The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 11, 1911, Page 8

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THE SEATTLE STAR Stingy Styles for Men Make Em :' TWO HIT | YOU'LL FIND IT HERE NEWS OF THE DAY COND A cial Club ‘voted to have ite atiok ere advertising ‘ 250,000 of those stic circulated. The committee appolt ed to investigate why women's Wearing apparel coat laundered than men’s, the Inundries when it was learn that ‘men's wearing apparel Yaundered by machinery women’s laundry {s done by hand, exonerate was while The estate of the late George 8. MeClaren, valued at $150,000, to his widow. In case of remarriage or death the money goes to the Children. The will was admitted to probate yesterday. Shannon purchased a] rty at Second and Le ra rday for a consideration of $40,000. The lot is in the Grade district. Because the beach has been covered with sawdust and sawmill @obris, the Seattle Park company ‘Wost Side Mill company. The plain tiffs want the mill company re straiued from dumping refuse in the Sound. When a Bellevue-Summit street ear was hit broadside by a Yesler Way car nt Second and Yesler last night, Mrs. A. C. Thayer, residing at the Archibald, sprai her arm badly. Mrs. Thayer was the only passenger hurt. HARRRAAH ARR * * NEW HAVEN, § Conn— % Dropping eight stories In an Welevator and alighting pr ‘® tically unhurt was the expert W ence of John Fisher, employed “®on the construction of the % new Hotel Taft bere. Fisher ® walked home as usual. * Rkaerteanrt keene Seventy-five Eastern delegates to the convention of the Interna. have been entertained here for the past three days, left for San Fran ‘isco yesterday avter the Shasta Mmited. ©. L. Quigley was hired by the @ity council for one mouth yester- @ay at the request of the council efficiency committee, to investigate the operation of the machinery of the municipal government and then give the council a preliminary re- port of the state of affairs. Foster, of the Wash- marine hospital serv- ed-from Alaska after investigation of the existence of leprosy re H. D.C. & meeting at St. Edward's 5 Catholics form- Gaelic league. and F. .}button-hole bouquet. more to be} eeeeeeeteeee ENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE ywiit npromise can: eo in men's styles all padded thick overything will hip hestiess and, alas, shoulder The bowlegged man is lost must encase his cute limbs in cuffless trousers no room hed at the kn ay the wack Moet people do KEPT BUSY ty I suppose your wife er summer cottag Not so much | women visiting her ferent kind of diet ‘aal ta enJoy!ne | jenn He hipleas, jer than 18 In GY) Clothing | will be hy think it In possible cM tighter, The tapele will oft and creaseless, with from two yesterday to adjust the Dito thes buttons garbage dumping dispute ‘Jl! Hats are lifeless things called garbage drivers were sent to the/ Ajpines, made of some furzy Hallard seow | wusay material that will shape it self around any bump on the eran jum, If the faddist wishes he may |atiok a her in the band, and q 1 Alpine appearance will be worn, low, broad-brimm » han three each on a a Kansas Ditling Un and Health was auth Commiastoner Mayor eee RRR ERE NEW YORK—Heild at Ellis Island for deportation because from rheuma- Haw an cured by Un * and now she insists she cannot be barred from the country suffered Mra, Mary tiem, they must be and decided! chains” and ed The tile will be at 3 hat will replace the eeeeeetenee seeeeeeeee Pee AT RRR ARE | HELENA, Mont.—Because the | voters did not seem to be in rym} pathy with hts efforts to bond the city for a new water system, May-! lor Edward May resigned and Bdw.! Horeky, the city attorney, was) ted to succeed him by the coun: | ell | | Mra. Musek—Dolite, why don't you practice your musie( 1 sald I'd |give you a penny an hour to do so. | Dollie—Yes, mother, but father promised me 5 pennies an hour if} T sit still on the plano stool } | NEW YORK—"A course of study intended to teach children how to spend money should be added to the public school curric ulum,” declares Jas. L. Stephen |san, ‘a Boston public school prin- cipal | RICHMOND, Va—That the ne. \gro race ts dying out and will be |totaily extinet in America in the | }2ist century i# the declaration of Health Officer Dr. BE. 0. Levy: | coora hat, and may be worn fo jdress as well a# in the morning White others at the seashore raged / ini: neckwoar will prevail, Cou 0 fey aoe bag pad bination knit socks have been jhe stayed in town and got engaged | turned out to accompany the ties. o.mne'er See. | Ties, socks, bats and suite ar —Kaneas City Journal. | supposed to match In color collars will be tight rk, offfinished, ebony canes, with nobbed will be favorites with the stic! Palmetto sticks will hold thelr own. For the particular man a narrow | BOSTON, Aug. 11.—Wm. H. Lane, 66, former secretary of the Pacific Mail Steamship company, is dead at his summer home at Narragansett Pier, R. L., as the result of an attack of paralysis. NEW YORK—Eight years in | congress and no money or bank ac Count was the statement made to-|* AT THE THEATRES day by Representative Daniel 3.|* Moore--Dark. P ie Riordan of the Eighth New York |® Seattle—“Rip Van Winkle district when testifying in legal proceedings. SUERTE ES HERSEY S % Orpheum Vaudeville \& Empress Vaudeville. ® Pantages Vandeville. & Grand—Vaudeville and motion | — pletures. | Coliseum——Vaudeville and mo- # ton pictures. eakkkkteeehaetehe Perey— tare you doing about your doctor's advice to take phys feal exercise, dear boy? Cholly—I'm carrying a Seavier walking stick and I wear a larger * * * * + * e “Prosperity Comes Throagh Thrift” DONT JOIN ae RENT A PIANO THIS CLUB why should any- one, in fact, rent a piano? A rental piano is, as a rule, a second - hand piano—a cheap instrument usual- ly — anything, in truth, that will stay half way in tune. Why should you pay three, four, five or six dollars per month for the use of such an instrument? You can pay the rent for years and then you would not be any nearer to owning the instru- ment than when you started, DOWN ACES THIS PIANO im YOUR HOM ee P How different when you join the Kohler & Chase Piano Club. At the very outset you start in a thrifty way. You save $97.50 in the initial cost of the piano, as you get a piano for $277.50 that usually sells for $375. Next the terms. You do not have to pay more to own one of these splendid new pianos than you have to pay to rent a second-han¢ Every week, coming in manent ownership of a beaut Now we say, and say it Jone. Five dollars cash, then $1.25 a week. to pay, you are laying up $1.25 for yourself towards your per- iful, durable and permanent piano, boldly, that no one can afford to rent a piano when by becom- ing a member of this club buying a piano is attended by so much advantage and so much case. Join the Player Piano Club—You Get a $750 Player Piano for $487.50 $12.50 Down, $2.50 a Week—No Interest KOHLER & CHAS 1318 Second Ave. Opp. Arcade but it will fit “Trottey: | shouldered, tight-fitting overcoat ts) } i The i i | iff | | li | | | Look Like Lot of Fashion Freaks offered roomy, member strong this fall folk coat, worn to some extent this summer, to duck the English cut coat | Billa collected; work; ings, 314 Balley; Main 5677 LOS ANGELES, \s by ® speeding au boulevard betwe and Santa Mont | Osborne and G. death today. Th stop after the aceld tity is unknown, The injured cou One artistic tom family in apt to 4 Dealers loone it? think the old, hanging raglan will “come back” However, the Nor and several working hours an the rest of the t matteroffact way will be the only polite way severe lines of the confidential. Open even \a way which mad *** |tompting to the ull Furniture | Dry Goods A Slip-o BY. AUTO a tandem motorcycle and the auto- mobile struck them from behind lives jhas, during her 34 years, illustrat private detective \ed many books and magazines tn FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes Dally at 6.30 Aug. 11.—Struck tomobile om T n Los Angel Miss Vera J, Aug. 11, 1862, both the civil war got a taste of one of the bitter horror | of war. Hitherto in the war, the battles of importance bad been followed by the withdrawal of one or the other army from field, and the one which re mained in pow session could for the dead of both, But « Cedar Mountain, Va. or Slaugh ter Mountain, as it is sometimes often said, Two,| more appropriately known, neither might start|a?my had withdrawn from the a falenized cy-jimmodiate vicinity, Bo on the clon But it} ith, under flags of truce, union works out ate soldiers, aide by other way, out their fallen com seems, one serv: |raden ing as an antl | — dove for (hele ae eer eee other, with the Prestons Moore and his better half, May Wil! & so Preston, de | & vote thelr joint) * to art during | # 4 “keep house”! ® me in the most) ® Mrs. Preston * * * * autolst fi lent and his iden. ple were riding perament In the lay havoc, It in * CHICAGO, Aug. I1--Mre. ® Miunte O'Herrin will sacrifice # ber right index finger to get ® money to give her little daugh. ter Isla a musical education. & Reginald Waldorf, an accom: & plished pianist of Philadelphia, # will buy the finger—if it fits. * Mra. Waldorg lost her finger * through blood potsoning, and * was unable to practice, She * advertised for a finger to be # grafter upon her hand. * Rh hhh de them highly timate consumer [rurnt ture | Dry Goods il ver Night Gown} armies in| any| | In Soft-Finished Long Cloth ] VERY popular model, with round yoke embroidered and ini tialed and yoke and kimono sleeves A special value at $1.00, HH! drawn linen pattern lace. Long Silk Gloves, $1.00 and $1.50 Pair |} $1.00 | ribbon- trimmed with CELLENT values are offered at these prices in Women's 16- ff button-length Sil double-tipped fingers shades. Lavender-Top Silk-Lisle Hosiery Special, 35 Pair Three Pairs in Box, $1.00 11S popular Women's Hosiery is of fine, light-weight black silk-lisle, with laven- der-color top, 4-inch garter welt and double sole, heel and toe; an excellent stocking for service, Special, B5¢ pair. WOMEN’S BLACK SILK HOSIERY, SPECIAL 95¢ PAIR—In a fine grade of silk, fashioned with 7-fhch mercerized “flare” or extra-wide top and mercerized sole. —Vivet Stripe Novelties Prominent in the New Fall Ribbons {[BBONS play an important part in the Fall season's fashions and many at- tractive novelties in stripes are featured. Among the new arrivals in this Section are Satin-Stripe Ribbons, 5% and 6% inchés wide, in pastel and darker colorings, includ- ing such novel combinations as red and black, red, green or blue and white, two-tone green with black, and many others. These. are priced at 50c yard. WIDE TAFFETA SILK RIBBONS, SPECIAL 25¢ YARD—A lustrous, firm Ribbon, 64 inches wide, in a pleasing as- sortment of colors; excellent for sashes, hair bows and millinery trimming. Fieor Fleer. ik Gloves, with Shown and in black, white and favored street mousquetaire wrist, First Floor ' Lace Veils and Drapes || pecial, 85c H popular Veils shown in brown, navy, black and white, 114 yards long, and are finished with effective scroll or floral border design. May be ap- propriately worn as hat drape or face veil and are exceptional value at are enacting i IO te The Fall Number of the QUARTERLY STYLE BOOK Now Ready, —contains 89 pages describing and illustrat- ing new Fall Fashions for Women, Misses and Children, including many pa in colors ; six additional pages of new embroid ery designs Price 20c, including a 15¢ pattern of your own selection ec. . Piret - Toilet Accessories _ Lazell's Massatta Talcum, 20c Hudnut's Sachet Powder in Violet, Helio trope, Sweet Orchid, Chrysis and others, 50c ounce. Cosmydor’s Imported Toilet cake. Newbro’s Herpicide, 40c Dorin’s Face Powder in flesh color, white and brunette, 35c. Odor-Shun, an odorant, 25c. Lehcaresor Powder Books in flesh color or white, 25c. Cloth Brushes with hardwood and extra quality bristles, $1.50/ Bath Brushes with good bristles, with or without handles, 50c to $2.50. Welco Bottles, keep milk warm and pro tect bottle, 39c. Cuticura Ointment, 39c, Roger & Gallet’s Shaving Cream, 75c. —Firet Floor Free Needlework Lessons Given daily from 9 till 11 a. m. by an expert pede, Art Needlework Section, First | oor. Soap, 15¢ odorless antiseptic de- backs A Practical Breakfast Table— Special, $2.10 WELL-MADE, substantial Table, of selec fir, ted Measures 42x52 inches over top with leaf extended and 24x42 when same is dropped. A specially good value at $2.10, at Floor, Annex. Fir Chiffonier, Special $7.85 Well-made C hiffonier, of golden-finished fir, as illustrated. five wnt 7 drawers, trimmed with brass pulls, and jf Hi stands 49 inches top of case measures 32x19. Special $7. THE SPECIAL DEMONSTRATION OF igh, First drawer is secpente shape and + Fourth Floor. Hil CALORIC FIRELESS COOKSTOVES ip Frederick & Nelson BASEMENT SALESROOM New Fall Coats For Misses and Small Women $12.75 H REE standard of style, material and tailoring for smart models as illustrated, showin price. T left, Misses’ Coat, 50 or 52 inches long, in fancy gray or tan mixture, having wide circular collar, inlaid with velvet and trimmed with buttons of same material; back is Price $12.75. At right, Misses’ Coat of gray or tan plaid-back coating, belted in Empire effect 52 inches long, having shaw! collar piped in velvet; yoke Price $12.75. In center, Misses’ Coat of heavy black or navy-blue serge, and braid. lined with good quality satin. |) with large sailor collar trimmed in velvet } Price $12.75. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. A number of Women’s Coats, sizes 34 to 40, are also included at $12.75. —Harement Salesroom. Fall Millinery RRIVALS in early Fall Millinery include small and medium-size Hats of satin in smart black and white | effects and coronation purple, tastefully trimmed with satin bows; also models trimmed in chenille and fringes. These | are moderately priced from $3.75 to $8.75. A good assortment of Untrimmed Shapes for Fall is ia evidence, prices ranging from $1.45 to $4.95. Basement Salesroom. | Women’s Pumps and Oxfords 1318 Second Ave. Opp. Arcade ends tomorrow. You are invited to visit the Housefurnish- ings Section at any time between 10 a, m. and 5 p. m. and see this wonderful Stove in operation. Frederick & Nelson Special 2.35 Pair UTTON Oxfords in patent leather and gun-metal calf, with full round toes and welt soles, also Gun-metal Calf Pumps in two-strap style, with welt sole and military heel. Sizes range from 254 to 8. Special, $2.35. MISSES’ SANDALS AND OXFORDS PRICED FOR CLEARANCE, $1.45 PAIR— | Misses’ Patent Leather Roman Sandals, with brown or black | tops, and Gun-metal Pumps with welt soles, also. Patent | Leather Oxfords with light or heavy soles. Sizes 11 to 2 im the assortment, but not all of these sizes in any one style | WOMEN’S TAN CALF PUMPS, CLEARANCE PRICE $1.65 PAIR—Have street-weight sole, instep strap and Cuban heel. Sizes 24 to 7. nent Salesroom Special Values in Women’s Lace Neckwear at 25c PURCHASE at an unusually favorable figure—embrac- ing Tabs and Bows of domestic Irish lace, and Jabots of lawn prettily trimmed with lace, in a wide variety of styles and designs. Specially-good values at 25¢. WINDSOR TIES, SPECIAL 15¢. plaids and stripes, large and small checks—many colors In plain colors mant Sal | color-combinations to choose from. F;

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