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p T ~ AT THE BON MARCHE TOMORROW A Wealth of Saturday Economies in Warm Weather ‘‘Needfuls” and Summer Wearables VACATION SHOES FOR BUSY LITTLE FEET Shoes that will stand up under hard holiday wear— shoes that will be cool enough that cost too much—here Mar ¢ Shop. Hadn't dren here te »rrow and have $1.65 SCUFFER SLIPPERS $1.25 pr. — Ghuitrak's: Beatie Minoan Women’s tan Oxfords, tn te tan or black, sizes § to 11, button or lace style, with regular $1.65 value that will ee te an or wear splendidly, priced Sat shapes. Regular $3.00 and $5.50 value that will sell at urday $1.25 a pair. CHILDREN’S $1 SHOES SATURDAY at 59c | a pair. and the Bon > chil 1 r days $3 and $3.50 OXFORDS — $2.00 pr. — BOYS’ $2. .50 SHOES SATURDAY FOR $2 | Children’s regular $1 quality Shoes, in either Patent or gunmetal Shoes in button or blucher e : , good we! ole eo good wearing patent or kid, with fancy tops, turn sole atyles, with good it soles, the good wring i kind; sizes 1 to 6%, $2.60 value, Saturday at $2 sizes 2 to 5. Special for Saturday at 6 CHILDREN’S $1.50 TAN SLIPPERS AT 95¢ turn sole and ankle the season at $1.60. rs, with Chilren’s tan 5 strap. This quality On sale Saturday at sold al a patr. WOMEN’S UNION SUITS AT 75¢ Three-piece Union Suits, made of fine quality pure white, hard twisted lisle thread, with low necks, no sleeves, cuff knee or lace knee. Sizes 34 to 44. Women’s Underwear 25c Each Women’s summer weight fine rib bed Cotton Vests, shaped at the waist with long or short sleeves and high neck or low neck and no sleeves, Pants to match. Sizes 34 to 44 je per patr. CHILDREN’S ROMAN SANDALS at 9c PR. | Chilren’s Roman Sandals with colored tops, very strong and durable; a good opportunity for getting cool shoes for the hot weather, Negular $1.60 value LONG GLOVES AT 50c Pair “Kayser's” full 16-button or elbow length washable Cham. olsette natural color, 50c patr. Gloves, white Children’s Hose --- 25€ --- “Oynx” fine ribbed and Silk Lisle Stockings, in black, white and colors, at 2 Stzes 5 to 10 terns, at 2 nda dledathch assem ntestanene N ns OeeE SATURDAY SPECIALS IN GLOVES, HOSE AND UNDERWEAR JUST THE THINGS YOU NEED, AT JUST THE PRICE | ; YOU WANT TO PAY: LONG GLOVES AT $1 Pair “Kayver's” heavy “Tricot” silk 16-button length Gloves with double finger tips, in sizes, $1 or SILK HOSE 35¢ or 3 PAIRS $1 Women's Fibre Silk Boot Ho: black, with extra stout double hi and toes, in black, tan and white sizes §% to 10, at 350, or 3 paire $1 5c LACE HOSE AT 35 A PAIR 300 pairs of imported Lace Lisle ‘Thread Hose, tn many beautiful pat with stout double heels and Fast black, at or 3 pairs —Main Floor. fast toes $1.00 SATURDAY IN THE MEN’S STORE—A SALE OF MEN’S SUMMER SHIRTS AT VERY LOW PRICES MEN'S PONGEE AND MADRAS SHIRTS, PLAIN AND STRIPED -98¢ea.- We show 5 lines of Pongee and Madras Shirts, some with mill tary collars attached, others with separate collars, in plain and striped effects and nicely made. Priced at 98c a garment. - Swimming Togs for Men Men's Combination Bathing Suits of plain blue Jersey cloth, 5 ad Cc jen = Combination s of heavy cotton ve . Men's Combination Bathing Suits of wool, tn navy, with colored rived at S9c im $f tment tor 25 A SPLENDID ton trimmed, with Pretty Gingham, Dresses. sleeves, trimmed open all the way down the back GIRLS’ WASH DRESSES 59c EACH Percale or made with low necks with pipings ar tons or colored yokes and cuffs GET A CAMERA—AND $9.00 No. 1 SENECA CAMERAS SIZE 4x5 INCHES, SPECIAL —$6.00 ea.— size 4x5 fitted with Seneca Uno shut- achromatic lens. Made holder or film pack No. 1 Seneca Cameras, inches ter, single to take adapter, at $6, plate Get your Camera Supplies at the Bon Marcne. ing done here, any size roll at 10c, and printing und en larging from your favroite negatives done at very reasonable prices. 25¢ Acid Hypo, 1 pound package at... All work done by experts. 20¢ Developing Trays, 4x5 inches ttachments for Cameras No. 2 A Folding Buster Brown Camera UNION STRERT- Folding Buster Brown Camera and —size Dutch necks Linene short but- lin | | HAVE FUN Leveop- —Main Floor, SECOND AVENUE “CHILDREN’S DAY” GIRLS’ $1.49 WASH DRESSES AT $1.19 For Saturday—Children’s day—we've taken 500 of our popular $1.49 Wash Dresses and repriced them at $1.19. who has been wondering how she was going to find time to make daugh- ter’s summer dresses And these dresses are so prettily made—of fine percale, linene or check gingham—with contrasting pipings—or embroidery and pearl but- set-in Men's Solesette, Crepe Madras and Bedford Madras Shirts $1.49 ea. $1.49 each for 3 lines of Crepe Madras Just genuine Solesette, and Bedford Madras Shirts for men. All have separate collars to match and soft French cuffs; par ticularly well finished. Swimming Togs for Boys Beye’ Co fon Bathing % ae $1.56 ine 25c Boys’ and Slippers, a pair $00 an Royse’ Combiant of navy TBe, 690 and . Ww inners, SPECIAL 3ut good news for the mother sleeves 14 years. pleated skirts and s to GIRLS’ LINENE DRESSES 98c EACH Sizes 6 to 14 years in Dresses of ene, dark blue and tan colorr, open down the side front with scalloped edges around the neck and front. IN TOILET ARTICLES PERFUMES AT 50c AN 0Z. Hanson Jenk’s Perfume, known for the lasting and pleasing fragrance; on sale at 50c an ounce, In the follow- ing odors Lily of the Valley, Arbutus, White Lilac, Heliotrope, White Rose, Honey- suck! Sweet Peas, Wood Violet, Jockey Club, Snow Drop and Bouquet. .29¢ ..10¢ » the 60 the 260 each Tc ¢ and Tar Cough Syrup, 4, the 260 5c Syrup of Pepsin, the S0c #ize 29¢ for cuts and brulses, je Face Powder, the 106 bott rine, Main Floor. PIKH sTRERT HE BRIDGES SAYS HE WILL | _ NAME WOULD-BE BRIBER IF EDITORS ASK HIM TO “At the Commercial Club tonight,” sald Port Commissioner Bridges to The Star today, “I will put It up to the editors of the two papers who have backed the Ayers dea! to say whether or not they want me to | name the man who tried to bribe me with $250,000 worth of stock in the Ayers concern. “Those two editorial boosters for the Ayers scheme know the man, and if they say name him, | will name him, The fight, so far as | am concerned, has only started.” I | | | Bridges’ offer to name his would-be briber follows the “holy horror” | | | outburst of certain Ayers boosters today. The Star yesterday printed | i Bridges’ statement, made at a public meeting, In which he told of the | If | attempt made to Induce him to “lay down" on the public last year and | let the Ayers deal go through ii Now Bridges says he'll name names if the Ayers organs say the | | word, | | | DOCTOR TELLS IN COURT | HOW BRIDE BATHED HIM | AND BIT HIM ON CHEEK “And then Miss Kloss gave me a Harvard In 1888 bath,” related Dr. Philip Rexford Miss Kloss had treated his mother | | ! , ere her | Waughop, who is seeking an annul and was given credit for saving her |i 1 1 1 1 }life. Dr. Waughop subsequently fi | ment of his marriage to Mise Nellie! placed himself in her hands to treat |i Kloss on February 4 last, In Judge|him and cure him of the drug |i Smith's court late Thursda habit. It was then that his reason |i | wh: T” asked | became forked, and he described |ff at did you have on?” asked various fantastic pictures con-|f Attorney Me: jured up by his befuddled mind. | tion Mins Kions gave him doses of | Nothing,” the doctor answered drugs, he said, in which he recog: | | amiably. | nized choral | Here Judge Smith Interrupted. | Talks of “Blond Friend.” 4 | “At thie point,” said the court, “t/ In one of these mental pictures. Ithink it is desirable to adjourn to/the doctor sald he saw himaelf | private chambers. |standing in the at wondering And it was behind closed doors|/who his “blond friend” was, mean jthat Dr. Waughop's bath testimony |ing Miss Kloss, In another, he saw wan taken, The big crowd in the| himself dropping into a hole 2,000 courtroom, the most part of which | feet, and finding no bottom ut |was fominine, was keenly disap-| “I remember there wan some-| | pointed. }thing about a marriage, but did not | Mise Klose at Hie Side. [know what I had to do with {t | Waughop was on the stand most! Someone sald I owed $5. S80 1 pald of the day. He described the #ix/it. The preacher, as I remember, | days of his married life as a “long.|/looked sharply at me. 1 tried to/f interminabl: hazy night during| brace up. |which Mise Kloss was conatantly| “I remember being with a | by hin side. | | “I do not remember once waking up without seeing her beside me, he said. “I remember there waa a marriage and that somehow I was mixed up tn ft, but I did not know |T was marrying Miss Kloss, and had /ing about some famous writer a» |no clear recollection of ‘anything|vining that when people got mar-| until I woke up from this haze and|ried they should write down in| |found my wife biting me on the|biack and white what each should Joheek, telling me how much she! do. | loved me” Fed Him on Eggs. | | This was on February 9, naid the} "I tried to write down in black ldoctor. He then called up Dr. J.jand white what Mise Kloss should |i] |D. O. Powers, and shortly after-|do and what | should do. And ff] ward the annulment proceedings|every time, Miss Kioss would tear) | | were started it up. | } Mother Wanted Him To. “Miss Kloss would feed me erzs | Dr. Waughop spoke in an easy,|in the morning and bromide tn the | | | restaurant party that same day, and next I was standing at the curb! with a blonde. I never proposed to Misa Kloss or made love to her, | as I remember. Once she told me I was married, I remembered read-| |unrestrained, ulleless manner.|afternoon. Then she let off on the) Once, under cross examination, he| bromide, and I began to recover my) leald he married Miss Kloss because | senses. About that time, Miss Kloss! he was of the opinion that his|took me to Butterworth's undertak- | mother wanted him to do so. ing parlors and picked out a coffin! His attorney, Walter Keene,| for my mother, saying she expected quickly interposed the queation: her to die soon I went to my | “Now, doctor, you don’t mean|mother's home in Butterworth's| |that you are of that opinion now?" |auto, and then went to Attorney! et. replied Waughop, “I am/| Keene's office and asked him to get | ff |atill of that opinion.” me out of this meas | | All his life, practically, said Dr./ Wanghop, he had devoted to his The Waughop case was contin ued this morning by Judge Smith jalling mother. The strain on his|to 9:30 Monday morning. No testi. i |nerves caused him to take druga,|mony was taken today on account | jand he has been using oplates|of its betng the regular motion day since his undergraduate days in tn court Seattle Man, Civil War Veteran, Gives $5,000 to Take Comrades to Gettysburg H. C. Henry, capitalist, and veteran of the civil war, who fought at Gettysburg, announced today that he would donate $5,000 neces- sary to complete the fund to take all of the Gettysburg veterans in Washington who have applied, to attend the reunion at the battle- field The state had appropriated $15,000, but 46 more veterans than this would provide for submitted proof that they had fought tn the great battle. A spectal train will take the 164 veterans East, over the Great Northern. GRAND JURY WILL ADJOURN MONDAY The grand Jury will adjourn Mon-|{s the depositary of many confi- Pps dences of public men—the very hte kitottoation Aad locavened highest and most {mportant, self- styled and otherwise, of King coun. ty's political world “Billy's” place is in the Alaska building, and it is a favorite gathering place for those with discriminating taste for Nquid refreshment and political chats. | Consternation was abroad to Judge Ronald late Thursday af. ternoon, when Foreman Ruther: ford appeared in the courtroom and caused the trial of a criminal case to be abruptly halted, while Judge | Ronald hastened to the grand jury when | room | “Billy” Sutherland was subpoenaed | But even this tmportant news|to appear before the grand jury. dwindles into insignificance be-|But today there is joy in the land. | side the explanation of “Bill| “Billy” was only the victim of a| | Sutherland's appearance before the | practical joker, The subpoena was | | probers. a fake, and the probers did not be it known, “Billy” Sutherland, question “Billy.” MOTHERS CAN APPLY FOR PENSIONS ON SATURDAY ee i Because the blank application; giveri 10 days to investigate. ] forms had not come from the print-| | 7 bil alge A founa mert- x orious, the Judge will issue r. juvenile department, has Gesignat-| sioning the mother $15 per month ed Saturday, June 14, as the first |if there fs but one child, under 15, For each ad: | | | | | day when mothers, in needy cir-)depending upon her. cumstances, may apply for pen-|ditional child, the mother is pen- sions under the new law which|sioned $5 per month. The children went into effect Thursday. are required to live with their Since the enactment of the law,!mother at home. |there have been close to 100 moth. “The prime object of the moth- ers who have appeared in Judgelers’ pension law,” sald Judge |Frater’s court to ask for relief, Frater, “is to keep the children un- Héarings under the mothers’|der the direct influence of their ension law will be had in the/mother, if she is a worthy woman, uventle Detention home, on Ninth’ It is intended by the law to elimi ay, and Jefferson st. The mother|nate the necessity of+ separating is required to fill out a blank form, families and causing the children, and notice {8 then given to the) where the mother {s left in desti- prosecuting attorney and the coun:| tute cireumstances, to be placed tn ty commissioners, The latter arg|charitable homes,” SEATTLE STARK : FREDERICK & NELSON Special Values in Women’s Suits, $25.00 An unusually interesting group of Tailored and Trimmed Suits in the finer weaves of Wool Ratine 3edford Cord Eponge | Novelty Stripe Suitings and Serges in latest Spring irable colors, Outer Coats, $19.50, $25.00 and $32.50— the short, hip ratine and ige th and long models. In the lighter-weight in coatings, designed in pl Sleeves in m Shown in an ex- andarin, raglan and set-in styles cellent range of prevailing colors Second Floor. Long White Kid Gloves, Special $1.75 Pair TIMELY special in view of the June occasions when White Gloves are most ap- propriately worn. These Gloves are Glace kid, 16-button length, pique sewed, with Paris point stitch- All sizes. Exceptional value at $1.75 pair. ing Summer Gloves— 16-button Chamoisette Gloves—white and natural color, 50c pair. 16-button Silk Gloves—white, black, navy, pongee, gray, oxblood and brown, $1.00 pair 2-clasp Chamoisette Gloves—in white, natural-color, gray and pongee, 50c pair. First Floor, BASEMENT SALESROOM 1,000 New Silk Petticoats, Five To Sell at $1.95 MANIFESTLY low price for these Silk Petticoats, as will be seen when you inspect the attractive styles, the careful making and the good silk that has been put into them. The silk is a desirable grade of chiffon taffeta. There are five pleasing models; one has deep flounce of tucks and knife-plaiting; another has 8-inch accordion plaited others are trimmed with combined Pretty Models flounce, and plaitings, shirrings and cluster tuckings In black, staple plain colors and rich, dark change- able effects. Specially featured for Saturday at $1.95. —Hasement Balerroon. Women’s Silk Misses’ and Children’s Patent Hosiery, 85c Pair ° Two-Strap Slippers —made on round-toe last, with medium-weight seeders Black Silk Sizes 8% to 11, $1.50 pair; 11% to 2, $1.75 pair; 2% Hosiery, with lisle top $2.00 pair. | tipped in lavender or gold; Misses’ and Children’s One-strap Velvet Pumps, made over a full-toe last, with light-weight | Sizes 8% to 11, $1.75 pair; 1144 to 2, $2.00 pair. | Boys’ Calf Lace Shoes, all solid leather and built to | Sizes 9 to 13, $1.25 pair; 13% to 2, soles. to 6, double sole, 85c pair. extension soles. Women’s Cotton Union Suits, 25c— Women’s Fine-ribbed Cot- ton Union Suits, with tight give good service $2.00 pair Children’s “E-C Skuffer” Play Slippers—in Tan and | or lace-trimmed knee, low Black Calf. Sizes 5 to 8, special 95¢ pair; 8% to 12,] neck and_ sleeveless, 25c. special $1.15 pair; 12% to 2, special $1.25 pair. tra sizes, 35c. Basement Salesroom. —Basoment Salesroom. ° Milla Corsets, 50c, $1.00, $1.25 Style 186, 50c— Serviceable Coutil Corset with medium bust and long skirt, designed for the a age figure. Fitted with two sets of hose supporters and two large hooks below front stay. Trim- embroidery med at top with scallops. (At left.) Style 774, $1.00— A good style for the average figure, made with moderately long skirt and medium bust. Material is strong coutil, trimmed at top with wide em- plain broidery edge Made with draw- string at bust and two sets of hose supporters, (At right.) Style 786, $1.25— An excellent model for the full figure, with low bust and very long skirt, with material extending far below the boning. ‘Two large hooks below front stay hold this unboned material firmly. Made of strong coutil, with three sets of hose supporters attached and embroidery trimming at top. (In center.) Kitchen Wares at Special Prices GRANITE DISH PANS, | STEEL SPIDERS, SPE- GRANITE COOKING KETTLES, SPECIAL 15¢, 20¢ AND 25¢— Gray enamel lipped Ket- tles, with bails, in 1%-, 2- and 3-quart sizes. SPECIAL 40¢— CIAL 30¢ i Dish seamless | Granite Pan of | Nine-inch Spider of hea y en-.| heavy steel, polished inside. gray | amel; ten-quart capacity. Housefurnishings Sectie® Coats are in cutaway » with in or mar ome have large y 1 ve effect k con trasting shade; oth are finished with ¢ ler c nd cuffs and wide satin girdle k are al from 34 to 42, Exceptionally low-price Wash Dresses at $8.75— i plain or figured voiles, with Dutch-neck, s I girdle and peplum effects. Skirts are in pl me tyle Sizes from 34 to 40. iI i]