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May Your New Year Happy Be——— FIRST BARGAIN FRIDAY IN 1914 | And It Will Be a Remarkable One: '—AT THE BON MARCHE’S CLEARANCE SALE— | For All the Odd Lots and Remnants That Have Accumulated Daving the Holiday Rush Have Been Sorted Out, and Will Be Thrown on the Tables at Absurdly Low Prices. A CLEARANCE. OF MEN’S $1.50 SHIRTS AT $1.09 Each In Plain or Pleated Fronts. and All Sizes From 14 to 17 | | al First Shirt sale of the year, and likely to be the best one you are going to see for some time—for these shirts are all standard $1.50 shirt i] { as good $1.50 shirts as you will | Lower Main meet with anywhere. All nice pat E Ereer terns—in good madras and percales— | | of the 1 } | Bon yours Friday for $1.09 apiece Marche | Men’s $3.00 Hats at $2.49 Each ‘1. 50 Combination Sets $1. 00 | “both the soft conatating of all te All of our Men's $3.00 ats | the Derby styles, in the ylocks and st to sentch, Le | —have been reduced to $2.49 each. They bine ) best $3.00 values on t market. Friday, Ho in ar $1.50 sets, Friday values each, Come in and see them WOMEN’S $3.50 “PINGREE MADE” SHOES PRICED $1.95 a Pair For Friday Only They're the famous “Pingree Made” Shoes |} known the country over for their correct ness of style and their comfortable shaped j lasts. There are about five hundred pairs | included in this lot—in vici kid and gun-metal calf button style. Have hand turned and —Upper Main Floor. welt soles. All sizes in combined lines | } ac Lan RAEI A PO AA RI RTS LN MND ss | iI | 25¢ and 50¢ Jewelry for 10c) |18e Crepe Remnants 9¢ Yard’ | Odds and ends of Jewelry, including * Remnants of Serpentine Crepe—-30) | lbar pins, cuff links, long chains, tie pins, |/inches in width and in lengths to 7| | lcoin holders. In gold, silver and gun- yards. Shown in all shades and good|} jmetal. Upper Main Floor. patterns Lower Main Floor. a) : : «ote Lis | i! '25e Soiesette 10e a Yard ‘33. 50 Shoes $1.95 a Pair| ; i Remnants of Soiesette—32 inches in Women’s Pingree-made Shoes in vici| width and in lengths to 8 yards, Highly| | kid lace, and gun-metal calf button style |All sizes in combined lines. Priced $1.95 mercerized. In good shades; 25¢ quality) Upper Main Floor. for 10c a yard. Lower Main Floor. | 25¢ Embroidery 10c a Yard) Remnants of Swiss and Nainsook Em-| ja pair 50e to 85e Silks 29¢ a Yard Remnants of plain and fancy Silks in tn ; | broidery Edges and Bands—widths up to figures, stripes, checks, foulards, taffeta, tH] [18 inches. Variety of dainty patterns to pongee and other desirable fabrics Priced} | 'I| |choose from. Upper Main Floor. 29¢ a yard. Upper Main Floor. | i [%5e to $1.50 Bonnets 25c| |$1.00 to $1.50 Silks 50¢ Yard) Infants’ colored Bonnets of velvet or} | Included are 36-inch Silks in. stripes, | silk—prettily trimmed with silk ribbon checks, foulards, satins and messalines ‘ Regular 75 A fine line of colors to select from 2 Upper Main Floor. to $1.50 values for Se. Second Floor. |Women’s Hosiery flea Pair || } In black, red and navy blue. > i 1 {59¢ Corset Covers 35¢ Each| Women’s Nainsook Corset Or 6 pairs for $1.00; 500 pairs in-| somewhat mussed from handling Daint jcluded in the lot—all broken lines of} | lily trimmed with lace and embroidery stockings of splendid quality; 8% to 10.) | Reg. 59c val 59c values 35¢ eac ch. Second Floor. | Lower Main Floor. 75e to $1.25 Guimpes 25¢) —. [95e Seco Combinations 69¢ Lower Main Floor. 2 yarc Seco Silk Corset Covers and Short Odd lots and broken sizes in Girls’! | 5 Skirt Combinations—sizes 34 to 36 only.| | | White Guimpes—trimmed with Val. lace} | ' In white and pink—trimmed with Val.| | |and embroidery Good assortment | t ; |lace Priced 6% each Second Floor. sizes to choose from. Second Floor. | EB | — ——— | [50e and 75¢ Leggings 25¢| 2. 50 to $4.50 Bath Robes $1! i || Children’s Jersey or Boucle Leggings Girls’ Eiderdown and Blanket Bath | i : l tin red, with brass or black buttons Robes that have become soiled ftom dis r & | |Come in sizes from 2 to 10 years. Priced f Not all sizes—mo tly 6, 10 and 12}]} | | Friday at 25c a pair. Second Floor years. Second Floor. | | Rain Capes Cut to One- Hall $2 to $5 Hats Priced at $1 ; | Broken lines of Children’s Rain Capes | | Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats for ||—not all sizes in all prices. Regula 4 Women, Misses and Children. Included! | | |$1.98, $3.75 and $4.98 capes at half] | |are nobby trimmed styles and choice hat| | { | Iprice Second Floor. shapes in styles for all wear. Second Floor. | : | - ; } : il ‘Remnants of Linen A Less Ribbon Remnants at ¥/2 Price}, All Linen Table Damask Remnant Included are Ribbons of every descrip | i | | Ihave been priced at one fourth less. All) | |tion—velvets atin Dresdens, taffetas | S| | Jare splendid quality and neat floral de ar 1a other dainty pieces, from 1 to | | y Upper Main Floor. signs. ‘Dainty Plaitings ‘Half Price Veiling Remnants Half Price Net, Chiffon and all of | Dainty Shadow Lace, styles Meshes Maline Plaitings. They range in | al iaithe They are 1 to | |from 1.to 2 y are very smart and % yards long All the latest effects jek Upper Upper Main Floor | ‘Embroidery Remnants for 1/2 Trimming Remnants at Hal! { | Remnants of fine Swiss and Nainsook Lace Frimming Remnants in as-| | rc @ | Embroidery—width to 45 — inches rted nd designs—lengths, % to | ; Variety of lovely patterns to chogse from 4 @ j 50c to} | 0c to $3.50 all at. half Upper Main 50 @ yare Upper } Floor. +|Main Floor. penaive—Mixth Voor Vike Street, Second Avenur, Union street WHICH? BY BERTON BRALEY Which will you be, Bond-slave or free? Through the year’s span Which will you heed— Honor—or Greed, Mammon—or Man? oer eee The old year’s gone the destined way of time and all mortality With all its good and all its bad, its woe and comicality, With all its love and hate and strife, its loafing and its laboring Its placid victories of peace, its warriors .fiercely savoring ; We've left it all behind us and we're not at all re- gretting it The old year's very, very dead, so let us be forgetting it! But now the new year claims the stage—and what shall be our attitude? ul fellowship have larger room, shall love have greater latitude? Ww YOU make life a sweeter thing, the world a place more lyrical With laughter and with joyous song; or selfish and satirical? Will you go grumbling through the days with sullen and smou through the er shouldering? thoughts trample roughly er Or fed ways your fellows Gold is indeed a goodly thing and pleasant is the touch And man sh eck to earn his share—but never think too much of it And when Gold means the world to you—-and all life takes the hue of it, Gold means more than: faith and friends, time to change your view of it; “A Man must live!"’—that’s true enough of veracity And vet he needn't live a slave to money-mad rapacity Year's ended, done! To speak of vanity When it’s a proverb finished ' The Old it serve throughout the NEW—for Gold > mi Humanity Which will you be, Bond-slave or free? Through the year’s span Which will you heed— Honor—or Greed, Mammon—or Man? HALF-HOUR PEACE, ANYHOW Seattic observed the firet 30 minutes of is new year in perfect rectitude. Such is the police tale as recorded on the official “blotter From 12 midnight to 12°30, not an arrest was made. Exactly at 12:30, N. A. Slim departed from the straight and nar row, bis hearty a«pirite by discharging a gun in the air. FRE | There was slim chance for Sifm to escape what happened then. | A copper heard the shots. Slim now Is celebrating at the city bastile the honor of being the first to get pinched tn 1914 Only three arrests were made between 12 and 1 a m. Betwoen 1 and 2, the number swelled to 23. The next hour there were only nine arrests. after Seattle got through celebrating, evidently, for there wasn't an other arrest till $a m. 108 ANGEL®S, Cal, Jan. 1—Ralph Fariss, the bandit, and Mrs Lola Statler, the girl for whom he declared he held up a train, me today for the first time since Fartes’ arrest “Oh, Ralph, why did you do it?” admitted her to the young bandit’s cell his arms and the pair talked for an hour, while Fartes’ dinner, which ; had been brought him. grew cold Mrs. Statler told Fariss that she will appear In court tomorrow to ‘teatify for him when the degree of his murder of Montague ts estab. HELD TO LIVE WIRE AND DIED | ished SANTA ROSA, Ca an. 1A coroner's Jury will investigate the case of Jack Roelofes, of San Francisco, dead here today through contact with a live electric wire. Young Roelofaz, in Santa Rosa to spend New Year's with rela tives, stumbled over the wire yesterday, fell, and in trying to rise grasped it. Unable to relax his grip, he lay writhing for ten minutes, begging to be freed When a bystander threw a rubber coat over his body and dragged him from the wire, he had succumbed PIONEER SHIPBUILDER IS DEAD TACOMA Jan, 1.-Frank M. Crawford, senior member of the firn of Crawford & Reid, shipb of Town, and one of the best known #hipbuilders on the in ¢ at his home today of heart trouble. Crawford, whose name has b well known among mariners on Puget Sound for the last 30 years, has, during the past 14 years, constructed nearly 100 veasels of all sizes and descriptions, including a large fleet of tugs and small So und steamers TO LOOK FOR DUCK IN ALASKA WASHINGTON, Jan, 1—Lord William Percy, son of the Duke of Northumberland, has applied through the British ambassador, Sir Vect) Spring R for perm! to go North on the revenne cutter Bear, when she len San Francisco next spring. There is a species of duck in Northern Alaska that cant be found elsewhere, and Lord Williain wants tO seek ft out NOT INTERESTED IN QUARREL WASHINGTON Jan, 1 Official Washington doesn't care any thing about the row between Disbursing Agent John W. Swift ana Jack Dalton over movement of Matanuska coal for navy test pur pos All it fs 1 where it can be ted In 1s having the coal moved to tide water, nken aboard the United States vessels. Between 2 and 4a. m, only two were nabbed. There | | GIRL VISITS FARISS IN CELL | I the girl cried, when a turnkey) She then threw herself into jf This is the tnformation given out at the Office of the director of| the bureau of mines TOOK A PLUNGE IN THE SURF NEW YORK, Jan. 1 » minute after midnight today, anal ed by fitds then companions, took a dip in the surf The woman and one other tw Ivered close in shore, of tha men swam out} | PASADENA’S GLAD NEW YEAR PASADENA, Cal, Jan, 1--Father Ricard wins, Pasadena has for its 26th annual tournament of roses as fine a day as California ever produced, «It was foggy In the morning, but the sun came up, in the} regular manner which the sun has, and made short work of the fox Consequently everything was run off off schedule, and .the greatest floral pageant ev en in Pasadena—the greatest in the world, it is declared by many—wound its way through the streets between 10:30 and noon NTO, Cal, Jan. L—-One woman dead, her murders man nursing a paiatul xunshot wound in his hand ax the result of an early morning tragedy in Sacramento under world early this morning rh dead Su Adama, shot time d inatantly killed; Ch land chest, will die; Policeman Clenapao, 30, shot in the Warren, shot in right hand, “ four | forehead | | in the exuberance of the New Year atmosphere, and mantfested | AT 50¢ The Muslin Underwear Sale} DERICK & NELSON Store Opens at 8:30—Closes at 5:30 In the Basement Salesroom exploits the lower-priced grades of undermuslins, every bit as fresh and snowy as those on sale in the upstairs section, and just as note- worthy for the excellent order of materials and workmanship, and the dainty styles, afforded at the January Sale prices. ll Corset Covers in the Sale 19c to 65c AT 19¢ Corset Covers of cotton crepe, trimmed around neck and arm-eyes with dainty Barmen lace edge drawn with ribbon AT 25¢ Nainsook Corset Covers, trimmed with one row of lace insertion, beading and edge Other dainty Corset Covers in the Sale are specially priced at 38c, 45c, 55¢ and Princess Slips in the Sale 75c to $1.45 AT 75¢ Princess Slips of nainsook, trimmed on cover and ruffle with serviceable lace edge AT 95¢— Nainsook Princess Slips with cover part trimmed with deep points fashioned of lace insertion and embroidery motifs. The skirt ruffle is tucked and finished with lace edge Princess Slips are also featured at $1.25 and $1.45. Long Skirts in the Sale 50c to $2.25 Long Skirts good quality trimmed with embroidery ruffle of attract- ive pattern. AT 85¢— Long Skirts of muslin, trimmed at bot- tom with embroidery ruffle headed with wide beading drawn with wide ribbon. AT 95¢— Nainsook Skirt trimmed with embroidery ruffle in eyelet pattern and wide eyelet in- sertion drawn with ribbon of Many other pretty Skirts to choose from at $1.25, $1.45, $1.95 and $2.25. Drawers in the Sale 19c to 55c i AT 19¢— \ | i | | | Drawers in circular and straight style, trimmed with embroidery ruffle, lace-trim- med ruffle or tucked, hemstitched ruffle AT 25¢ Drawers of good quality muslin, in the narrow, straight cut style, trimmed with embroidery edge in flat effect AT 45¢— Circular Drawers of soft nainsook, trim- med with embroidery in several different patterns Other Drawers in the Sale are priced at $e and 55 Chemises in the Sale 45c to $1.25 AT 45¢— Chemise of soft nainsook, trimmed with Valenciennes lace edge and ribbon-run heading Other Chemises in the Sale, 95c and $1.25 | muslin, | | Barmen lace insertion, Gowns in the Sale 50c to $1.25 AT 50¢ Empire and Slip-over Gowns, trimmed with wide embroidery edge, embroidery in- sertion and Barmen lace edge. AT 58¢— | i H i! | Slip-over Gowns of soft muslin, prettily |j trimmed with two rows of Barmen lace insertion, dotted embroidery beading, rib- bon-run, and lace edge drawn with ribbon. AT 68¢— Slip-over Gowns of soft muslin, with round embroidery yoke set in with dainty Barmen lace insertion. Another style has square yoke effect of wide embroidery in- sertion and linen pattern lace edge. AT 95¢— An effective Gown at this price is made of soft lingerie cloth, in slip-over style, trimmed with hearts fashioned of embroid- ery motifs and fish-eye pattern lace inser- tion. Attractive Gowns are also included in the Sale at $1.25. Combinations in the Sale | 50c to $1.45 AT 50¢— Combinations in both circular and knick- erbocker styles may be had at this price. j One very attractive Combination has em- broidery and edge to match trims the neck, arm-eyes and drawers. AT 75¢— Many pretty styles are offered at) this | price, with circular or knickerbocker | drawers Other Combinations in the Sale at 95c, $1.25 and $1.45, Short Under-Petticoats in the Sale, 45c¢ Under-Petticoats, made of soft tucked and trimmed with dainty —Basement Salesroom Short muslin, lace edge in flat effect January Clearance Specials in | Women’s Knit Undergarments (First Floor) HE Women’s Union Suits, in medium and heavy lines, weights, Light-weight Merino Suits, Swiss-ribbed, ankle length, high neck, long or elbow sleeves, special $1.85. Heavy Lisle Union Suits, mercerized finish, knee length, low neck, sleeveless or quarter sleeves, special $1.85. Medium-weight Mercerized Lisle Union Suits, and hand-finished; regular and extra sizes; special $1.65, Extta-size Wool-and-cotton Union Suits, ankle length, low neck, special $1.45. very fine rib, seamless, pure white several styles; high or Knit Underwear Section is quoting very special prices on desirable grades of Vests and Tights, comprising surplus and discontinued as follows: Extra-size White Cotton Union Suits, medium-weight, seamless, _hand-finished, | special $1.00. Mercerized Lisle Vests and Tights, im- ported, Swiss-ribbed, heavy weight, special S5¢ garment Light-wefght and Vests, fine ribbed weave; of each; special 654 g Pure White Cotton Vests and Tights, tine vests in 3 styles, tights knee or special 35¢ garment. Cotton-and-wool Tights two styles zarment ribbed; ankle length; medium weight, -Firet Floor. yoke set in cover with dainty | | ——