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FRIDAY MA rH a ying srone may Jewish Relief Worker Me ormacl, Will Speak Here Soon SECOND AVENUE AT JAMES STReer Doctor Spivak Scheduled for Series of Ad- dresses for Campaign To New Quarters, April Ist All their present stock is being closed out regard- less of profit. Come in tomorrow and you wil find decisive reductions on all lines of mer- } chandise. Few Items from the DRESS GOODS SECTION 40-inch Printed Voiles in} 36-inch Ratinspun; all black and floral pat- popular shades; re- tas, reduced aoe duced to, yard... .50¢ yar . - ge-inch Basket - Weave neh Apron Checks, Suiting in plaids and 2- standard quality Ging- 1 tone checks; worth $1; hams; reduced t et je yeduced to, yd....59¢ yard apes 15e¢ 1 SOTA RE Men's Form-Fitting Shirts & Drawers heavy weight Reduced to a 79c 25c Pair Latest Men's Heather Mixtures drop stitch Reduced to new patterns all sizes garment Rubber Aprons usehold =| Newest Ginghams | ed ery attractive pe’ Aprons Verna. ed to Reduced to $1.25 Each Women's Fine Union Suits Merino-finish Cotton Hose Reduced to Re 4 to 15c 65c Pair Garment Closing Out Kitchenwares Dept. EVERY ITEM UNDERPRICED Point Electric Irons, Gold Band Dishes at a duced to, ea. .$5.75 greatly reduced prices. Electric Irons, 0, So Easy Oil and Dust $4.35 Mops, reduced to 55¢ Qt.-size Mason Fruit Jars, 25e reduced to, doz...90¢ Fine Mercerized Lisle-finish % Roll Top Socks Women’s Drop-Stitch Silk Hose very fine gauge (Black Onty) Reduced to $1.35 Pair Ladies’ One- and ‘Two- St Reduced to 35c Pair Women’s Fine Gauge Silk Hose all the new shades—and black Reduced to $1.00 Pair sizes 3 to 8 Reduced to $2.68 Girls’ High Top Storm Shoes sizes 3 to 7 Boys’ Solid Leather School Shoes in Tan or Black sizes 2% to 6 Reduced to Reduced to $2.75 | $3.45 Pair Pair | = povs Clothing Department uits, made from! Boys’ Knicker ( ‘ood, sturdy materials; Pants, age Me kr Sizes; reduced to,| years; reduced to, $4.98/ each $1.15 Wool Ruff-Neck | Men’s Crompton Corduroy ters, in school Pants, well made; waist ination colors; re- 32 to 36; reduced to, to, each. .$2.85 each at 65 DAIRY PRODUCTS for the FAMILY TABLE Delicious, wholesome dairy Droduets, fresh every day, for the table. Stop in on the way home for: minke Jee Cream Butter Dattermitic Cottage Cheese ese Dalgarien Milk — Cream Mayonnaise Cashmerette Sox Novelty Aprons trimmings Women’s Fine rap Patent Slippers Alcohol Decreases OTTAWA, Ont. Marck bolle beverages In Mexico Ridden by ‘ Radical Agitators Head .in Bolshevism — Lifts States of Sout BY BOB DORMAN N. BE. A. Service Writer } VERA CRUZ Mexico, March 7 Red Russia has litte on "Bloody | Mexico” today | Lenin's doctrines are sweeping across the countr ike a raging Itlo Grande ‘eh uant ope arching behind if Bbolaheviem. And in the field government sgh diers, themaclves fighting to crush rebellion, are wearing Naring red rib.) bons around their campaign hats. Thruowt central and southern Mex} ico—that is to say, in thé more dense- |ly settigd sections—the reds grow lever stronger. | In the north, where the population | {= more seattered, radicalism's apread |ts moro gradual. | But even there the soviet creed is | guining many converts. eee | Amid the frantic pealing of church jbells and shrieking whistles, Gen Eugenio, Martinez rode into Vera} Crus at the head of his victorious troops. in the Plaza were gathered thoy ‘ands of tho townspeople. In front} of thom was an auto, from which rose a staff flying a huge red flag. [It bore the emblem of the sickle and ithe hammer—radical symbol. | Martinez passed into the Hotel Dill- |gencian to review the passing col- jurns. ‘The end of the line ¢ame. |The general disappeared. Heron Proal, leader of the Vera Crux reds, his place, | Judge Remains in | Spite of Protest TACOMA, March 7.—Judge M. L. | Clifford will remain as criminal judge | ot the mperior court, despite Prose: | | cutor James W. Selden's declaration that he will filo affidavits of preju- ldles in every case brought before | Clifford, it has been announced fol- Hlowing a iéngthy conference by the four superior court jurists, Selden has alrendy filed two new petitions of prejudice and requests, which were granted, for changes of |venue. Ben Deloria, charged with |second degree burglary, in one of these cases, pleaded guilty before Judge W. D, Askren and wan sen- jtenced to 1 to 15 years at Walla lla. 1. Lowe, on a grand lar jceny charge, pleaded not guilty be- fore Judge . Card. j | | | | Prof. Albert Sauveur (above) of Harvard univer- sity has been presented with| the Bessemer gold medal by} TREATED ONE} the British Iron and Steel WEEK. FREE) institute, “in recognition of | omach’ service in advancement of} metallurgy.” He ig the first) American so honored in | | Orizaba and Cordoba, | #eem to take interest in the war that nothing. My horses were taken from | Dr. C. D, Spivak War-Stricken| hern Republic | He spoke of the Joy of the worker# That once more thelr comrades ruled Vera Cruz. Then he invited all to a} demonstration in the Piaza that night “4. A band was playing in the center of the Plaza. and round circled balcony. About 1 flag j Cathedral be eg wildly, thelr we pulled by meal eds. Proal'g hand rose, The bell pred, the band became sient, Proal begun’ hits speech, He cursed eapitatism and religion in terms too foul to print. He in Yoked every, base appeal to claan hatred. Frantic cheers rose from the Tanks of his followers. The chimes rang out in wiid acclaim. The government, since then, has ordered such meetings suspended be- Cause of protests, Yet the same scenes were wit- Rested following the entrance of Obregon’s victorious warriors into ee American intervention {s bound to come. So the better class of Mexicans be lieve. Many of them dosire it, do resident foreigners. Both see a menace looming over the country that is more dangerous than revolution. And it is bolshevism, “0. Despite the alluring promises of agitators, the Mexicans are sick of war, In Celayn I asked my coach driver why there were so few volunteers in the army: why the people did not is supposed to be raging. “Why should we fight any more?” he asked. “We are tired. We are sick of fighting. “We have seen our labor go for nothing, our fathers and brothers killed. We have endured starvation, wounds and threats of death. “The farmer has seen his produce | take by armed men, who paid | me to serve the army. H “And all for what? To help some man who desired power to reach his goal. “Once the cry of ‘Liberty, Justice and Equality’ stirred the people's hearts. But that’ day ts gone for: ever.” The Fresh, Delicate teasy tang of rare spices can be had only in an uncooked dressing — a true Mayonnaise. Such is GOLD MEDAL } Mayonnaise | The Perfect Salad Dressing | In order that GOLD MEDAL may come to you as fresh as morning dew— itis made fresh daily—made_ in sunlit plants filled with sweet, pure filleredair. And in every city and town in which GOLD MEDAL is sold, speedy motor deli keeps GOLD MEDAL al- ways fresh at your grocer's. And in order that every part of the country may be sup- plied with Mayonnaise, GOLD di New Jersey, in Chicago, and in San Francisco, BEST FOODS, Inc, 1964 yant Street, San Francisco WHY SLANDER SEATTLE? Giving the lie to Mr. Lundin’s slander that Seattle is the blackest- spot on the face ‘of the earth, the Literary Digest of February 28 (only two weeks ago) prints an official government map, prepated by Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assist- ant U. S$. Attorney General at Washington, D. C., which shows Seattle, the metropolis and chief seaport city of the North Pacific Coast, leading San Fran- ciseo by 85 per cent in the matter of dry-law enforcement. Why pick on Seattle, Mr. Lundin? Why slander the city to win votes? Get the Literary Digest of the above date and study the official chart. Compare your own city with San Francisco’s 85 per cent black, Chicago 65, Baltimore 75, Boston 75, New York 95, Delaware and New Jersey 80, and staid old New Hampshire territory in the 60 per cent class! The present campaign allegations of vice and immorality in Seattle are “old stuff,” a mere repetition of every previous argument against an incumbent mayor. Even the Hon, George F. Cotterill, during his term as International Chief Tem- plar of the Grand Lodge of Good Templars of the World, church and Sunday school worker, whose probity has at all times been above suspicion, was obliged in his annual thessage as mayor, in 1912, to say: “The average of only five women and girls per day, arrested for all causes in a ‘seaport’ city of 300,000 population, is an eloquent answer to the mendacity and distortion of facts with which our city has been assailed at home and outrageously misrepresented abroad. These figures shatter the concocted delusions of a persistent, though discredited, vice propaganda.” Seattle’s moral conditions under Mayor Brown are as good as they were un- der Mayor Cotterill or any other mayor. The Navy Department, always solicitous for the welfare of our sailors against vice temptations, after an experience last year, under Mayor Brown's adminis- tration, has announced that it will send to Seattle this summer the largest fleet that ever visited Seattle, and for the longest stay. Mr. Lundin displays gross ignorance and political malice when he says that the voters of Precinct No. 220 are made up of “gamblers, bootleggers and prosti- tutes.” Lundin owes an apology to the reputable hotels, wholesale houses, manufactur- ars, and their hundreds of guests and employes, who live, work and own valuable properties in this busy district. Mr. Lundin knows, and every fair-minded citizen acquainted with conditions should frankly admit, that the “red light” district long since moved beyond the north city limits: —that the joyriders and roysterers seek safety and freedom on the highways and boulevards outside the jurisdiction of the mayor and city police department. * that the notorious roadhouses beyond the city limits are responsible for more drunkenness, contribute in greater share to moral delinquency, cause more serious automobijfé accidents, furnish more police problems than any other source of crime and vice. Raids innumerable have been made by the sheriff, and we leave it to Prose- cutor Malcolm Douglas to explain why he fails to act. Mayor Brown has made good! | : The longest-grand jury session in the history of King county, with money lay- ishly furnished the public prosecutor to get evidence, failed to disclose the “aw- ful conditions” talked about by Lundin. That most reprehensible and life-sapping form of vice, narcotic peddling, has been practically eliminated in Seattle under Mayor Brown, according to official reports of the Federal Narcotics Chiefs. Just a word in passing, Mr. Lundin: ad No other city on the Pacific Coast would tolerate your kind of campaign. Imagine, if you please, the attitude of Los Angeles toward a candidate using your methods! ; The Chamber of Commerce, of which you are a member, is spending thousands of dollars, raised by public subscription, heralding Seattle nation-wide asa clean, healthy, prosperous city; a city of wholesome environment, beautiful scenery; a cultural center, with a great University within its borders. ‘ It is inviting tourists and permanent residents, soliciting factories and payrolls. Is it fair, Mr. Lundin, for you to tear down what our leading civic orguniza- tion is trying to build up? Have you nothing constructive to offer? WHY EXPERIMENT? f RE-ELECT MAYOR BROWN AND INSURE CONTINUED PROSPERITY, HARMONY AND A PRACTICAL, SENSIBLE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION! *