract and cannot be | lived up to more firm, Tussell would not intimate whether he will recommead the Increase be granted or denied, declaring that he would study the demands and give the council the facts concerning |them, He intimated, howe increases ore granted in other di partments, the clerical help show also be considered entitled to increas ed pay, [men | month, the} ulded if we go to the bond. | Mayor | ation to the street | demand } one-half | § increase | , that If] CLAI The alleged hammer-slayer in front, followed by Etta Mary Jackson, her “kid sister,” Photo taken immediately after seen heading dow? steamer docked at tional L escape from CLARA PHILLIPS IS PEN B {Her Cell Mates Agree She | Is the Prettiest © wome | ther {the prison tog and prison officials, she had displaced Lofi Jof Denyer, Colo, as jwoman in San Quent | Mrs. Peete had held os |the murder of Jacob I | Angeles. |. Clara, by her express work with the | kitehen In her form | netette which ts the en prisoners, she was | picture could be | hind prison walls nel Seward, and laundry t ervin Cares woman Ume | burglary, “1a \is the eighth | tentiary | serving Under |now remain: in p' of seven years for life. “Ligue FLEET » ONWAY TONY... f.88 nd enlisted county authoritivs in the lone bandit who (Ore) State operators and | aun Runners Start Cargoes | |) OTTAWA, June jing toward the ary line, on thelr way ate, as a@ result of \the prohibition enfor there, Canadian der reported now actively flood New “hard stuff.” Attorney General nounced that no new si officials a that engaged York wi in. |to cope with the situation, Most of the liquor done with motor tru motors, loaded to capac goods, cross the line rate of speed, armed gv to them, ready to de WAND, Ore, J 6 are toda who have de this city PORTE land. pol vandals Jehurehes in four days ‘The latest entry repe Greek Orthodox hol where a crucifix and at ) was stolen ‘two Itoman terian and Lutheran also been looted, th yn ) ify Aa i the ¢ d serving her other |scrubbing ..and. _helpi of cell-mate: She California lay son a and she may remain | deliberate! | of “Bonded Goods” year of Canadian bonded Mquor are International bound. | rum-runners are \taken by the prohibition department | ANOV N revenue officer or “hi-je highwaymen who make 6 of robbing hootleggers, Vandals Desecrate Portland Churches from the Catholic, a jatealing some valuables end destroy: ing furnishings in some inglances. 8A PHILLIPS RETURN n the gangway on the S. New Orleans froin the Los 2 leg jail. EAUTY new > Amer pan S. Copan. Honduras, the where Clara fled, following her sensa- monument to adenoids, opinion. of Dri Barnes, Stanford lege. “Observe invites, her noye is pinch “See, real American n Inmate Barnes ‘pleads. Wi the The complaints ie Louise Peet prettiest tle since | sentence for Jenton in Los the t ed wish, went women, ng. in. the] oday blue” flan. gurb of wom ax protty a expected be Jtent to de }banning Nquor the three-mile | by. feders Treasury customs officer move wa ng a term for insthe pent for murder. | not to be seized. w she must} Under the pinimum | rum-runners, clone,” her mouth is open, terma Yessels whose captains flaunt the law, or Dr. Wallace He instructor in medicine at university: medical col- DOCTOR SAYS LADY ON DOLLAR HAS ADENOIDS | | FRANCISCO, June 4.—The dollar is o the arold Barnes 1 and he r es, A clear case of adenoids, “Let's have a coin depicting the woman,” “Th he ty dollar sb \WILL SEIZE | BOOZE SHIPS 4.—Foreign | June nd violate from limit, today to this effect. made to define sharply |classes of vessels which are and are of Jowners conspire to def will be impounded government, and will be customs authorities, officials the Officers Search chin Dr. pical American is not a yictim to nasal pould & memorial to the mouth ips which enter Unit én waters with delibprate in | aah : ¢ regulations | vosuels ‘inside | seized | notified | The| order, whose for Bank Bandit |ficers of Coos were today the the Glendale | $1,100, An vent coast cargoes mov: | effort is the man to New York | the repeal of |eng rcement law | mountains, Jong the bo ased tt a Glendale store, in th plans to} Dominion | Rainey an- tepe would he ed by. Dartmouth. colle In the smuge@ling ts }at chs, These ity with case at a terrific | yards clinging yp battle with juckors,” the business statements of by a vote of 118 to admitted they neve and more than proud that they ing were upheld, ure 4.—Port- searching, for secrated five tn the past WASHINGTON, sailing all the the trip gates frém. Seattle Over 125 strong, vrted was the lie Chureh, chain’ valued altar, Presby ehureh have eo marauders sundown, goal this morning. RNR a had. Smoking, dancing .and card play: Cur tt It ix possible that he authorities bi as it was learned that |previouy to the robbery arge stock of provisions at 1 1 by being made from unc Dou sear Ba 4,--Of- Countios | glas ch for rday robbed nk of to pre- maching the is hiding in few ha senior 38, on class elieve hotin d pure \Kissing Upheld by Dartmouth Seniors H., June 4 —Kiss- men ulloting on popular things Jand persons the sendors pluced their approyal kissing Six students had been kissed hundred to he ps Myf at " the mple wei Seattle Shriners Invade Washington June 4. ind: Potentate Richard Huntoon deseribed of the Nile smooth way dele. Washington Be aitle hotels, dele gates Nave taken possession of the New Bbhitt and Brighton Jif they keep up the sightseeing pace | they started on today, the hotel lob. Dies will he deserted from sunup to Mount Vernea but Was the 44 ARE KILLED “IN AUTO WRECKS Tragic Accidents: Continue Thruout Nation (Copyright, 1 Forty-four persons were killed and 127 injured in week-end accidents in 39 cities thruout the country | Elght were killed in Chicago, six in New York, four in Hagerstown, |Md., three in Pittsburg and Mount | Union, Pa; two in Cleveland, Phila- jdelphia, Huntingdon, Pa., Detroitand | Littleton, N. Y.; one Pa., Knoxville, Tenn., Wapakoneta, | Ohio, Milwaukee, Oshkosh, Cresson Pa., Peabody, Mass., Lewiston, Maine, Springfield, 11., and San -Francisco. ‘Twenty-two were injured in: New| York, 14 in Milwaukee and 10 in| Atlanta. | 1 1 | j | by United Press) KILLED BY CAR Seven Others Injured Tacoma Crashes TACOMA, June 4—Mrs. Eliza Van Slyke, 78, was run down and fatally injured by auto’ driven by C. Christofferson, on the Pacific high- st of here Sun- day evening wor ' ged 40 fect the machine. She died shortly after her removal to the hospital without regaining conscious- ness Five persons were ing glass when Dr. B Rich, well known surgeon, collided with a’ car driven by John Lundstrom, met on a curve at the bottom of Elhi Hill, Dr. Rich had the tendon of a little finger severed. Both cars were runined, Mrs. R. M, Cook of North Puyall- up is in the hospital with a possible fractured skull as the result of a head-on collision between two cars at Sixth and Prospect, , €, EB, Washburn, crashing into a jeable car, head-on with his motor- eycle obtained a possible fractured skull. DRIVER FACES DRUNK CHARGE Sheriff's Office Acts Protect Highway by to Charged with driving while drunk, Carl Capp, 6220 ; Seattle, Was arrested Sunday near the Mead. ows, on the Pacific highw by Deputy Sheriff Joe Hilly Capp’ was Co ning from side side of the road and missed a crash by sheer Juck, Deputy Pill said, His car was evowded with women and. children. A passenger agreed to drive the automobile on into Seattle, and Capp was roleayed care of his friends, to report the sheriff's office Monday, in to Every 16 feet of level surface of the earth in the temperete zone re- celves an average of one how of heat energy from the sua. is | | | in Uniontown, | | | injured by fly-| | | Jon the | school histories are pro-British. DITION TWO CENTS IN “SEATTLE, HUNT ALL | NIGHT FOR BABY BOY Steamboat Captain’ 5 Son Strays Away, and Lifeless Form Is Found in Lake Wa shington Missing since Sunday afternoon, 3-year-old Chris Lars son of Captain C, T. Larsen, was found drowned in Lake a mile south of Kirkland, Mond All Sunday night aur r the child's body t was not until The little t he strayed near the American bax ching pi laybreak that the » the The dock edge vessel §s s been tled at s investigat master of the S. S. Biancay) Washington, near Hough y morning. ged the lake bed near the Houghton dock arties combed the surrounding woo lifeless form was found. ed on board the ship with his father and it is, belie Sunday the property and lost his balance while pla of the defunct Scandinavia} the wharf for some time. Dr, GH ing the case Monday. Oh! See Wha t the Last Legislature Did to Us! ly ou’ll Have to Thow the Baby’ s Still Into thi Garbage Heap Now LEMMON Friends, cit!-| zens and bootleggers! It's time to set forth and buy| yourself a nifty new pair of binoc lars so that you can watch step on June 7, when all the new laws, passed by the late lamented legislature, go into effect. As a@ result of the two month’s vacation the legislators had at Olympia this year, there are 187 new laws on the statute books to mix you up and get you in bad with the authorities. Some aren't so bad, There's the law which allows you to pay fines instalment plan of a dollar and a dollar whenever the fudge sees you. When you get thrown in jail you can now your freedom with a conditional sales contract. Another one allows rifle and pis- tol practice on tae University of Washington campus. The legisla- ture passed this bill, pf the. boys who wear toreador trou: and side burns at the uni- versity ‘will stroil down on the rifle range some da¥ when the boys are at target practice. | BETTER GET RID OF YOUR STILL If you for the baby last Christmas you had better get rid of it in a hurry down | for a new law will make you guilty of a misdemeanor for the possession of it. If you can't sell it you might give it to the cop on your beat so | that it won't go to waste. ake mining stock salesmen will now have a monopoly on the Wash- i | ox trade as the legislature passed Investigator your | buy } hoping some} bought a moonshine still] Ja bill regulating the sale of | stock except metaliferious | stock, Dice and other games of |are due to be very popular at university this coming year as legislature passed a law pi of the campus. : January 1 was set as a day observe the adoption of the prohi ; tion amendment in the ae “with appropriate ceren ag has not been’ decided yet wh appropriate ceremonies will be morial” or Minty COMMISSII WILI BE NURSEMAIDS: Now. | County commissioners will have | play “nursemajd" to all dance u outside the limits of incorpo cities after Wednesday night. Dan Cupid slips in with a advice at this point. He advises: {to get married within the next |days, as marriage license ‘costs | going to take a jump. It will | cost you more to get a divorce. High school students may be cused from physical training at request of their parents, but # still have to wrestle with th studies. Contrary to common. belief, state-wide teachers’ retirement | does not set a time when te \must go to bed, but provides fund to pension them. And in conclusion it pede that if you want to express views on the last legislature, ¥ }may get a chance, for it’p law authorizing the city of to lease or otherwise acquire a auditorium, Sees Plot and mucl “fot mn within a radius of one for British to Take U.S School Histories of America Condemned Hirschfield; Smells English Propaganid NEW YORK, June 4.—A plot ex- ists to regain the “lost colonies” for Englanc id make the United States a part of the British empire, David |S. Hirschfield, commissioner of ac- counts, charged today in a report to Mayor Hylan. The 40,000-word report gave the Evidenge collected: by Hirs in his investigation, the report stat t indicates that the histories men’ | give a new and less patriotic pretation to the revolution and war of 1912; and the commissio protests against the lack of 1 ence, in Many histories, to ote new! findings of Hirschfield, following his ?Hall, the mutiny act, stamp ae al investigation into charges that many AS fi result of his investigation he ree- ommended that eight text-books be barred from New York schools. The commissioner sees even mope behind the, school histories than pro- British propaganda. According to his report, “an international money power” is behind the historians, whose’ real purpose, as Hirschfield sees it, js to dominate the world thru an Anglo-American union, based on | British superic T OF HISTORIES HE CONDEMNS 'The histories condemned by Hirsch: field are: “An American History,” by David Saville Muzzey, of Barnard college, Columbia university; “History of the American Peopl by Willis Mason West, former head of the department of history, University of Minnesota; “School History of the United " by Albert Bushnell Hart, rd university; “A> History of the United States for Schools," by Andrew C, MeLaughtin, University of Chicago, and Claude H, Van Tyne, Universi of Michigan; “Our United States,” by William Backus Guitteau, director of schools at Toledo; Burke's speech on conciliation, edited by OQ. H, Ward, Taft school, Watertow Conn; “Short American History by Grades,” by Everett Barnes, of Trooklyn; “American History for Grammar Grades," also by Barnes. the Boston massacre. He declares that the mi i antes to forpane 4, Column 2) SEA COLORED NY reader may obtain a p sonal reply to any answ able question of fact or infor tion by writing to The r Washington bureau, 1322 York ave. ‘Washington, D.¢ closing 2 cents in stamps, gal, medic I. and marital can not be given nor « tended research’ be unde Unsigned letters cannot be’ swered. All letters are con! ual. Carr ne Q. What gives the sea if color? ie A. 'To some extent, the eol due to reflection from the sky long tube of distilled water : blue color, and the addition of purities changes this to gre is probable, therefore, that the: est sea, |, ¢, the Guilt Streand, is purest, arid that the greenest, W/ the Aretle oeean, contains most | trinsic material. It is all a que of reflection trom the minate par cles of impurities ‘of the sea of ferent waye lengths of whit