The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 27, 1914, Page 10

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| Men’s 50c Wash Ties 25¢ Ea. | isfaction; 50c value on sale Thursday at 25c¢ each. This Store Will Be Closed All| Day Saturday, Decoration Day —“Clean-Up” Day— AT THE BON MARCHE’S ANNIVERSARY SALES The last day of the Anniversary Sales will be a memorable one from a bargain point of view, for all the edd lots, short lengths, and such like that have accumulated | during the exceedingly busy events will be thrown on counter and table at prices low enough to insure their all being sold in a day. | And now, just a last word—to say “thank you” for the splendid way you have | helped to make our 24th Ann Sales the bi st and best ever held in Seattle 100 New Tailored Suits to Be “Cleaned Up” at Newly Trimmed Garments of Worsteds, Bedford Cords and Serges $9, THOUGH THEY ARE WORTH FAR MORE In Hague Blue, Tan, Brown, Navy Blue, Black and Black and White Check. $9.85 for nice tailored Suits—sounds like July clearance prices, doesn’t it?—and yet it is but May Nice, light weight Suits, just right for summer wear, in the plain tailored or cutaway fronts—semi-tailored and Etons—either plain or nicely trimmed with satin, silk or tapestry.-Second Floor of The Bon Marche. —“CLEAN-UP” SALE— | —“CLEAN-UP” SALE— Of Short Lots of Men’s Of Small Lots of Gloves, Furnishings for Thur$day Underclothes and Sweaters Men’s 25c Silk Neckwear 12!/2c| $3.75 and $4 Sweaters $2.75 . ¥ ‘s Sweaters | y, cardinal, maroon Silk Neckwear in very pretty patterns at just Childr 8 Sweater gra car ' < half price. Made of good silk, full length, priced some in Norfolk style, with belt, or with stylish spectal at 12%0 each instead of 25c, on Thursday. Ruffneck collars. Sizes 4 to 14 years of age, $2.76. Men’s 50c Underwear at 25c] $1.25 Kid Gloves at 79 Pair Broken lines of Men's heavy, dark brown Cot- | ,, Women's fine Dress Kid Gloves in black, mie. ton Ribbed Underwear, both shirts and drawers, | ott cloves of in. Some gray and black but ce phy gpa tm the lot. Regular 60c kind, Mochas. Sizes 6% to 7% spec! . 35e Union Suits at 25¢ Each Women's low neck, sleeveless ribbed Cotton Wash Ties, in heavy Oxford and silk, very | Union Suits; white with lace trimmed cuff knees pretty stripes and very durable, and will give sat | sizes s4 tc Spectal at instead of 360 each, | on Thursday Boys’ 50e Union Suits at 39¢ Just 39 each for Boys’ Porosknit Union Suits, | seconds of the 50c quality, In sizes from 4 to 14 | years of age. Ideal underwear for summer wear. | Babies’ 10¢ Shirts at 5c Each Low neck, sleeveless Shirts to fit babies 1, 2, 3 | and 4 years of age. Swiss ribbed garments, tn white, with ribbon at neck and arm holes. 100 | value, be each. | —Lower Main Floor of the Bon Marche. 75e and $1 Tourist Caps 25¢c Men's 75c and $1.00 Toulrst and Auto Caps, made of cravenette worsteds and crash, to be dis- posed of Thursday at only 25 each. A splendid bargain. Men’s 50c Leather Belts 19¢ Men's Belts, of harness leather, in black only; good and strong, with gunmetal Washington buckle. Sizes 30 to 42. While we have any, 1%¢ each. —Lower Main Floor of the Bon Marche. THE INSURANCE COMPANIES HAVE SOLD US THE } Salvage Stock of “Helen Igoe” Shop for Women It will be on sale at this store on Monday, June 1, at from 25c to 75c on the dollar. Full particulars will be given in next Sunday’s papers. A BIG CLEAN-UP OF COTTON REMNANTS| Remnants of Domestics Rescate of 12 1-2¢ to 18¢] Remnants of 15¢ to 25¢ | Worth 7c to 10¢ Yard at , Useful Lengths | White Goods, Special at | Sn titer ceereensarmepepeerratenenhnpsororvetegraserermarrongrssrerienreip arent THE SEATTLE i Pa —5e a Yd.— An overstock of short lengths makes this deep cut necessary, 80 we say Se instead of 7c for 10¢ Ginghams, Percales, Calicoes, Cretonnes, Outings and Fiannels in lengths up to 7 yards. On spectal sale Thursday. Odd 15c and 25¢ Neckwear —at 10c— A clean-up of odd pieces of | Women’s Neckwear, such as Chemisettes of net, Dutch Col- lars, Standing Collars, Jabots, Bows in colors; 1c. Boys’ One and Two Pants Norfolk Suits, Special —at $5.00- Boys’ Norfolk Suits of serges, fn Might and dark gray, brown and pencil! stripes, with one and two pairs of full-peg Knicker- bocker pants, lined throughout, in the loop belted style, for $5.00. INFANTS’ 25¢ SILK HOSE, 3 PAIRS 50c ‘f0e a Yd. Hundreds of useful lengths up to 5 and 6 yards, in Ginghams, Percales, Galateas, Crepes, Suit- ings, Lawns, Dimities and Eden Cloth, that sell regularly at 12%e to 18c a yard. Special at 10c a yard. Neckwear and Plaiting at Reduced Prices 25e and 35¢c Plaitings for —10c Yd.— Remnant Plaiting Net, Shadow Lace, in cream and white: lengths, 1 to 2 yards, in aiff yles, at 10¢ a yard Us Floor, ot Boys’ Sample Straw Halts Worth $1.50 to $5.00 at 1-2 Price Sample Straw Hats of Milan and Sennate braid, trimmed with black, blue or white grosgrain ribbon outside bands and leather or cloth insiae bands. Sizes 6% to 6%, priced for Thursday at just half. 10e a Yd. A big lot of odds and ends in white goods remnants, including White Lawns, Fan Lawns, Long Cloth and Crep worth regular 1c and 25c a yard, Spe celal at 10¢ a yard Floor of the Bon Marche. WOMEN’S 25¢ BLACK SILK LISLE HOSE AT —15c Pr.— Seconds of black Silk Lisle Stockings, with double gar ter tops, reinforced double heels and Sizes 81% to 10 —Lower Main Floor. A “CLEAN-UP” ALE IN THE BOYS’ STORE Boys’ Golf Dress Shirts Worth 85¢c, Special at —25e Ea.— Golf Dress Shirts in Plaited and soft bosoms, with cuffs attached. Neat pin stripes and figured effects, in sizes 12 to 14 years; worth up to S5¢ Some are coat style with ocean pearl buttons, Lower Main Floor. Roya’ A “Clean-Up” Sale of Jewelry Novelties | Jet Earrings Are Priced at, Pretty New Girdles Priced | Lower Main | \ ee ee a | —i7e Pr.— | —50c Pr.— —98c Ea.— 500 pairs of Infants’ Silk Jet Earrings, Drops, Hoops | Accordion plalted Girdles in Stockings, white only; fine and Loop Earrings, in fine, | all the newest colorings, made elastic ribbed legs. Sizes 4 bright or mat jet finish; gold- | of fine messaline silk, in all | to 6%. Lower Main Floor. filled or gunmetal mountings. | sizes, priced at 98¢ each | Special at NTS OF LACE AND TRIMM —l/2 PRICE— Only half price Thursday for 2,000 yards of | remnants of Laces, Allovers, Edges, Bands and broidery Edges and Bands, worth 25¢ and 36e Flouncings, also Nets and Chiffons, Braid and | a yard, epecial at 10c a yard Widths up to 18 Beaded Trimmings, lengths % to 1% yards, | inches, lengths from 1 to % yards worth 250 to $5.98 yard. | Upper Main Floor of the Bon Marche. E SOc a pair. | SAT Upper Main Floor. 25c AND 35c EMBROIDERY REMNANTS —Il0e YARD— 4,000 remnants of Swiss and Nainsook ¥ LOTS OF FLAGS FOR DECORATION DAY—FOURTH FLOOR, MARCH Union Street, Second Avenue, Pike Street. Telephone Main 6425, ‘LAKE VICTIMS ARE BURIED Many friends and relatives of Floyd La Batt and George Leo Max well, drowned in Lake Washington last Friday, attended the funeral yesterday d the funeral service at the funeral A fr Butterworth undertaking Maxwell boy were held from the Church of Conception. Rev, J, B. Noftsinger r of Floyd La Hatt, which was he vhapel. Services for the }the Immaculate WANTS BUSSELL IN COURT petition asking for Judge Frater has continued the hearing on the establishment of the legal rights of Wallace A. Buasell, until June 4 | Prosecutor Murphy yesterday demanded that Bunsell appear in court | He is now in Low Angele | Hussell shot Joseph Bonner here four years ago while suffering from mental trouble, due to overstudy, He was released from Stella coom. STARVES; SHE IS SET FREE LONDON, May 27.—-Mrs, Pankhurst was released from prison again today under the “cat and mouse” law, She was on hunger strike, and would have died she not t Hberated, Her arrest was made in connection with her participation tn a clash between suff: ® and police, when a delegation of the former tried to see King rrKe at | Buckingham palace. OUIMET MAKES HOPE HOPELESS | LABOULIE, France, May Francia Oulmet, American golf champion, today defeated Charles Hope one up in the play for the amateur golf champlonship of France. Other scores were; Atterly beat Bowers, one up; Topping de feated Leblanc, one up, and Travers beat Herreshoff, 6 up and 4 to play Three Americans and one Australian remain tn the running ‘WINS $20,000 CABLE POOL NORTH SYDNEY, N. F, May 27.—Wilitam C. Townsend cable operator, won the International cable pool on the Epsom derby, It was worth $20,000. Every year the cable operators of the world make & pool on the derby ‘START AUDITORIUM CAMPAIGN Now for a public auditorium | The Commercial Clab went on record again last i4ght In favor of | jeuch a building in Seattle. It was voted to Join with the Federation of Music Clubs to wage a new campaign before various organization of the city to secure such @ meeting place that will be a thing of munict-| pal pride. |MUST BE COP TO BE IN STYLE If this thing keeps up, everybody'll be « plain clothes cop The other day Chief Griffiths arranged to have a lot of business n to watch the sf flends arrangements with the street car company to have ite conductors and motormen act etectives in spotting crooks. What chance has the poor erimina | | FIGHT SAVES LUMBER MILLS | When flames | mill at Ballard yente men can mounting skyward at y afternoon, it was the Campbell lumber 4 the high wind would carry the fire throughout the mill district, but after a terrific fight, the fire department confined the blaze to the one mill, The loss will be about $6,000, one-third covered by Insurance “WEE” MAKES ’EM DIG UP | Wee” Coyle, former “U" football hero, yesterday at Olympta collected a dollar each for the rowing crew fund from Gov. Lister, Supreme Court Justices John F. Main, George EB. Morria, H. D. Crow| ad prominent Olympia citizens, Saturday is the last day for con-| tributions PIONEER co. WILL GET DUST The cireult court of appeals at San Francisco yesterday rendered | | decision favorable to the Pioneer Mining Co. of Nome, in its suit |against Jobn Tiberg for $14,245 gold dust deposited by Tiberg in the! Seattle assay office The company claima he stole it. Tiberg was| | tried on a charge of theft and freed. |BISHOP SCADDING PASSES PORTLAND, May 27.—Right Rev, Charles Scadding, Episcopal | bishop of the diocese of Oregon, died at his residence here early today{ of pleural pneumonia. Funeral services will be held from the ca thedral Sunday afternoon. Wy Bishop Scadding was born tn Toronto, Ont, 1861 | survived by a widow Noy. 25, He ts| i} | | | TO GIVE BENEFIT CONCERT | To raise funds for charity cases at the Swedish hospital, a benefit concert will be given tomorrow evening, May 28, at the First Swedish Baptist church, Ninth ay. and Pine st The Swedish hospital is a charitable institution. The concert is in charge of John Isaacson, leader of the Mission Tabernacle chorus; Robert Johnson and H. P. Sather, leader of the Svea male choir. REBELS AFTER ‘MOTHER PORT 8. 8S. CALIFORNIA, MAZATLAN, Mex. May 26.—(By wireless to mt Diego, Cal., May 27.)—The Mexican rebels succeeded today in breaking railroad communication between Manzanillo and Guadalajara. Gen. Obregon, the rebel lender, is pushing south, presumably to- ward Salina Cruz, the only other railroad port still held by the Mexican federals on the west coast. DEFENDS PRESBYTERIANS CHICAGO, May 27 Assertions that the Presbyterian church has no place for workingmen w warmly denied today before the denom ination’s eral assembly here, by Dr, Edgar Hill, of the Home Mis sions board. POOR MYRA HAD NO FRIENDS PHOENIX, Ariz, May 27.--Miss Myra Tirrell, 80, died here to- | day, leaving her beautiful home and her entire estate of $50,000 for a) home for stray cats, dogs and other dumb animals. Miss Tirrell tatght in the Arizona public schools for more than | | 40 years. | DRANK WITH STRANGER; DEAD SAN FRANCISCO, May 27.—John Enos, quarryman, drank wine from a bottle tendered by a stranger who struck up an acquaintance with bim in the street, and died later from strychnine poisoning. | WHITE W LL ALSO BE HEARD | The Eagles’ O, Cavanaugh conductor, will entertain in| concert Thursday e athe. May 28, In Eagles’ hall, Seventh av. and | Pine st. Crawford BE. White, past president, will make the address |} | of the evening ‘STRATHCONA ESTATE TO PAY | | | | MADISON, Wis, May The state tax commission announced today the estate of the late Lord Strathconna soon would pay an tn heritance tax of $100,000 to Wisconsin. Strathconna left Northern Pacific |AVIATOR REPORTED RESCUED | LONDON, May 27.—~That Gustave Hamel, the aviator who started last Saturday morning to fly from Lecrotoy, France, to Hendon, Eng- land, has been picked up by a fishing boat and landed at South Shields, | | Bi ngland, was reported here ® today. Hamel had been given up for lost. | ‘MAY BUY A DREADNAUGHT | SAN FRANCISCO, May 27,—Rafael Araga, Gen, Obrogon’s' repre. sentative, was arrested on a complaint charging he was given $7,580 to buy a Mexican rebel warship, and had spent $4,000 of {t on himself, NOW, ROCKEFELLER invites those tax commis Cleveland residence and assess what they find the | clear photograph of what they find. railroad stock worth loners to visit his We would like a VILLA HAS gone to jailing the lawyers who fall Into hie hands. Pa exbandit ie surely making some high bids for popularity in jexico, I REDERICK Store opers STORE <a hee eos at 830 and closes at 5.3I0 WILL CLOS & NELSON E SATURDAY IN OBSERVANCE OF MEMORIAL DAY | | Goods Sold in the Basement Sale oom Are New Goods B ought Especially for This Salesroom. The Service Is of the Same High Standard as Elsewhere Throughout the Store. Wool Dress | Materials | ‘ Reduced to | | | | | NEW SUITS, $18.50— | ————— Women’s Sample’ Shoes | New White Chinchilla Coats $15.00 1ite chinchilla cloth tailored of soft in the medium-length Balmacaan style, these Coats are just what many are ecking for wear over thin Summer dre sees and for motoring and boating. | Coats of cut chinchilla in the same tyle are shown in white ground effects, with black or brown plaid or stripes. The shipment sizes 14, 16 and 18, 34 to 40 bust measurement. includes and soft-fin- ished featuri Russian skirts as well as peg-top and peplum Sizes 34 to 42. Price $18.50. Basement Galesroom. Cretonnes Special 18¢ and 25c Yard Advance Summer styles in serge, g the new effects Special 4 . N the Basement Sales- 50¢ Yard $2.15 Pair room, Thursday, an ALUES of an excep SAMPLE LOT of unusual offering of For- tional nature are to aabesrrs ‘ Domestic Cre- Women’s Oxfords} °'8" re be found in these clear : i tonnes at two very low ance offerings at 50 | and Pumps, 175 pairs in prices, yard. Included ae WAY. AL berg An abundance of good A lot of Imported | tems and fasta, acta ae patterns and colorings, Voiles, all-wool and very | ‘ia! offering Thursday at} i iuding dainty, bright fine grade, in Black, | $215 pair effects for sitting rooms Navy, Copenhagen, Dove, Included are Button) and sleeping chambers; Champagne ard Tobacco, | Oxfords, Two- strap also darker effects for 46 inches wide, reduced | Pumps, and Pumps with- dining-room, living-room to 5O¢ yard jout straps, in Patent, or library. Two lots in French Dress Fabrics Gun-metal, Tan Suede) the selling: in plain and fancy effects, | and Velvet materials. An CRETONNES, 32, 34 widths 40 to 44 inches, in exceptional opportunity! and 36 inches wide, spe- Champagne, Pearl-gray, for those who wear sizes cial 18¢ yard. Cardinal, Brown, Hunt 3, 3%, 4 or 4% CRETONNES, 32, 34 er’s-green and Navy, re Special = pair. and 36 inches wide, spe- asement § duced to 50¢ yard ent Salesroom. Thursday Apron Specials, 39¢c and 45c 8 sketched, Princess Apron in back fastening style, made with two large pockets and trimmed around arm-eyes and on pocket with white rick-rack braid. Pat- terned with black dots, fine pin-stripes or small patterns. Special 39¢. neck, Bungalow Apron of blue chambray gingham, with turn-back kimono sleeves and wide straps bound with white or red. Special 39¢, Large Bungalow Aprons of strong percale, with turn-back kimono sleeves and trimming of white rick-rack braid Made with ‘round neck and wide bands bound with white. Special 45¢. Basement Salesroom 6 NY cial 25¢ yard. Basement Salesroom. 1 White Pique Middies 65¢ Well-tailored Bal- kan Middies of white with pique, square collar and cuffs of self-material. These popular Outing Blouses are shown 14 to 20 attractively priced at 65c. LINGERIE WAISTS, $1.50— Charming effects in Voile, Crepe an@ All-over Embroidery, some introducing a color note in embroidered dots and Sizes #4 to 44. Price $1.50, —Basement Salesroom. in sizes years, stripes. Clearance of Wash Goods Remnants at 5c and 10c Yard AT 5¢ YARD— Remnants of Dress and Apron Ging- Prints of various kinds, Unbleached Muslins, Colored Flannel, Lining wash hams, Bleached White and Flannelettes, other desirable for clearance, 5¢ yard and Outing Materials and fabrics, AT 10¢ YARD— Useful lengths of Mercerized Cotton , Dress and Kimono Crepe, standard quality Percale, Galatea and Dress Gingham, Barred Lawns, fine Muslin, Cambric and other mate- rials, for clearance, 10¢ yard. Basement _Salesroom Poplins and Pongees Camisole Laces Special, 10¢c Yard AMISOLE LACES in a sortment of dainty widths up to 14 inches, large as- shadow designs, special 10¢@ yard. Basement Salesroom Women’: 8 . Silk Gloves 39¢ and 65c Pair 5 Hureeeg S Tricot Silk Gloves with three rows of embroidery on back Assorted sizes, 39% and double-tipped fingers in black and white. Two-clasp style, pair; 16-button length, 65¢ pair Milanese Silk Gloves with Paris-point embroidery ind Black and style, pair; 16-button length, 85c pair. Basement Salesroom. double-tipped fingers white, two-clasp Allover Laces Reduced to 30¢ Yard N under-priced assortment of Allover Laces, including 36-inch Nets with 18-inch Venise All- overs in many desirable patterns, reduced to 30¢ yard. large self , also ~-Basement Salesroom. Children’s Stockings 10c Pair B' ACK Seamless Stockings in ribbed weave, sizes 6%, 7%, 8% and 9%, Basement Salesrogm. the pair, 10¢. Rubber-Cushion Hair Brushes Special 25¢ PECIAL values in Hair Brushes with single bristles set in rubber cushion and strong back, special 25¢. —Basoment Salesroom. | | | | a | pr

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