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ipl hs TD PM I, [Eve ! Red Cross] Don't forget to enrotl at 316 University Street, for your First [| Aid Class. Total cost $1.60 for fifteen lectures. | Civilian Relief Dept. Now at headquarters, having removed from Central Building, Salvage Dept. Remember, the Salvage Phone fs Bitiott 4512, ‘Send everything you cannot use, or wo will call, Everyone feels at home at the Dining Room, Lunch with us |] and be served, under pleasant conditions, by our finest girls, all volunteers, Money all for relief. MANY BARGAINS IN THE JUMBLE SHOP ON. BR. A. Start Special) SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 10--An |invitation to come to jail is the) latest device of the San Francisco | police department in preventing | ortme. This unique Invitatton isn't en | graved and it isn’t stamped “R. 8. V. PL” in the lower lefthand corner, but it is “on the level” and has | met with generous response just the same. |. Police Lieutenant Thomas Tobin, who originated the idea, declares the invitation is saving seores of unfor tunates from wrongdoing. Here is the invitation, issued as @ general appeal from the city prison; “It you are broke and have no place to go, don’t steal; come here, You'll always be given something to eat and a bed." Steady work for good men, $7.50 for eight hours, Master Builders’ Association 4082 Arcade Bldg. KAVANAGH'S Firet and Uni First. at ‘Madieon Buy Christmas Presents Now Baum is cutting prices on all Jewelry and Leather “goods. Now is the time to buy your Christmas “gifts and at a great saving of money. A small deposit will hold any article until called for. Here are a few of our big Specials: $17.50 Gold Bracelet Watches Men's Elgin and Waltham 910.50 b saa ‘Watches, warranted, $10.00 Bolld Gold Lavaltieres, | g2ho9 Gold Filled Watghen, 95.50) warranted, at 2.50 $6.00 Solid Gold Signet Rings | Gillette Rasore, regular $5.00. 83.50 special at 64.50 oo Ladies’ Seatskin Purses, spe- cially priced at 2.25 end up BAUM’S JEWELRY STORE 1411 Third Avenue Widinepuirn Watch Repairing We Will Giladly Patients From Examine Your Out of Tow Teeth and Give Whose Time Is You Our Expert Limited, Given Advice. Special Attention Smile without embarrassme: Do You Know That dentistry is comparatively a new science in for- eign countries? That during the Boer war a certain Américan subject, fighting with the British forces, was known as “Gold Tooth’? That the gold-toothed individual elicited much curiosity on the part of the people of this locality who had heretofore never seen a gold tooth? Can’t you appreciate the fact that you are now living in the twentieth century and in the United States—the best land on earth? That right here in Seattle are the best of the dental profession, ready and anxious to serve you? If you lived anywhere else there might be an excuse for you neglecting your teeth—but here—and the examination is free. Get an estimate on your work today. Modern methods — high-class dentistry — prices. These we offer you. Electro Painless Dentists Laboring People’s Dentists Jd. R. VAN AUKEN, Manager Located for years at S.E. Corner First and Pike. Phone Main 2555 low Makes Jail Hotel for the Misfits; Free Meals and Beds Halt Many Crimes |" It applies to men and | alike. Result-—many a man “on his up pers,” instead of waiting in a dark alle nd “aticking up a belated | passerby, has come to the city prison, | ay | | ve heard you'll he who's down and out women | Ip a fellow Many a girl, instead of peddling | |her soul for col stepped into jailer'n office and received | around the! in, has nan with bables ed from to support bh ° children | step that would make her suffer all their lives Makes dail Decent Sometimes they ly written cards scrawled by some ft P whom Tobin has he in the paat Sometimes they merely say “Mary Blank told me about you,” or, “Med Jones said I most alwa dow wher. eonceal t pour out th pathetic ears But—before tion to unfortunates,” Tobin made the jail a ph to come to. Bight years ago, when Tobin first took char the elty bridewell, it) was a place of the usual type—| where drunken men and blear-eyed women slept on between vermin rotten food from rusty tin plates and | hardened their hearts against so clety’s laws. Today there are clean beds with mattresses, pillows and blankets evergreens and palms in the corrt dors; giant geraniuma hiding the bara, while the old “tank cell” tn a modern diningroom with china dishes and snowy table cloth | Spare Room for Girls A great spare room has been al-| lotted to young giris, wayward! novices at wrongdoing. It is a boudoir, wellcarpeted, pleasantly fur nished, with dressers equipped with little knicknacks girls like to have| in their rooms, Another «pare room, once dedi cated to dust and spider webs, has | become a chapel, with altar, statu: | ary and candelabra, Norsectarian | services are held every Satur | day morning, where Catholics, | | Protestants and Jews mingle and| |make thelr appeals to the same| God. ‘s of the 3 troubles into sym. iswuing his “invita | Lieutenant nt place Coat Brains, Not Money All this has cost the city next| }to nothing. In eight years San Francisco has appropriated but $140/ toward jail improvemen Tobin ways he isn't reformer” —he is & human nature «pectalist. | He believes jails, instead of harden: | ing hearts, should soften them. His| sole motive is to prevent crime, | Tobin has been on the police force over 40 ywars. He might retire on pension if he wished. He stays on for the good his work may do, “This way out,” says Tobin to the departing prisoner. And the Prisoner Knows that the thing to 40 ts to go out—and stay out But he also knows he can come back tft tinrd tuck. keeps dogging his foot- stepa. “Tom* Tobin has told him sot BUYS GOAT HERD Joe Smith, printer and farmer, has purchased a herd of 125 goats and put them to work clearing land. “They're worth $1.00 apiece a month to mo,” says Smith, “because of the brush they eat off of my ranch.” MUNITIONS SCANDAL | ROUSES ENGLAND| LONDON, Oct. 9—Engiand ts aroused by a munitions sca volving @ loms to the go of from $60,000,000 to The select committee on national expenditures is investigating the loss of millions of tions delivered to out proper acknow! DEMOBILIZED MEN is GET FREE FISH LONDON, Oct. 9.—Two tons of} fish were given away to families o' demobilized soldiers and » Bermondsey, in one day dred tons of fish have sented to different districts, by ‘the | headquarters staff of the Canadian army. DIDN’T GET HER ANNUAL BLACK EYE) | LONDON, Oct. 10.—Describing # |number of assaults by her husband,| ja woman at Tottenham tol the magistrate she took the precau tion of staying away from him lant May, when sho was due to get| her annual black eye. He had blacked her eye the three preced. ing Mays, Aboard Airliner wm - 90 Five hun | NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—Look rather enticing. It's the builder of the Law {won air liner, which flew from Chi cago to d York preparatory to a transcontinental flight, and Miss |Felicity Buranelll, a passenger, at Jone of the windows of the big air |boat. ‘The window is of isinglass |and may be lowere THE are STAR—FRIDAY, ee 10, = Little Girls’ Hats Are Just as Diversified as Those for Grown-ups ITTLE daughter's fancy and mother’s judgment are both sure of satisfaction in the Basement Store showing of Children’s Hats, for here are smartly tail- ored affairs of velvet, velour and beaver, with streamers or grosgrain ribbon bands through all the degrees of “trimmed- ness” to the frivolous “best” hate deftly puffed and shirred, with pastel silk facing and fur trimming. Hats for every type of little girl, within this price range: $1.95 to $12.00. TH! RAREMENT STORE. Veilings at 25c Yard offer wide choice in a va- riety of close and open meshes, of Black, Brown, Navy, Taupe and White, plain or with small dots or chenille borders — attrac- tively low-priced at 25¢ yard. Chenille-Bordered Drape Veils $1.00 Each Very effective are the chenille-spot borders on these large Drape Veils— black or dark-brown, bor- dered in self or contrasting color; for example, blue and beige on black, or red and blue on black. Priced at $1.00, —THE BASEMENT STORE Broken Lines of Children’s Play Shoes Low-priced HESE Play Shoes are in tan and black leath- ers, button and lace styles, all with sewed soles, free from tacks. Sizes 5 to 8, $2.85 pair; 8% to ll, $3.45 pair. N LINES OF s AND CHIL- DREN'S BUTTON SHOES in gun-metal calf, with black cloth tops, reduced to $1.95 pair. MISSES’ PATENT BUT- TON SHOES with oak- tanned outsoles, sizes 12 to 2, $3.95 pair. INFANTS’ AND _ CHIL- DREN'S PATENT AND vICI KID BUTTON SHOES, with turned soles, sizes 2 to 5, $1.50 pair; 54% to 8, $1.85 pair. YYS’ AND YOUTHS’ GUN-METAL CALF LACE SHOES with welt soles, stocked in various widths, Sizes 11 to 131%, $4.95 pair; 1 to 2, $5.50 pair; 244 to 6, $6.00 pair. Young men’s sizes, 6 to 9, $8.00 pair. BOYS’ AND YOUTHS’ TAN HIGH-CUT STORM BOOTS, water- proof, with full bellows tongue and buckle at top, sizes Aly to 13%, 4.50 pair; 1 to 2, 5.00; 214 to 6, $5.50 pair. ~THE BASHMENT STORE FREDERICK & NELSON | _FIFTH _AVENUE—PINE _STREET—SIXTH AVENUE HE BASEMENT STORE Economical Women Will Find It Profitable to Investigate the Basement Store Values in Top ( Coats ; $25. 00° $35. 00 $45.00 vce sterling fabrics as Tinseltone, Velour, Zibeline, Long-nap Bolivia and Melton Cloth are available in Coats at these prices, in addition to novelty mixtures. With ample collars to drape in soft folds about the throat, cord tucking on xckets and button trimming, they ca many ways of attaining tailored smartness. These colorings are prominent: Navy, Brown, Green, Burgundy, Porcelain-blue, Taupe, Maroon and # Beaver-color, also Black. Priced at $25.00, $35.00 and —THE BASEMENT STORE $45.00. 100 Girls’ Coats at $12.85 Unusually Low-priced Following a Favorable Purchase ype Coats as many girls have been wishing for, smartly styled, trimmed with fur and fur-cloths and fully-lined. These Coats are in Size 14 Only —typical values are sug- gested. in these brief de- scriptions: Coat of Green Egyptian Velour, as pictured at right, with beaver cloth band at bottom, collar and cuffs. Coat of Copenhagen- blue Velour, as pictured at left, with Coney fur trimming. Black Zibeline Coat with black velour collar and buttons. Green Cheviot Coat with beaver cloth trimming. Coat of Astrakhan Cloth with broad velour collar. Unusual values at $12.85. —THE BASEMENT STORE. Charmingly Presented in Trimmed Hats at $7.50 EATHER and fabric combinations, yarn em- broidery on velvet, clusters of yarn flowers, brilliant birds in flat applique effect formed of feathers are high lights in this assemblage of Trimmed Hats, and’ there are smart models with uncut tinge 4 or wreaths of Autumn flowers and foliage. Large and small Hats are featured with im- partiality, softly draped or trigly tailored. A notably-varied display, at $7.50. ~—THE BASEMENT STORE Men’s These Corsets at $2.00 Heavy-weight Shirts and Drawers $1.25° Garment OMFORTABLE warmth is insured by these Shirts and Drawers of heavy- weight brown cotton— they are woven from long-thread cotton and | finished inside with soft, Wye fleecy nap. Price $1.25 f ; garment. HALF HOSE le sole, heel and toe, especially desirable for sensitive feet, sizes 9% to 11%, 35¢@ pair; 3 pairs for 81.00. Elastic Insert HE average-figure Corset at left is of pink coutil, with low bust eased with elastic gores, flexible boning and long skirt free from boning over hip. Sizes 21 to 26. Price $2.00. The Corset at right, for the short, slight figure, and for misses’ wear, is a low-bust model, with elastic in- serts in top, and short <5) skirt also eased SPLIT-FOOT with EN'S WORK SHIRTS of aie and gray chambray with elastic gores. cloth, fullcut, with turn Made of pink cou- down collar and two pock- * * ets, doublestitched, $1.25 til, and trimmed to 82.25. Price $2.00. —THE BASEMENT STORE ENT STORE. with mercerized braid. Sizes 21 to THE F Provide for Comfort With’ 40 Georgette Waists Reduced to $3.95 ‘AN exceptionally low price for these Blouses —quoted because the as- sortment of styles and sizes is incomplete. They are prettily trimmed with embroidery, beads and _hemsti' and there is choice Flesh-color, Bisque, blue, Peach and Sizes 86 to 44. Reduced to $3.95. —THE BASEMENT STORE The Neckwear of the Moment Moderately Priced Bee the prevailing: round-neck effects dresses, there are Georgette Collars in wide | cape effects, at $3.50, 4 For the Tuxedo collar suit or coat-dres straight Lace Collars $1.00. For Cloth Frock or Suit, Washable Satin Collars at 75¢. Vestees for the coat-d of ped abe ay net, round neck showing # popular frill effec $1.50. as He Wishes in A Corduroy Suit ‘ and mother believes in} putting little fellows in corduroys, for she re- | alizes that they are just as long-wearing as they are moderately priced. There Are Suits of Medium-Weight Brown Corduroy at $4.00 with full-lined coats in double - breasted effect, slash pockets, trousers cut amply full and rivet- ed buttons. ‘ Sizes 8 to 8 years, M $4.00. i BOYS’ JERSEY SWEATERS in good wool mixtures, in Ox- ford-gray, maroon and navy-blue, sizes 24 to 84, $2.50 and $3.00. THE BASEMENT STORE Scrim Curtains $1.50 Pair T this price the Base- | ment Store offers un- usually attractive Curtains of smoothly woven scrim, in white and ecru color, finished with hemstitched hem. Curtains suitable for any room in the home, $1.50 | pair, , —THE BASEMENT STORE