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SARA aah ae aa ach Sar For the Little Folks-a Bon Marche Sample oa of Children’s Coats AND EVERY ONE A NEW AUTUMN STYLE— only one of a kind—for they are samples of the new fall styles that we secured at half price—after the makers had finished taking their winter orders. CHILDREN’S $8.00 COATS, pretty sam $4. 00 . ples, priced a - $4.25 CHILDREN’S $8.50 COATS, samples, re $4.50 duced to halt, or $5.00 CHILDREN’S $11.00 “SAMPLE $5.50 $6.00 $6.75 posh ie pagthonge $7.00 A SALE OF INFANTS’ SAMPLE DRESSES AT ONE-THIRD LESS special at .. CHILDREN'S $12.00 SAMPLE going at ..... CHILDREN’S $13.50 “SAMPLE priced at . AND LIKE THE SAMPLE COATS amples for the coming season—bought at one- third less—because we ¢ all the man had—and pay him cash for them INFANT'S $3.00 DRESS AND - ae SKIRT SETS priced 2.0 ence a aoe a COATS, COATS, COATS, one of a sort— were able to there is only Infant's 75c Long Dresses, have been reduced to... 50c a ET Abeer | Infant's $1.00 Long Dresses INFANT'S $4.00 are reduce Infant’s $1.50 Short SKIRT SETS priced §O intents 61.80 Ohort S100 | to ..-.ee. eneeeesseeneses 67c $1.50 Long priced at.. $1.00 Marans priced st. 91667 —Second Floor. $5.00 DRESS AND SKIRT SETS _ infants going Infant's $2.00 Short Dresses, special a) Sige | Infant's $2.50 Short intents taesat at... 91,67 | TUESDAY ECONOMIES IN THE DRAPERY STORE Of Vital Interest to Everyone Who symmpowrsnabe Has a Home to Keep Furnished Fo 75¢ WILTON CARPET SAMPLES AT HAR WINDOW SHADES WORTH TO 50¢ ¢ nicely fringed ends, at 69c each Tuesday, Factory clean-up sale of heavy quality Win- dow Shades, 33 and 36 inches wide, 7 feet long, mounted on patent spring rollers; mostly greep and blue. te WHITE TABLE OIL CLOTH 15¢ A YARD 20c Table Of Cloth, 1% yards wide, in mill Jengths, at 15c a yard. Nice quality, in white only, that will give satisfaction at this price. WOMEN’S $1 ELBOW LENGTH | SILK GLOVES, SIZES 5/2 TO 8 |——79¢e pr.— Oretonnes tn new fall priced, 20c 12 1-2 FIGURED SCRIMS PRICED 8 1-3c Yd Good quality figured Scrims, some with side border, others with allover designs, for elther long or short window curtains, priced at 81-3c a yard Tuesday. —Third Floor, WOMEN’S 2-CLASP 50c WHITE SILK GLOVES, SIZES 51/2 TO 8 39¢ pr. Women’s full 16-button Women’s 2-clasp Silk or elbow length Silk Gloves Gloves with double tipped with double tipped fingers fingers and embroidered and Paris point backs. Sec- backs. Seconds of Ameri- onds of $1.00 value, but the i} imperfections are very slight. They are white only, | in sizes 514 to 8, for Tues- } day’s selling at 79c a pair. | Lower Main Floor. ca’s best silk gloves with very slight imperfections; worth 50c. They come in white only, in sizes from 54% to 8, at 39ca pair Tues- day. Lower Main Floor. FOR TUESDAY MORNING From 9 to 11 a. m. only. No telephone orders taken. HEAVY TAFFETA SILK 25e heavy and WORTH 59¢ A YARD AT 60 pleces of Pure Silk, lustrou a ie line of colors, on sale from’? tot & Bt at 380 o ® yard instead 10c HANDKERCHIEFS AT 5c EA. Dainty lawn satin at: chiote In perfect condition: reeaine the | JUST FOR TUESDAY ‘These Unusually Good Domestic Bargains. | 7 1-2e APRON GINGHAMS Ae ) 27 INCHES WIDE, A YARD 2,000 yards of Pes af <3 oe inches wide, in full Yee value, fn red and white and brown and white checks, priced-at 4c a yard. 15e URESS PERCALES 10¢ vane Dress Percales in mill ends, and WATER BILLS HERE WE HAVE A fore, ft ‘fom et deih Sia aa OM Din bee eats 12 1-2e DRESS CINGHAMS 8 1-2c] OFFICE JUST | 49, TOILET PAPER Sc A ROLL Co gl gg ne lig Ee a Gf FOR THE Fine Crepe Totlet Paper, large size and Bates Ginghams in stripes rand piaids, at §%c a yard 121-2e GALATEA CLOTH 9¢ YD. Galatea Cloth, 28 inches wide, good weight, that will w & i. Mi | oa” full bolts, in plain shades, at $e a yard. —Lower rolls, 10¢ alze, from 9 to a < roll. Not over § rolla to each: sone delivered. Lower Main Floor. ENDS OF SCRIM TO 25¢, EA. 5c Samples of fine Serima, Mar Votles and Bobbinet, % to Lyard long, worth to 26e, till 11 a. be worth i. be each. Third PURPOSE THIRD FLOOR PIKE ST. SIDE. Mata Floor. —18 POUNDS OF CANE GRANULATED SUGAR FOR 8%— WITH $1.00 GROCERY ORDER, NOT INCLUDING SUGAR OR FLOUR—LIMIT 18 Ibs. | |\Let the Big Daylight Bakery Do Your Baking BON MARCHE BREAD 3 FOR 25¢ LAYER CAKES 25¢ AND 35c EA. White raisin, plain white, whole recetved | Layer Caken—2 la: » — yers, 250; 3 1 » wheat, graham, bran, sweet rye, Ger- of She. None better ed tn Seattie man rye, plain rye, crimp, raisin rye, C| Your choice of chocotate, maple, cara French, milk. mel, cocoanut or nut. Pare Lard, one of the best brands; Mo. 10 45c Navy Salad Dressing, quality guaranteed; Vanilla Waters, frouh en refund pail $1.40; No. 6 pall 72 2 pail of 20 fo urn of empty bottles; rn Tooth Pieks, the best quality; shout 15 bottle ..... 0c in @ package .... se EQE | shervet Cup Mustard, emall sherbet cups Pure Catenp, one of filled with strictly pure mustard, each 5c he bra: splendid quality; pint bottle...... # Pure Cider Vinegar, Town Talk brand, the very best grade; bottle ...., Am msente, Mayflower brand, none ie from Awift Pre BI Every high grade quailty: 16 al Brenkfant ‘Ten, our regular. dh¢ 9 E rade, ound od Pent, lasigs sine Wo. 2% cans wood f Gneose, fancy auatity, prived i: c 4 ity. Getitornte Bartlett pears: can. TT pound c vanned wus, large nize No. 2% ca fresh cut Cy s quality; this year's pack; id I + medlpopedpepeaponedingycsiah c 1 008 auaitty, | ail kovernment |, pound 4 c ‘Fourth Floor. ———————— Car Tickets for Sale on the Main Floor, Transfer Desk. sonMARCHE ike sTReeT UNION STREET. SECOND AVENUI srafters, | Inge,” sald the doctor. | death, and he had remained forgotten in Ban Quentin until -elatives | {I CHARGES MURDER AT GRAVE lithe state officers by name and the copper mine owners with responst- |} i ‘STRENGTHEN BORDER GUARD| |be adopted by ‘a wife. Your rhythmic ease I much admire, I like the dancing steps’ you pace; | Your every move is my delight, | So dainty and so brisk and free You are a most entrancing sight— Oh, won't you trot through life with me? With love the fiddler for the dance And hearts merry as a rhyme We'll turkey trot a glad romance In syncopated two-step time, | \ | | i} | Dear lady of my heart's desire, | I love your lithe and splender grace, | | Though care should tread upon our toes And rough and bumpy be the floor, We'd laugh at troubles such as those And gayly turkey trot some more! Come then, my love, and be my wife And take the fate that fortune sends; We'll tango pleasantly through life And one-step till the music ends; We'll buy a rag-time gramophone With syncopated melody, If you will only be my own And turkey-trot through life with me! TRY TO FORCE U. S. INTO WAR| BY GILGON GARDNER. WASHINGTON, Aug. 18.—President Wilson saya he ts convinced | there {s more or leas organized effort to force the United Staten into) war with Mexico, Why should there be any such effort? Hriefly, here) if is the answer; | Wall sts speculative interests in Mexico have no assurances |i that they would find protection or perpetuation at the hands of the |f revolutionary party. One thing the revolution has been fought for ts| relief from exploitation of the common people by foreign and domestic | The common people want a chance to live, They want the land) if holdings broken up and want a chance to stop paying tribute to the! great horde of foreign holders of concessions who have capitalized their holdings and distributed huge profits in endless dividends on} watered stock | Huerta stands for a continuation of this system. He promised |} to pay all American and foreign claims if recognized. Wall favors) recognition of the Huerta government, or, as an alternative, armed |] intervention by the United States, PASTOR RAPS FLAG HEROICS Attacking the bigots, scofters of religion, and opinionated hobbyists, Dr. M. A. Matthe of the First Presbyterian church, In a) sermon Sunday, scored the herotca displayed by certain Seattlettes) with reference to the American fiag, demanded to know why the same treatment as accorded Dr. Hazzard is not given to those who refuse to) fans when their dren are dying, and deprecated the decline nce of masculine boldness. hobby of dwelling continually on flags, the soca! evil and the I. W. W., until we are sick with thelr social vomit- “It ts our duty to put the man who violates the in jail, but make it an incident, and | conatitution and defames the fla, not a matter for heroics.” FORGOTTEN, NOW HE MUST DIE BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 18.—Convicted of murder in the first de |i gree, sentenced to die, and then forgotten for nine years, ts the unique |i} perience of August Geber, who has been re-sentenced to be hanged No- ember 14, by Superior Judge Dunne Geber was sent to San Quentin to await execution for the killing of Geo. Hartman. On an appeal the conviction was upheld, but the | records in the case were destroyed tn the big fire of 1906, | Geber realized that any word from himself would only hasten his jf of the murdered man recently called the case to the attention of District | | Attorney Fickert here. i] | MRS. HAZZARD IS LOCKED UP} Dr. Linda Burfield Hazzard, whose manslaughter sentence of two || yoars waa affirmed by the supreme court, was arrested Saturday after- | noon by Sheriff Shattuck of Kitsap county and taken to the King county | [ij | jail, where whe will be held, pending disposition of a petition for a re-|If hearing before the supreme court H | Her bondsman, the Southwest Surety Insurance company of Okla- | i] homa, surrendered her. If her petition is denied, she will be taken to Walla Walla within | i] the next 30 days. In the meantime, she is required to raise $20,000 }f bond to secure her release pending the rehearing. _|] | CALUMET, Mich, Aug. 18.—-Standing by the graves of Stephen | Putrich and D. Tazan, striking copper miners killed at the Piainsdale | | mine, in a battle between strikers and deputies, at the funeral Sunday, | Jos, Cannon, an organizer for the Western Federation of Miners, charged | bility for the unlawful killing of the men. | The two deputies alleged to have been implicated in the killings | had not been apprehended today, but two local officers have been ar- rested and charged with murder, NOGALES, Aug. 18.—Orders have been issued by the state depart: |} ment at Washington that strict guard must be maintained along the |] Mexican border to prevent further exportation of arms and ammunition, | in violation of the neutrality laws, | It ts reported that the department {s informed that large shipments of contraband have been smuggled across the line here recently. WANTS WOMAN TO ADOPT HIM: CINCINNATI, 0, Aug. 18.— win Mitchell, giving his irae as the National Miltary Home, Dayton, and styling himself “a handy thing to have around,” wants some woman to adopt him. People have adopted cats and dogs, but here {s a man 44 years old who says he loves his pipe and tobacco, and who wants to Peculiar propositions are received by news- papers every day, but this one Is so far out of the ordinary that It bears repeating. The letter is as follows: Dear Mr. Editor: Will you please publish this letter in your valuable paper, I wish to give some woman who can af- ford {t an opportunity to adopt aman. I would like some wom- an to adopt me Just to sit down in the evenings and listen to me relate some of my experiences at sea and in foreign countries, my three days’ battle at San Juan Hill, Cuba, and then, I'm a very handy article to have around, Can adapt myself to most anything, and I do not wish any salary, But the lady who adopts me must give in re- turn for my docility and faith fulness enough to eat and a place to sleep, Now, who wants to adopt this first wonderful -animal—the come, the first served. _. Repeatedly, certain council members have designated him as Mayor Cotterill’s mouthpiece, and recently he was mentioned as a man for bala the mayor was trying to create a position in the garbage di- vision, Flagg emphatically denies that he is seeking a city Job, or that the mayor {s trying to get him one, In a statement issued today, He deprecates the “venomous, stubborn fight between Mayor Cotterill and HE WANTS TO BE LET “a | Councilman Griffiths, two Christian geutiemen," e ' AT $1.65— | AT $1.95—- fine as men; they can “Women, | am convinced, Paige 4 lavelll.” wise ae men.”—H, G. Wells In The FREDERICK & NELSON Store Opens at 8:30---Closes at 5:30 Daily Autumn Suit Modes are faithfully reflected in the new showing of demi-trimmed and tailored effects now in read- iness. Some of the smartest models are devel- oped in Damasse, Matelasse, Eponge and Vel- our—Serge, Wool Poplins, Wool Bedford and Novelty Suitings are also given good represen- tation. New designs and novel trimming ideas heighten the interest in this advance showing, which features Suits at $25.00, $28.50, $32.50, $38.50, $45.00 and upward. NEW SEPARATE COATS— Afternoon Coats, Outing Coats, Sport Coats, Traveling Coats and Business Coats are well represented in the new Fall assortments and illustrate the tendency toward rough and pile materials. Prices $19.75, $25.00, $28.50, $35.00, $45.00 and upward WOMEN’S ONE-PIECE DR - Street and Business Dresses of Serge, Bedford Cord, Damasse, Eponge and Velour in these new assortments; 4 also Dresses for afternoon and evening wear, in silk crepe, silk eponge and fine challis. $25.00, $28.50, $32.50, poplin, crepe meteor, charmeuse, Moderately priced at $14.50, $19.75, $45.00 and upward, Becond Floor. Special Prices on Made-up Rugs HESE Rugs were made up in our workroom from surplus lengths of carpeting and border. They are all in the light colorings suitable for bedrooms (pink, blue, mulberry and gray), and are exceptional values at the prices quoted BODY BRUSSELS 7-3x8-6, special $9.50. 9-9x10-8, special $15.00. 5x5 special $3.50. 7-6x11-6, special $14.50. 9-9x12, special $17.50. ff 5-9x6, special $5.00. 8-3x9, special $13.50. 5x12, special: $16.50, 6x9, special $7.50. 0x9, special $14.00. W ILTON VELVET 6x7, special $6.50. ial $14.50 9x9-9, special $12.50. 6.6x7, special $6.50. aes “ST | 9-7x10-6, special $16.50. 6-9x10, special $6.50. 9-9x10-6, special $15.00. | 9.9.12, special $18.50. 7-6x8-6, special $9.50. 9-9x11, special $15.00. 10-6x12-8, special $18.00 Linen Table Cloths $1.65 and $1.95 Hemastitched Silver-bleached Cloths, free from dress- 9x10-6, Tumblers Special 50c Set of Six ing, size 62x62 inches. HIN-BLOWN- Tumblers jj Hemmed Cloths of heavy linen, 59x59 inches. in the attractive bell Bleached German Linen Cloths, hemmed, 60x60 shape—choice of engraved inches. wheat design or cut star pat- tern. 50¢ Bleached Irish Linen Pattern Cloths, 68x68 inches. Special, the set of six, Third Floor P tl =: Ie | r n r Scalloped Silver-bleached Linen Cloths, measuring 57x75 inches. Hemstitched Half-bleached German Linen Cloths, 62x78 inches. Hemstitched Austrian Linen Cloths, splendid wear- ing quality, 66x80 inches. Bleached Irish Linen Pattern Cloths, 68x86 inches. ent Balesroom. Silk-Boot Hosiery 50c Pair OMEN’S Silk-boot Hos- iery in black, white, tan and gray; sizes 8% to 10; the pair, 50¢. —Basement Salesroom Clearance Prices on Summer Millinery BOUT 100 Trimmed Hats in an assortment that features the summer's favorite trimming ideas, special at B5¢. Untrimmed Hats in Hemp, Milan and Tuscan, spe- cial 25¢, 65¢ and 95¢. Flower Trimmings, including Large Silk and Linen call sabrina Roses, June Roses, Lilacs, Dahlias, Hyacinths, Gerani- pts H ums and Crush Roses, special 25¢. Back Combs, 25c ACK Combs, Side Combs and Barrettes of shell and amber, in a wide variety | of styles, 25¢. i Basement Salesroom 1] Patent Leather Belts 50c OMEN’S Wide Patent , Leather Belts, black only, all sizes, 50¢, Basement Salesroom. Lace Curtains, Special $1.95 Pair NTERESTING special values in this assortment of 100 pairs of Scotch-weave and Cable Net Curtains. } SA ‘They are in Cluny and Duchess lace effects, Filet with designs and plain centers with wide borders; ecru-color ss aa and white, 2% yards long. Aluminum Kitchen ment Good-looking, durable Curtains and excepti | pa s ptional 2 bel values at $1.95 pair. Sets, Special 95c pobat Firat Floor. } Maw LUMINUM Kitchen Set, pas consisting of one mixing Ask for a Transfer Slip spoon, one basting spoon, one tea strainer, six table-spoons When Purchasing—It Facilitates and six tea-spoons, special hopping 95¢. —Housefurnishings Section, The New Bead Necklaces _i EAD NECKLACES in the brightest of colors and in the among recent jewelry in graduated style | | | new 27-inch Nengttt are | arrivals. Both plain and cut effects are noted, and some are | They may be had in red, dark-blue, green, coral and amber, as well as jet “affects,” H and are moderately priced from 50c¢ to $2.25. —Firat Fie