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i 3 4 iq ¥ | | | He Has a Pretty Christmas Button to Give to Every One Who Visits Him The Christmas Play Rooms will open Saturday morning—when good old Santa Claus comes down from the North Pole to take up his headquarters at The Bon Marche—until Saturday—and let them enjoy the merry-go-rounds, the slides, Santa Claus aeroplane, the sand piles—and the other playthings we have dedicated to the pleasure of the children for the kappy holiday season. The Toy Shop Will For all the thousands and thousands of new and wonderful Christmas Toys will be on display—and there will be lots of special bargains for those who like to do their Holiday shopping early And just think of it—there are more toys to be seen here than any store on the coast has ever shown before. $1.98 Imperial $1 00 Kid Body Dolls . FULL 2 FEET, ALL WITH BISQUE HEADS AND SLEEP. ING EYES. Handsome Kid Body Dolls with bisque heads, sleeping eyes, pretty mohair wigs tied with ribbon—bodies well stuffed, full 2 feet tall—with shoes and stockings. wre’ —Santa Claus— j At the Bon Marche Tomorrow He Will Arrive at the Fifth Floor Play Rooms at 9 0’Clock Saturday And He Wants Every Little Boy and Girl in Bring your little ones down town to join in the happy throngs of children who will be here all day Be a $1.50 Rugby Football $1.10 Champion Rugby Foot- Ball, made of ined der, at $1.10, $1.50 Flashlights. 85¢ tat Pocket Flash Light, alze que xe th made o complete with Mazda lamp and renewal battery at §5c inch football loge ond ' canvas lined, complete with | are crooked, Are 18 \j guaranteed pure gum biad- | @ tall $5.00 Flirting Dolls $3.15 , ns f vulcanized fide and dressed ‘ome and Welcome Morning Seattle to Be Here to Meet Him Christmas Eve Merry Spot on Saturday $2.50 Kestner Dolls $1.95 Cunning little Baby Dolls with baby faces, laughing ping ey bald baby heads 22 \s best Indian leather, tult 1 wa Fourth Floor slippers and stockings. A Big Sale of Little Coats And Other Interesting ‘Children’s Day’’ Economies Children’s $4.95 Winter Coats In Sizes 2 to 6 Years Good, warm All-wool Winter Coate—made of a nice quality of kersey or cheviot—with velvet collars and cuffs, and wide belts of velvet to match—large velvet buttons, too—-in navy blue, Alice blue, red, tan, brown—lined with a strong, durable sateen lining. —Second Floor. $3.50 for Children’s Day. 50c to $1 Hats 250 in all, at 10c Ea. Children’s Felt, Pat- ltyear sizes. —also corduroy; tily trimmed with silk bows and fancy buttons. blouse effect or straight front styles with belt. 6 to Children’s $5 to $8.50 Dresses, Reduced to Children's Wool Serge and Shepherd Check Dresses lace or embroidered collare—pret- FOR 50c to $1 Knit Toques Priced 10c Ea. Mussead Toques tn $3.50 Full Odds and Ends of 59c Undermuslins, Priced Included {n the lot are Chemises, Combinations and Envelope Drawers in crepe id musiin—neatly trimmed with lace or embroidery. Good quality cloth and well made. The Envelope Drawers come in small sizes, —Second Floor. ent Leather, Corduroy Hats and Silk Bon- nets—odds and ends of 50c to $1 values— while the quantity lasts 10¢ each, 39c Saturday in the Pare Food Store Washington Creamery Butter 35c FRESHLY CHURNED WASHINGTON CREAMERY BUTTER —FINE QUALITY—NO PHONE ORDERS. Mayflower Coffee—our regu- lar 350 bh ER. reshiy roa ed—for Saturday only at, a pound.... 27kc Shoulder Ham—medium size, properly trimmed and smoked —n9 telephone or- 124c ders. A pound Little Pork Sausage—fresh ..15¢ Tomatoes—the regular lfc size pecan ae Bae gen d: tomer. A dozen 0e— 8c acan........ i Pare Pea: Butter—one of Guaranteed he best brands, absolutely pure. A pound ... 124c a " comm, rs Marche rand—one of the very best. Five tars tor 19¢ —Fourth Floor. Bon shipments recelved daily. A pound. Thasksgtviog complete for 1 red, navy, eray—airen for Infants and chil- dren—assorted styles. Just about 100 tm the entire assortment — each 106 75c ported Ron Non Snappers for the Thankegiving table. favor, cap and snapper, dozen 10¢, 15e and Diener 2 pe ch contaiping Look at These Morning Bargains On Sale From 9 A. M. to 12 Girls $2.00 Rain Coats, 9 to 12 No telep can be them—lot ed —in most « Don't forget that the Bon Marche closes at 6 p. m. Saturday. A sample lot of mney Silke gths in a good range of colors. a. m. to 12 19¢—Upper Main Floor, 32-Inch Lining Serges, Yard Heavy quality Lining Serges in biack and dark brown, suitable for coat lin-? Cc ings and under skirts, 9 to 12 —Upper Mal Floor. 10c and 1214¢ Cretonnes, Yd. 1 20 to %6-inch Mummy Finish Cre-\ 8 Cc tonnes, all good, clean stock at # 1-30 a 3 yard from 9 to 12 Saturday. Third Floor. 12'Yc and 20c Swisses, a Yd. eiill lengths of 12%46 to 200 Swinnen, 1 10c io 7 ‘are jong, pier of tte r gis0a Gots, 100 from a.m. to iz —Third Floor.’ 10c Bridge Score Pads | Nullo—n Coun uctio: ir * 9 a, m. to 12. —Upper Main Floor. 10c and 15c Tally Cards, Doz. A large ortment of 10c and ibe 1 Tally Cards for whist and bridge—soo Cc | Gira’ shower pr storm co 6 to 12 yen to 12 at 26 yard, Linene Wainta, tucks and plaite, 39¢ from 9. m. to 12 TA BI hed M size 68x74 Inches from 9a. m. to Bleached Huck scores, 9 a. m. to 12 be dozen. < r Main Floor. post Men’s $1.00 Union Suits Men's Cotton Ribbed Union suits in gintbees. Walaht—ante phage,” Yac evee {to each, at 600 from. 9 a.m. tol? Lower Main. Floor, Men’s $1.00 Storm Rubbers Good quality Storm Rubbers, wide widths and all sizes, from 6 to 11 at 6 from 9 a. m. to 12. —Upper Main Floor. Women’s 15¢ Handkerchiefs fi Women’s all pure Line Handkerchiefs, with embr Oa, m, to 12 at 8 1-3e—U ppe Women's Bu feet of goo lie trom 9 a. m. to Children’s W. wizen 2 to 14 at a.m. to 12 Sa Mary Garden's 5 fine for t ymplexion a, m. to 12 Saturday at wn rubber back cloth Talcum Powder on sale from 9 95c Conte of tan with 10c and 15c Embroidery Swiss and Nainsook Embroidery Bands > in different widths and patterns, 9 a m —Upper Main Floor. 79c and 98c Linene Waists assorted worth 7 econd Floor. Bleached Muslin, Yard mill lengths, full yard , rd from 9 a. m, to 12 to each Lower Main Floor, $1.25 Bed Comforters at } Bed Comforters in peat floral patterns, ‘89c 12 $9¢ —Lower Main Floor, 7c Bleached Huck Towels; Towels. Aic nine _ Ac —Lower Main Floor, 25c Burson Stockings, Pair Lower Floor, Children’s 25c Waists at 6 trom 9 y—Lower Main Floor. | 50c Talcum Powder Priced 29¢ —Upper Main Floor. Fresh Ginger Snaps 10c a pound—in the Daylight Bakery—Fourth Floor, boNMAR CHE Union St. second Ave. Pike 8t., Seattle. Telephone Elliott 4100 | | will be a | entirely, the city being asked to contribute nothing. A small percentage | | of the employes’ salaries will be deducted and pensions are to be paid Mrs, Leona W. Browne, the at- torney, returned home after mid- night to an empty he sons and daughter being out of town on a visit, She thought she heard a ;nolse on the front porch and stepped outside to investigate, A draught of wind slammed the door to and the spring lock caught, The key was inside the house. Mrs, Browne reluctantly awoke a neighboring family, The head of the house knew another neighbor who had a ladder, The secayd | neighbor waa roused. The members | of both famtiles got up and dressed, | and the ladder ws ‘fetched to Mrs | Browne's house. Ono neighbor held the ladder while the other climbed {t end got into a bedroom window, He went | downstairs, unlocked the door, and let Mra. Browne th Mra. Browne was profuse in her thanks and apologies for the bother she had caused. The neighbors were nice about It, and waid it was no trouble at all. Mrs, Browne was so anxious to show her appreciation that she followed her neighby ut on the porch. And another draught of wind slammed the door again! “ve ee George O. Magill, a Seattle fireman, had even woree luck, The Magilis live at 411 North 49th. Mrs, Magill ordered George, on his day off, to wash the hall window upstairs, George, with pail nnd cloth, climbed through the window onto the porch roof, closed the window and began to wash it. He #lopped 4 lot of water, By and by a neighbor came along, and he and George, the latter sitting on the edge of the roof, talked about the war, Meanwhile, the water had caused the window sash to swell, All the other windows ¢ locked. Mrs. Magill was callfhg on a neighbor, Tho hall window stuck and George couldn't get it open, George yelled and yelled, Mrs, Magill heard him faintly and came to the rescue, Quite a crowd had gathered by the time she returned. They laughed like anything. : . . Indian Charley, steeplejack, Was tn the city jail. He sawed his way through prison bars And forgot to furnish bail. Now how he did It, the cops don't The feat I can't explain. Did he creep like # fy down the outer wall, Or use an aeroplane’ Indian Charley, steeplejack, Made straight for a saloon. ‘Twas in the morning he got away; They bad him again at noon. Tho moral ts, as many know, When appetite enthralls, Old booze a stronger prison Is Then fron bars and walls ‘RAH RAH BOYS HAVE HIGH OLD TIME One freshinan was burt and 41 others suffered with colds, blistered | feet and drenched skins early Thursday morning to pay for the un- pardonable offense of the first-year men who tled up two sophomores last week and left them to be freed by the milkmen abont 3 a, m. To avenge the humiliation east upon thelr classmates, the sopho- mores organized a masked battalion of 100, pounced upon 42 freshmen Wednesday night, tied them up, hand and (oot, piled them Into, autos, took them to the Bothell road, painted their hair green, gave them « good old-fashioned paddling and left them to free themselves the best way they could. ‘The namo of the injured man could not be learned. The freshmen Jooned themselves of their bonds and along about 3:30 a. m. got back to the campus, after a trying marathon tn the rain. MAY EXTRADITE BANK BANDIT VANCOUVER, B. C.,, Nov. 20.—H. Hartin, the Austrian, tdentified as the surviving member of the gang of five bandits who recently held | up and robbed the Sedro-Woolley bank, four of whom died in subse- quent gun flights with posses, may be tried In New Weatminater, B. ¢ The provincial authorities have applied to Secretary of State Bryan / for Hartin's surrender to the jurisdiction of British Columbia. Hartin is wanted by the Canadian authorities for the murder of Charles Adams, the young customs officer of New Westminater, who | died as ® result of a wound infileted during a fight with the bandits. | pensions were approved by a meeting of the Seattle Civil | we in the Y. M. C. A. Thursday night, and the city council ed to submit a charter amendment to that effect {n March. | The plan {# to obtain the pension fund from the civil service employes | after 26 years of service for the city, or upon attaining the age of 65. | The pension is not to exceed $50 a month. For the first five years no | pensions are to be paid, so the fund may attain a substantial nucleus, WOODY WILL EAT ALASKA SPUDS J. L. MePherson, of the Alaska bureau of the Chamber of Commerce, sent President Wilson and Secretary of the Interior Lane a box of Alaskan spuds each and a letter telling about agricultural prospects in Alaska. Mac talked like # regular real esta’ ent, and Prexy Wilson maybe will buy a lot or two up North of strength of it. He's too busy at present writing a message to congress. So he Secretary Tumulty write to McPherson to thank him for t Murphys, etc. Mac also got a nice letter from H. A. Meyer, private secretary to Lane. CHURCH SOCIETY TO FEED HUNGRY | Saturday night More than 100 hungry men will be given warm suppers every | for several weeks in the dining room of the First |i Methodist church, by the Ladies’ Ald soctety, alded by the Brother hood league, the city employment agency and the Charity Organization | society, which will choose the men to be fed, it | “It's to help take their minds off their troubles over Sunday,” | jf explains Rev. A. W. Leonard. | KEMPSTER NOW IN “FAMOUS” GLASS | H Sometimes it pays to be the goat. A, L. Kempster, manager of the |} Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co., was the Press club's moat | a short while ago in order to advertise the club's annual show and Expose. So Thursday night, the club presented Kempster with the |i | allver card of life membership. Similar cards are held by W. M. Taft, | | Sir Thomas Lipton and other famous men. CHILDREN WILL SING AT REVIVAL A chorus of 75 children will be a feature of the revival services| Friday night at the First Methodist church, Supplementing them will be Evangelist Bilborn, with his original revival hymns, nverts knelt three deep at the altar rail Thursday night tn re-| sponse to a plea from the pastor, Rev. A, W. Leonard, at the close of a sermon on “The Test of Reliability.” SLUGGED WOMAN SU CCUMBS AURORA, Il, Nov. 20.—Miss Jennie Miller, daughter of ex-Mayor| Holmes Miller. and the richest woman In Aurora, who was found Wed- nesday night in the First Methodist church yard with her skull crushed, died today without regaining consciousness. \y Bits of bone were removed from the brain. minutes later, The police have no clew, NEGROES MAY BE CITY FIREMEN Sixty Seattle negroes are prepar-|manned by a company of negroes, to take the eivil service exami-|and Mayor Gill says he will call nation for elty firemen, according|the civil service board to hold ex- to 1. F. Norris, transfer man, and|aminations of negroes to see if 16| one of the leaders of the people of} men are available to take charge! his race, jof the new house, under a white| ff “The negroes have no desire to| captain.” mix with the white firemen,” de $$ clared Norris, “but we are Amert-| Holland's bulb Industry will suf. can citizens and taxpayers, and are! trom the war, but the growers | entitled to representation in the) city’s service. Fire Chief Stetson determined to pay lower has assured me he will do what he| Wages and to destroy a third of the | can to have the new fire house) crop. Miss Miller digd a few Hecause less than par was offered, the port commission ‘Thursday | deferred the sale of $422,100 worth of bonds, The three highest bids! will be reconside: today, Ladies’ Home Journal Patterns ‘FReperické-NELsov Beckwith Heaters BASEMENT SALESROOM One-Dollar Millinery Featured Saturday In the Basement Salesroom W OMEN'S Untrimmed Hats in silk and plush, all-black black and white tions, $1.00. Women’s Trimmed Hats in a variety of styles, $1.00. velvet and combina becoming Saturday, choice of any Child’s Trimmed | Hat in the Basement Salesroom, $1.00. Basement Sale Good Values in Women’s Top Coats $5.00, $8.65, $10.00 W INTER’S favorite styles and most popular coatings are in these three moderately - priced groups: Models appropriate for business, school and outing wear in a large showing of plain, colors, novelty plaids and stripes. Sizes for women and misses. Prices $5.00, $8.65 and $10.00. WHITE COATS, $9.50— Smart Coats in white velour and white chinchilla, college and Bal- macaan models, in sizes 16 and 18 years; 34 to 40. Price $9.50. —Basement Salesroom. Sturdy, Serviceable,Shoes for School and Play Times ISSES’ and Children’s School Shoes in patent and dull calf leathers, with cloth or leather tops. Made over comfortable, broad-toe last; very serv- iceable. Sizes 6 to 8, $1.50 pair; 814 to 11, $1.75 pair; 11% to 2, $2.00; 2% to 6, $2.50. Children’s “Foot-form” Button Shoes, allow the growing foot to develop naturally, in patent and dull calf, with oak welt soles. Sizes 6. to 8, $1.75 Boys’ and Youths’ Water- proof Shoes in Blucher style, with tan calf uppers and two full soles. Sizes 10 to 13%, $2.50 pair; 1 to 2, $3.00 pair; 2% to 5%, $3.25 pair. pair; 8% to 11, $2.00 pair. A good-wearing School Shoe for boys, in button or lace style, made on a comfortable last, with calf upper. Sizes 10 to 13%, $1.50 pair; 2% to 5%, $1.85 pair. —Basement Saiesroom. Basement Salesroom Values in Boys’ Clothing full: $3 $3.00 and $4.00. and bl value a 25¢. to 16 years, 50¢. very Boys’ Norfolk Suits, care- ly tailored from serviceable gray and brown suitings, sizes 6 to 17 years, $3.00. Boys’ Norfolk Suits With Pairs of Knickerbockers, made up in a variety of good suitings, sizes 7 to 17 years, moderately priced at -95. Boys’ Chinchilla Overcoats, sizes 2 to 10 years, in gray and blue; well-tailored, warm and serviceable, BOYS’ SHIRTWAISTS, 25c —carefully made in striped shirtings, blue chambray ck sateen, sizes 6 to 16 years. Very good Boys’ Flannel Blouses in gray and blue, sizes 6 —Rasement Salesroom. “Tdeal’’ Steam Cookers Special $3.50 ce 7) WO - compartment Cooker of heavy charcoal tin, with Steam solid copper water pan and whistle which blows water is when more needed, A meal for the average family may be cooked at one time, without the flavor of the dishes intermingling. Special $3.50. Housewares Section. Children’s Outing Flannel Gowns Special 38¢ trimming stitching or Sizes 6 to 1¢ Special B8¢. Children’s Aprons, 25c Well- made Coverall Aprons in ki- mono - sleeve style as pie tured, made \? of chambray gingham in tan or Copen- hagen - blue, with turn- back cuffs, neck and strap across back bound with navy-blue or red. Sizes 4, 6 and & years, attractive ly priced at —Barem Large-Size Oval Roasters, Special EAMLESS self-basting and self - browning Roaster, as pictured, of heavy stamped sheet steel, special S5¢; in seamless enamel, special $1.25. STAR COFFEE MILL, SPECIAL 35¢— Large Coffee Mill (ca- pacity 14 pounds), fast- ens to wall and has grinder | of japanned cast iron. KIN-HEE COFFEE POT, SPECIAL 75¢, 85¢ A highly nickel-plated Coffee Pot that makes good coffee in a very short time. As shown in the sketch, the upper part of the coffee pot is re- moved to put in pulver- ized coffee (about a tea- spoonful to each cup). Directions for using ac- company each pot. One- pint size, special 75e. One- quart size, special 85c. Two-quart size, special 95c. ALUMINUM ROASTER, SPECIAL 95¢— Seamless Roaster of heavy sheet alum- inum, measures 1034 inches square and 5 inches deep. Easily cleaned, as it has Spe- spun no seams or corners. cial 5c, CASSEROLES, SPECIAL $1.45 AND $1.75— \ \ i ee Casseroles with plerced nickel-plated brass frames and brown-and-white fireproof earthenware linings. Seven- inch round, special $1.45; 8 inch oval shape, special $8.75. Housewares Section Cut Sunburst Tumblers Special 50¢ Set of Six HIN-blown Clear Glass Water Tumblers cut in sunburst pattern as pictured, special, the set of six, 50c. —Baser ent Salesroom