Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A SAN a a Sal 4 eadiaaa All the Remaining Summer Suits AND COATS WILL BE SWEPT OUT OF THE BON MARCHE TOMORROW AT. Every Summer Coat and Suit is Included —Not a Single One Reserved— For the Semi-Annual disposal is on us again in the garment section, and all the and coats will be sold at exactly one-half t remaining su moderate prices So that you can tell just exactly what print below a complete roster of the sizes we have left mmer suits heir former is here, we garments and the | These Summer ‘Suits for Half : brown ‘Three $2 All Woot Diack size 42, one tan stze one 46 ack serge, strictly ‘4 and 45, at of black serge with no sizes 38, 40 and 42 tatlored, sizes 4 ‘Three $29.50 8 Ing and vest « away style. site 4 One $35 Suit of tan Hedford with novel: ty vest effect; size 35, at Ome 835.00 Suit in tan two-button eut away Redford, size 40, at Twe $39.50 Suits, tan ratine, Empire style: one sixe 34, one aize 36, at ar $39.50 si le; tans: st ® * 14, 34 and 36, ecru size 14, at One &19.50 jt of black wide wale t diagonal 5 y, size 36, a! s10.50 tof black and white ne 40, at ratine, whip cord, ‘$43.00 wine 24, at fan black and at f brown Ottoman silk, size 34, at of navy biue slik Ben- It: size 34, at s with s heavy navy blue silk ity tan Bengaline, 34, at . 50e MIDDY BLOUSES AT 35c White Linene Middy Blouses made with blue square sailor collar and cuffs with striped band | eet ~( dozen in the lot in Junior sizes, at 350 | é9¢ NORFOLK MIDDIES AT 48¢ Well made waists in the Norfolk midoy style made of linene with white striped cuffs and collars. 20 dozen in the lot in misses’ sizes, at 48e each. 98¢ TAILORED WAISTS AT 69¢ Neat Tailored Walsts made of linen with Gibson plaits, Robespterre colli and shirt front with pocket and long sleeves with cuffs, priced at 69e. UNTIL 11 O’CLOCK A. M. These Bargains on sale from 9 to 11 a. m. only—No Telephone orders accepted. 50c PRESIDENT SUSPENDERS 25¢ Genuine President Suspenders in light, medium or heavy weigh:; extra or regular length. 25¢ till 11 a m. Main Floor. 20c TABLE OIL CLOTH 10c YARD Sample pieces of Fife Table Oil Cloth, slightly imperfect, but none to hurt; till 11 a m., 10¢ yard. Third Floor. 25¢ HANDKERCHIEFS 15¢ EACH Women's All Pure Linen Initial Handkerchiefs with embroidered de- signs around initial; till 11 a. m., 15¢, Main Floor. 29¢ JELLY GLASSES 17¢ DOZEN New squat shape Jelly Glasses with tin tops; G-ounce size. Not over 2 dozen to each. Till 11 a. m., 17e, None delivered. Lower Main Floor. Going OUTFIT NEW ALASKA GOLD FIELDS OUTFIT AT The Bon Marehe AND YOU WILL [ These Summer Coats for Half | | ty plaids, 0. three length rating, tan elses 36 and 40, grays 88 and diac ; one sine 34, one 40 0.50 Cor draped on. - a4. aiken style nine 40, black and wh trimmed; atx and 4 at Two 822.50 Coats of brocaded Maltese | 26 Inches long, ales 34 and 14. at Two 824.50 Co: & length, on ° lined; light Two 934. striped, satin lined 0 Coats, full length, white wines 34 and a6, One $24.50 Cont, black and white checks, satin ined. at brocaded satin Corn S4 green 43, of slik motre, idl style: ne 98, two aize 40, 12 25 . at ‘Twe $24.50 Coats, 40 Inches long of white bas Ket weave; sizes 36 and 40, UGUST SALE OF WHITE Pretty, Attractive 79¢ White Waists | of Lawn, Voile or Madras, Special --at 50¢-- A host of different style walsts worth 79, have been priced at 60c for Tuesday. They are made of lawn, votle or madras In white or dainty colora with high or Dutch necks trimmed with lace or embroidery, many with collar, cuffs and front embroidered. $1.25 NEW WAISTS AT 98e Lingerle and Tailored Walsta with fine pin tucks, long sleeves and tailored collars and cuffa. Others of voile with low necks and long or short sleeves. $2.50 TO $2.75 WAISTS $1.98 Waists with low or high necks, lingerie mod- “ls in white, some with turnover collars and cuffs of Hght blue or rose, and the strictly tatlored madras waists, 98¢ LINGERIE WAISTS AT 79¢ Fresh and dainty are these waists of voile, lawn, mull or French twilis with aquare and V shaped necks, trimmed with lace and insertion. | ond Floor. DRAPERY ECONOMIES In for day Tuesday—giad to take Telephone Orders for any of them. 20¢ CURTAIN SCRIM 15¢ YAR) Printed Curtain Secrim, some plain, others figured; full 36 inches wide in pretty colors, at 1Sc a yard Tuesday. 10c CURTAIN SWISS 6 1-4c YARD 6%e a yard for Swiss Muslin, in mill enda ranging from 1 to 10 yards long; makes neat sash or long cutrains. 12 1-2c FIGURED DENIM 10c YD. Fine quality figured Denim tn Ort. ental and conventional patterns with rich color combinations, 10c yard. 59c BUNGALOW NETS 45¢ A YD. Nottingham weave Bungalow Nets in madras, Brussels, filet and point (Esprit effects; 40 and 45 inches wide —Third Floor. to the FOR LESS Another Big “Bargain Tuesday” in the Grocery Kingsford’s Gives wd 99¢ Need Peaches, California sliced peaches; ihe grade, aise, best quailty, tent stopper, bottle stra Large Prunes, latest crop, ibe grade; Tuesday ellow: rt teed fresh stock; mak fol breakfast dish; one of the best brands 18 Lbs. PURE CANE SUGAR FOR —ie— Pe Groceries — Not Pig Feet, medium size, best qual ity, about 3 to a pound pound p Meet, spiondia quality. ‘all overnment in Queen 0) 20c medium size Mekled regular price, 30c Ontons, 10 pound sac brands; guaranteed not to cake When accompanied with ack 1Ic $1.00 order for other able Plume, large size No. 2% good” quality plume in Mght syrup, cans California 6 Including sugar can 9c |’ Homestead 1 square tins; Aq from Swift's premium nd the pur- or flour. Bia Seed, x wood mixture ot can with a plece of ic LOAVES est Mayonnaise, poun Orange Marmalade, in bulk, best | 3 quality; none delivered; | Cherries Del Monte Your choice very finest te. packed; 7c, 0, S50 and 15¢ | an wate, Sinoked Boneless Herring, a)! _se- lected fish; all solid meat; | German rye, 1 pound boxes .. 2 I” Vacaalebemarelelone UNION sTREWT. BREAD 25¢. ham, bran, plain rye, sweet rye, AECOND AVENUK——iIK BON MARCHE fen 3 10c Wild Cherry Pho: maker a of white raisin, ntful a rrariek: aa summer drink whole wheat, Gra- aC full ‘quart’ Hottier 29c —Fourth Floor. sTrhenr FROGS, TREBLE AND BASS, HOP THROUGH OREGON TOWN * KLAMATH 11.—Froga, bi Jand t pauneby, yed | bull frogs and striped little acrobats who were tadpoles | Mast spring, invaded this city, hop. ping — solemnly nd earnestly! The through the streets, on their way|came, It made no difference to from Lake Ewauna to upper|the frogs. They continued to hep Klamath Lake. Not all of them ar-|stolidly each year over cobbles and rived there, for they are excellent roUgh dust and across trout bait and all the anglers who regardless of men and could possibly take a day off made later, of automobiles }the most of the supply V {mpul r signal determines From time immemorial the|the migration is unknown, Ap frogs have made thin annual mi-| parently the army has no leader gration at this same season, from|and it does no foraging on the | the lower to the upper lake. They | mare h FALLS, ee] mua follow the waterway con ble| necting the two If they chomp but yld| nobody known when they OV ered an overland crosseut three miles long and ever since they stuck to It fields vanished and the city asphalt, t macadaim SULZER DENIES ALL CHARGES | ALBANY, N. is facing Impeachment proceedings, and posstb! of perjury or vio lation of the corrupt practie act following statement 1 deny that I used any campaign contributions for personal Y., Aug. 11.—Gov, Sulzer, whe indictment on the charge this morning made the ue “I deny that I speculated tn Wall street or used money contrib uted for © ign purposes to buy stocks, either in my own name or otherwis I never had an account with Fuller & Gray or Boyer & Gris wold, I never heard of these firms; I do not know the and know nothing about the transactions with these firms committee until recently and » alleged transactions were brought to my attenth ley committee stock matter with Harris & Fuller was not a speculative account or matter, but a loan made upon stock as collateral, which stock had been acquired and paid for years before my nomination for the office of governor, and from other sources than Harris & Puller, “Certain checks given me for campaign purposes were depontt ed to my personal ac nt, and thereafter | paid the amount of said checks to my campaign committee “In filing my statement of receipts and disbursements with the secretary of state, I relied on information furnished me by the persons in {mmediate charge of my campaign, and tn whom I had and have the most implicit confidence, and | belleve the statement _furnished by them to me to ) be accurate and true. EMMA GOLDMAN IS IN TOWN Emma Goldman, the famous anarchist lecturer, arrived from Portland this morning, and is stopping at the Butler hotel | Miss Goldman, who is known as “Queen of the Reds,” will deliver two lectures in Seattle, Monday and Tuesday nights, at the Pinoish so j claliet hall, Madison and Sist av i “We have experienced at difficulty in securing halls,” said Her |man Michaclovitch, Miss iman's advance agent, today, “but we are trying to arrange for lectures for the whole week. It in strange that even so-called revolutionists have turned us down. The so-called ‘yellow’ sociallats are among these. Miss Goldman will speak on “The Peychology of Anarchiem and Ita Spiritual Significance” tonight. Tomorrow her address will be on f'The Modern Drama; Its Social and Educational Value Dr. Ben Reitman, Miss Goldman's manager, and Michaelovitch were arrested Saturday for distributing announcements of her lectures with out a license, They deposited $5 ball each, and this morning asked for | @ continuance of thelr trials ASK REMOVAL OF REGENTS Resolutions were adopted by the Seattle Free Speech Ie ganized at the Labor temple Sunday, asking Gov. Lister to rescind the order of the board of regents against free speech on the University campus, and for the removal of the regents from office, “to the end that | the campus be not made the scene of riot or forcible disturbance, due jto efforts of Seattle citizens to secure and maintain their fundamental nd constitutional rights.” The resolutions also ask the mayor to investigate the conduct of | the park board in removing the benches from the muste ball, where the | I Open Forum had been held The board is charged with “direct action tactics” tn eprinkling the benches outside. | A. J. Allon was selected president of the league; W. FP. Johnson, sec- | |retary, and Mrs. A. 8. Walker, treasurer, Speeches were made by Glenn Hoover, Sam Sadler, Millard Price, M. J. Kennedy, G. N. Hodg- don, J. F. Cronin, Walter M. Tharber and Hen Reitman THREE DIE IN FAMILY ROW | VIENNA, Aug. 11.—Dispatches here give details of a dexperate | double duel with knives, resulting in the death of two of the princtpals, in the Galician village of Balkonya There had long been a feud between the families of Michael Pa | welka and Rudolph Weuzel, and when the men chanced to meet on the street they quarreled, and soon began attacking each other with knives. Their wives, similarly armed, quickly arrived on the scene and jumped into the fray. Fran Weuzel stabbed Pawelka in the heart, and the lat | ter’s wife, extracting the weapon from her husband's corpse, made a furious rush at Weuzel, stabbing him to death, Then the two widows | attacked each other, and at the third clash Frau Pawelka fell uncon | scious at her rival's feet. She was removed to a hospital, where she is |now reported to be dying, and Frau Weuzel, who escaped with minor injuries, was arrested BARCELONA, Aug. 11.—The waiters at one of the most fashion able cafes here won a strike by unique means. When the management refused to accede to their demands they walked out, and their places were quickly filled by strikebreakers. Shortly before the dinner hour, when ntly dressed customers usually begin to arrive, the establish |ment was invaded by a horde of coal heavers, beotblacks, chimney | sweeps and other types of day laborers, clad in thei~ working clothes, who occupied all the available places at the tables and proceeded to order meals, the price of which had been provided by the strikers The manager, in a frenzy, sought the police, but the authorities de- | clined to Interfere so long as the unwelcome customers behaved them. selves and paid for what they ate, Finally, in despair, the manager or dered the place closed, but as the same tactics were followed the next day, he was forced to capitulate, and the strikers were reinstated on | their own terms BILLY SUNDAY SHEDS HIS COAT PORTLAND, Avg. 11.—By appearing in the pulpit of the White Temple Baptist church In shirt sleeves and collarless, Billy Sunday, noted evangelist and former major league baseball star, has set a fash fon not likely to be followed by the local divines, Sunday, tn his ser- mon, which was to men only, he told them of 57 ways, more or less, that! ‘Chickens Come Home to Roost.” | Incidentally, “Billy” picks the New York Giants to win the National league pennant, and says {t's heads and tails between Philadelphia and | Cleveland in the American CANAL READY IN OCTOBER WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—Vessels of Nght draught may | through the Panama canal within a few days after the | the Gamboa dike, on October 10 next | ready for shipping of all Classen. | This is the report that comes to Washington from the cana! zone Fifteen dredges, with a monthly capacity of 1,500,000 cuble yards, will | be flonted into the cut as #oon as the Gamboa dike is dynamited. QUEER THINGS DO HAPPEN While Andrew Muller was picnicking in New York, a soda water| bottle exploded, severing an artery in his leg. Miss Elizabeth Mbntag tied one of her stockings around the wound and saved his life Kaiser Wilhelm, commenting on the sorry parts played by the Bal- kan kings in the war, 1s quoted as saying that King Constantine was best [ of all, while the rest “stayed home and combed thelr dogs.” If the London underwritere do not veto the project, 12 of the biggest transatlantic liners may soon provide their passengers with the “movies, along with squash courts and Pompeltan rooms, A Paris policeman found a viscount wrapped In a blanket, sleeping, told him to move on, but apologised when he showed his card, | When Chauncey M. Depew tried to enter the Villa des Fleures, at Aix les Bains, his way was blocked until somebody whispered ex citedly that he was “the second president of the United States.” The first Ghinese bigamy trial instigated by the new Chinese) Woman Suffrage society resulted in Wu Chan Tse being sentenced to | 8° days’ imprisonment, pass | blowing up of In December the canal will be WIN STRIKE BY UNIQUE MEANS | FREDERICK & NELSO Store Opens at 8:30---Clo at 5:30 Daily Fumed Oak Library Table, $20.00 SPECIALLY this _ well-built Library Table, mad oak in a rich fumed finish with one large drawer and four smaller ones. Size of top, 28x42 inches. Dull metal trimmings. An ideal table for use in small apartments. Exceptional value ay $20.00. low price for Mission-style from selected fitted Third Floor. Women’s New Tailored Suits, $18.50 +, NTERESTING advance a Autumn in Women’s Tailor fancy Eponge, heavy Serge, Be rrivals for ed Suits of dford Cord and Bourette novelties, in brown, navy-blue, gray, Copenhagen-blue, black colorings. Coats are modified cutaway styles, anc piece models, finished with girdle. Sizes, The tailoring and materials in these attractiveness of mark $18.50. the styles, values at them as and mixed d skirts in 34 to 44 Suits, with the excellent New Autumn Coats $8.75 to $18.50 smartly tailored in the three-quarter models, from Plushes, Astrachan Pebble-Cheviot black and mixtures Cloth, Colors include gray, tan, and fullltlength and navy, Zibeline brown, Axminster Rugs, Special $2.35 VERY low price quoted to sell qui ment of small Axminster Rugs, siz Choice $2.35. all in floral patterns. ckly an assort- ¢ 36x72 inches, Second Fivor, Women’s Sample Hosiery, Special 19c Pair ANY styles of Hosiery to select from in this lot, including Plain Black Lisle, Lace-boot Lisle, Embroidered Lisle, Col- ored Lisle and Silk-boot. 19¢c pair. Broken sizes. for clearance, Basement Salceroom Special, An Advance Selling of Blankets at Attractive Prices T HE new purchases of Blankets for the Fall and Winter season are now featured for display, and this is made the occasion for offering some especially interesting values in Cotton, Wool-mixed and pure Wool Blankets in selected qualities from some of the best mills in the country. COTTON BLANKETS, $2.35 PAIR Heavy Cotton Blankets, white and soft grays, bound with 2-inch ribbon on border; size 66x80, special $2.35 pair WOOLNAP COTTON PLAID BLANKETS, $2.45 PAIR— Blankets blue and white, tan come in gray white, and white or pink and white plaids, size 66x80 Spe- These serviceable and inches, with neatly overcast edges. cial $2.45 pair. WOOL-MIXED BLANKETS, $3.85 PAIR— Wool-and-Cotton dou- gray Spe- Blankets, large ble-bed size, 70x80 inches, soft steel color, bound with 3-inch silk ribbon, cial $3.85 pair WHITE WOOL-MIXED BLANKETS, $3.85 PAIR— Wool-and-Cotton Blankets, size 66x80, white with pinkor blue border and 3-inch silk ribbon binding. Special $3.85 pair. —First Floor. WOOL-MIXED GRAY BLANKETS, $4.35 PAIR— Closely-woven Wool-mixed Gray Blan- kets, size 70x80 inches, also Heavy All- white Blankets, 72x82 inches. Special $4.35 pair. ALL-WOOL WHITE BLANKETS, $6.85 PAIR— All-wool White Blankets, size 70x80, with overcast edges and pink or blue striped border. Special $6.85 pair. PLAID WOOL BLANKETS, $4.65 PAIR— Fully 75 per cent wool and weigh 4% pounds to the pair. Block patterned plaids with combination border in pink, blue, tan or gray. Size 66x80 inches. Special $4.65 pair ALL-WOOL $5.00 PAIR All-wool Blankets in attractive broken plaid patterns of pink, blue, tan or gray. Size 66x80 inches. Special $5.00 pair. PLAID BLANKETS, The ‘Regal Quality” Range Sa “Regal Quality” Range meets the a well-built, handsome and thoroughly range at a moderate price. The top is of polished steel; the bod ville steel, and the flues are asbestos lined The base is the new sanitary style, as pic demand for efficient y of Wells- throughout. tured, Price, complete with water connections: Fourteen-inch oven, $40.00, Sixteen-inch oven, $42.00. Fighteen-inch oven, $44.00, —Third Poor