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_ THE SEATTLE STAR “THIS STORE CLOSES AT 6 O'CLOCK SATURDAY EVENING BARGAIN FRIDAY AT THE BON MARCHE —A Sensational Clearance of— 55 WOMEN’S TAILORED SUITS WORTH FROM $14.50 TO $16.50 at $6.95—— LESS—YES, MUCH LESS THAN HALF PRICE—— Not all sizes, of course, or we wouldn't be disposing of them at this ridiculously low price—but if you want a suit cheap, scan this list—see if your size is here and af it is come and buy it quickly before someone else secures the prize | | | | | | | | | i] Girte’ and Misses’ Navy Serge Suits, Norfolk | style, size 11, two size 13, one size 15, one size | 1 size 16 | Girls’ and M site 11, one size 13, five sixe | stze 16 | Black Serge Suit, size 42, plain tailored, straight | front Jacket, skirt with side fastening Navy Serge Suits, plain tailored, straight front jacket, skirt with side fastening; one size 40, one size 42. Women’s $14.50 to $16.50 black cutaway Serge | Suits, two size 38, two size 40, four size 42, one sine 44, five alze 46 Women’s $14.50 to $16.50 brown cutaway Serge Suits, one size 38, three sixe 44, three size 46. Women's $14.50 to $16.50 navy cutaway Serge Suits, two size 38, four stae 40, two size 42 one one ’ Norfolk Suite In brown 16, three size 17 Other navy cutaway Serge Suits, four sults sire 44, one size 46 GIRLS’ $8.89 AND $11.95 SPORT COATS SPECIALLY PRICED Think of it, oniy $3.98 for giris’ $8.89 and $11.95 Sport Coats, such as mahogany ) } e boucles, belted all around, Light blue duvetyne with broad stitched belt below the hip line, brown and gray check norfolks, and red and green aibelines, ’S WOOL AND SILK ES WORTH § PEC WOMEN’S WOOL AND SILK DRESS! RTH $5.00, SPECIAL The serges come in navy, peari, gray and black, some with side fastenings and ) lay down collars, trimmed with corduroy or velvet and with satin tie, The foulards are | | e in pretty colors and messalines in brown with set-in shadow lace fronts FOR BARGAIN FRIDAY—LOTS OF CLEARANCE SPECIALS 75¢ MAITING SHOPPING CASES, SPECIAL | $7.00 COWHIDE SUIT CASES, SIZE 24,NOW at 55c each—— at $5.00 each—— Light weight Shopping Cases, made of fiber Cowhide Suit Cases nr matting with four brass catches, sige 10x13, Fri wolid leather handles, day at S5e each —Third Floor. J lock, Friday $5.00. DAINTY 15¢ AND 20¢ NECKWEAR REDUCED FRIDAY TO From a third to a half off the regular selling prices of neckwear for 10c Friday Bargain Day. Included are Dutch collars, jabots, chemisettes, bows, stocks and linen collars. —Upper Main Floor. 25c, 49¢ and 59c Dress Trimmings Now ——at 10¢ yard. Fancy Dress Trimmings, including bands ap pliques, braids, radium bands and clunies, aasort- ed widths; worth to 59¢ —Upper Main Floor. WOMEN’S 25c AND 35¢ KNITTED WOOLEN GLOVES, PAIR Just 17¢ a pair for Women's Knitted Wool Gloves, all sizes in gray, I7c white, red, brown, navy; worth 25¢ to 35c regularly, Day at only 17c a pair 39¢ Stamped Linen Guest Towels Now| ——at 25c each Linen Guest Towels, stamped in many different designs, with both the scalloped and hematitched edges, 39¢ value for tbc —Third Floor. de of selected stock with brass catches and Corbin —Thied Floor, Children’s $1.00 to $1.95 Trimmed Hats ——at 48¢ each_—____ Children’s Hats, neatly trimmed with silk braids and ribbon. The shapes are of felt and velvet in all colors, for 48c. —Second Floor. for Friday Bargain —Lower Main Floor. 3c Dozen Royal Society Cotton Thread at 15¢ dozen Royal Society Embroidery Cotton tn two dif. ferent sizes, Rope and India; popular shades of green, purple and brown, and other shades, at 15¢ dozen. —Third Floor, —$1.25 AND $1.50 HAND AND STAND MIRRORS AT— This lot consists of staple lines of hand and stand Mirrors in ebony, foxwood and oak finish, oval and round shapes; heavy bevel plate glass, 95c —Upper Main Floor. sizes 5, 6, 61% and 7 inches 98¢ Cretonne Shoe Bags, Now Special ———at 50c each Shoe Bags made of different colored cretonnes with twelve compartments, nicely made and with —Third Floor. 49 Scarfs, Sqnares and Centers, Now at 25c each——_—_— Discontinued numbers, pieces embroidered tn colors, hemmed and hemstitched, with floral de signs and scalloped edges, at 25 each —Third Floor, bound edges, at 50¢ each. 2,000 YARDS 25¢ KIMONO CREPE AND CREPE PLISSE, YD. 2,000 all, full 30 1 1 worth 25c, specially priced for 2 69c Embroidered Linen Guest Towels Now ———at 39c each__—_— embroidered in deift blue nd) edges, size 20x36 inches —Third Floor Kimono and Crepe Plisse, yards in nches wide, in stripes, designs and floral patterns; Friday at 12%c a yard Bargain Square, Lower Main Floor. Crepe 39¢ Embroidered Linen Guest Towels Now at 29c each Pure linen Guest Towels, embroidered in delft blue designs with button-holed edges, size 16x2% inch 29¢ each. —Third Floor. —$3.00, $4.00 AND $5.00 TRIMMED HATS SPECIAL AT— Pure linen Towels designs with button 6% value at 390 each | About 200 Hats of velvet, plush and felt, in a number of shape and sizes. They are neatly trimmed with feather novelties, ribbon and silks; worth $3 to $5 for $1 —Second Floor. ° FRIDAY BON MARCHE FLOUR AT $1.19 A SACK | ———DELIVERED ONLY WITH OTHER GROCERIES—ONLY ONE BAG TO EACH—— 5c | Kippered Salmon, the very best 15¢ Broken Rice, clean. white stock, good quality, pound Graham or Whole Wheat Flour, No. 10 sacks, Alber 32:¢ quality Columbia River oe au Bros.’ best, sack Rive Chinook Fish, ‘pound Peaberry Coffee, freshly roasted c y chigan | Be ee elas ny Split Peas, the best quality 6c No. 1 gr 30c | quality, pound sack c splendid for soup, pound pound ‘ 5 ponnds 20¢ for Gleason's Geape Julce, pint bot splendid quality, 19c ottle Soda Crackers, about | to the can, refund of | return of empty tin | $1 value, tin Pearl Barley, fine ¢ for Bargain Friday BSC ve! Monte Asparagus, cotlosal | tles Peanut Butter, made from oply | Breen Asparagus, new pack, | Del Monte Tomatoes, new, nolid the best peanuts, guar A No. 2% size pack, large size N | anteed strictly pure, Ib SC 25¢ | can | —Fourth Fioor of The Bon Marche ry and Pigeon Show nll thin week—Admie I alon Street, Second Ave WHAT’S DOING IN |'POLITICS | 1 | | } i The following committee haw been appointed by President Haight of the Muntctpal league, to report on the various candidates: 8. M Brackett, chairman; C. J. France, L. J, Colman, Hans Pederson, Wiliam M. Calhoun, C. F. Riddell, W. J. Ranken, jr, BE. A, Lewis and Kabbt Koch “ee ee Price was elected chairman, Misa Mary Mitchell secretary and JR surer at an organization meeting in behalf of Austin BE. Griffiths’ candidacy for mayor, An advisory committee will be selected after consultation with Mr. Griffiths John F. Justion tre Headquarters have been opened by R. 1. Downte, campaign man i ager of the H.C. Pigott candidacy, in the Lumber Exchange butiding. |} os. 6 8 6 All of the mayoralty aspirants have been asked to address the Com mercial Club, and three will start the ball r Saturday, January 41 eee @ George B. Worley, discussing the water and Ment departments at a | meeting at Mountaln View station Wednesday night, # Minneapolis | | | and Detroit furnteh water at half the cost in Beattie Ne speaks tn Woodmen's hall, 26th ay, N. B, and BE. 66th st, Priday night eeeee Supporters of Ira D. Landy for Rathekellier tomorrow noon eee ee the counct! will organize at the Hecause the state constitution provides for voting by ballots Comptroller Harry Carrol) has raised a legal question as to whether the seven voUng machines authorized by the counctl may be used in the ff primary election, February 17, Corporation Counsel Bradford wan anh | ed for an opinion, ave to go to the supreme court | | | | | and the wetion may “eer ee committee vest 0 civic At the Griffiths orgar ization was appointed to confer with other the schoo topics. meeting, Wednesday, a» candidates for a united re board to grant the use of school butldings to discu JUDGE BY DAY, ROBS BY NIGHT? | A justice of the peace by day and a robber by night is the dual personality charged to Fred Smith, former justice at Green River Hot Springs. Smith and four companions, one a woman, are held by the King county authorities, charged with looting j freight care Hot Springs. Those arrested with Smith are Frank Mitchell, Jack McCarthy, Martin Auterdale and Mrs. Hallie Lucore Smith was arrested, charged with conducting a blind pig at Hot Springs. In searching the premises, Deputies Sullivan and Nelson stumbled onto a large quantity of merchandise. It was found, on investigation, that the goods had been taken from Northern Pacific ght care. j Smith will be tried in Justice Brown's court Friday, charged with illegal sale of liquor, CHEERS FOR MARY GUNDERSON “Who ts Mary Ann Gunderson?” | by ten mayoralty candidates, may x Hut that's immaterial, says Jay Thomas, her campaign manager. |f He doesn't know himself. Nor does any one else, and any lurking #us picion that there is no Mary Ann Gunderson may not be without foun @ dation tn fnet | Hut what of that? Has Harry Carroll, reputed to be the most pol |i ished, palaverous, parlours and politest man in the world, the spurn her candidacy simply because she didn't pay the $75 for mayor, as required by law? the weary citizen, encumbered right to filing fee | “No.” said the Preas club audience Wednesday night, after ing to Mike Carrigan and Dave Hrattstrom, who used to play “Yon | Yonson,” | Accordingly, the protest convention denounced Carroll's derelic-| tion as the “biggest scandal” in Seattle's history, and voted to run | Mary on an “outlaw” ticket. ‘WHY ARE THERE UNEMPLOYED? | | WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—The problem of unemployment in admitted, | according to the secretary of agriculture, to be intimately connected with | the problem of unsued tillable lands in the United States. For thin reason Secretary Houston had a new investigation made, from which jf he learns that only 27 per cent of the tillable lands are actually under cul: | tivation. | ‘The entire United States, excluding foreign possessions, contains says Mr. Houston, “about 1,500,000,000 acres. Of this area, or 60 per cent, oF 1,140,000 000 acres in estimated to be tillable. The land in crops, ac: Mf cording to the latest census, is 211,000,000 acres. So, for every 100 acres i now tilled there are 75 that may be tilled fs | With able-bodied men walking the streets, clamoring at factory doors | [ and in summer hoboing the rafiroads, all with one demand, namely, work for a living wage, It is obvious that the present system of land| tenure, which keeps apart the land and the labor which would make it productive, ia uneconomic, ARMIES TO CLASH AT TORREON \ s 1} EL PASO, Jnn. 22 | as those fought recently at Tierra Bianca and Ojinaga, will begin with-|f in ten days at Torreon, according to advices from Chihuahua City today. | | | | | { Another battle on Mexican soll, as momentous |} The constitutionalist troops from all parte of Northern Mexico are hur-| rying to a rendezvous above that point take personal command territory south of t all available soldiers from Monterey NEW TREATY WITH JAPAN? WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.--A wrong Interpretation, it was said, had n placed on the latest utterances of Baron Nobukal Makino, Japane xn minister, He stated negotiations between his government and th department have failed, and that Japan is considering some other for settling the controversy growing out of the California situation other ways” are taken to mean either a test suit agatnst the Call jfornta law or negotiation of another t AUTO VICTIM SEMI-CONSCIOUS Charged with running down and injuring H. Storfold, a sailor, 724 | Fastlake av, when he struck him with an e¢ Monday night | where Gen, “Pancho” Realizing that Torreon Js the to the whe the federals are massing there Saltillo, Villa will to Mexico City Mexico City, San Luis Potost and | | i} | antome near Ninth av. and Pine at., Jay O. Bruggemann haa been released un-| der $1,500 ball, pending the outcome of Storfold’s wounds he injured man has been removed from the city hospital to the Seattle General. He | is conscious at intervals $175,000 FIRE AT PORTLAND PORTLAND, Or., Jan, 22.—After 20 engines and a fireboat had re led to an alarm of fire, a blaze which threatened the plant of the Portland Lumber comp was extinguished early today. A loss various ly estimated at from $126,000 to $175,000 was entatled. ‘The mill build ings, containing machinery valued at $760,000, were saved REOPEN GYPSY SMITH HOME PORTLAND, Jan, 22.—-Under the most rigid medical and sanitary ma, the Gypsy Smith auditortum, which was closed Tuesday on t of the discovery of a ¢ » of smallpox, leaving nearly 1,000 une men homeless, is open again, The building and bedding will be pd daily IS RACING AGAINST DEATH LOS ANGELES, Jan, 22H. G. Nutt, general manager of the Salt Lake ratlroad, is racing across the continent today in an effort to reach Brookline, Mass., before the death of his mother. Nutt had his private car attached to a fast transcontinental train, and expecta to set up a new transcontinental record, ‘Tax s Will be waiting to hurry him from one | station to another tn Chicago ane York ae | TO CANCEL JAP CITIZENSHIP’ 108 ANGELES, Jan edings will be nounced today to annul the citizenship of Ulysste Japanese of forelgn birth, who enjoys the privile tained a naturalization certificate in 1896. started, it Koneko. > of voting is an the only be ob: LOVE? IT’S WORTH SIX CENTS NEW YORK, Jan, 22 Six cents was all that the | the alienation suit brought by Ern Wadletgh kin, a Cornell student, who was charged with weaning Mrs, Vera Black | Wadleigh from ber husband, | jury awarded tn against Lo VV: Special 25¢e FREDERICK & NELSON Store opens at 630 and closes at 5430 Boys’ Norfolk Suits Reduced to $3.45 DD numbers from our best popular-priced Suits are this in Norfolk style, with lined knickerbockers, in grays and many ser also 13, 14, 15 included in clearance lot They are 8 and 9 years, to $3.45. mart belted-in styles, with converti- viceable mixtures. Sizes 7, 16 and 17 year Reduce Overcoats in the ble collar, sizes 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 to $3.45. Boys’ Chinchilla Hats in middy shapes, gray, , reduced to $1.45. little Boys’ Velour Hats, Tyrolean and and 18 years, reduced brown and blue, sizes 6% to ¢ Broken lines Middy styles, in brown and gray, sizes 6% to 6%, re- duced to $1.75. Boys’ Plush Velour Hats in gray and dark green, Becond Floor reduced to Oe. Clearing Odd Lines Leather Goods New Silk Negligees at $5.00 pas pretty Negligee Novelty Fabric Bags at greatly reduced is made of kimono Prices . ec dalee ilbe widli Fine Leather Bags in calfskin, pigskia gees y ”"' " pineseal and Morocco. large poppy design of Fancy Collar Bags. Writing Cases and leather A large assortment of Elastic Belts in tinsel effects and plain colors, reduced to 5O0¢. Silk Sashes in plaids and light colors, re duced to $1.00. Wide Suede Girdles with silk bow, re luced to $1.00. ~Piret Vow. Lace and Ribbon Remnants: Clearance HORT lengths, soiled and rumpled pieces in Laces, Embroideries and Rib bons, in patterns and lengths at sharp reductions for clearance.” —Piret delft and is also shown in blue, other novelties ia Copenhagen blue with conventional design in soft colorings Prettily trimmed at bot- tom, kimono sleeves and with puffed down front satin ribbon Attractive $5.00. value at Second Floor. The Clearance of Women’s Garments | stes sharply reduced prices on Wom- que many desirable en's Suits and Coats in broken lines. | Clearance Trimmed Hats at $5.00 SPECIAL clearance price on high-grade Hats of Velvet, Plush and Velour, becomingly trimmed in An to replace the hat bought early in the the winter's favorite styles with fancy ostrich. opportunity season at a Reduced to $5.00. Children’s Trimmed Velour Hats in white, pink, brown, light and dark blue, reduced to 95¢. Fancy Ostrich Novelties reduced to $1.95, $2.95 and $4.95. a saving 4 Basement Salesroom The Direct- Action Gas Range — Saves the Gas nominal for ends at prices odds and quick sale as follows: Odd items in Notions, choice for clear- ance, 1@ each Odd assortments of Toilet Sundries, in- cluding tooth paste, tooth powder, sponges for clearance at and other choice 10¢ each Odd lots of Fancy Yarns, Pillow Tops choice for clearance at items, and other art goods, 5e cach Odd lots of Corsets, various styles, bro- hoice for clearance at 35@ each. —Rarement Salesroom ken size Meat or Bread Knife Special 25c SPECIALLY low HEN you bake with a Direct-Action} Gas Range no preliminary of the oven is necessary. f ported Bread or Meat a | You simply put your baking in the Knife as shown in il ol | oven when it is cold, light the burner and} Iustration, It has 8-inch { | the baking is practically done in the time hand-forged steel blade | | | you would be waiting for the ordiaaqyy | and natural wood riveted \\ | range oven to heat. handle. Special 25¢. | I | Steel Mail Box | | It is all in the oven vonstruction. And this is but one of the features i] | the “Direct-Action” that make for greatetl efficiency, convenience and economy im th kitchen. | We will welcome an opportunity to} —Third Fleet. |) Regulation-size Steel Mail Box with lock pictured, special 25¢. Hourefurnishings Section and paper holder, as oad a demonstrate them to you. Spring Dress Goods Arrivals HIS first shipment of Dress Goods for Spring includes an unusually varied assort: Ff ment of novelties in. 39-inch width, Included are plaids, ‘Striped effects, check] Bedford cords and whipcords in light and dark colorings and in combination shades } The Forty patterns to choose from yard, 50c. The popular Bedford Cords for suits and] + colors, including f \ medium-twill 46-inch Serge is also r the new arrivals. It is featured in amor dresses in the new sprit a wide color range, including black, brown, snahogany, tango and npvelty bine shades: cardinal, Copenhagen, | Price $1.00 vard navy, plum, wine, Ace y Forty-six inches wide, $1.25 cutfard, tango and taupe | “ | | | = ‘ Be