The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 20, 1914, Page 12

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| The Bon Marche Will Close at 6 o’Clock Saturday Evenings On Sale From 9 a. m. Till 12 Only No Telephone Orders Accepted for [3c Darning Cotton| tse Taffeta Ribbon| —3 for se— i—10c¢ yd.— Clark's 0 4 Inches wide, soc Darning Cotton, ‘ \earamaty: axbisod white and colors; 3} |°' apools 5c. jcolora; 10 yard | —Upper Main Floor —Upper Main Floor. | | —MEN’S 50¢ FLEECE- LINED— | UNDERWEAR 9 A. M. TILL 12, at 25¢ Just half price for men's 50 Underwear, nice and warm and nontr Pitatings with all the latest improvements. On sale from 9 A. m, till 12 at 25c a garment. In the men's store. —Lower Main Floor, fleece Seco Scars at |25e Chiffon Rutts — be ea.— | Maline and Chiffon IRutfs, % yard long, 3 inches wide. —Upper Main Floor, long, inches wide Be ea | —Verer Main Floor. | 9 A. M. Till 12—Third Floor | G0 DOZ. FIBER ROPE SILK 35¢ Lustrous Fiber Rope Silk Thread, an extra fine quality, in almost all the favorite shades, 60c a dozen quality, 35c a dosen, for this sale 9 A. M. to 12—Lower Main Floor j $1.25 UNION SUITS AT 62 1-2c Women’s “Merode” lisle thread or medium weight cotton Union Suits, with high or low necks, Jong or short sleeves; not all sizes in every style. 9 A. M. Till 12—Second Floor | infants’ Ripplette Rompers 35¢_ kimono sleeves, elastic in the bottoms, sizes 6 months to 5 years, at 35¢ a garment, value 50e. 9 A. M. Till 12—Second Floor 25¢ UNDERMUSLINS AT 12 1-2c Corset Covers of muslin, trimmed with embrold- ery edge or lace and insertion, and drawers in regular style, finished with ruffle and tucks, at 12%c. 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor 15e HANDKERCHIEFS Se EACH Women’s all pure linen Initial Handkerchiefs, in B, C, D, G, H. J, K, L, M,N, P, R, 5, T and W, with Initials neatly embroidered, at Se each. | Infant's striped ripplette Rompers with set-in | | FOR MEN'S $15.00 BUSINESS SUITS IN DARK GRAY, BROWN AND SPUNS PENCIL ————ALL SIZES YET—FROM 33 TO But don’t wait too long if you want one—for and once they are sold we cannot replace them at the price, for it times that such bargains are possibie—once get squared away for another season, $15.00 Suits will cost you is only at “between season” things $15.00 here or anywhere else. Boys’ $5 Suits, Sizes 6 to 17Yrs. | —at $3.95—_ | These Suits are in sailor blouse, | Here is a bargain that helps you Buster Brown, Norfolk and double | payed your nae og of My oe 7 of them are the swagger Englis! breasted styles, sizes 6 to 17 years | Style, with belted becks, some of of age. They're made of cheviots, | cravenettes, slip-ons and gaber- | fweeds, worsteds, blue serges, gray | dines, others and brown mixtures, checks and | —Upper Mai stripes. Marche. = =] ) = = z a = = as = P= = F = = B At the Nim's Pink Bean At the Tunny Fish B a | y Fis jooth, by Wagner's Orchestra Booth, No. 1 cans, $c; No, 2 | Piece’ California Tunny Fish ° ny, ‘ ’ 12%: No. 3 cans, | NO % size cans, 12%; No. ” DeZulueta 1 size cans, 2249¢ A de Re licious fish delicacy cat the Centennial Booth At the Pacific Coast Biscuit entennial Sunshine Cakes | Co, Booth, large tin Swastika free to the first 50 women | goda Crackers, 89c, & to 6 arse » Spal gee sack of | pounds in each tin. Refund riquet te ee © | of 20c for return of empty dD. 0 Nemo,” Her Roberts. Time im Nor- At the 10c can of uchter of the Amert- purchase. SOME SATURDAY ECONOMIES IN THE PURE FOOD STORE CREAMERY BUITER FOR —s2l/2¢ tb.) cg Shoulder ¥ medium weig phone orders und nat “2 7 Pare Peanut Batter, made tron t anute, Pxtra fan finest quailty ¥ fine, dr ck, poun Shelled Popcorn. two-ye eens This Store Opens at 9 A. M. and Closes at 6 P. M.—Not Open Saturday Evenings BON MA lon Street, Second measure. | and brocades, 2 AND BLACK AND Men's $15 and $18 Overcoats —at $10— Not over one to of Chocolate These Underpriced Morning Specials—————— 25e Tooth Paste| —at 10c— | Dentyne Paste, for and |25e Witch Hazel —at 17e— size Witch Ha Glycerine and] bot | Peroxide whitening | nel preserving the Rose Water, Ile h. tle. —Upper Main Floor. CHILDREN’S FINE RIBBED 17c | LISLE THREAD STOCKINGS AT 10¢ pr. | ribbed lisle thread Stockings, black, seamless, with double heels and toes slightly imperfect; sizes 514 to 9% at 1 till 12 Saturday, or as long as we have any | -Lower Main Floor, | Kindergarten Cloth, —10e yd.— Upper Main Floor fant Some @ patr, Children’s 60c Bed Sheets for — 49c ea.— Rieached Sheets, Kindergarten sive 81X90 inches, with Che engths to er seam, 4%¢ ya Inches wide Lower Main Floor. —Lower Main Fioor 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor MEN’S $2.50 TROUSERS $1.39. Men's Trousers of strong, heavy welght mater fal, in dark mixtures mostly, sites 34 to 4 Just the kind for out door work waist 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor | BOYS’ 50¢ PANTS 39¢ PAIR) Oe Pants, in brown and gray mixtures well made, of good mat at 39¢. Splendid for ¢ Roys' and bl wear well, and will eryday Wear 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor $1.00 VELVETS AT 35¢ A YD. | 1,000 yards of narrow and wide wale Corduroy | and Paon Ve! in navy, brown, garnet, green inches wide, at 36c a yard 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor 35¢ HALF WOOL CHALLIES 19¢ 26 pleces of half wool Challies, with neat fir ured designs and a good range of colors, for house dresses, kimonos and wa: at 19¢ a yard 9 A. M. to 12—Upper Main Floor WILSON DRESS HOOKS FREE Bring this ad to our Notion Department Satur day morning and recetve a card of Wileon Dress Hooks free, your choice of size and color. STRIPE 44 INCH they are going fast. of chinchitlgs. n Floor of The Bon AT THE PURE FOOD SHOW NO ONE BUT A GOAT WOULD EVER TRY TO DO IT—and no goat but this one of Bulger’s could ever get away with it—for the bottles | are up on a wall, | Special performances of Bulger’s Barnyard Circus all day Saturday—a good program by Wagner's Orchestra and special premium « ffers at many of the booths Be sure to be here. r telephone orders. | jin At the Kellogg Booth, large a customer Stoliwerck Booth, moving picture animal book Cocoa or We cake | free with e purchase of 2 with every 25c | packages of Kellogg’s Wheat Biseult or Corn Flakes st an ke Mayflower t en fit Snags, & aray teed 19% Vieor of The fon | Avenue, Pike Street RCHE.| | | | Quaker Girl | couples took }appear th BE QUITE UP TO George MeKenazle New York So why shouldn't § No reason,” waid ¢ enee last night, which witnessdd the ¢ that they had the prvileg acts in the main and baleony foyers Did they dance? When the curtain went down on the firat act, manager of the it tr attle? ening 1 out into t yers h noe One tanko The 1sploce orchestra played the luring muslo, the kid plunge C'mon Joe's try tt, thing In an evening gown Hubuh, Chartte ! They're watchin’ too clowe. ‘Geo! it'ud be a cinch If some & tall blonde who was algo afraid to join the whirl don't wanna I got cold feet, honest Metropolitan theatre, saw of dancing the ta and tango before all these more would get the habit | MAC'S NEW STUFF ‘eri do And therefore he announced to bis audi performance of “The ngo betweer every one tn the au finally two pleaded « bold escort of a shrinking little people * deciared Wish somebod would join the crowd, an’ then I would The tango betw acts is an interesting diversion an exeuse for stretching. Mar enjoyed the excuse, but fe turesome enc h to try the tango in fron the clone »wded around the two couples like int ‘wume says MeKens tar 1K between roof habit. Seattle'll get the habit, all righ with the habit will have further oppo night and tomorrow night attle appeared bashful with that tango thing la erented spectators t nity t It gives one w were ver in audience ofa » tango to VENDETTA GETS THIRD VICTIM NEW YORK, Feb. 20.—Lutet Lasazearl, a prosperous Itallan, wa thrice stabbed through the heart be arly today, Angelo Al I one of his acquaintances, was arrested he murder, In his was a bloody handkerchief, on which the polloe as ed he had w his dagger, It was the third murder of the kind n a short time and detectives think all were connected with the sa endetta SPEAKING OF anaps, there's Maurice, professional Terps! chorean, who gets paid for hugging girls while showing society how to break its neck in new dances. drew down a cent in his life And old Terpsich never WHY NOT STAY IN NEW YORK? CALLAO, Peru, Feb 20 will be arrested ax soon as term of deposed President Guillermo Billinghurst, wn the authority of men clor Provisional regime 1 now on his way from ‘england to New York That 6 lands he » wt at Vice President Roberto de Legu to serve out th HE WANTS GOV. WEST’S JOB SALEM, Or, Feb. 20. —Requesting that the slogan ministration, Lower Taxes, Progressive be printed on the ballot opposite his name, Crawford has filed his declaration with the secretary didate for the republican nomination for governor "Kee of sta ynomical Ad laws and Strict Enforcement Attorney Ge eral A. M SAY, SAM SHORTRIDGE, standpat candidate for U. S$. senator in California, hae got the dandy platform! youth, he was bill poster for the suffragettes in Oregon, BREMERTON, Feb. 20.—Capt. Ernest Weat afternoon before the court-mal have not been disclosed. Thin {a the third trial of charge of assault was aleo recently returne ta, Ga, grand jury for breaking into his m possession of bis child, having separated fro that. PORTLAND. lives in Portland Feb. 20. v. 8. Capt against him by the / 1 hix wife shortly before When a ‘(COURT-MARTIAL NAVY CAPT. MC. in to jai board on charges that West THIS IS THE LAST STRAW “The most sanitary woman tn the world” This was established when she was seen quenching her thirst at a sanitary drinking fountain by means of a straw ONE OF the funny things Is the railroad bill by Democrats of the How They actually couldn't apply their old g Alaska not being a state. tate ‘Socialistic.” Rights,” DOG TO THE RESCUE OF DOG SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 20 cheered. whil A big shepherd dog with a crusty tem per rescued @ puny little Spitz here from the net of a pound man dog catcher dropped his net, and bis quarry ran away, The jo bystanders PET COYOTES? YEP, THAT’S SO CHICO, Cal, Feb, 20. heavy rains, of Ed Vadney here, in the heart of the city them. Driven from their homer in the woods by ‘amily of coyotes invaded the basement of the residen: He intends to make p HOW'D YOU like to be In the top of a 42-story New York sky-scraper during an earthquake jigger? Wouldn't it jar you? COSTS $25 TO STAY HUNGER PORTLAND, Feb. 20. idence of A. lL. Mills, p Galeido, a Span to keep from starving nt of the First Fined 82 CO-OPERATIVE UNION MEETS the erative or tem A The sixth annual meeting Washington State unton will be held at the La! Co-op Kislative ple Thursday and Friday, Feb. 26) form and 27, beginning at 10 a. m. banks, est All co-operative companies of ev- operative paper every character that can qualify as state wh such under the law are entitled to be represented terchange cunse “HAIRNECESSITY TO WOMAN,” SAYS JUSTICE WITH TOUPEE Hair is a human necessity and clothing are. So Justice Brinker decided yesterday, after Attorn quoted from Kipling and other poets, and incidentally ittention to the fact that the judge himself wore a tou Murphine represented Tom Singer & Co,, hair de ants were Mrs Ha Smith and husband, Mra, Smith ployed by Si partie | used for herself. The Smiths claimed there wages, because hair is not a family necessity, Th counterclaim of $8 for overtime work done Mrs held hair was a family necessity, the counterclaim Attorney Murphine submitted to the court ide references to legal decisions, the | hatr Hair may be an ornament or superfluity of dress, but it 1s usually and station in life. sisters under the skin worn by all wome “The colon regardless of their rank nd Judy O'Grady are The new co-operative Inw ha on the movement a great impetus committee to help ate a bill for state farm lishtnent of a state co. and ule agency, of products will be arly for a woman ney Te eal Ipee. alers. h was r, and the latter claimed an §8 balance for hair she had was no right to garnishee also enter ey Smith. but dismissed the case by sustaining a brief containing, be following illuminating !deas on and are also alik respect of their mutual desire hair, Indeed, the poet has said concerning ane cla A rag, a bone au hank of hair.” The court will note hair was considered essential even in describing a nale Since time began and lover sung of woman's hair ad her filled the pages of literature ‘raven locks. crowning glory with ‘golden tresses, very aubur Caught stealing bottles of milk from the res. National bank, he had been taking the milk for two weeks Remigio giv Ait plans for a and for in Just as food mn Murphine The defend formerly em. a The court and need of ss of women, the hank of imperfect fe strolled by moonlit banks, poets have and sighing bards have n curs’ and Judicial notice can be taken that hair fs absolutely an essential in cfvilized woman's adornment, 7 rr belle is in no sense necessary from our point of view, in the nose but ne th » Hottentot It-respect ing Hottentot would allow his wives to be without them, and from this i standpoint ‘hairs’ are ‘necessaries, THE SEATTLE STAR WE DON’T SEEM TO [REDERICK & NELSON at FIO Store opens at G30 and Closes BASEMENT SALESROOM 100 New Lingerie and Net Dres: To Sell at $5.75 Each es MWELVE pretty models are in- cluded, three of hich are shown in the sketch. The materials are plain and striped Voiles, Allover Embroid- ery, Laces and Nets. The sizes /range from 16 and 18 years to 40 bust measurement. The values are decidedly ing at $5.75. interest- NEW TOP COATS, $7.50 TO $12.50-- t ne mod c er and he repe and ne Be ! Col lude t Copenhage Moderately priced a 750, $9.50 and $12 5 nent Balesroom. Charming Millinery Styles for Spring i ie same ideas that 1 ed of the new Gowr easily traced the Millinery creat f For example Minaret effects worked out in moire and straw and the quaint Watteau or “bustle” hat the } elevated back filled in with soft crush rose Novelty Roman-stripes and plaids are g good representation and the use of sparkling jet and crystal nets and ®ears” of ribbon are new ures In the more tailored hats, sailor, gun-boat and tricorn shapes are seen, with trimming of wings, jet ornaments and fluffy pompons Small and medium shapes have first place for in addition to the usual early Spring wear, staple shades we show petrol-blue (oil on water), sheherazade-orange, —Masement Balesroom P. N. Corsets $1.00 and $1.50 duck-wing, charmeuse-pink, cyrenaique and verleusant-green ) 1 Chemisettes 25¢ Net Chemisecttes, styles = with \ TYLE 1266, the ‘front-lace corset shadow lace yokes and ‘ pictured, is made of coutil and is cambric bodices. Many e { intended for the average figure. It has pretty patterns in white } {| medium bust and skirt extending below and cream. Good values {)\7RPCA the boning. Well-boned, with elastic at 25c each. | [ag j i strap in back and three sets of hose sup- —Basement Salesroom as porters. Sizes 20 to 30. Price $1.50. Style 1914A is made of excellent qual- Bai ‘ Women’s { aL ity brocaded coutil, especially suitable A for the slight figure. Has moderately Vests, 15¢ 1 "i ¥ high bust and long skirt, finished at top W OMEN’S Cotton- with band of self material and lace edge. ribbed Vests, high Fitted with hook below front stay and three sets of hose neck and wing sleeves. Supporters. Sizes 19 to 26, $1.50. Neck finished with mer- Style 854 is a misses’ girdle-top corset, very lightly cerized draw tape. Sizes * boned, with low bust and long hip. One hook below front 36 and 38. Unusual value stay and two sets of hose supporters hold the garment Price $1.00. —Basement Salesroom. at 15¢ each Sizes 18 to 26. Basement firmly in deri Salesroom., NEW_ ARRIVALS IN Women’ s Pumps and Oxfords at $3.00 show a high standard of style and quality maintained in pop- ular-priced footwear. Women's Colonial Pumps, as illustrated, in patent leather, dl gunmetal, satin and velvet, with welt and turned soles, $3.00 pair Walking Ox- welt Women's Women's English-last 1 “Mary Jane” Pumps, as pic nt and dull t calf leathers, able Par eo; A DE: fords, in black calf with sole and with welt $3.00 pair strap des) 2 1 it heel, $3.00 pair. low, fl NOTE Th and Calf Button Boot Section has just received a complete line of Misses’ and Children’s made over comfortable, full-toed lasts, sizes 6 to 8, $1.50; 2% to 6, $2.50 pair. —Basemvnt Salesroom Patent 8% to 11, $1.7 and Sondun Gloves 59e Pair Children’s Play Suits (2 to 5 Years) 45e W' YMEN’S Kid and Lamb-skin Gloves HILDREN’S Bloom in black, white and colors. As- er Play Suits, as pic sorted sizes All neatly mended. Un tured, of plain light-blue usual values at 59c pair, mBasoment Balesroom. or tan chambray ¢ ham; navy-blue gingham with white broken check Hand-Bagss, $1.00 or delft-blue percale with nt iN: Paginas erin dst saannee mall white dot. Made : eet Dr RAO: ERP eae lined, with faney metal frames and with are neck and. ki ww ; 1 strap handle Lambskin Hand-bags, in = mono sleeves, finished 1 ' 4 the new hape, silk-lined Leather we} with bands of plain color aN at i : ; ask 4 . tej inn tahs “nalfeiaeeinl ah and-bags wi 1 ngrrow frame, deey pocket and silk lining embroidered scallop edge 45¢ Attractively —Basement All with inside coin purse priced at $1.00. Unusual values at Salesroom nt Salesroom. i I }

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