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Windahiel nd ustan mirror; peg ‘$1.29 with stron 63 5d | ewspaper ——— i LL WAKE ’EM ALL UP! Here Goes Another BIG BOMB Sit Up and Take Notice —Everybody Special for Saturday ONE DAY ONLY—COME EARLY CHOICE OF 100 SUITS $20 COATS MADE TO ORDER ANY PATTERN IN MY BIG WINDOW 100 Patterns to Choose From 20 of these fabrics are worth..... 30 of these fabrics are worth. . 30 of these fabrics are worth....... 20 of these fabrics are worth.......$35 $100 FORFEIT IF I FAIL TO GIVE YOU ANY SUIT IN MY BIG SOUTH WINDOW FOR $20. Come down Friday evening and pick out the pattern you like best and then get your order in early Saturday. Louis Sidelsky _ IMPERIAL TAILORING CO.—SINCE 1890 s Wbbed by Police Drunken Autoi THE SEATT Men of State in Session Here! & A FORCED TO So do not confuse this Great Sale with any other. PALACE CLOTHING CO. 1020-22 FIRST AVE., COR. SPRING ST. Everything Sacrificed Two with Furnishings floors loaded Clothing, Shoes. huge cholce and QUITS UNABLE TO ADJUST TS LEASE AND IS Out We Go— Store Closed For 5 Days — Slashing prices below cost, SELL OUT AT ONCE Remember, it is a Genuine Quit Business proposition we are offering you and positively the Lowest Prices ever made. including all fixtures. of this stock of merchandise. SALE OPENS TOMORROW 9 A.M. BE HERE EARLY THOUSANDS REWARDED TOMORROW And you will buy Arrow Collars, 1¢; Handker- chiefs, 3¢; Socks at 7¢; Garters, 6¢; Suspend- ers, 10¢; Wool Process Work Socks, 14¢; Over- alls, O8¢; Coverall Play Suits, 68¢; Boys’ Over- alls, 39¢; Heavy Gray Union Suits, 98¢; Leather Lined Work Gloves, 23¢; Felt Slip- pers, S5¢; Extra High Grade Pants, $1.49. Big lot of Shoes for Men, Women and Chil- dren, 98¢ and $1.45. OVERCOATS $4.85 About 300 Coats in latest models, You will say they are wonderful values at $25 to $35, and they all go at only $9.85. Also about 165 odd Overcoats, all new goods, go at only $4.85. READ THESE PRICES Space will permit of only a few examples here, but thousands more bargains to be found in the store. Men’s Suits $5.85 865 beautifully tai- Jored Suits of the finest fabrics, the kind you would appre- ciate at around $30. Snap these up quick at $12.85. Also about 270 fine Suits, broken lines, sold as high as $35, All go at 35.85. Entire stock goes—two huge floors must be sold to the bare walls, No reasonable offer will be refused for any part or all YOU WILL PROFIT GIGANTIC MERCHANDISE SLAUGHTER Think of buying a high grade Blue Serge Suit, full lined, that sold up to $27.50—they all go tomorrow at only $10.85. And extra heavy pull over Sweaters at only Style Sweaters at $1.19. Also a big lot of Bath- ing Suits, in values up to $3.50, go at 68¢. Thousands of other items at ridiculously low prices. BOYS’ SUITS $1.98 Fine 2-Pants Suits that sold as high as $10 —while they last—go at only $1.98. Also several hundred Top Notch Boys’ Macki- naws and Raincoats, out they go at $1.48. seth innit nsiaoceaais fusing the indignation of} 3. A. Williams. #1. was arrested a charge ing while drun! pemetriane slous roan | Paureday at Terry ave, and Seneca beating his horse brutally| st, by Patrolman J. H. Burt. Will- st. to Union st, Joe|lams posted $206 pall. 41, Russian funk mon, was A TREMENDOUS STOCK OF FURNISHING GOODS UNDERWEAR Ask an Eastern Washington newspaper man who is going to be candidate for governor from cast of the mountains. He'll say A. R. Gardner. Gardner (center) is editor of the Kennewick Courier-Republican. He hasn't°yet said he'll run, but it ia believed he will SHIRTS All kinds Work HATS and CAPS ty Patrolman Pat Kenyon and Union Thursday. Honey Savers! Spring excellent quality, chif- taffeta Dresses; with ‘three of rufflings; smart collar. er ornament at waist. $18.00 $10.89 and Misses’ Fall Coats in atid plushes. They were d for four times as much. Sizes 1 - A +++ $2.49 Purses and Vanity C, d Mather lined and with all Red Beautifully embossed. Wonderful values at ..... -$1.49 Met's Dress Shirts in madras and ; Mostly big sizes. Sligt t- foiled. While they last, at 49¢ “Peters” Shoes, blucher cut. soeseses S198 Pret’ thes Gold Band Cups and Saucers, cs ~ Tumblers, Aluminumware, Frying s, and many other items at ....9¢ 5,000 yards Challie, Ging- ham, white and striped Flannelette, Nainsook, Unbleached Muslin, Cam- bric, Scrim; at less than the present wholesale cost. Only, yard ...14¢ . 496 Crystal White Son; Fron Cross Laundry Soap } 12 bars Sapotio ‘for only Quantities Limited, | Slutsky was charged with disor |Other members of the State Press associnticn shown here are: Fred L. Wolfe (1), New- Serly conduct and posted $19 bail |port Miner; Chapin D. Foster (2), Grandview Herald; David Dickson (8), Ellensburg |Record; Sam Hopkins (4), Vancouver Columbian; Prof. Robert Jones (5), University of Washington journalism department; Lincoln Lonnsbury (6), State College journalism jdepartment, Pullman; T. J. O'Day (7), State college; L. C. Weik (8), Odessa Record; Al; Hillyer (10), Sunnyside Sun; ‘Makes Prunes | Real Topic of | Conversation Vancouver Man Says) County Leads in Production Prunes may not appeal to every person as a particularly interesting [topic of conversation, but there ts | no limit to the subject or to the n- terest in the subject when Sam Hopkins, businéss manager of the Vancouver (Wash.), Evening Co- lumbian, gets started on the matter, Perhaps the Holland housewife, | who buys dried prunes at her na-/ |tive market or the Norwegian res- t man who serves them to |his customers, has no idea where} the fruit comes from. .1f Hopkins |were in elther of those countries,| jboth parties would find out in short} | order. | | Clarke county is fast becoming |the greatest prune-raising district jin the world, Hopkins says. Grow- jers in the vicinity of Vancouver) raise better and more prunes to the | HEAR SUZZALLO G. W. Hopp (9), Camas Post. Photo by Price & Carter, Bt AT SMOKER President of ‘U” Urges Higher Ideals in Work ROBLEMS of newspaper circula- tion, the gathering and playing of news and the matter of the news- paper's place in community develop- ment were the topics to be taken up at the second day session of the Washington State Press association Friday at the annual meeting at the University of Washington, Thuraday the delegates from alt parts of tho state registered at the university department of Journalism, held.a round table discussion led by David H. Dickson of the Eliensburg Record, and then were guests at the annual banquet and amoker in the evening at the Men's Faculty club, President Henry Suzzallo of the University of Washington was the main speaker at the banquet, and urged the men to set a higher goal in their work. "In pedagogy.” he said, “it ts con: sidered poor practice to talk to the pupil's level,” he said, “It 18 also bad to talk way above his head. ‘The right method 14 to talk to such @ acre than in any other nectoin of |the country, | The market for the Clarke coun- |ty crop is ‘world-wide, Hopkins de-| jclares. Much of the product ts skipped to New York and handled by brokers, but a great quanity of the fruit Is shipped direct to Euro- |pean markets, principally to Hol- land, Germany and the Scandina- Peninsula. Ex-soldiers would not make wry faces and say unpleasant things when the subject of prunes is men- tioned if the army had obtained itn prunes from Clarke county,” the Vancouver man said Friday, Hopkins is part owner of the Co-| lumblan and ts at the Press con-| vention with E. N. Blythe, news| itor of the paper, and also a part! owner. point above him that he can get your idea if he jumps for {t real hard. “This samo thing should prevail In} our newspapers, Don't get down to your reader’d level. Don't get too high above him, Hit the proper} medium.” Suzzallo also urged the newspaper men to be discreet in the use of thelr editorial influence. “Great strides have been made in publicity, and we have found out how to close the minds of the people against the words of a person who may disagree with wus,” he sald. “There is small place in this world for the man who speaks the truth blandly without regard to popular fooling or without tempering his words with the popular opinions of) the day. “I believe wo are farther away BOURBONS LOSE Twenty-four years ago the town! [of Odessa, in Lincoln county, potted a solid democratic vote. totat| number of ballots cast was five But then came L. C. Weik and! other republicans and a few years! later there were still the five dom ocrat votes—-and a few others—but! they were helpless agninat the re-| publican majority that had come to |the town and settled. “Now,” says Welk, “wo perhaps have trongest ‘republican dis- from democracy now than we were 20 years ago “This in true because we know Btatt Photographers oe ‘Blaze Did Not Dampen Ardor of C.D.Foster And He'd Rather Be “First Man in Grandview—” Caesar said he would than second’ man in Rome. And that's one of the reasons why Chapin D. Foster, editor of the Grandview Herald and president of ciation, has established himself on @ small country paper rather than on @ metropolitan dally. ers in the state association for sev- eral years and his election as presi- dent !s a reward for his labors, For the past 13 years she has been in Grandview as head of the Her- ald. His newspaper career started in Minneapolis, when he was 18 years old, on the Minneapolis News, Foster was just out of high school and was in dire need of @ job. He got one as police reporter for the News and he has been with the work ever since, Previous to going to Grandview, Foster worked for a while on a Ta- coma newspaper, Then he went management of the Herald. Two years after he purchased the publi- cation, and when hoe was passing thru. one financial difficulty after another, his plant was destroyed by fire. he Herald published as usual, however, Foster went to Sunnyside and got out an emergeney edition until he was able to replace his lost equtpment, bince that timo he has. steadily built up his paper until now he hoasts of one of the finest in his section of the stato, LIKES TO. GET how to organize the minorities into an strong factors as the majorities."’| Roy A. McMillan, of the Tacoma} News-Tribune, spoke of the passing | of the ‘iden that the country editor! sa “hick.” | trict In the state Wolk is ths editor and ownor of the Odessa Record, which he estab: Hwhed shortly after he Odessa 24 years ago, Tis paper then corresponded to the size of the| versity of Washington with mord) the town, but has shown the same steady growth (hat Odessa has, BACK HOME David Dickson Once Carried The Seattle Star There's one member of the State went to| Press association who looks forward | for a proas association to the annual meetings at the Uni than the ordinary pleasure. That mon is David H, Dickson, rather be} the first man in an Alpine village} the Washington State Press asso-| Foster bas been one of the lead- | east of the mountains and obtained | 10c - 25¢ - 98 Men's and Roys' Fine « Fine Ribbed Garments he oss s6ae anges: Ame High-grade Wool Union Suits, only, ... 48 Ath. Union Suits. WOMEN’S SHOES Flannel Shirts A BONA FIDE QUIT-BUSINESS SALE OUTFIT YOUR WHOLE FAMILY AT LESS THAN WHOLESALE TOMORROW 1020-22 FIRST AVE., COR. SPRING ST. PALACE CLOTHING CO. Veteran Paper Owner Recalls Real Problems Started In Work 50 Years Ago; Used Hand Power Problema of newspaper work dis- cussed at the Press association meet- ing at the university brings back |memorles to G. W. Hopp, of Camas, of the days when the newspaper men were faced with real problems. Hopp is the dean of the press workers at the convention. For 50 years he has followed the “newspa- per game.” | news editor of the Ellensburg Even< ing Record, and a former Seattle | boy. In 1904 Dickson carried a Seattle Star route on First and Second aves., | between Madison st. and Yesler way. |1ror several years he was’ connected | with the circulation department and later went to Spokane to work. | He enlisted in the army during the |war and after the armistice was| igned, returned to his old profes: | Jon. However, he dec that he! would take up the news gathering end of the business and went to work Later he became connected with} ensbur& Record and has held| his present position for several years. F . o In 1866, when he first started to work in the offtee of the Clayton County Journal, in Iowa, the type was set by hand and the papers were printed on a hand press. But Hopp has grown up with the newspaper business. He has seen it evolve from a business depend- ent on hand power to a place where machines do pO per cent of the work. For the past 11 years Hopp has been editor of the Camas Post, and Glo-Glan Instantly Relieves STOMACH Trouble, Indigestion Bloating, Dyspepsia, Gastritis, Uloers, Heartburn, and ther disorders or ‘ens of the stomach, Twenty drops fer before meals, EAT ANY- NG you iike with no more fer- s gas, heartburn or other ful conditions. Harmless, non- ‘and highly beneficial, Helps stomach Glands perform Mrs. May McLean, 1428 Jackson St, Oakland, Cali on *atter 4 years with stom. nd gas, 2 bottles of GLO-GLAN has brought me complete relief. Life hax taken | ntirely new as- pect e ything ia again bright and cheer “1 eannot GLAN too. highly. Yor Je by all leading druggists. Holmes Drug 0o., © Diatributors, ys nommend GLO- he often finds time to compare his present equipment to that on which he first started to learn the “game.” NEW KIND OF SHOE ENDS FOOT TROUBLE A shoe that is designed to fit more snugly to the lines of the foot, particularly to the sole of the foot, is proving a tremendous success. It ia the invention of Dr. factured on & of the leading shoe manufacturers of the country. By holding the foot snugly in place and supporting it evenly over the entire bottom, this known as the Dr, Geo, R. | Anti-Friction Shoe, prevents ti usual foot, troubles due to wrong fitting and the improper support that results from it. 1 over the country chiropo- dists are adopting this type of shoe asa part of their treatment, fitting the shoes to their patients personally. Many foot ailments are caused by Improper support of the foot. Other ills, Including what is some- times thought to be rheumatism, aro frequently the result of the strain on unsupported arches. The pressure of the bones upon the nerves produces a sense of pain which may be carried to other parts of the body. ‘Phe Dr, Geo. R. Davin Anti-Fric- tion Shoe relieves that strain by giving even support to the whole foot and carrying the body in ab- solute comfort. mM ons with foot troubles, such ax corns, callouses, bunions, weak: ened arches, etc, are advised sto | call on Dr. Davis’ at his store and consultation room at 1407 Fifth Ave. No obligation to buy,—Ad- vertixement