The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 29, 1921, Page 8

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Ue bed Mee! 5 PAGE 8 by ') LEGA: BAR ‘Laws Conflict on District Elections, Prosecutor Explains oepenen eameneieneneei eames tna eae aN EET -AURRA TEI, Dt Seeking to clarify a situation that =m ms to cause untold incon-| Ny to voters, if indead It does pMet halt the voting of bonds for! Purposes in King county, Col d A. Hanson, chief civil deputy | uting attorney, requested an/| Wednesday trom the state at- | ¥ general. A communication to the prose attorney's office recently, founty School Superintendent EK. Hulse called attention to n of the 1921 school laws, Specifies that but one set of Officials may be had in each A precinct. SOTIONS MUST BE D IN ONE PLACE i is the situation,” Col. Han- DA explained Wednesday. “Picture a Which we will say represents precinct. Now overlapping one corner ts a portion of a district, on another corner a district, and on a third corner | © district. r the law all these elections be hekt on the same day, but ‘One polling place is allowed. Now, then, can a polling place for fis Precinct be selected which will voters in any of the said ta to vote outside the terri limits of their respective dis i? If not, can the provisions of A 6 in such cases be disregard. and as many polling places and f election officials be provided inct as the acl wi , eres en he oon awe | the Moore this week. i TAKE DAY OFF law states that in school dis- 1 of songs. This time, howe displays her naive acting Sallie Fisher. She is one of the topnotchers on the bill at On former vaudeville engagements this clever actress confined her “act” entirely to a program other than first class, bona| Choir Rehearsal,” written especially for her. form wharfage rate. This | Wentern trade. | ver, in addition to her singing, she charm in @ brilliant playlet, “The cannot be held legally with j ae as than one polling place for each school district. If not, then it seem that a resident elector ; have to cast his ballot there for elections property held In his pre then go to another polling to east his school vote, and per- another for his water or drain- bill ballot. \ “In other worts, ft looks Ike a will have to take a day off to @round to the various polling ” Notes and Comment on THE OLD During Christmas week more to throw some light on the sub school bond elections are lke to be held up indefinitely. ‘This, y Ing to Superintendent Hulse, re Mean a very setious setback King county's schools, a number Which are awaiting the vote on | ‘he squad for 1922. n tant bond measures. a? & Yakima postoffice. eee in Larger Quarters |» coming year, ‘Expectation of continued business | Chef Troxell. with the coming of the new haa led the Puget Sound Farms | acreage specialists, to move to/ "*W business: promises ¥ eee Ward & Ward, of Tacoma, to John L. Dumas, manager. company has been located for last 12 years at 605 Third ave. Newly-Arrived Shipments of Merchandise Add Interest to Our Year-End Sale With selections virtually as varied and de- sirable as on the opening day, the YEAR- END SALE continues in feminine favor. Radical price allowances are in effect on - entire stocks—without reserve. Choose rom— All Coats All Suits All Gowns All Sweaters | All Hats All Petticoats During this event we must exclude all exchanges, | gprccras and C. 0. D. orders. All sales must inal. All Blouses All Skirts HOME TOWN the attorney general ts | 599 poxes were mailed daily from the | Prazil. Athert Holder, star center of the | salvaging and reconstruction of the St. Martin's college football team, South Bay bridge, Montene, on the | Lacey, haa been elected captain of | bid of $11,300. The company also wit Ordinances regulating parking and and minors in poolrooms are going to be strictly enforced in Olympia Thurston county is developing a It ts supplying grape quarters, at 714 Third ave., ac-| Yineyardists with split cedar stakes. been awarded the contract for the! 'Instructions Given | for Brazil Exports } Exporters to Bragil must declare in their conmmular invoices the prin cipal material from which articles proper are made, according to an ‘instruction Booklet received by the Chamber of Commerce thru its |forcign trade bureau from the than American Chamber of Commerce in The booklet ts available | for consultation. $8.95. Bags at $14.95. some frames. and $27.50. |build new approaches at @ cust of $5,530, o 4.9% | With patent cracker. Payatup’s ity council met oon Wednesday night and cleaned up alt/]) Movey Day $2.35, ‘olicn | Pending business, so ax to start 1922 with a clean slate, ee Friday night the alumni! o? the Puyallup high school will met to form @ permanent organization and elect officers, Tbe and $1. have paddy, Boldt's Butterhorns are de- ctous. Advertisement, $10 and $12.50. cob; guaranteed 15 yearn Whalebone set of Teeth $2 Amalgam Filling arr ork guaranteed for 15 years. Have impression taken In the morn- met te same day. Exam- and advice free | Call and See Samples of Our Pinte | 1 | $2, $2.25, | | ing ination | ivory and beige. When coming to our offices, be sure Tee Ey t iEME place Bring ie ad with you. Cat-Rate OHI Dentists | Opposite Fraser-Patersen Os, ‘Free to Asthma and| to 5 yards. i | Formerly Sale || dress linings; lengths from half to four yards. | Dress A i rj variety , | « ~ Hl prons in a wide variety of styles Hay Fever Sufferers, 1 Felt Base Rug, 9x12....$18.00 $12.00 || Firat Floor | and colors. Small, medium and large sizes. | —_— 1 Fiber Rug, 9x12 oes 27.50 15.00 |) erm ee | | 4 weet any-i]| 1 Axminster Rug, 9x12... 37.50 25.00 Front-Lace Corsets $3.95 Children’s Bloomers, 3 Pairs $1 i ce ime | 4 Wool Fiber Rugs, 27x54. 5.25 2.50 Gossard and Frolaset, in broken ranges of | Black Sateen Bloomers, with elastic knee lor "Ksthma, and °te wane ‘hecontrol it! 6 Axminster Rugs, 27x54. 4.75 3.00 styles and sizes. All sizes in the entire lot. | and waist. Sizes 2 and 4 only. Regularly fo matter wheth- |] 1 Rag Rug, 6x9.......... 18.75 12.50 || Regularly $5 to $10. —Second Floor || 50c. ‘ present or ar chives 1 Rag Rug, 6x9.......... 12.00 8.75 |} Asthma, Fourth Floor | | or r, our method should relieve you ¥ specially want to send it to parently hopeless ‘ Mt vores of iakelore ioned. . At OUT expense, ned to end wheezing, gray. Special, $1. ple day, Mt Stockings. ly mal you do Send no upon below. t even pay 4% and Hudson eta. Send free trial of cial at 50c. THE SEATTLE SCHOOLS IN [Sallie Fisher at the Moore FREEWHARFAGE Vex Cabinet Split } PERIL THRI) Pleasing Skit Is cents charged by the port of & Francisco, an attempt was made to |met San Francisco to agree to a uni-|shipper here has been entirely al |of effort, bullt wu fan | sorbed by the railroads and business | for the use of publicly owned timber, | interests, Francisco refused to do, and cone. |is Mowing thru Northern ports, No| sources of food, coal, oll and water | | ss quently received the bulk of the/action has been taken by the port) power resources from the stasdpoint | Washington to congressmen to “kill | A. Turner, state health director, ‘The | The situation has been reversed, | Francisco, FRIDAY An After-Christmas Clearance Women’s Hand Bags Beaded Bags at $5. Formerly $7.85 and Beauty Boxes, $4.45. Formerly $6.50. Genuine seal with hand- Formerly $20, $22.50, $25 Ribbon Remnants 1, Price | | All Ribbon Remnants half price.—riret rioer | 15 \ Mahogany Nut Bowls $2.35 i] Formerly 15c to 25c. Movey Day 10c yard. | ‘| Jewelry Novelties Bead Necklaces and Pins at 50c. \Formerly | Bead Necklaces, $1.95. which were $2.50 and $4. French Pearl Necklaces $7.50. colorings with solid gold clasps. Women’s Neckwear 59c i Neckwear slightly sofled from handling dur- | ing the holiday displays. Women’s Handkerchiefs | > e x 7 . i . Pps ig tars | Slightly soiled from the holiday displays: | lente Regularly $1.50. Special $1.85 a gar- | “i Conte, uae. Drocste be ee (rhaisbene) “plate. which” te "the || 25c, 334g¢ and B35e Handkerchiefs 19c. Lae. “Pint nie |. Women’s and Mises Comes ot seta: Rehiest aod strongest plats known 2c, dol/y a ‘ i i or without fur collars; mannish coats in mouth; you tan bits corm ott the || 50c, 65¢, 75¢ Handkerchiefs 39c. | Mercerized Damask 85c Yard | heather mixtures. $1 and $1.25 Handkerchiefs 59c. 2.50 Handkerchiefs 98c. || 85c Marquisette 25c Yard \ | 700 yards Curtain Marquisette in white, | 86 inches wide. \\ Imported figured madras, plain repp, Ori- {I noka—plain and figured, madras, cretonne, || curtain net and marquisette. Rugs Specially Reduced ° Women’s Stockings 25c and $1 | 800 pairs Pure Silk Stockings, semi-fash- Eight-inch lisle garter top. white, cordovan, Russian calf, navy and 800 pairs women’s brown and white Cotton | Special at 25c. Children’s Stockings 20c and 50c | 125 pairs Infants’, Miss ings; special at 20¢ pair—not all sizes. 200 pairs Wool Mixture Stockings in black || blue and pink borders. and white. Large sizes only, in white, Spe- Fo — nee ea RR een emer THURSDAY, DI BER 29, 1921. WOULD REVIVE STAR HERE’S MAN CAN*T PROVE HE IS ALIVE | ' ‘i France, Presented een ne ir Fe | - . | nid hig job in Francs, he . ae resen e s Francisco Dem wi WASHINGTON, Dec, 29.——In the has given his sanction to the #ub-|| jas to produce a birth certificate. ||Men With Families Refuse /San ‘al al famous Ballinger-Pinchot fight, | gtitute for the notorious Curry bill City officials here wrote him || to Take Jobs | That Charge Be Resumed 4 which ait but «pit the ‘Taft cabinet | now in the house territories commit: |] Wednenday that there wax no ree: |) Q in 1909, to be reenacted in the Hard)" oy te for Al-|| 0d of hia birth here, Coulon says || | 4 ing cabinet in 19237 es ty nap apianiel he was born bere in 1906. | LANSING, Mich, Dec. 29—Sevea Since Beattie, Vancouver and other | ane innue between f men, all of them heads of families Northwestern porta have bean able tntorior Ballinger and Cl lho wih tet Welt: ota’ (0 came to abolish wharfage charges entirely, Gifford Pine vast resources from our control? I] tier families, whic ein want, the port of San Francixco tw do. | aarict think not.” | ha covered in Lansing. manding that the Northern porta | : ; ny) Thats the way Chief Forester s workers make harge of at least 15 cents a OO" re 7 ove seed ' 0 0 they answered appeals ae ete jens @ | ska, an cleewh with Ballinger, «| r with the administration of | Greely fevle about it and ft is to be ship Gradh tho wives 6¢ tha be ‘A year ago, according to loca) port | Seattle business man, on the side of resources in Alaska, work |premumed his cnief, the secretary of engi tae Ay te Bene pry commiasioners, when the port of |Private corporations, and Pinchot, | ing solely under the direction of the | agriculture, is in sympathy with his ued to work. Members of the = ne bdew lin ml e ide of he pub ecretar of the interior.” views. - Beattie wan compelled to charge 30 | the idealist, on the aide of the pub: | peor y 3 city council want to revive the wi cents a ton wharfage on importa and |2¢, Taft was president, but Ballinger) ‘“Phis proponal,” nays Col Greety,| Fail, following in Ballinger’s foot ni —_ nt to hip 26 cents on exports, and other North. |¥OO-—temporarily at least. chief forester, today, “may well be | steps, has gone on so ms cones 2 Be ee in pt a Foday the in is exactly the! challenged. After all, the national|to the present system of public con ern porta were compelled to charge day tho issue ia exact “ ‘chavtane raton bigher than the 15/S&me Secretary of the Interior Fall’ interests in Alaska are paramount.” |trol of the natural resources of State Leads U. S. \— - “The United States, says Greely, | Alaska aa “cumbersome and annoy: in Smallpox C Washington bad more smalipos any years ing” to those interests which would | jonal policies | develop the country, meaning private | ce the wharfage charge to the|“has painstaking legislation” | divease, however, is rarely fatal in commiasion on the demand of Ban|of the public welfare, Should we|the daring piece of . thin state, now cut off, by one stroke, all these | fathered by Secretary Full. SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET ghOVE Ne Furs One-Third Off | Semi-made Fur Collars and All Furs by the | yard at one-third off the regular prices. I —¥First Floor DECEMBER 30 A Red-Letter Day 215 Men’s Union Suits ' At $2.65. Regularly $3.50. Medium weight, fine finish wool mixed Union Suits. At $3.85. Regularly $5. Medium heavy wool mixed Union Suits. Trimmings Reduced . All short lengths of lace edges and insertions, beads, bands and metal laces at one-half off. Point de Paris lace and insertion. Formerly || Extra large body size. Sizes 16 to 20. Regu- 25e. Movey Day 15¢ yard. | larly $2. - p 5 || At $2.85. Outing Flannel Night Shirts of | Narrow fancy and plain silk trimming braids. || imported fabries.” Size 15 _ Resulects $3. 12 only. —Men’s Section, First Floor Men’s Night Shirts $1.45 and $2.35 At $1.45. Outing Flannel Night Shirts. —Firet Floor i] Regularly $4.50. | Broken lots of buttons. —rittn H6er || Formerly 50¢ to 85¢ dink. ideas Dw She é i Remnants—Half Price ice | fama, Outing’ Fiennal, Perealoa, Skirting: ams, Outing Flannel, Pe es, ings, | Women’s Underwear | Devonshire, Muslin, Beacon, Robing, Voile, Large Size Union Suits $2.25 | Cambric, Nainsook, Long Cloth, Dimity and j Skirtings, —Second Floor | 260 odd Union Suits—Munsing, Lucille, Car- | ter’s. Large sizes only, 40, 42, 44. Low neck, | Children’s Creepers 55c 24-inch lengths ais eth sleeveless, ankle length. Regularly $2.65 to | One- and two-year sizes. Plain colors, pink fe Coke $4.50. | and blue gingham, with check ing Formerly | Jersey Silk Bloomers $1.95 |: S ; ‘ —riret Floor || 180 Bloomers, in flesh color only. Regularly | } Regularly | Special Price Basement 100 Trimmed Hats $1.95 A wide variety of attractive styles in black, || blue, tan, purple and Copenhagen. Also, 36 Suedine Tams at 50c. In green, orange, black, navy and light blue. | Children’s Underwear 85c Each | | 160 Lucille wool and cotton mixed Vests and Pants. Vests, Dutch neck, elbow sleeves; high neck and long sleeves. Pants, knee and ankle —Virst Floor : , || Fur trimmed Suits in velours and sued- Good quality cotton Table Damask, 64 inches ines; navy, brown and taupe. Three-piece Floral and stripe designs. 186 yards |; Jersey Suits in heather mixtures. || Smart Dresses of tricotine, serge, crepe and —Second Floor | satin. | wide, only. First Floor Dress Goods Remnants \ Jersey Bloomers, 5 Pairs $1 Thousands of desirable pieces marked for 400 pairs women’s and misses’ Cotton Jer- Girls’ Wool Dresses $3.95 Wool Serge Dresses, size 6 only, in navy and brown. Jersey Jumper Dresses in navy, brown and red, sizes 8 and 10, 800 Aprons at 85c A clearance of Coveralls, Polly Prim and || to five-yard lengths. | -Bourth Floor || ml ; | sey Bloomers, white and flesh; with or with- reroormended oF" war abi Cedars | | cule spose). |, out gusset. Sizes 25, 27, 29, 1. ers, whose wort f v' . | * A . coed ealigtaction. ask oar cuss || Drapery Remnants Y Price |, Silk Remnants, plain and fancies, from half | | | | Woolen Remnants—Coatings, suitings and Lengths 114 | dress lengths; three-quarters to four yards. Fourth Floor | Velvet Remnants—Plushes, fur cloth, panne, erect pile, chiffon and costume velvets. Lining Remnants—Plain and fancy coat and Women’s Petticoats at 89c i 200 Petticoats, formerly $1, $1.25 and $1.49. | Percaline, sateen and Waterbloom; some col- ors; mostly black. Crepe Gowns $1.45 Regularly $1.85. White and flesh color Slip- over Gowns of good quality Windsor crepe. | Second Floor i} Black, | 7 Cotton-Filled Comforts $5 Fine, lofty Comforts, white cotton filling; silk- oline coverings in pink, blue, rose, tan and green; 28 only. Women’s Blouses at 85c A clearance of broken lines of white and fancy voile, organdie and lawn Blouses. All sizes, 36 to 44, but not all sizes in any one style. Formerly $1.29 to $1.95, Jersey Silk Petticoats $1.95 100 Petticoats, both plain and _ novelty flounces, in a wide assortment of colors. ~Second Floor Sheet Blankets $1.95 Pair 50 pairs best quality Cotton Sheet Blankets, | size 60x76 inches. White, gray and tan witn | s» Movey Day $1.96. | Women's Sweaters $2.95 50 pairs same quality, size 64x76 inches. A clearance of broken lines of tuxedo and Movey Day $2.15. coat styles. Sizes for women and misses. s’ and Boys’ Stock- | —First Poor ll —Second Floor lennes last year than any other state # Demands are now pouring into in the Union, according to Dr. Paul ¥, [ M eo. gQeeags 5 Z, aecn SEB, EF3, 22°23 i ++ 53235_ ¢ 4 ere ar at Bil I

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