Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| KETTLE KNoBs | ON ALL THE LITTLE KNICK-KNACKS— 5c Card | needed for work box and sewing basket—this for 19c | way for savings on all the requirements for - ae Kettie Knobs black! Your Spring sewing ‘ te, Re fetal cabs ‘and ; 1)" Home sewers and dressmakers alike can profit |*nun, Ye, St bolt. Son a car’ | by the economies of this sale 19¢ ‘ % and § pink *-inch wide, In blue, lavender and Pair card. Sizes 4% to 9 inches long, for eae ‘ good cutting Scissors, well fin asa: west ished. —{2e— 1a Se Hooks and Eyes 2c Fine Bigok f Crimped Halr Pins \ Card Crips inches on Hooks and Eyes, long, 16 backanes Pe } white or black, sizes 0 $30 & bendie. to 4, guaranteed aot to [ rust, special at 2c a 8c Sperm Oll at 4c fF | 2c Darning Cotton La Ao with | we ex, fo Women’s $3. 50 “Pingree Made” Pumps and Button Pingree-made perfect —every on Tuesday—atl 2 will ike Made with welt soles, in Gunmetal Calf and Black Cravenette Pumps» Patent Leather Oxfords—-$2.35 a pair Tue Upper Main Floor of The Bon Mai 6c Cotton Challies 3 3-4c Yd. Mill ends and full bolts, 27 inches wide, in pretty designs for com- forter coverings, till 12 Tuesday, 3%c a yard. Lower Main Floor. Drammers’ Silk Samples ic 1,500 pieces of plain and fancy Silk, suitable for trimming, 4 to % yard long, worth to $1.25 a yard, til 12 Tuesday 5c each. Upper Main Floor. te Extension Rods at 5c Ea. Heavy brass Extension Curtain Rods, extend 25 to 54 inches, ends and extension drackets included. till 12 Tuesday, 5c each. Third -25¢e- EACH to 12 Only No Telephone Orders Can Be Accepted Made of 50c Tie Silks IN PRETTY COLORS AND ATTRACTIVE PATTERNS By buying all the cut pieces of 50c tie silks a well-known maker had—and having them made up to our own order, we have come into posses- sion of 2,000 handsome Silk Ties that we can sell at 25c apiece. Lots of different patterns and colors—more than you would be apt to find in any other 2,000 lot on account of the silks being shorter bolts Better come and get some—they are rare value ‘Lower Main Fioor of The Bon M. AT VERY LOW PRICES—all plants, 2 or 3 years old—each bush is accurately tagge¢ with the name of its variety wrapped in moss Lot No, 1 | Lot No, 2 hardy, and has its roots carefully Lot No. 3 Lot No. 4; Lot No. 5 10e 15e 25e 35 50e —For Grocery Bar rg g WHEN PURCHASEO WITH A OR FLOUR—NOT OVER 17 POUNDS TO EACH. ried Holland Milcher Wer- ; Premiom Bak about 10 pounds, | flower brand | and best: 1-5 cakes Pure Coe pound ‘ %-pound Imported Safety Happy Home. et Maximo Macaro quality, stock; 19-pound boxes Pare Baking Powder, brand; hie! pure; 1-po Mayflower | grade, atrictly 15¢ | und can CHILDREN’S HAIR THE BON CUTTING 35c—IN THE MARIN Union Street, Second Avenue, Mike | 15e and 0¢ Elastic 10¢ Yd. d Sik and Lisle Elastic white suitable for supporters, 10c yard. 25¢ Bundle Wire Hair Pins — MORNING— —SPECIALS— On Sale From 9 A. M. —ANNUAL SALE OF ROSE BUSHES— WITH A SPLENDID LOT OF IMPORTED HOL- LAND AND DOMESTIC ROSE BUSHES ON SALE field-grown ain Day —17 Pounds of Sugar for 75¢ 00 ORDER FOR OTHER GROCERIES, NOT INCLUDING SUGAR Siz red Oxfords 82. 35 a Pair Se Tollet Paper, 8 Rolls 25¢ the be rolls Not over § rolls On Lower Main Crepe Totlet Paper, at § rolls for 26¢. to a customer at sale till 12 Tuesday Floor. this price. $1.25 Crepe Kimonos for 59¢ | full floor lengths, with deep round col lar and crocheted scalloped edging, Second Floor. Tic and $1 Gloves 5¢c a Pair Women's one and twoclasp nat- ural Chamots Gloves, also oneclasp || ti 12) Tuesday 50c. Lower Main Floor. Crinkled Crepe Kimonos, ull 12 Tuesday 59¢. Doeskin and Cape Gloves, In ‘In Domestic Section TUESDAY “CUT RATE” SPECIALS . 35¢ Crepe and Ratine 19 Yd. Fancy Crepe and Ratine, a crepe | ground woven with neat ratine stripes and figures; new styles, 27 inches wide, 19¢ a yard, | Ends of 10¢ Cretonnes Se ¥d. Just half price for mill ends of Cretonnes, lengths up to 10 yards, | 7 Inches wide, medium shades; in floral patterns; be yard | 7 1-2c Apron Ginghams 5c Yd. Apron Ginghams in mill ends, lengths to 20 yards, In neat checks in brown and blues, wide, at be a yard 12 1-2c Dress Ginghams 8 1-2c Dress Ginghames in mill lengths to 15 yards; 2.000 yards in the lot; 27 Inches wide, in che stripes, plaids and piain shades. 12 1-2c Dress Percales § 1-2¢ 2,000 yarda of Dress Pércales, in mili ends; lengths to 10 yards, 36 inches wide, in light and dark col ors, neat stripes and figures 20c Juvenile Cloth 12 1-2¢ Yd. Nice Juvenile Cloth, in mill ends, lengths to 10 yards, 32 inches wide, strong fabric for children and rompers or house dresses. Lower Main Floor of The Bon Marche. kit . ploen, maker Ading: p 1 ELLO SHOP. THIRD FLOOR MARCHE Street $10 Adjustable Dress Forms. Two Priced at -$7.50- full 27 inches | sults | THIS WAY FOR LOW PRICES NEEDLE BOOKS | 1-2¢ and | ; Special 1c Spool Wm. F. Nye’s Sperm - pe | Curling Irons, two bottles for 4c | | styles, folding or 5 ¢ Gem Pins, 360 }} straight, hardwood ban- rofl exit than Se Buttons 2 } dies, for Te each. ~— points, 3c & Card | ers | nediem ane | | 6c Dozen =| 15e Cotton Tape 10¢ Piece veya tart ‘ | "i dozen Handy | 24 yards to the | ] Wax, cloth wide. suitable for = of The Non Marche | advisory ballot to the Herewith The Star submits its amendments and propo voters of Seattle! Many important i sitions must be approved or rejected, and what is most vita of all, 18 charter commissioners must be selected The Star, after a careful investigation, makes the following recom- mendations i) AMENDMENT NO, 1—JAmiting height of bufidings to 200 feet. VOTE YRS. ove eo AMENDMENT NO, 2—Providing that all ors on city work pay a minimum wa yntractors and subcontract VOTE YES. AMENOMENT NO. 3--To create & partment of public welfare, to handle the jail and charitable tnatitutions, VOTE YES. | “ses it pe Ba AMENDMENTS NOS. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 AND 10—Relate to changes in the | form of city government. VOTE NO. | PROPOSITION A—"Shal! the cost of trast water mains be assessed againat the property of the district benefited?” VOTE NO. ‘ The tmmediate district concerned is Ballard, Whatever may be the | correct theory of assessment, the fact fs» that In the past, when trunk mains were installed in other districts, as in West Seattle, for example, the cont was charged to the general fund, and not to the particnlar d trict. It would be unfair, therefore, to charge the cost in the present case to Ballard alone ee eee PROPOSITION B-—VOTE YES. This proposition merely asks the yoter to state whether the 16 free holders should frame a charter providing commission government, To vote “No” would mean that you are in favor of the present system voting “Yes,” {t would mean you are tn favor of a change, whether that change {8 commission government or the city manager plan eee PROPOSITION C--VOTE VES. 4 By voting yes, you authorize the transfer of $240,000 from bons that have already been voted for Cedar river purpores, but which mon ey is not needed there for the purchase by condemnation of the Lake Cushman power site. Seattle » ld acquire new power altes to insure the welfare of the city Heht fant fy voting for PROPOSITION C, you do not vote for new bonds, but merely for @ transfer of money from one fund to another eevee PROPOSITION D-—NO RECOMMENDATION This is the proposition authortaing the fesuance of $1,750,000 te bulld bridges across the government canal The locations have been fixed by the elty council Having @ canal, we must have bridges, but The Star does not know whether or not the present proposition ts the proper one eoesee COUNCILMEN—THREE-YEAR TERM, VOTE FOR 0. T. Erickson and Robert B. Hesketh COUNCILMAN-—TWO-YEAR TERM—VOTE FOR: Ira D. Lundy eeeee The most Important duty of the voters in this coming elec thon Ie to choose the right kind of charter commission. The charter le a city’s constitution, and certainly there ie nothing more vital than the selection of broad-minded, independent, men for this work. igation of the numerous can. ected the following 15, for jere to vote next Tuesday, Ault, E. B, editor of the Union Record Holton, Thomas H., president of the Central Labor Counel! Houlllon, A. V., engineer, candidate for mayor in 1910 Burkheimer, John E., lawyer, progressive Doyle, C. W., business agent Central Labor Count! xleson, Dr. J. B, physician ans, C. E., se rpenters’ untor axon, Charles S., lawyer; expert on charter revision Kellogg. J. Y. C., lawyer, former councilman Moore, Judge W. H., former mayor, lawyer Peters, Mrs. E. M., social worker and student of economica Schrader, L. O., clerk to the city counct! Smith, Joe, journalist Thorgrimson, O. B., lawyer; former president Muntetpal league. Trimble, William Pitt, business man oeeee A separate ballot will be given you on the port election. There are two bond transfer propositions submitted. Neither of them is for new bonds, Vote for both. 4 : Proposition 1—To transfer $300,000 from the Fast Waterway project to the Central Water Front Improvement. Vote VES. | Proposition 2—To transfer $225,000 of the $3,000,000 authorized issue from the East Waterway to the Salmon Bay Improvement. Vote! Yes. BILLY SUNDAY MAY COME TO SEATTLE DURING SUMMER hop” during his meetings Rev. Ralph Atkinson has, how ever, secured Sunday's consent to conduct a series of meetings provid ed the city ix divided Into units and | the churches in each unit are clos ed during the Sunday sermons. The ministers’ f tion ts con-| sidering the plan t 2,000 PERSONS WILSON IS FIRM HELD ALL NIGHT AGAINST WAR BY IN TABERNACLE! U.S. IN MEXICO WASHINGTON gardless of p the | Seattle may have a chance to lis ten to Billy Sunday, evangelist, [along with ba and tce cream soda this summer An invitation to conduct a revival campaign here was turned down by Sunday t se certain posing ministers fo wp) "C8 retu March 2-—-Re ssure from within or Vashington adminis: | SCRANTON, Pa, March 2.—At-| tempting to struggle through the storm to their homes from the tab tehful waiting policy ernacle, where they had listened tebe Pp last evening to a sermon by Billy Bed ras Will be continued Sunday, the ex-ball player evan-|) Tosiden lson made clear to gelist, two men perished early to jcallere today He realizes he said, what tnter day and several were badly frozen. | vention would cost in Ives and When dawn broke 2,000 men Rishi , women and children were stili| Money, and explained that he con storm-bound in the tabernacle sidered the U. 8, too big to have : - |its hand forced for y gelfish Those who died were ( ony @ Wheelereck and Martin Baalas,| "sre an ; both middle-aged men | chat , of - ie Nag rat Whe Was overcome but 8140 not sonreciate thet thee ort short distance from the tabernacle, | hive to contribute brothers Kena collapsed in a drift and sank into his last sl 1 p. Basins had cove fore 1, dying . KOmewhat outskirts of and sweethearts in event of inter vention vas EXCITING CHASE Sunday | preferred to| LOS ANGEL building over-night. |in his un fee were served to| Fat sprin ght and again this | diminutive ne ten blocks The he is the taber: d place in Three thousand pe sembled in it to hear Two-thirds of ther remain in th Food and ¢ them at mi » March 2.—Clad relothing, Bin Yen Yells two blocks after a ro who had snitched morning two-bits from h m. Scores of Warm clothing was taken to| pedestrians Joined the chase. them and men were working to|negro escaped open a path for them to leave in| the course of the day came on Fim SMOOTH ‘HINEE” | SAN FRANCISCO, Mareh 2 Old college spirit was aroused in} Chinese, with two loaded members of Seattle Alumni Asso-| cleaned up $600 In Chinatown, He ciation of the University of fowa got away with the coin, when moving pletures of the big{deseription the police annual lowa-Amos ed on the sereen at nual banquet of th nint day night | ATTORNEY DIES blue | FIX TAXI RATE | The bill proposing a schedule of Jrates for taxteaba and motor‘ ve hicle for hire before the city council session this afternoon © was flash-|was that “he wore econd an lation giv Washington Annex, Satur came up OLYMPIA, Mareh 2.—Following| Taxicab rates for one or two per A protracted fllness, Attorney John | sons are fixed at 60° cents for the Y. Ostrander suceumbed to cancer| first three-fifths of a mile, ‘and 10 on the Sunday stomach at his home here! cents foreach addition al one-fifth of a mile 4 DESIGNS FOR new money are finished, says report. | designs on it will never end, But PREDERICK & NELSON Store opens at 830 and closes at 5.IO A Special. March Selling of Open-Stock Dinnerware Services From English, French, Austrian, German and American Potteries, at Liberal Discounts HE China Section (Third Floor) begins the month of Marct th ar tant our entire line of open-stock patterns and embracing se 1 ne fe 1 re pecial price c gs ma ddition, be taken advantag g to purchase separate piece th hich t mmence a set or to ¢ 1 a service lready essed ; i 1rd Floor. 50-Piece Service Special $15.00 50-Piece Service Special $14.00 50-Piece Service Special $11.50 Burgess & Leigh serv A ice of fine-grade Haviland Set of pure English porrelain, with 1: chine modeled on ‘ ntional border in : P n-brown and gold the graceful Ranson edge Fi ce Set, shape, as pictured special $14.00. piece Set, special 50-Piece Service Special $19.50 Dinnerware 99-piece Service Special $17.50 Austrian China Dinner- 50-Piece Service Special $15.25 Fine-grade Royal Doul- Haviland ton porcelain, decorated ware in dainty floral dec- in the pleasing Ranson with a reproduction of oration, with mat gold shape, with autumn leaf the Leed's pattern. Spe handles. Service for spray decoration in deli- ial, the fifty-piece Set, twelve, 99 pieces, special cate colorings. Fifty- $15.25. $17.50, piece Set, special $19.50. The Semi-Annual Sale of Boxed Hosiery In the Semi-annual Sale we offer Women’s Gauze-lisle, Silk-lisle, Cotton, Mer- cerized Lisle, Fiber-silk and All-silk Hosiery from our standard, carefully-chosen lines at material savings from regular prices, if bought by the box. The Silk Hosiery is sold in boxes of three pairs; all other qualities six pairs to the box. —First Floor. Strong Line of Spring Suits, $18.50 ———— SALESROOM Lt ARTICULAR care has been devoted to the assembling of a strong line of Spring Suits at this moderate price. Practical business suits are shown, as well as demi-trimmed novelties, illustrating the vogue for short, novelty coats, kimono and set-in sleeves, and skirts in draped, peplum, tiered and peg-top styles. The mate- rials are Crinkle Crepe Serge Worsted Brocaded and Diagonal Suiting black, tan, in gray, navy, tango, Copen- hagen, lavender and black and white checks and stripes. . . . Extra-size Suits up to 51 bust measure- ment, in standard colors, are also marked at $18.50 —Basement Salesroom. Special teins on Laundry Helps Imported Oval Clothes Baskets of extra fine quality willow, as pictured, reinforced at edges and bottom Twenty-nine-inch size, special 95¢ GALVANIZED TUBS, SPECIAL 60¢ and 70¢— Wash medium size, special 60c ; UNIVERSAL WRINGER, SPECIAL $3.45 A ball-bearing Wringer with hardwood frame, 10. Can be Galvanized Tubs with wringer attachment, large size, special 70c. inch rubber rolls and enclosed cog wheels attached tubs, $3.45 to galvanized, fiber or wood special WASH BOILERS, SPECIAL $1.00 Wash © Sree cae PANERA Nin Boilers, as pictured, made heavy charcoal tin, with seamless fit-in cover and heavy copper bottom. Special $1.00 WIRE CLOTHES LINE, SPECIAL 12¢ Galvanized Twisted Wire Clothes Line in 50-foot lengths, VANCO MOP WRINGER, SPECIAL $1.35 Mop Wringer of* to get out of order and tear mp, but water is pressed out by forcing handle down- Special $1.35 . He special 12c pressed galvanized steel, with hardwood handle, Has no rollers usefurnisbings Section, tony ward