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THE STAR—FRIDAY, INTRODUCING COLORADO CZAR, GENERAL CHASE MAY 81914 3 f OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P.M. 4 Unparalleled Values IN READY-TO-WEAR FOR SATURDAY’S SELLING Clothing Siaughtered $50,000 stock of Men’s High Grade CLOTHING, Hat: Boys’ Wear 69c Wash Suits, sailor and military collar style, materials blue and chambray and $7 Boys’ Suits $4.89 ON SALE ALL DAY SATURDAY Men’s and Young Men’s Suits —$12.50— Boys’ made in Shoes and Furnishings thrown on sale regardl+ss of original cost. Sener | stein madras — all Here are the best’ wna sizes , SALE STARTS SATURDAY, MAY 9, AT 10 A.M. 95g exe’ shire ae sre ottered ecto 00, in beau 1 weaves and rich colors, Come Early. B. Suits up to tite new military collar and links, cut full size, in all colors and Here are Sale Prices. Come Early. materials, including black Here are Suits that are not made alone to sell, but in all sizes from 6 to 18, Come SHOES CLOTHI NG F H hi anton, Coeeeter 2 val to wear. Skilfully tailored throughout. Coats have the 34.89 =, eee Oe ee ue by some stores fo Some have tw urnis ings wee See ee canvas and hair cloth fronts, which keep them from lis our price h of pants is ‘ sagging, and felled collars, which hug the back of the E =— ase Those 515.00 Men ‘$4 65 $2.50 Manhatten Gc 58c ped i bar rh neck, We have them in all colors and sizes. Compare 98c Povey wach an ne bY | 39 Suits cut to. . = OME. cece come in 4 pleces them with what you have been paying $20.00 for else- blouse, also Byron collar, in re ae” pants, hat and belt line khaki, latea and he 15c¢ Collars gray only; fancy trimm ness madras cloth “Well made, $4.50 Walk- Over Shoes 98e sizes; all day Saturday, Worth regular $1.2) cut to 50c Suspenders cut to . $17.50 Men's 85 Suits cut to. . | $22.50 Men’s 9 25 Suits cut to. . . 2 $1.89 “be $5.00 Work Shoes E ee 4 eres ee ee ‘ohn Chase, “ezar of Colorado” ani R d t POL A ee $1.85 $30 = $35 Men's |175c Work Shirts | c FN aieat ab tee coacean e u Cc I on S Tri inl med . $3.50 Boys Suits * $12. 35 cut to ....... state militia, te a soldier by choice, . X ‘ Specials for Saturday Sieh cut $1.68 Dp Assee tu 25¢ Sox 7c with « militia court-martial blot in In Women Ss and Children Ss 25c Spapiteld, Aro $4.00 Boy’s ae ais ee ack Chase has long dabbled fn milt r ono f eval back kimono leeves; He braid a reached the dozen tary mea happiness of gold Suits cut to $1.39 Ready-to-Wear fine gingham or percale. 50c —<pappininen! HATS HATS are allowed a fair commission on, otherwise would probably have to charge you $30.00 with sabered cavalry, filling with we You 3 $5.00 Boy’s petit. 4 as years ago. , i Ages 2 to 6. Saturday. ; $3.00 Hats | Suits cut to. DLs oitet chase wan so untatr thet Hl AIL Day Saturday Until 10:00 P. M. 25 ’ eee Boy’ $1.50 Dress Cc martialed him on several charges 87 Women’s Gowns 94.00 Max's 75c Boy’s 21c Shirts cut to... | Whe Rose Peabody was thrown [Mf $25,00 WOMEN’S $13. 98 C and — Petticontaas Pants cut to.... out of Colorado polities and the SUITS cambric, crepe or muslin, Hats cut to. . ™ $1.50 Boy’s 15c Handker- 3c demorrate came into power, vee a Muy /geiten Value $5.00 J.B. St 89 See Ber to... BBC [chiefs cut to..... got his Fe Here you ave. Saastifl rch weaves In ; a» ae Stetson Hats a $3.50 Men’s 25c¢ Garters c coats come medium an 87c. a $3 Danb C | cut to lored. Some 1 For the odd yard? Hats tic $1 65 Pants cut to... J Ba PCa these my ‘we were C No, you don’t have $2.98 75¢ Black Sateen Shirts . $5.00 Men’s to pay the one cent. You military rds of the regular $1.89 $7.50 Leather Suit Pants cut to. j a eaen cae installing gunmen | will find sizes from 16 to 44 These New Spring Ribbon Saturday for Cases cut $1 79 Overcoats and } '/2 Off $3.00 Suit Cnete 87c to shoot women and children $18.00 SILK Models represent the | 25c Fhe ES ete bet Slip- rae ee ibs DRESSES $12 98 highest priced Paris it eee where you’ ) : 23 : These are made of heavy messaline silk Millinery at a very big evlag is your # Absolutely all goods sold as advertised. We back our advertising with poplin or satin, New models, sulted for spring modest price, indeed, | p18," Nise” In colons ‘ oO r ith high or low neck, ‘ o ha , 5 honest values. Sr lean eleven; oimmed wih, bilk ‘net, tnce but it’s only at Me- | Saturday, 5 for 5e. and ribbon to match; in all the newest colors; Cormack Bros. such New Ruchings and ‘ They y fon, nets and lace; all MJ $5.00 SKIRTS fered. They have been . d : a WOE iho 88 0445 94 A 3.95 all trimmed by experts coners snd Sie Yor ‘ “1400-1402 FIRST AVE., CORNER UNION ST. Several new models, some with overskirts in our own workrooms. | to. “P *° “°° hie and draped, others plain’ tailored in all the ; . most fashionable weaves and colors to be had You will also find Hats 630 on Pe for the _ — . — — | for this season's wear at Bonnets Rs sisee-aleo” ahiéren‘e: ee |enat Mr. and Mrs. Seutor are very} Ba 44 up to the grow- | Vays $1.00—fitted at the respectable.” $2.00 WASH SILK $i 25 ing Miss from poe eh hg | “They may be deadly respectable, | WAISTS. ......000055 bd 49c. 79c,98 Women's Silk Lisle |my dear Mollie, but to be seen| cata takate uel aa aban wilh c, c, c ‘ Gloves — sheer, but with them often or even once or| hist m, Scr teaasleeves. ‘Trinimed irm; full elbow, 16-buttom twice, will queer’ you with all the| with Six tase ant me Sizes run from 18 to 44 to $1 -50 length. This Glove is nicer HOW TO CHOOSE FRIENDS and better than silk. 87 Women's Street Gloves | c —very swell, no nicer for $1.50. Also the famous people I want you to go with and the people you will wish to knéw.”| “1 can't see why you object to| ” rebeliiously continued Mol- ] CHAPTER CXLX. } can’t understand how mother let Our Enlarged ON SALE ALL DAY SATURDAY s (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper | on s0," said ey to Mollie as we! you, mares, stood up for) Shoe Dept cape—fitted Saturday, 87c. . nterprise Association. entered our roo! é. chorus girl.” | . N Neck: aii “I strongly object to your golng| “Now, look here, Dick,” spoke up| «wet, my dear, Jack's chorus| . Men’ s Golf Shirts, 780 5c New Neckwost aa ™- < — in public places with} ranged PY oR iron =p pe he girl, as you call her, was most re- Where We Carry Shoes to fit the Vv I S t d C Dota: fudhea; ects; TGEe an people that are as conspicuous as | tone with me; I am quite old enoug . 7 . 5 to tame'aube of meet, ahd I know | nee wee eocmaptanees, Ske show Whole Family alues, saturday collars; values up to $1.00, VV those you were with tonight, and I‘ ed birth and breeding, and although eet I don't like to judge any one, I would say that the Seutors were Saturday 25c. Hosiery and Neckwear— Here is where you save car Gunmetal short neat toe, Very WOMEN'S $3.00 Oxfords, button or lace. with Golf Shirts, with cuffs attached, well laundered; neat stripes and figures, in light and medium colors TatloredReadyCo. good enough in their way, but, my dear, thelr way is not ours.” “Margie! I never thought you were a snob,” indignantly cried Mollie. “And I don't think I am,” was my retort. “It isn't a question of goodness, Mollie dear, It is a q tion of where you want to be plac in your path of life. If the Seutors are the kind of people that make you happlest—the kind of people that appeal to you as those you) ay 8- vamp, dressy for street wear, A pair GROWING GIRLS’ 00 1 Pumps, eres Jane of fine kid and low heel Sizes A pale $1.49 MEN’S $3.00 Freak last Shoes of fine viel, toes, low heel, in lace; all sizes, 6 to to, n pate $2.49 $2. 49 strap style % to 7 broad, roomy button or General Socks, 8!/3c Saturday so much seamless. favored To- x have white feet, double heel and toe; These 15c for summer wear; morrow, 3 pairs for fare on a single purchase by getting 2 articles for almost the price of one. All Day Saturday BIG SALE WHITE BEDSPREADS TEN CASES Delayed shipment from a big Southern mill. Here's DENVER Helen Taft evidently does not take everything her mother says fousiy. Mis# Taft, who is a student at Bryn Mawr, has announced her intention of working for votes fog women, although her mother re cently declared berself an “ant!.” Colo., where we save you the mid- dleman’s profit. Full double bed size, at 98c, $1.19, $1.98, $2.39, $2.98 Compare these with what you have been paying one- quarter more for. would wish to be your friends, then| 1 feel that neither Dick nor I have anything more to say about It.” I could see by Mollie's face that she was bored to death with the Seutors, and so I pushed my point a little further. “Now, Mollie, I know you have the curiosity of youth, and {t {s per. fectly natural that you should wish to know about the actresses that you girls see weekly at the little theatre near your house. Mind, I am not saying there are not refined and clever men and women on the stage, some of them in very small parts, and I believe that the tors are ‘good’ people, and in Unusual Announcement The retirement of our vice president, on account of fil health, necessitates the quick selling of merchandise here at prices for high-grade lines, such 4s we carry, never heard of in Seattle. 1/3 T0 2 OFF Our Usual Low Prices. BOYS’ $2.50 Columbia Calf Shoes, lace, also vici button shoes in one lot to close. All pate 91.98 CHILDREN’S $1.00 tops, patent bottom, all colors; 0 fancy soft sole 65c | ‘ Chase | eee ard for service rendered his owners, the mine operators, {MB pjack and navy, #killfe rt He was given command of the/H of the new models. The = | length, lined with heavy satin Power made him mad. | tunic and draped, oth plain t He rode down parades of women |ME c+ Semple Suite w ' : Seconp Ave. AT JAMES ST. Complete Report of Market Today et | Prices Pald Producers for Vegetables and ir Frute MY PATH TO THE GALLOWS ‘: WHAT THE PRESS AGENT SAYS own Walk of life probably fill their | (corrected aa J. W. Godwin & Co.) ° 4 r , Appointed ‘places, with credit ta [Satie woatee” 2%. °°" £8" Ralph Fariss Tells of Serving Term in This State, mevoroan teatro win | appointed | Binge have a monster surprise for its patrons next week, beginning with a matinee Sunday afternoon, the offering being a film-dramatization The Washington reformatory was “The question of choosing one's |52i Just din Its treatment and lust as good in its treatm By RALPH N. FARISS, friends, like the question of using |¢ ‘Twenty-four-year-old train bandit FOR SATURDAY paint on one’s face, is not a ques- | 2 muda onions awaiting death in San Quentin | Its influence as the Preston school bal a tion of morals, but one of taste, but \caen ora so @ 160" | prison for murder. | |in California had been, and | wasn't | of cong a 's immortal one cannot rectify one’s mistakes | Beets, sack ts 100 @ 1m | —— | | there three weeks until they regard- | Poem iawatha. The story, in friends as easily as one can wash |Rueveses HI pee @ ras | isp | lla the ws a Weadel orivanert which is in four reels, was produced ING TO SELL the rouge off one’s cheeks if one | Parsnip aia ABTICLE NC. & 1 kind of seemed to drop natural-|0" the Seneca and Onondaga WE ARE GO finds that one’s taste has changed. |caivforsia head ietiues... 2.00 @ #36 | I believe a great many boys be |1y back into the reform school rou-| Indian reservations, and more tha ~" - Local radiates ries itw|come thieves and later on murder- ye eee ed to dron | 150 Indian actors participated. The ade Suits and Top Coats The friends you make as a | tine And, too, I seemed to drop | ae as reo of ai oe young girl are the ones that usually |xeuo” curnies s-sss1s+1: 800 @ 228, Jers because of the carelessness of |naturally back into the happiness | Production is approved end @ne determine your social position Ny | Bent Mpotenene (Sie store ¢3 | humanity I had known at Preston |dorsed by the American Historical life, and I have known many [Artichoke ai"'| “tn the four years during which 1 I wrote to my parents, told them |S0clety. mother that made the grievous er |celery: soo @ eee {rambled over the United es how I was getting along and that ’ s all a ues ror of allowing her daughter to pick |? oot Lemna ep d er ee 1 had resolved never to go crooked DANNY MAHER Is up and become int co | P* 40 | biggest of which again and they were overjoyed | aequaintances, Oftentimes. one| 32 11% | aten to Tos Angeles, for whieh | ain and they were overioved. | TQ WED IN ENGLAND Blues and Blacks Included. makes very delightful friends in-|7 75. | Was given 30 days In ja diately went home—in an unusual! poxpon, May & way for me father —Danny Mahet, ‘ ‘ arelessness | formally, but, as a rule, one should Ly hey fl 5 ep by the carelessn on & pass my of peop the former American jockey, and ° e ° ; e when young, be very. careful in| {i2" oo) got me. Miss Dorothy Fe Be ce 5 choosing one's companions.” Oranges, Cal, navel 225 @ | H pctoy sf acing gr ; wine te ger I had the firmest determination | at st "Georga’s enureh. Hanae Which impels me to ask again,” | Sma!) sine navels @:5.54. 10% clotnes fon 2 Ser I'd ever had to go straight. When! cauare. Th . - + | Cal. , @ 460 They were left out where any. 4 4 Brn r square he earl of Rosebery at- said Dick, “where was mother | cho a . ; T arrived home there was a reunion | tended the wed when you made this theatre and | ar @ sie | body could have taken them. that it makes me cry now to think | jhe one + a cupber onenaeanant?* @ 200 I pawned them and spe about bhire pendant. D ithe waa home,” answered Mol Prices Paid. Producers fot Butter, | money in a few hours. aitn't I was 22 years old when I got | ——__ He, with a slight blush Poultry, Veal and Pork I never kept money long—didn' out of Washington reformatory. I did not| feel called upon to tell her that you | %* so {seem to care for having it, but Just I got a job with a produce house “14 4 7 | end it, Bakersfield and 5 and Margie. were not to be in the|oiar |, in Bakersfield and worked hard. In party ‘ 19 |For this fob I got my first tong four months I was raised three Did you Me to her?” iT d I poke 14 | s8entence—a year n resto! times in wages and I never stole a ete Me to her?” asked Dick, | iquava (oad nine, dow 260 | School of Industry. | thing No,” anawered Mollie, “I saw| Belgian hares 10 | 1 wasn't hgh ice fa f° Ralph N. Fariss. I decided to go into business for when I came back from th @-| O14 Pigeons, nood sine, da o 18 as the rsh rt, Hy + Meant danke > DAMAWAUA, Onl: myself and Dad helped me. It was Purnt , phone that she thou ‘ as soc . ¢ % | have a chance to les | ac e ‘“l,/in this venture, surrounded with Remember, our stock of Hats and Furnishings ts included phe ne that ah thought ! wan tlle [Val larger 00) ah @ ARE MAT ck upon the time Tid at |and was promised a Job on the | poo Is _ronture, surrounde with : y in this cash raising event. A few contract goods excepted tng to Marsie, and T did not GetForm, Seed bine Bees.» 18 wake *| Preston as one of the happiest |P. braking if I would work as call hal Neahed wk inte thh Gnieee ae See windows mae Butter years of my life when I was trying | boy for a while. raster a ion aioe at's very wrone, Mollie,” tht reater crime than ever a a Die her ote gong i en e Washington ig |to do good things—when I was| Iwas then 19 and well developed | © a Ne ; eC Jere 6 » a id \t “fe f t yuld . | praised for what I dic lor my age ! reed yp TD oy bret Dave Pr) If the officers only knew how| I stood the jibes of the younger| BEATEN TO DEATH . od ‘ 2 ne cit-| Fresh ch bette llow like me is in| boys and worked several months, e ncen?” i +, | much better a fe! K ; ¥ paessnsarrage one hase 16 | Much rat school than out with thelalways in hope that soon I would) FOR A SCENT PIECE neee are untirely Private, (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) | irresh ranch » |mob, they'd keep us there until|be a brakeman ‘ FREE _ G * = . . ~ * E ination J SrinmnethWaia’s soy{they. were sure we wouldn't go| Then something broke in me, 1| CHICAGO, May &—Leo Crobow and Dingnosle y At the end of 1912 there were| Wisconsin twlnn >” | crooked again w desperate and in an instant] ski, 18 years old, and Dominick Mil- | T confine my practive to. chron: ,; ®@ 2.619.891 bee hives in Germany,| Block Swinn a: _19_| Why sometimes whe n they talked | decided to ramble Aueie : quit my | jerowski, years old, confessed|[M ‘id women, euch as chronic ail. sees thaw fait Gt thane’ belnk aqua to me there I would ery my heart| job at once and hit for Portland,| i... nad beaten Frank Vinackl so ments of the LIVER, STOMACH, 4 . ; oO « ry e' e , “ “—s 8, KIDNEYS, BLADD : 401-403 3d Ave, at Prussia, Silesia leads in the Prus| Phone your WANT AD to|Ut and wish I'd never done a bad | Ore | severely that he died an hour later | gaax, BLOOD, FILEa. VAmee J Pike St Yesler Way sian province with 187,264, and of| jATN 9400 today, for by to- thing Here, after | had fallen again for | 5° OSE VRINS, ULCERS, ETC, aif the’ wondreadian states only oday, y When they released me I had a|burglary, | was put away for on-| because he had refused to give them nih bONAWAT ‘ Havaria has more, The province of|morrow today will be yes} good record and was firmly resolved | other year's stretch in the Wash- a nickel to buy beer, according to a) [J so7 ‘Third Avenue, Seattle, Wy Posen counted 122,705, terday. to go home and lead a straight Ife: ington school of reform at Monroe, statement of the police i