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Most men are In love the m through life. They love themsel AMUSEMENTS MOORE THEATRE | One week, starting Bunday. seats ern Company "tirection ¥ Rey. Company of 100, 0 Prices: Eves lower Moor, 81.50, #1) divans, 82: bales ‘awa They wallery, B0e. nerve Wedaesday = matinee, “SEATTLE THEATRE Roth Phones 43 Tonight. Tomorrow Night ‘omorrow Matinee BARNUM ‘The Hypmotiat, More Fun Than a Clreus Nights Abe, Re, Matineor—25e. ‘Next Sunday—_*Ste Mophiws.” hevtra of “A PICTURE OF DORIAN GREY.” €-OTHER BIG & & C. ACTS—€ MATINEE PAILY, 1¢ AND 206, PN SON IER RR By | PANTAGES THEATRE | Matinee Dall _Twlee Nightly Evelya Martye and Eddie Norman, pine tne Texas Tommy Potlatch | “ ide + -orner iy ad February Announcement For the benefit of our patrons, will give 26 per cent actual inued discount on all piume dyeing, cleaning, eweting, willowing and remaking. Morses, wagons ed. a Sore fixtures at your own , IN ALL LATEST sTYLES Built for service and backed wp by the reputation of the The Harris Tract is now on fale in acre tracts—-one to four acre tracts. Just five minutes’ walk from the boat landing across LAKE WASHINGTON on Juanita Bay. Direct boat service from Madi- son Park. PRICES $400 UP Terms to Suit Call at once if you want a first pick of this fine soil. Close to the lake on the Kirkland- Seattle road. DAVID P. EASTMAN 505 Lowman Buiiding HARCEY’S Just drop in and get acquainted with our meth- od of furnishing your home for less than the other fellow can do it. Friday and Saturday, Special, 9x12 Brussels Rugs $9.85 Harcey Furniture & Carpet Co. 425 PIKE ST. nent they are born—to stay In love ! THOMAS R. HORNER Candidate for Corporation Counsel. Thomas R. Horner, candidate fo corporation corusel of Seattle, holds that jail reform can be ac complished both quickly and surely through that office. The corporation counsel appoints the city attorney, who in turn handles all the police court work, and, through the city attorney, the “third degree” and other abuses ean be abolished. Horner has made a study of - jail conditions, and he made a telling address on the subject before the audience at Harmony hall last night. the most fertile vice and crime. If we could cure the economic conditions that cause poverty, vice and crime would disappear by operation of natural laws,” sald Horner. Speakifig in the same halle where T. A. Parish last week met with disheartening disappointments in the size of the crowds and the lack of enthusiasm (the boys failed to distribute the dodgers wer: tising the meetings, Parish’s cam- paign committee offered as an ex- cuse), George F, Cotterill, pro- kressive candidate last night, was received by crowded audiences in/as both Kidd's bali and Mountain View hall, Green Lake. Cotterill, by reading from county records, show- ed that Parish's office expenses as seamen INNOCENT, HE GOES TO Nn TO BE CURED OF DISEASE ALBERT BLUNT. CANON CITY, Colo, Feb. 7.— Albert Blunt, aged 23, confessed to [a crime he did not commit so he jcould break into the penitentiary and there get the proper treatment for tuberculosis, which he could not get as a free man. |" Blunt is behind the walls in the state penitentiary here serving a |sentence for burglary. He says he |confeased to the crime so he could get relief from Tom Tynan, the humane warden of the penitentiary. That he is getting it is evident from the fact that since entering the penitentiary last May he has gained 5 pounds, When Blunt entered the pen he was a mére skeleion. He had serv- ed two months in the county jail at Grand Junction and he was so | Wasted away and so weak that he could not tal He had given up «sl hopes of life. Then he heard of the reputation Warden Tynan had for humane treatment of con- decided to take a chance, and \I'm glad 1 did, for | may bear the stigma of an ex-convict for the rest ot my life, but 1 would have been dead before this if I hadn't pleaded guilty,” Blunt says. “When I finish my sentence by May, 1913, I hope |to be cured.” We Are Not est note known in fashion and for men and young men. 803 THIRD AVE, THE” SEATTLE STAR | PAUL K. MOHR Paul K. Mohr ts organtsed labor's candidate for the city counetl, but his support will not be limited to the votes of the union workers, Mohr is probably more widely known than any other Seattle labor leader, He has been active in municipal work for years, and was one of the chief movers in securing the recall amendment to the city char He ts a forceful ond a student of economic municipal problema. assessor jumped over his prede- cossor three times faster than the total assessed valuations would justify, He promised to shoulder the responsibility of the police de- partment bimeelf, instead of trying to shift {t for the purpose of making ag He diseusned fully and plain- ly, hefiging at no point, just where he stood on municipal ownership, poco taxation and other live ts sues. T. A. Partah had a sizeable crowd finally to talk to, It hap pened at the Renton Hill club house last night. But you wouldn't have needed a microscope to discover comfortable sitting room If you had come in at any time during the pro- gram. There was absolutely no en: thusiasm mm ag by the aud- “ mae re, who presided at the meeting, got this gem off his chest: “Don't Msten to the other side, who have told you untruths, you have been told here to- night.” Hi Gill, the “reformed” candidate, appeared before the Quiz congress <=: | last night and gave his answers tn the characteristic Gill style, He said he would segregate the womén of the street, but would not estab- lish a restricted district, whatever that might mean. At Georgetown Gill spoke to a large audience along the same tenor of having made a mistake before, but promising to be good nest time. The socialists will have three ponerse tonight. Hulet M. Wells, candidate for mayor, will speak at Caswell's abil, Mountain View sta- tion, and at Kirkwood hall, Green Lake. Edwin J. Brown, corporation counsel candidate, will be at Bard's hall, South Seattle. With the straw vote to be taken at the Quiz congress widely adver. tised, especially aj the soctal- feta, the result, for what it's worth, jast night, showed as follows: Wells 160, Cotterill 102, Gill 80, Parish 59. C, W. Smith, candidate for the council, made an unusually favor- able impression at the Quix bon gress last. night. He showed car ful stady and progressive opinions on all public questions. 18 HE WITH THE IRI6H PLAYERS? Rantaway—I'm going to leave the | * stage, Friend—You'll be missed if you do, old man. Raotaway—That's the reason I'm going to retire, I'm tired of being hit.—Boston Evering Transcript. OUR PRECISE ARTIST “His heart was in his throat.” on the Bluff When we say our new showing of Spring Suits touches the high- fabrics in ready-to-wear apparel You cannot get, at any price, hand- somer styles, finer materials or better-made Suits than we offer at common-clothes prices— $15.00 ..'$25,00 SHANER & WOLFF Out of the High-Rent District. THE WONDER MILLINERY CO. 1535 Second Ave. SHOW YOU They Are Simply Beautiful. Invite You to Inapect. THE WONDER ‘M25 Second Ave, We i My von, | am glad that yoomaked my advice | Regarding the girl yousshould marry; i's well in these mattermta stop and think twice, To be wise and @ litthe bit wary, Be eure whe is saving aud thrifty and bright (A treasure you seldom discover) And then--if she's willing te have you--all right, Providing, of course, that‘you love her! She ought to be gentle and kindly and sweet, And tender and loving aod gracious, Bhe ought to be pationt and steady and neat, Not fluffy and lghtly flirtatious, But—if she's not up to this standard I set, If, in fact, it is way, way above ber, You'll never admit or believe it, 1 bet. You certainly won't—if you love her! ‘This mattor of marriage ia haif of your life And one you should carefully ponder; You ought to pick out « brunette for your wife, Unieas of the blondes you are fonder, I'm glad that you Hsten to all that I say, As near to the a! you hover, And when I have finished you'll go on your own way Despite my — if you love her! YOU'LL FIND IT HERE NEWS OF THE DAY CONDENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE Rehearsals for the benefit pro-|' Just when you think you've “ gram to be given for the leis | rived, there in always some one Home and Training Schoo! at Ra- | to pester you by telling you of t your verna Heights, at the Metropolitan | | mistakes, February 20, © begun. U of the poultry show |keys be! ing to Misa it of corned nongeanly aoe wight. It | Bhowalter, of St. Loula, got loose has been to open Sunday in the Hi Brestin and frightened from 10 a. m. men 10 p. m., owing |several spinster guests, into hys to the vast attendance the past |terics. three days. regimental! PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 9.—Mary First |Garden’s press agent announces the yeason was given by |singer is to wear a Greek costume corps of the university on the |in the future far comfort. It eo campus thie morning. sists of & satin robe and tunic, with corsets, socks and shoes missing, A awarm of bees broke up Dr.) Cook's lecture at Hopkinsville, | Ky. And « bee stung him to the! neck, too! Seventy-three students of the uni- versity have been dropped, owing TARRYTOWN, N. Y., Feb. 9— Fox claims to have the “very wit est hen” because it lays “Thermos Megs,” which can't freeze He ‘avers the hen lays exes with two to their fatlure to pass the exam- inations which are required for a college continuance just fifty years ape J. Pillow toot staff and some cavalry within a mile of the Confederate works. Quem toned as to his bardibood, Grant re- plied that he had known Pillow in the Mexican war, and knew bow far he would go. other words, he in- timated Gideon was a “so far” Pil- low. It in a comfort to Pillow's friends, of course, to know that Gen. Grant did him aon Injestice’in that Gideon was not in the fort until the next day, or he might have taken Grant in the act. A concert will be given at the Pleasant Valley Presbyterian chureh, corner 34th ay. and Bertona st, tonight. Local and down town ‘talent have been secured. The church has been recently remod- led. REREREKKAKAREH EEK * <A storm now approaching *% Vancouver island will cause & winereasing southbasterly & * winds, becoming high, and # *® later shifting to southwest, ® here. RARER ARHKARAHRAAH Women’s Commercial club met last night and decided to go on record against the proposed exten- sion of the domestic science depart- ment in the high school of the city, by which It is intended to pro- vide each school with an entire Mat model Invitations have been extended to loca] organizations by T. H. Mortin, general secretary of the Pacific Northwest immigration convention, to be held in Tacoma January 21 and 22, to name each from three to five delegates to the convention, They ne great caus How many there are who would rather fail! D. H, Gilman has protested to the streets and sewers committee against the $5,000 astessment levied on his property at Sinith cove for a portion of the expense of constructing a rising prise at 23rd ay. W. and Garfielt He says he intends to file a suit for’ $50,000 against the city. NEEDS THE COVERING The teacher was trying to ex- plain the use of the thermom- eter. “How can we tell,” she asked, “in winter, for instance, how much colder one day is than an- other day?” “When it’s awful cold,” spoke up the barb little boy, “no- body goes t’ git hig hair cut,”— Chicago Tribune. Local Elks, two carloads of ‘em, |Journeyed up to Everett last night |to attend an athletic smoker given by thelr Everett brothers, Earl Myers, 16, charged with se- curing @ motorcycle from Piper & Taft's a8 a “prospective” purchaser and delaying the return of it, will be brought here from Tacoma by a local deputy today. A Kansas woman got a divorce, alimony and the money, all in 22 minutes, .Reno'd better look to her laurels, sholis, with an air space between. NEW YORK, Feb. 9—Lillian E. Small, who had enrolled in normal college to become a teacher, holds the unique distinction of never hav- igg been late to school or atwent = day during her 10-year courne. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Feb. 9— ‘Having received a letter from J. J, sGox of Jackson, Tenn, confessing t the slaying of Ollie Katterer, ernor Donaghy has pardoned Martin, who was convicted sentenced to life imprisonment ITHACA, N. YV., Feb, 0—Presi- *t Schurman, of Cornell, pro- to make public soon figures ‘ing how fraternity men stand te their classes as compared with monfraternity men, CHICAGO, Feb. 9.—Albert Cart- fon was “arrested” by & man rep resenting himself an a detective, searched and relieved of $90 for which he was given a receipt. The “detective” then left and has not returned. PITTSBURG, Pa, Fed. 9.—Ex- perts in the laboratory of the Uni- reity of Pittsburg have discov. ered a secret process by which sev- eral varieties of food can be man- ufactured out of petroleum. CHICAGO, Feb. 9.—While ,the pianist played “Dixie” and the singer & moving pieture house warbled “My Country “Tis of Thee,” the audience, which had broken Into panic, following a cry of “fire,” ‘was restored to order, ASHEVILLE, N. C., Fi o— Archibald Greer has refused $500 # |for & pet bull dog which keeps his chickens imprisoned in the chicken coop, freeing them only when they have laid their daily quota of eggs. ST. LOUIS, Mo. Feb. 9.—Vegg- we )men entering a packing plant in East St. Louis, bound ang gagged the night watchman ai wung him to a meat hook while they rob- bed the safe of $1,100, NEW YORK, Fi 9.—Mies Anna Peck, famous woman mountain climber, reports to suffragists here that she planted Joan of Arc Suf- frage league flag atop Mount Cor- opuna, a 21,000-foot mountain in Southern Peru. CHICAGO, Feb. 9.—False teeth with metal roots, which are to be grown into the jawbone, is the in- vention with which Dr. B. J, Green- field of Wichita hopes to interest the profession bere. REAEKKKRKKKKKHEH * AT THE THEATRES Metropolitan—Dark. Seattie—R. B. Barnum, hyp- notist, Emprese—Vaudeville. Pantages—Vaudeville. Orpheum—Vaudeville. me Grand—Vaudeville and motion pictures, REE EREAKRHEK Sseeeeeetee ROCKFORD, Ii1., Feb. 9.—"“Breed- fing educational cowardice” is the charge made by Rey. T. B. Thomp- son, congregationalist. against schools and co pting the “bounty of Andrew Carnegie,” NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—James B, Duke is to resign from the pi flency of the American Tobacco ( to become chairman of the British American Tobacco Co., limited, ac- cording to announcement here to- day, NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—Announce- ment was made today of the elec: tion of Frank H. Harris, partner of the late Edwin Hawley, to the vice presidency of the Chicago and AL ton Railroad Co. PAJAMA-CLAD | ~GIRLS |} LOS ANGELES, Fob. 9.~"Texas |f amy” has invaded the Union League club, At @ smoker last night two pajama-clad girlies from a local theatre entertained the bare- domed business men, who yelled for more, | FURNITURE ORY GOODS FREDERICK & NELSON, There is no such thing Inc. Store Closes Daily at 60, —New— American Lady $1.50 $2.00 $3.50 —models in which the long, slender lines, so desirable this season, are successfully attained: Style 327 In heavy striped batiste; a good weight for early Spring low bust, wear; extra-long hip; drawstring at top, silk- embroidery pairs of Price $3.50. Style 179 finish. Three hose supporters. Style 224 A tow-bust long skirt—~a good model for Corset with the average figure; material is striped coutil, embroidery edging and drawstring at top; three pairs of hose support- ers. Price $2.00. Has moderately low, bust yand jong skirt; material, firm batiste ; wide lace trimming at top and two pairs of hose sup- porters are attached. Misses’ Peter Thompson Sui Price $1.50, —Seeond Floor. In Fine French Serge Special $13.50 A NEW purchase of these natty Suits, embracing one- and two-piece styles, quality navy-blue French serge, with full blouse, and deep sailor collar # sa stable brain if a men it bubbles like boiling apple butter hase white braid. special $13.50. The skirt is in plain-gored style, laced in back Sizes 14, 16 and Mf Girls’ Gingham and Percale Wash Dresses in pretty plaid and check patterns, with long waist and short box-plaited skirt sertion and pipings in harmonizing color. Added to the Lines of New Neckwear At 50¢’ —Collars of fine Swiss, prettily embroidered and Venise-lace-edged, in Quaker, Sailor and_ Eton styles, 50c. —Embroidered Jabots in sheer Swiss and lawn, plaited and plain designs, effectively trimmed in laces; 50c. —wiret reer. The-waists are trimmed with emb Sizes 6 to 14 years; $1.95 to $4. New Belt Buckles Special $1.00 OLD-FILLED Buckles bright, green and dull fi polished and gray-finished silver. with imitation jewels, other? filigree effects—each fitted with or clasp. Special values at $1.00. New House Dresses, $1.9% fe HE Dress pictured is made up in a fine grade of down front and is trimmed in plain-color cham with embroidered scallop. White ground with stripe blue, gray or lavender. Price $1.95. Equally attractive is a Dress of black and white cale with neat figures in light-blue, navy or lavender. It collar, extending to waist-line in front, and cuffs of white 4 ered pique. Price $1.95. Several other attractive new models are on display att low price. New Kid Gloves Special $1.00 Pair -——a new importation of fine Glace-finished Kid Gloves, overseam seven, Paris-point cm- broidered in self and contrasting color; two patent clasps. Black, white. tan, brown, gray, navy, mode and champagne. Special, the pair, $1.00, Firat Fioor. BASEMENT Washington Birth Novelties Crepe Paper Decorations for ’ ton’s Birthday, 25c. Hatchet Favors, 5c dozen, & Large Hatchets, to be filled with @ Se each. Tally and Place Cards in designs. priate to Washington's Birthday, upwards, Paper Napkins in cherry dozen. Crane's “Papier Ligne” Paper, in-note and letter sizes, | white, 65¢ to $1.00 box. SALEROOM ~~~ Attractive Values in Women’s Outing Gowns JTING Flannel Gowns in blue and vhite or pink and white stripe pat- made with double yoke front -and back, and round neck finished with embroid- ered lace full. O' tern, scallops or fagot-stitching and Well-made and cut Price 75c.. edge. amply Gowns of good quality outing flannel in blue or pink and white stripes, finished with feather-stitching around neck; double yoke in front and back, 50c Children’s Bloomers of black sateen, with band top and elastic at bottom, special 25¢. Basement Salesroom. Frederick & Nelson INCORPORATED Children’s Sha Special 75c HILDREN’S Vici Kid Shoes W ent tips and turned soles. without heels, and 5 to 8, with heels, 75¢ pair. a Children’s Patent and Gun-metal Jockey Roots, made over a short-valm Sizes 5 to By Basement | : Women’ omen $ Silk-Boot He Special 25c OMEN’S Black Sitk-boot 7 with reinforced heel and t0 soles. with heavy $1.45 pair. WwW garter top, special, pair, 25¢. © —Basemeat &