The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1912, Page 8

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; THE SEATTLE STAR THRILLING CLUB OPPONENT | OF SUFFRAGE BUDAPEST, Sept 18.—Wild | ®eenes mar di the meting of par Mament here today when © Tisza, president of the lower house, Was slapped, insulted and knocked down because of his hostile attitude | towards woman suffrage, Count ‘Tisza was set upon when he entered the chamber with the minister of commerce | Members active in the tuffraxe movement were in an aggress! Thood today, and the debate on the Question was marked by bitterness and vituperation, Count Tisza was warned by letter that the suffrage advocates would p* » their cause today, and that the building would be burned if he attempted to clear it. just A SL IGHT } MISTAKE “The reporter's life is a happy one the sou of that indignity is usually beneath consideration, or the insult fs due to some misunderstanding i The speaker was Albert J, Beveridge, The Seattie Commercial Club re- He continued ceived, last night, the official call | I know a reporter who went to a house for the fourth national conservation | and said to the servant who answered his ring When he suffers an grees himaelf a one-time reporter. the’ day after a wedding ADVENTURE OF THE i AND THE FRIENDLY STORK. .| WILSON N GETING WARMED UP, AIMS BLOWS AT T. R. MINNEAPOLIS, yt LB wAL ling a blow at the personal strenu congress, which will be held in In. “Can you let me have some details, please, of yesterday's cere-| osity of Col, Roosevelt, Col. Wood dianapolis, Ind. October 1 to 4.) mony? = The club will appoint as delegates “No, I can’t, she sald, “They ate every crumb! And 1 think you | TOW Wilson, In his speeches ehere any business men who will be t vicinity at that time. The Bon Marche’s Autumn Display} of Laces, French Tunics, Nets, ‘\ and Fine Dress Trimmings Ye Very Beautifu-————————_ And not only beautiful but most complete as well, way that has always made the popular store in Seattle and trimmings are being t Venise Lace , a little lighter Is!'—St. Paul Dinpateh ‘begging for and priced in that fair Bon Marche the remember that thi and year lace than evér before, FI d, Bohemian La used more freely being specially favo weight but very beautiful, is a good second in demand It comes in all widths of bands, edges, flouncings and allovers. Then there are the exquisite Shadow Laces, soft and filmy, in the narrow widths for frilling, in the 8 or 10-inch widths, for making the popular “Robespic and in still more elaborate de signs and wider widths for draping evening gowns and ¢” collars, party dresses, Other favored laces are Carrick Macross, Point Lierre, Duchess, Irish Crochet, Cluny, Ratine, Macrame, Chantilly, Point de Paris, Normandy, Torchon, Oriental, Valenciennes, Mechlin and Maltese, at prices from 5c up to $12.50 a yard. Nor have we forgette for here are seme =ple: bey underpriced. of course. 15¢ AND 20c BANDS 5c All New and Pretty to give you haraatas, lines we were able te we sell them the same wey, Colored Floss ds in widths up to 3% Inches, & ction of staple colors in mat en worth Ibe to 200 a yard, will go at be a Linen and cotton i lk ties, Chine Lines to. 0 te. | 0.2: cabins Wades baa cael Torchen Lace All linen Cluny Lace Edges with » To Vdeos bands to match. Widtha wp te 6 inches o mate up to 3 Many pretty floral designs to pick , design: among. Worth S0c a yard, sale price scalloped edges at bo & Be. 50c and 75c Allover 18-in. Laces, yd. | with strong yard. 15c and 20c Cotton Cluny Laces, yd. White Shadow and Oriental Allover Cotton Cluny Wash Lace Edges with 1 Laces, full 18 inches wide. Have a ban to mateh. Come in white, cream sompftioral and scroil patterns, Won anda ap to 4% inches, As ~ ter any pretty at 39¢ a yard, value Se sorted orth up te 2 a * and yard. 15¢ and 25c Silk Braids Priced a “ 25c and 35c Fancy Laces Priced yd. Silk Trimming Braids fn black Fancy Trimming Laces in white white, colors and colored pinations. | cream and ecru, widths up to 4% Assorted widths in straight and Inches, Newest lew in floral and Tegular edges, Worth i5e ar | conventional designs, worth 2¢ and Ihe 6%e « yard @ yard. 75c¢-98c Ratine and Macrame Laces | 50c and 65c Oriental Laces Marked to 98e yard 19¢ @ yard DOMESTIC SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY BUYERS STRIPED PONGEE | OUTING FLANNEL NURSES’ GINGHAM~| 7c CALICOES IN WORTH 15c¢ FOR WORTH 7c A YD, WORTH 10¢ A YD. 26INCH WIDTH —t10e Yd— —4e Yd.— —ée Yd— —Se Yd.— Striped Pongee, 32 ards of Calleoes inches wide, full bolts wide, | wide, medium for waists, dresses, ¢, lengthe to 20 | Jea in neat patterns, shirts or pajamas | Basement. A TIMELY SALE OF HOUSE CLEANING NEEDS 35c Feather Dusters 28c| 50c Parlor Brooms 33c | 35¢ Calcimine 27c pkg. The “Witch” Parlor Broome ‘Decorato,” the sanitary calc Ratine and Macrame Lace Edges. | Oriental and Venise Lace Kage and Bands and Points in white, cream and | Bands in white, cream and Arabian, ecru. Assorted widths in openwork | wiath to 6% Inches. Dainty floral floral and conventional pat *, worth | designs with strong worked edges | Outing Flannel, 2 Glog Inches wide, in lengths to 20 yards. Not over | 15 yards to each 14-inch standard Feather Dus-| ters filled with win, Td tati| M@ht welght, made from beat | mine, in assorted colors. Comes turkey feathers. Suc kind at 28 Eastern broom corn. 60¢ kind at | in 6 ound packages at 270 in each | 336 each | stead of abe 15c Mop Sticks at 9c ea. | 25c Liquid Veneer 17c Good strong Mop Sticks with | 4-ounce bottles of Liquid Ve spring head, Will be yours to-|neer Furniture Polish. Maken | | 15c Scrub Brushes at 10c! Well made fiber Scrub Brushes | with hardwood backs. 1c kind, strong and durable, that will be youry at Ie each | 25c Stove Brushes at 15¢| Good sized Stove Brush With good briaties. | Th morrow at $c instead of 15¢ old things like new bottles at 17 ||25¢ Dustless Cloths 19¢ —FR mew lack Beauty Dust Cloths, ab While they last Thursday we 125 Du Pan. iy that will gi will give away 1,000 samples of | | ‘Sc Dust Pans at ‘Se tong each || Jap-a-lac. Only one to a cus-| | | Me $1.50 Wool ool Sponges 98¢| Fomor, 90 al imey perior quailty] | 26 Dans that are very « Good size Wool! | of this Jap-a-lac | ibe each, atisfaction at 15¢| Sponges: oy 4 § Sorcha oneal | $1.50 Stepladder Chair kind 98¢. 5°) 966 Varnish 19c a Can 98c Dries Good for all wood or metal } Golding Stepladder Chairs, one of the handieat articles around Applied with a cloth ac Water Pails at 16¢) 2.27 sx” hours ronises Iron Wa ater, Pais, yemes surfaces, the house $1.50 chairs at, 9% je kind, strong and durable. | ~ ie “Complete Line of $1.25 Curt: myer size at 16c each $2 Superior Paints $1.69 Jap-a-lac 4 98c carry a complete line of | “Home-Kissed” Adjustable Cur vanized Stretchers “Superior” Ready Mixed Paints We for inside and outside work, $2] Jap-n-lac. Will give satisfaction. | tain Strete with nickel plated kind that painters lke, at $1.69 4 pint cans 1 pint cans brass pins that will not rust. 98 a gation pint 45c, quart & | each, FROM 9 TO 11 A. M. ONLY, NO PHONE ORDERS Fels Naptha Soap Priced Bar | Ferris Goods Worth to $3.00 Fels Naptha Soa a bar from 9 Ferris Waists, Maternity Walsta, Ab On sale from, sale on the to 11 a. m. only, on Thursday. Not over 3e | dominal Supports and combined; worth to $4 § 11 a.m, at 49e, On DEMONSTRATION OF THE POPULAR “NEMO” CORSETS—SECOND FLOOR. MARCHE sale on the Fourth Floor. ONE ENTIRE BLOCK ON SECOND AVENUE FROM PIKE STREET TO UNION STREET in| Ought to be ashamed, an able-bodied young man like you, going around | and in St lerack at every | With the jot beer falling apparently from the | clouds, several citixens of Muskogee | | Mary lout of that window by the bucket | had made « night raid on the Paul today, partiewlarly jattacked what he declared was the |plan of the progressive onuididate re, control of the trusts Of Roosevelt's characteristies he jeaid “Some people think it i# progres- | nive to take the bit in their teeth land bolt, or to conduct themselves as if at a Donnybrook fair, taking & head that shows. They seem to think that progres ism is a matter of speed and It does not matter how fast you are traveling--whether you are RAIN OF BEER CHEERS an industrial comm charge of them a progressive depends on the diree tion in which you are going. Referring to the trusts, said “There is which this campaign turns, That b the proposition that monopoly ts in | If monopoly is Inevitable, then the thing to do ts to evitable, I deny it If monopoly is not tm evitable, the thing to do is to break it up and to prevent it from forming again, It is my honest opinion that monopoly can be broken up. 1 un derstand the third party leaders start with the proposition that mo nopolies are inevitable, and that the beet that can be done is to establish aaion This I deny FS MEN OF THIRSTY TOWN: MUSKOGER, Okla, contents of Sept. 14 9,600 bottles were able to quench their thrist ful,” shouted a South Side man, as| he ecized a water bucket and start ed for a near-by cold-storage plant Prohibition enforcement Officers place. As the news of what was going on spread over South The officers—federal officers had found 80 barrels of beer in bot Subscribers to The Seattle Star will confer « favor by notifying this office at once of any fall- Ure to secure prompt at : wlar any very of the ar it ie the dest Management to secure the best service for ali, and complaints ere given courteous and prompt attention If your paper fr night by at once 400 the Cirewiation Dewartmemts A scholarship is open at thedi/ni- versity of Pennsylvania for some stadent of the Northwest, Jack Paul Hart, who w awarded) the scholarship last year by the alumat of old Penn, ls wnadle to returnethis year. Dr. Walter Kelton has @een appointed to recelve the applica tions of candida ‘The first of the fall meetings of the Seattle Presbyterians was.deld at the Westminster churchidast night, Rev. N. B. Harrison speak ing en “Our World Debt.” This afternoon the women of the pres bytery are holding a reception) for} Dr. and Mrs, Mylrea, medical anis sionaries to Arabia Senator Jonathan Bourne, jr.. of Oregon, spent a few hours here yee terday afternoon. He tisfaction with the success of his reels post law in congress. D. P. Slater was yesterday charg- ed with grand larceny in the sum of $70.60. He is said to have ap- propriated that amount of money from his employer, D. B A pipe organ recital was given in the First Presbyterian church last night by Gatty Sellars, an organ ist well known in England, He will give another tonight, The Ladies’ Aid society of the Immanuel Baptist church will give an entertainment and social at the church Friday evening, September 20, SACRAMENTO, Sept. 18.—Diog enes may cease his search—an hon est man has been found. Dr. Wm Snow of Sacramento, touring Europe for the state board of health, has had his expense account approved. One day in London cost him 40 cents, another cents. Portiand, Or.—Police noticed the peculiarity of cream at Steve Alex’ restaurant, They went in, drank two pitchers of “cream,” got a jag an and arrested Alex for selling whisky with the breakfasts. Sunday morning St. Louis, Mo.—Governor Mar- shali, of Indiana, democratic candi date for the vice presidency, ad dressed the City club at noon here today. St. Paul, Minn—Returns today show Gov, Eberhardt was renomi nated for governor yesterday. The democrats nominated P, M Ringdal for governor Hangs Himself With Lasso TERVILLE, Ia., Sept. 18 Seetomaing Wild West acts depleted on the show billboards, the 11-year-old son of J. J. Hat- ahan accidentally hanged bim. self with a lasso in a tree near his home. The body was found there after an all-night search, | —p- a | TIRED OF HIS HU | FORT WORTH, Tex,, Sept. PBecause, she says, her husband hug: | ged her too much, Mrs, Laura Sea |man has brought suit for divarce | from Arthur Seaman, to whomyhe was married July 10, last. Mrs. Sea man says that her husband showed anger when she asked him to quit | hugging her, “Grab the dish pan and come on,| of the building they are throwing cold beer| corps of cork pullers emptied from} thrown out sireet below Wash bollers, water buckets, dish | | pans and every Muskogee the, |erowd quickly grew in numbers | foaming and splashing from the ond story window of the | plant YOU'LL FIND IT HERE News of the Day Condensed for Busy People expressed | Meliride. | |ped a handful total of 9,600 bottles, wtroying it the botties must be The beer was in th The officers and began work. Th the botth ts and then window the other that could be utilized were br into pre to cateh the beer as tt "or NO_TOUCH Jones—Could you I'm a little short, Smith—-I'm married, too. EXIT BRUIN BY BERTON BRALEY T'm not averse to ragtime talk; In fact, I'm pretty strong for slang. It's mighty hard to make me balk At any guff from any gang I'll stand for “beat it" and “good night,” And “marble heart” and “frosty stare,” j And that old has-been, “out of sight” dl But I won't stand for “It's a/ bear! I tle no can to “candy kid,” 1 don't mind “scream” or erine”; To speak of any bat as “lid” Affects me not with any spleen. “Backed off the walk” or “to the woods,” In no way make me want to swear; I don't protest at “that's the goods,” But I won't stand for “It's aj| bear!” I'd like to bump that silly phrase and further} Clean off the earth, etill; I'd like to knock it seven ways. To shoot St, flay it, slay and kill. | I fall for slang and like it fine No highbrow attitude I wear; Pure classic English—nix for mine! But I won't stand for “It's a bear!” ROOSEVELT WILL TESTIFY OCT. 1 WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Pro- gressive National Committeeman Frank Hogan telegraphed today to the senate committee, which ts in- vestigating campaign “contributions | that Col. Roosevelt will testify be-| fore the committee Dog Eats Money, Its Proud Owner Claims DANVILLE, Ky., Sept. 18.—Peck Manning possesses a water spaniel dog that is attracting considerable attention on account of its appetite for money, The dog’ favorite diet is one-cent pieces. Iv will swallow one copper after another, as fast.as they are fed to him, and ft is claim: ed the spaniel has frequently eaten as many as 26 pennies In one per: forman The appetite of the dog for money was discovered when a man drop- floor. a dollar's worth, Wilson one proposition upon to take} and} The federal law | forbids the breaking of bottles when | | beer is found uncorked and the beer poured out cond atory | got a] into the} receptacte | storage | lend me $57 | “peach- | here October 1, | ! Women’s Cotton Velour Morning Sacques at! of change on the Kefore he could gather the money, the dog had devoured about | | Aprons, Special 8c a: 18¢. 3 Frederick & Nelson ae i i BASEMENT SALESROOM | Handsome Trimmed Felt and Velvet} Special, ($2. IFTY attractive Hats in Velvets and Felts, fea :turing a good el : F desirable shapes, tastefully trimmed in feather fancies gum Special values at $2.85. and ornaments Values From Popular Untrimmed Millinery Velvet, Beaver, Moire Silk Shapes in a large assortment of the latest effects; unusual values at Pe up to $3.95. Extra-good values season's fashionable in Ostrich Ph ’ ing—including and handsome two-tone effegts, iat git and up to $9.50. ie A wide variety of new rayne in Aigrette, Wig : and Flower Trimmings at 45c and up tot | casement teal white tn APP 3,500 Pairs of Women’s “Hose ‘Lisle, Mercerized Cotton and Cotton Cuba . Special, 18¢ Pair MERCERIZED COTTON HOSIERY— | BLACK COTTON HOSIERY— Black Hosiery in gauze Full-fashioned with 4-inch double mercerized Black Cotton’ weight, seamless style, tops and spliced finen heels and toes. Spe- | ond qualities in medium weight, cial, 18¢ pair | heels, soles and toes, Special FANCY LISLE HOSIERY— : Full-fashioned Hosiery in black, white, tan and navy with polka-dots dmg Reinforced with high spliced heels, double soles and toes, Special, colors Cotton Suitings and Apron G Special 5c Yard VER 4,000 yards in this attractive Suitings in cadet-blue, brown and wine-c and diagonal designs, copied from fine woolen materials; Cotton Dress Fe and dark blue grounds with characteristic foulard figures ; short lengths of fast blue Apron Ginghams in checks of all sizes. selling—including good lor suiting checks and h rhursday An unusual opportunity to save in making selections for children's washable school dresses and women’s house garments: —at S¢ yard. Children’s 4 Galatea School D $1.25 MAT, practical models, as” illustrated, of g Galatea cloth in novelty-stripe design, made ect and trimmed with tailor bands, buttonsa contrasting color. The material is in navy-bluey Copenhagen-blue. . Sizes 6 to 14 years, Interesting value at $1.25. collar ¢ Lingerie Waists, Sp CLEARANCE of Dutch-neck models in Fre Mull Waists, designed with short sleeves trimmed with laces, insertions and medallions. 200 Pairs of Good Lace C Scotch, Cable-Net and Other Popular Wea Special $1.50 Pair A VERY attractive Thursday offering from the Basement Drapery Section, every pair pairs of Curtains in all, and all good, substantial weaves long. Included in the assortment will be found plain center styles with effective border designs, also allover patterns im conventional and floral effects. Many are in reproductions of fine-old laces. Cream and ecru color. Featured for Thursday at a specially-low figure—the pair, bees i Fall Displays of Wool Suiting Ma Include the Following Attractive Values . $1.25 54-inch Cheviot in medium and dark navy- 54-inch Cream Homespun _blue, extra heavy weight, $1.25 yard. blue stripe, $1.25 yard. 54-inch Storm Serge, navy-blue, black and | — $4-inch Cheviots and Serges i brown; good weight ; $1.25 yard. | pagne and cream; desirable for | 54-inch Diagonal Cheviot in combination | wraps; $1.25 yard heavy quality; $1.2: 54-inch Black Storm Serge with pi | of white, $1.25 yard. §2-inch extra-heavy Navy-blue Diagonal Homespun, $1.25 yard. LINING SATIN, 75c Yard black and wistaria; De atin Coat Lining, inD ard, —Rasement Ns Thirty-six-inch Suskana S light- and dark-gray, brown and light-tan; y Pretty Cotton Velour Sacques, designed with loosé, tucked front and adjust and trimmed with stitched bands of satin, Excellent | Colorings are gray and white, tan and rose, lavender and white. }] $1.00, i Gingham Hubbard Blue and white check Amoskeag gingham) and well-finished ; trimmed with ruffle at bottom,

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