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see ee es eee A REMARKABLE THURSDAY DRESS GOODS SPECIAL | $1.50 Plain and Novelty Dress Goods at ) Entire Stock of Marabous | With more Wheat—and higher prices for that Wheat—Times are bound to be good in this great State of Washington. Coat Sensation— 100 Winter Coats, Worth $10.00 and $12.50, at Sale Starts at 9 A. M. Sharp and Will Last as Long as We Have Any of the Coats Left to Sell. There are only one hundred of them— and when the hundredth coat is sold the sale will be over—for we will never be able to get any more to sell at this price. There are a score or more of different styles among the 100—in both medium and long lengths—in plains, mixtures and fancy coatings—in many different shades and patterns—in zibelines, cheviots, waffle cloths—and goodness only knows what pica else best. 200 Beautiful, New $4.00 White Silk Crepe de Chine Waists —at hee We have just received 200 beautiful, new white eg Crepe de Chine w or six of and only $3.95 for the one you like About 45 Neat $20.00 and $25.00 Silk Dresses Are Reduced | Thureday bargain in Silk r more dressy wear, remain. 00, so have been the: i} Another of those splendid bargains that have made our Dress Goods Sec tion famous; 2,000 yards in all of $1 3 heavy serges, chin mixtures and coatings. 50 plain and novelty dress goods, 54 inches wide, in stunning Rom —Upper Main hag no stripes and plaids, chillas, broadcloth, $2.75 to $4 Corsets $1.49 Ea. } | 1-4 Off We have included tn this sale for ‘Thursday our entire stock of Mara- They Are in bou Stoles at one-quarter off the q regular prices. Here are some of Size 18 to 36 the prices: Except 29— $29.50 Combination Marabou and Ostrich Muff, in white and black, natural and white, : $22.13 at .)..-. $225) Marabou Stoles, 9 strands wide, reduced to $16.87 $18.00 Marabou Stoles, 7 strands Wide, 2 yards lone, $13.50 half, Just half and far lees than half price Thursday for good Corsets of fine coutil, boned with best boning. They have low and | medium high bust, long skirt, and fitted with supporters. Sizes 18 to 36, except 29. $1.00 and $1.25 Brassieres 50c Brassieres of cambric, well boned with neat lace edging. Others are the mesh braasieres with shields— lace and hook {n front. Sizes 34 to 46 In the lot, at 50. | —Second Floor, Finish of the Three-Day Clean-Up in the Children’s }| Section—and Apron Day as Well—So Look for Bargains 25e Marguerite Aprons 15¢ | $1 Wilhelmina Aprons 65c > know that For Apron Thursday another ain in Wilhelmina Aprons m and pe trim- h orick-rack braid on and necks, at 650. eut to. $15.00 Marabou ‘Stoles, 6 strands wide, 2 yards loos, 4 95, OBE WD cece iseses. in mixed black $12.00 Marabou Se: “ $9.00 and white, natura! white, reduced to And many others. ba tape bound bib and pocket 25¢ to 50¢ Aprons 19¢ Ea. |50e Bib Aprons 29 Each ‘ Amoskeag Gingham Bib of white lawn | Aprons with neces front— | jace | button on the shoulder, cross in er of | the back, and with 2 large pock- ed from | ets. Edw nd with white | tape. See ) Children’s Bath These Children’s Robes 12 Price in iteses ) $1.50 Bath Robes 75c + $2.98 Bath Robes $1.49 : ) $3.50 Bath Robes $1.75 Children’s $1. 25 Children’s $1.50 Wool Sweaters 79¢ | ag 49c Winter Hats for 4, warm Sweaters for rat Obildren’s Neat Hew to wear these | just one-third the original price in | Hate of chinchi) nd felt with silk bands, Brown, and gray to choose from, . ! —Seoond Floor, th. are wo an ay—made with pooket and Second Floor Center large pearl buttons. Genuine German Male Canaries at $3.95. nuine German Male Ca- | fem, direct from the Thursday Morning Specials On sale from 9 a. m. to 12. No telephone orders for Morning Bargains. Drummers’ Samples of Dress Goods 5c Ea. 500 samples of Dress Goods in lengths up t yard, plain and fancy weaves, worth up to a yard, as 8 we have any, from 9 to 12 Thursday, 6 Upper Main Floor. mo} Part of the lot of | 16,000 canaries that landed tn New York about two weeks ao, and probably the Inst to come over this year. They 5c Handkerchiefs at 3c Each Belgium ana Antwerp “Tomer | Children’s colored bordered Handkerchiefs, worth Se, on sale Thursday morning from 9 to 12, : ch. Nice for school use. Upper Main} 60c Cotton Bats ; 15¢ Cambric for 10c Toilet Paper 5c Roll 39¢ Ea. 3c Yd. | Cambri in | Crepe Totlet Paper, the 10¢ rolls, on sate "tan wasnl Thursday from 9 a. m. to 12 a a roll Not t over 12 yards over 8 rolls to a customer, Lower Main Floor. For Afternoon Tea—Daintily Served—Try the Sixth Floor Cafe. Union ei, Pike 8t., Second Ave. i | terrier pup —to $10. 00—] | | SEATTLE'S BONDS ARE IN DEMAND | the Thirty-fifth Street school a week ago to LOOK UP YOUR SECURITY Our Uncle Bam's turned banker, And it now ts his delight e To lend us scads of money—it Security is right. But he's a level headed cuss, Tightfisted as can be And you can't get a cent without 1 security And #o you needn't think that you n your old une’, for you must know 1 that bunk, Une’ Sam So the ni You'll find that bi As our old fr eee away his dough, rtin’; y rHorton. Prominent humortsts put chopped rubber crumbs tn Constable Jim Shannon's on his desk at pollee court But the joke fell flat Shannon smoked and enjoyed his tobacco as before cee ¢ © A large spider stopped Chauncey Wright's big car on the road to Everett the other day. No, it was not as large as a cow It crawled up the tube leading to | flow of gusoline. soe ee A friend of Ph!l Warburton, of Kirkland, has given him two bull jes, named * and “Bruno,” which look exactly alike uirton can tell them apart without any trouble its tail, it's “Spot.” But if tt But W If it wag “Bruno.” Y. M. C. A. SALESMANSHIP SCHOOL OPENS The Y. M. C. A. schoo! of salesmanship, in charge of a committee of anies managers, will get under way for another season at the Y. M C, A, Wedneaday evening, when Henry King, of King Bros., will speak to a gathering of men rested the science Trained Personality as a Factor in Selling of an *. BE. Denison & Co., of Boston, and FE. H. Rollins & Co ear h made bids Tuesday for the purchase of elty bond wing the spirited bi hree firme Monday, and the @a'e by the $829,500 we per cent br onds to Carstens & Earles Inasn neh as the sale Mor was made on the oer nt that no more bonds would be sold in the open marker until the first of the year, yesterday's bidders were turned away ‘BOYS’ “SECRET SEVEN” CONFESS CRIMES are held in| LOS ANGEL Nov, 18.—Nine boya of from 6 to 16 the detention home today following their confession that they burned get ever with Principal od to several burglaries, They con Secret Seven R. J. Emery, They also confer | foased they had formed an organization called the ‘BILHORN PLAYS ON ORGAN HE MADE Preaching on “Faith That Gaves,” Rev, Adna Wright Leonard, In } his revival sermon Tuesday night at the First Methodist Evangelist organ he made |AL LUNDIN IS A BUSY CUP OF TEA It's one thing after another now for Al Lundin, new prose- cutor. The other night he attended a meeting In a Beacon hill church. Tuesday night he was given a reception by 500 men and women at the Pligrim Congregational church. Wednesday noon he spoke on “The Washington Fake Advertising Law,” before the Ad club at the Rathskeller. Lundin told his audience at the Pligrim church no Induce ments of political rewards will prevail upon him in the selec tion of hie deputies. ERICKSON LANDS ON KNOCKERS Fourteen electrical contractors Tuesday petitioned the city utilities committee of councl! to stop so-called price slashing by the city light plant In the renting of motors, but the petition was tabled. Councliman Erickson, chairman, told the lobby when they quit knocking the city light plant and began boosting for it, something might be done. One of the complainants was Councliman Cooley, member of an electrical firm, SHOW PUBLIC OWNERSHIP PAYS “In Public Ownership the Best Way?" John Z. White, of Chicago, addressing the Municipal league tn the Good Eats cafeteria Tue answered the question in the affirmative He said the facts showed that public ownership furnishes cheaper and better service, gives better wages to employes, and builds up a better grade of morality ‘SUPREME COURT REFUSES TO BE T00 TECHNICAL TO GIVE REAL JUSTICE There is an exceptional note of human broadness In the decision of the supreme court Tuesday In the case of John Zappala, and the court Is entitled to be commended for the spirit of the law enunciated. mployed In pushing a heavy truck In Chehalis rained himself. The muscular exertion in- om work for a time. He applied to the indus- urance commission for compensation. The board held ad been no accident and that the compensation act did not cover his An appeal was preme court, and the Industrial Insurance comm: 4, “To hold with the commissl court sald, “that If a machine breaks, any resulting Injury to a workman Is within the act, but if the man brea any resulting Injury Is not within the act, Is too refined to come within the policy of the act.” The suprethe court refused to be too refined or technical and rendered Its decision on the broader ground of real justice and ordinary common sense, Fine work, gentlemen. GO TO PARK AND “TELL IT TO ‘SWEENEY’ ” | class to “Sweeney,” 7-monthold Seward bear. Sweeney” was procured by the crew of the revenue cutter Man ning, now in port, when a cub, He has grown to such large propor- tions he got to crowding the boat. The crew decided to turn him over to the Woodland park 200, “Sweeney” was taken to the park in a taxtcab YOUR BOX OF COTTON MAY SAVE A LIFE By William G. Shepherd VIENNA, Oct. 17.—(By Mall to New York.)—To the American Citizen, Hometown, U, 8. A.! if Christmas means anything to you, Nere’s your oppor tunity. For three weeke the hospitals here have been without cotton to dress the wounds of dying soldie Doctors and nurses are forced to us cotton small bags of thread. Everybody In Vienna who can help in no other way, spends his spare time in unraveling smal! squares of cloth, cut from sheets and handkerchiefs. With this rough, Marsh material, the most delicate wounds must be dressed Americans ought, In the name of humanity, to send cotton to Austria, Vast quantities of absorbent cotton can be sent to Vienna If American citizens will take upon themselves the personal responsibility of buying each a small box of It and malling It at parce! post rates. If the packages are addressed to the Red Cross, Vienna, and marked “Watto fur die Verwundete,” (cotton for the wounded) they will reach the hospitals within three weeks of the time they are posted, Some a substitute for NEW YORK ov. 18.—The bureau of foreign matis here explained that parcel y kages for Austria will be accepted at any postoftice | in the United 8. The rate to Vienna from any place in this coun try is 12 cents per pound, or fraction thereof. The postage must be prepaid, ground cork and cookle Jar of pipe tobacco, which he keeps the carbureter and stopped the! bites him tn the leg, It's mansh!p, on of Denver, | city of chureh, | stirred many to confessions that they would like to be better men and| | women. iW Bilhorn contributed several songs he wrote on the) Ladies’ j ii | Beckwith ss, | FREDERICK -e- NELSON oa Patterns Heaters BASEMENT SALESROOM | wh | tur Th WN | selling—no two alike— including charming Danc- ing and Party Dresses of | Chiffon and Silk, also All- | serge Dresses, Serge and | Satin and Satin and Vel- | vet combinations for busi- ness and street wear, de- } signed in the new man- darin and jumper coat effects. “Sample” sizes only— | 16 and 36. On sale Thursday at Rarement Salesroom. $9.75. A Purchase of Women’s | Sample Dresses At a Very Low Price Bovcet at a conces- = | to-date Dresses exceptionaly low price. Just 53 Dresses in the On Sale Thursday $9.75, sion from a maker o has a reputation for ning out smart, up- | garments, these are offered | ursday’s buyers at an Boys’ ‘Shirtwaists, 25¢ —carefully made in striped and black sateen, sizes 6 to 1 at. 25¢ Boys’ Flannel Blouses in 16 years, 50c A new shipment of Boys’ each. shirtings, 6 years. blue chambray Very good value gray and blue, sizes 6 to Wool Caps, priced at 25c —Basement Balesroom. Specials in Table Cloths and Napkins Table Napkins, Special 5¢ Each— Hemmed Mercerized Damask Napkins, full-bleached, good weight and serviceabl l¢; nearly one thousand of them to sell Thursday at the special price, 5¢ each. Table Cloth Remnants, Special 95¢— Remnant Lengths of imported, high-grade Mercerized Table Damasks, 2 yards lon g& and 64 inches wide. Pat- terned in Rose, Spot, Pansy and Fleur de Lis designs. Special, 95¢ piece. Table Cloth Remnants, Special $1.50 Each— Remnants of bleached Irish of desirable patterns, 70 long. Special $1.50 the piece. Linen Damask in a choice inches wide and 2 yards —Basement Salesroom Coverall Aprons, Special 69c PRETTY Coverall Apron in high- B, waisted style is shown in the illus- tration. It is sleeves, neck with embroide: The popular plain light-blu white checks. Aprons of goc blue or black in white. piped with white. made of stripe gingham ia light-blue, pink or lavender, with kimono and ty scallops. waist-line trimmed Special 69¢. Margaret Aprons in blue and white checked Amoskeag gingham, ¢ chambray or percale in delft-blue, nurse-stripes or light-blue and Pocket, bib and skirt are Special 19¢. Also specially priced at 19c, Margaret od grade percale in light- stripes, figures or dots, with gored skirt, pocket and bib bound Basement Sajesroom Lace Curtains, S long, in white, terns to select from. Speci: YARD— Figured Sun-fast Drapery pretty for over-drapes or Choice of red, green, br Thursday, 65c yard. FILET-MESH SCRIMS, S Yard-wide square-mesh Fi two patterns to choose fre pecial 95c Pair ROPPED or discontinued patterns in good qual- ity Loom-made Lace C ecru and ivory urtains, 2% and 3 yards color. Fifteen pat- al 95e¢ pair. SUN-FAST DRAPERY FABRICS, SPECIAL 65¢ Material, 36 inches wide, curtains next to glass. own, old-rose. Special, PECIAL 15¢ YARD— let Scrims in ecru color; om. Special, 15¢ yard. ~—Basement Salearoom. White Tea Cups ‘and Saucers Bavarian ovide shape, set of six, Special 75c Set of 6 N sale Thursday, Tea Cups and Saucers of pure white, thin china, in the popular as pictured. Special, —Basement Salesroom. T5¢. New Wash Waiste, $1. 15 1 OME W tical 1 Madras ar Waists are among recent Lingerie arrivals in the Basement Salesroom. Two of tt models are briefly de- scribed: Madras Waist in plain white or black stripes on white grounds, with de tachable collar and cuffs A pretty Organdy Blouse, with or low neck is trimmed with em. broidered silk front 34 to 44. Excel- at t $1 15 100 ‘ek of Women’sShoes To Sell at $1.00 Pair ROKEN lines of Wom- en’s Button and Lace Shoes—100 pairs in a clear- Sizes lent values ance Thursday. Sizes range from 2% to 5. Reduced to $1.00 pair Basement Salesroom. Hand-Bags $1.00 VARIETY of desir- able shapes in these Hand-bags, with fittings of Powder box, mirror, per- fume bottle and coin purse. The popular Party Boxes are also featured at this attractive price— $1.00, —Pesement salesroom. Colgate’s Perfume 380c Ounce OLGATE’S Perfumes in Heliotrope, Lilac, Arbutus, White Rose, Ital- ian Violet, La France Rose and other odors, the ounce, BO¢, —Basement Saiesroom. Fancy Ribbons 25c Yard LAIN and Novelty Ribbons in a range of floral effects, Dres- dens, Novelty stripes, Roman - stripes, Satins and other varieties, 4 to 6 inches wide, very good value at 25¢ ment Salesroom. Patent Leather Belts, 25¢ ATENT Leather Belts in red, white and black, with gilt and black buckles, unusual value at 25¢. —Basement Salesroom Children’s Union Suits, 25c HILDREN’S Fleece- lined Union only, Suits in gray 2 to 14 years, unusually low-priced at 25¢ each. —Basement Salesroom Children’s Hose Special 10¢ Pair HILDREN’S Black Ribbed Cotton iery in to 9%, al, the pair, 10¢. Basement Salesroom sizes Hos- sizes 5% spe Women’s Neckwear, 10c ROKEN lines and odd numbers in Neckwear Women's priced attract- ively low at 10¢. Basement Salesroom White Waists Reduced to 75c RACTICAL Waists for busi- ness and morning wear, well-tailored from good-launder- ing white linette, with long set-in sleeves and patch pock- ets, reduced to 75¢. —Basement Salesroom. 5 = mt Fr wa: