Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BON MARCHE o| THE BON MARCHE THE BON MARCHE REAT selling followed yesterday's announcement. Styles are such as appeal to women of refinement, The making, eries are the sagt you'd se lect if the garments were made at home, in cottons, the prices are the lowest we've rath able to give you in years The garments the Mus Musiin in Drawers, 106 deep fine tuck® and fin lace edge ade On naert The Dorset Covers, O06 Drawers, with feunce, tour tehed with @ and arme-eye edged with @ hem Atilehed ruftie B@o Bhort Chenier, t0 t Chemi with cluster of coke between, drawn up with Cambrt of n $1.08 Corset Covers, to Long Chemise, trimmed with a wide sertion, lace drawn wl ribbon, bectom of skirt with @ plain ruéfic Te Long Chemise, B06 Chemise, Dainaook and oa flare Meunce with broltery or Cluny and wide edge $1.50 Nainevok ade and Rand-embr ruffie of em: f destgne lace linwertion finiehed te Corset Covers Made tner with Drawers, oe A lot of Drawers, sook, with Fren of embroidery or Val lace and insertion and ribbons ade of w are trimmed with beading Se Corset Covers, the Made of Stnes—Mn © front t tow | out trimmed With : © of eambric nm and ribbon, plain and tight fitting seve edged with laces 44 to be 30c Pequot Sheeting 25c; 20c White Cambric 1 0c /1S SUSPECTED OF NOW ON—SEMI-ANNUAL WHITE FAIR Here are some will “fairly fly’ Tuesday. the materials and embroid+ And thanks to the decline not all: B00 Night Gown Gown of rot tintin with he ri ae cambrle wtitohed 10 styles in idery effects Empire finished lace bell shape style, with eau with bows ribbon | 65c Cotton Blankets 45c; 40c Linen Towels 25c| } These samples show what exceptional values may be had by attending ot 30¢ PEQUOT SHEETING, 25¢ Bleached Pequot Sheeting, 9-4 (81 inches wide), for double beds. This is the best make; wears like iron and gives every satisfac- tion; sold regularly 30c. Limit 10 yards to customer. Sale price 25e¢ Basement 20e WHITE BRIC, 10¢ Extra Fine White Linen Finished Cambric, 36 inches wide, — especially adapted for under- skirts; something entirely new, having a very smooth, even thread, and as dur able as linen. These come in lengths from two to six yards; regular value 20c; sale price .10¢ Basement CAM- 65¢c COTTON BLANKETS, 45¢ A Beautiful, Soft, Fleecy Gray Cotton Blanket, dainty col ored borders, in the single bed size; an ideal sheet blanket the for camp; stands lots of wear; 65c pair; sale price. 45¢ regular price $1.50 Bed Comfort, _ St. 19 $1.10 “1 _$2.00 $4.2 i $5.50 Wool eile a ~ ge | ’ vd Teme | $5.00 Army Blankets, | “sei” ts | $6.50 Wool Blankets, } $4.95 Wxire Large dize White W 17¢ Pillow Cases, 12'4¢ Ready Made ¥ Swisses, Silk Striped Batiste, Lace Stripe Lawns, many other favorite weaves will be found in this wonderfal offering of unqu 15¢ a yard. So that we'll have enough for all at this irresistibly low pri sell more than 15 yards to a customer BON Exclusive Seattle Agents for Royal Society Needlework Packets, $1.50 Colored Spreads, 75¢ Bleached polio 65e¢ ronuige $1.35 Mercerized Nap- | $ the bed res war price $1.96 ° . 35c White Cotton Dress Fabrics Cut to 15c Tuesday, the second day of the White Fair, offers a memorable bargain; close to 4,000 yards, all told, season's choicest white cotton fabrics at an extraordinarily low price; Sheer, Dainty Embroidered Fancy Hem Stripes, Mercerized English Madras and ir Semi-Annual White Fair 40c LINEN TOW- ELS, 25¢ Fine Linen Huck Towels, extra large size, 22x44 inches, in all Sel also white with red and blue borders; some hem- stitched, others plain hemmed ends; a very absorbent and extra good wearing towel; the biggest bargain of the season; regular 40c towel; sale price | 90c Ne. Decening Scarfs, 69e¢_ he apemarance of the estioned 35¢ ce, we'll not white goods, at “P5c (By Unite CHICAGO, Ave }pit wae in a wi ing burned in the tation going up to | went up to $1.01 rp, representing 66%, making an lcents since Baturd ROLLER While Aiding on lin the 11 o'clock | | Alki Point carried up Minsissippl valley WHEAT GOES UP id Press.) 3 The grain id uproar today, |following the reports of wheat be-|* northwest, Two jcente wae added to Saturday's price | of wheat tn the fin our, o May wheat The wheat jump May the new crop, to advance of 2% ay FAINTS ON THE COASTER the roller coaster | White City shortly t night Lulu May, of who was unaccompanied before by friendw, fainted dead away and was hurriedly | hospital | Bo critical that It war feared she would die. sponded to and at 13:30 o'e neem, Bin improved, » howpttal Dr. EB. A. MeDor ed her, says that due to accute dilat was stimulant nek she regained taken to the Minor her condition for # time that Her system re however has will then she and she this evening nald, who attend the attack was jon of the heart ERY Lowe, who le sus In Seattle, has been kane and ts being ing an investigatio: A man giving hie name as Jar arrested in Bp held there, pend ny A charm set with a diamond ring set with a diamond and ar emerald, & man's gold watch, a lady's gold watch, a man's gold-f od openfaced watch ape chain, a Lewis and t dollar, a California ha t ed 1876, @ hur with gold, $265 in gold a ‘ rency are among the th found the posses sus Hs “hoe DOP PPO ee eee eee eee eee eee eee eee ee a * ** * IN CHINA * IN AMERICA * *@ Marry because you owe It to ®# & Marry because you will * * your ancestors *#\# You fancy you have found * *# There is no such thing as | # your affinit RG : s sf ® affinity # * Marriage is an affair of the | SOA to -hicago, miles, fo "4 * Marriage is an affair of the heart #|& ton; from Chicago it goes to But ® hoad *\% Marriage is nobody's bust- # | ‘#0, 975 miles, for less than the 70 & Marriage is everybody's bust # & news but your own # cents, to say nothing of the $4 ® ness but your own ** riage in the result of «| "* oF ony considerable traffic * Marriage is the result of # ® blind infatuation open re ps ed o- at ® logical delibe , ~* od BaP isan - fol er “ Fn ones water ways ca faster than the rail ways Freight cars go less than 25 miles a day on the average years ago the steamers on (Star Special | There, jold question | speaking race has | BAN FRANCISCO, € Is marriage a fatiure’ once more, is that | MUST WE LOOK TO CHINA FOR SOLUTION OF DIVORCE EVIL? | Service.) 1, Aug. 8 that old the English never been able | to answer to its own satisfaction | That it ts a great and serious) | problem right here in our own} Jeountry, the clogged wheels of the quo-| Berner ie z TODAY'S RACING RESULTS. . Firat Race. HELP AMERICAN * |® Korosilany, 3 to 1 : * «Al Lindley, 6 to 1 *| * «Old Bettler, 20 to 1 * OB ® = Time1:/13 4 *| - Becon ‘ # Corlel, 3 to 1 «| eur THE MAGNATES CAN'T sas T AND PROPER The w * = Lil®G,, & to 1 *| 8T, BRAND, AND YET GERMANY HAS P ® «Toll fox, 12 to 1 *) ® = Time1;01 #| REALLY BOOM RAILWAYS. * a) ‘oni BY HERBERT QUICK in good times, They admit ft, We have #0 much heavy and low-grade freight, and our dis tances are so great that railways this country | A RAP AT lana non lone are unable to do the work (By United Pr ) } confess it We must, then JUTHHIB, Okla, Aug. 8-—-Ollo elop our waterways, for they |homa bankers are divided today) Can carry any load. The cheapest into two factions, one upholding| ¥*! to move an object = to fou the United States wttorney gener| it 88d push or pull it along on a ale oftuion tive to the. ptate's|1ad level and without much fric guaranty jaw, and the other de a onl The best ball-bearing ve claring Governor Haskell is right) 4), Fo eaten! ye ir ee ~ in ansuming the position that Bona | MIth the en TR gears gy ) parte’s decision amounts to noth-| ully high rates in com ing parison Waterborne freight 1s “The attorney general's stand carried at from one xteenth to amounts to nothing,” declared Has-|C7@"Ixth the rates paid on rail kell, “Why should not the Waeh-|"Ad# aS ington officials oppose the guaran In the Columbia river Ore ty laws, when they have ted | KOM and Washington i# a little re George 1. Sheldon to be their cam-| $10" that used to pay $6.20 a ton paign treasurer on the promise that Po Bo gg ndise, ike nails, fre at. will raise $2,000,000 for| Portland, about 90 mile This | campaign fund in return for) *0Ut @ hundred times the rate on republican’s standing pat on | ‘¢ best water routes. A short the tariff and opposing the guar-, 82") W4® Opened around the Cas anty for bank aeporiteT cades, letting boats up, and at once freights fell to $2 a ton and this cents pa (By United Press.) Papriad teea ‘ ROME, Aug. 3.—Archbishop Far-!to boot! Or “ ley headed a delegation of 21 Amer-| dollar's we : jean priests and 180 American pll-| tha Or the an, cart ew which is to be 12 i ence feet deep and 200 feet wide—It is r 4 » ox « doll. the pope las South Da br Ar ' ‘ that the . A are bel id t ev ever occur _o jthe now abandoned Missouri river made three times the distance per day for ) miles up stream, and we ive times as fast coming down—and they always tied up at night! Of course, modern vessels jrunning night and day, on good | water, with electric searchlight can do much better than that. A 1 a pre je highway | good river or surer, mo: j for heavy railway as any knows will tell you And yet, in spite of the fact that railways obliged to charge from 6 to times the water rate, and on the competitive tonnage carry it jess than a quarter as fast, the rail ways have put the waterways out of business all over the United States. They have done the same thing in Burope, wherever the have allowed It where the laws except in Holland railways had to have protection from the canals. Our American rivers used to be alive with steamers. Save where the con ditions are exceptional, they are all goue. At one time we had 4,000 miles of canals in this country We DOOK Most of them are now abandoned. CHET | breeding places for frogs. That the dear and slow transportation was able to kill off that which ts cheap | to follow the whims and fancy of/@"d fast seoms paradoxical. If we the ever-changing emotion {n the! ¥élieved in evil magic, we should [choosing of so-called life partners, | Suspect that the railways must have but we regard marriage as a mat-/U*ed It. Why did they do it?) Why lter of the head. It is arranged| Were they allowed to do it? How | with cold reasoning, deliberation | 44 they do it? Interesting ques tions, traly! and conclusion “We do not for a moment ee And yet the answer is easy, The linto consideration the wishes or|T@llway runs the year round. Most desires or views of the young peo-| Waterways are frozen a part of the ple. Our young people have noth-| Yar. The shipper didn’t dare make ing, absolutely nothing whatsoever | *! enemy in summer to wreak ven to do with their marriage eance on him in winter. The rail CANAL WATER WOULD REALLY | program first as last, 5 hela Th costs 4 70h he wheat 179 miles by han Whi ae cals es Han TD RAILWAY $TOeue: KOVED THAT cay ipeers boat. Hines cen killed off, no such power, The raj Could could make @ bite uge, dragout fight f The waterway, ea lens | «t of ineted, i we, While nudge legally. ‘capttal WM tunes, Oa investments im ee how many ancis eal ever many rivers oo Where great volumes of can be moved in =e jcarry 10,000 tone of the lake or where erm can propel many cargo, a8 on the onde made w traffic will survive But fol general business, on the pe canal or river, where of water restricts few hundred ‘ons only, teeta busine will be toe be inviting to capltal The of the railways must be diege law, and thelr nails ¢ statutes and commissions, @ a may as well give up the And yet—and 1 dont whether you will believe tm not—the waterways help the ways with which they The Ge know it, adi waterw along the gp ailwa I cannot find thee railway was ever hurt by @ ‘ herever . opened up trade i There are ple Elbe Mono' and Mair gahela fou of i . BIN OY Ly ~~ Hudson, th Lakes their cor Freyel pointed out ¢ ways take the ke it. The wat grade, cheap tonnage that bru the railways’ backs and pays jp little if any profit, aa ing up population, aid high-class freight (© gp» both the community amd) way | nefited. figures and facts for this, but it is not specialists the word that waterways help Mr Hil and Mr. jeri r ord as g Why, then, do the milan ay | off the waterways? Heaven ale knows the It seems to be & pm railway nature. had to make e traffic departments vernment railways tua their # killing the governmest Wherever the traffle mam sem boat line he goes for it as& $ goes for a rat—because help it. In Germany no allowed to make as low & tween two points as the makes. We must foster @ courage waterways by Railways must be rate with waterways, shippers freely to use the elther a part of their for portions of routings proper way waterways couraged Investments must be protected. For the ways are, and in the increasingly be, tne great, fee ways of the people, ‘1 % Children’s Eyes |Should receive careful | while growing. We give tention to children’s eye ® and invite you to bring them is% us for exam{nation. ; jtical Co., 1207 Second a ie a — : a ——| Juntice, daily grinding out divorce | '? °° . way runs everywhere, The wate , . | You Americans go into matri ) ater ENDANGERED BY | ise ip te cage jaa Le ‘ | nota, Oe pees N Ws OF | |atter divorce, attest mony blindly, furiously and aim-|¥4Y reaches canal or river points Knowing that they would be de : Must we look to China for our, lessly. In all other things you — Pring mage’ — aot weal a . , use reason, but when it comes to) ™# enemy of the lines he had | ported this evening, seven Ja Gives Home to Charity Sisters. a anewer F marriage you throw deliberation, | use to inland points, no matter! who had been detained by the tram BAN PRANCIOCO, Aus: 3.—-Net meat y p F Ng Poon Chew, philosopher, lec-| iogical conclusion and reasoning to|2°W favorable were the water rates | fration departinent, escaped from iste aiemtisoeme pee Bes rows he Seattle local No. 28, National! turer and editor of the Chung Sai the wind. We orlentals have no|‘ canal or river ports. So almost os aan the detentior t e betel # occasio x Tederatio o "onto . ly . y ne’ | De c | Cove, shortly ole midnight mith’®) by the announcement that the home| *c°Tatlon of Postoffice Clete, | Yat Po, a Chinese dally newsiaper| use for love, emotion or tender| every shipper 2 = Carelessness on the part of the ’ é of Mra. Robert Louis Stevenson, |!!! sive its first annual pallrin|in San Francisco, who has at-| iossion in marriage affairs. We | !shment by delays, denial of cars, | gonductor and motorman of an in widow of the late author, is to be |the Labor Temple on ‘Thuraday,|‘racted wide attention by a num-| have never been buncoed by Cupid, | {!scrimination in favor of his com bound 19th av. car nearly resulted _ ft ber of brilliant essays, says #0. He} w. go not recognize love. To the| Petitors, and general bad service, if : 7 \. Me used as a home for the Sisters of | August 27 This union is newly ve the Chinese view by Bot recogn: . © 80! Te a “ $e serious injury to Mrs Carmel was asked to give the Chinese view | oHental mind love ix a hallucina-| he refused to give the railways all Donald, an old lady living at 412) formed, and the proceeds of the jon matrimony Here ts what he | Hon, delusion, intoxication, a mir his business. If the railway had DR. & & MALL CO. tay when the aitempiod ts board] LASSOOED BY CUPID ball will be used to send deiogmtes | said Jage in the desert of passion, de-| to cut rates to kill off a boat line, - Seal ing when she attempted to board MRS. WARREN EXPECTED to Loulavilie, Ky. where theseen: The oriental view of matrimony | jee ie i cana. |{t could make it up on business | the car | - ie diametrically opposed to the We admire the American peo-| == — ——— —s The car stopped just long enough —_—_——_—. | vention of the International Union| oooidental theory and practice of ple for their common sense and ry for a young man, who had been 10 SURVIVE WOUND of Postoffice Clerks will openwon| the subject. If clreumstantial evi | P eo Rev. 8 1. Be - material progress, but we marvel M. wees t oye PhR pad bee ap Mr ggee bela rod agg boul tone Labor day and continue to Septem-|dence has any weight, China's! a+ your ees of matrimony. It is uget ar e ‘0. S| ranging’ the aged, ‘woman av eat tomorrow night.-"The name of the| common ob. very one shan’ to]! erga $ arom ” 4 Next Sunday at Wildwood park, | © 1 “You may never desire to ex length before two’ men pulled her bride has not yet been announced | tak t voluntarily or otherwise. ; | Hopes for the recovery of Mra. | Seattle Press Assistants’ union No.} @ par y ae. | ol ‘e your ways for ours, neithe up on the platform, saving her from| The ceremony will be performed | » the orlental mind marriage in| CMABee ? . r serious injury, and perhaps death, |in the tent of the Volunteers of | @thel Warren, one of the victims of | 59 will give its annual plentc, and} a Seaniion af henna : ty. | do we entertain any idea or wish | under the wheels of th America, and will be open to the|the insane wrath of Jesse Fit ,|& food time is anticipated. There | re ree onde upon 1/12. 8've, Up ours for yours, We} e Ss ander the wheels of the car om 4 , ; oF, MT | will be dancing and outdoor ty,| the human race aepends upon it.) have solved the problems of Mrs. MeDonald the condue-| public, An admission fee of 26| now entertained by Dr. J. W. Rich-| Prison belne offered for cach meant [tis not taken lightly + nag rag ie ae oge rizes being offered each ¢ ae, Yor e BO eo need be tor's number was 35, but the cents will be charged, the money | ardsog, the attending physician ’ . ee ee We marry because we must poe peers, | Fen cent to Boiling Meat ve ; attle Electric Co, refused to give|to be used for religious purposes was reported as getting along GAL 1P You marry because you fancy you! away with them j the man's name to « Star reporter. | cwiwege GUFFRAGETTES nicely at the Pacific hospital thin| ,, {2 A: Rice and Philo owen Are|have found your ‘affinity, We | Sbslestons ar We would like to have you know the Big White Market. a - | ’ , om afternoon. Unless complications “*"* on helr ¥ to Boston, | know of no affinities. China is a| Most distressing #ases of ectema || how good the meat we handle is and how cheaply we s@ SUICIDES ON WIFE'S GRAVE ARE NOW THE LATEST. ‘vet in, the probabilities are that she | “her ahey will attend the conven-| jand where bachelors find little | relieved by Soap Lake Salve, *** how sanitary and how cl is. This all helps, you | | PUYALLUP, Wash, Ang. 3-—-F. (By United Proce | will get well b aiead oo Bigg gy onal y. ~lhonor or weleome and old maids —— - good meat better ' F ash 1 i r ) apbical union as de rom ‘ | - P. Spillman, a Washington ploneer,| CANTON, China, Aug. 3.—China| the 1 union, The 1909 conven-|""Sr1e"ninene regard the t Meee “we tae shot and killed himself while tas & felitindaea enstremethe Democrats Meet Tonight tion is practically certain to come FP ee ae | Byeore tracts, 9100 | an THE ting on the grave of foager vans ‘: Foes a's ieee th , pcg Tel a 1] ing of the ma bond, whether acre; easy terms; close to ine Oe eras 6 wits ia movews neo Ber cous emneares J the city will hold Bes jin the form of separation or di-|f car line aud lake: level, clear night, i " pe oe at as — Rsinew ef pa meet ys me Svening = ia the! | voree, not only a® immoral, but all ed; fine for chickens and ber bs . rw : [en is the apanese bo: cut rooms ¢ the " ‘a 7 gton Demo The joint conference of eoal| fearful crime against society, You pr od ¢ sovemen ” in the! erat 77 reade nnex, for the| miners and operators is still in| consider personal happines leas prably since bis wife's death three | boycott revealed en t ? . . \ pprness, ples: ' : aris ~ jeath th boycott reves men their| purpose of getting up a county |session, but there will be no im-|ure and convenience and we hold Net way Ag Moy hag MAIN FLOOR PUBLIC MARKET BLDG. ) alent politte er and they have’ ticket ‘portant developments today |marriage @ duty, You are bound ’ = a SI