The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 30, 1914, Page 8

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—_—__—SHOP EARLY IN THE WEEK. FOR THE BON MARCHE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY a —BOYS’ $5.00 SUITS FOR $2.95— | Better Get Your Boy a New | —Suit for the Fourth— —AND LET. HIM FEEL AS WELL— —DRESSED AS OTHER FELLOWS — We're nding about half the expense at this sale of Boys’ $5.00 Suits at $2.95. Very good styles here for boys 7 to 18 years of age. Lots of good patterns, too, in gray and brown mixed, in checks or natty stripes and other good patterns and colors. Two good styles of coat—the belted Norfolk and | the plain double breasted, with full lined knicker- | bockers. | Norfolk Suits Worth to $15, Specially Priced | 58 50! | Boys’ 1k Models in Boys’ Suits, Bulgarian stitched on belt and loop belted style, Children’s Hair Cutting 25¢ in rich browns, grays, pin stripes and checks, with hair-lines and plain colors. All > jooeks have serge or alpaca linings, Pants ure all lined and made with belt loops, to 18 years, And a kindly woman barber to do the work one who understands lite folks and their ways. See Our Chiropody Specialist You can safely leave your children with her If you have any foot troubles, call and see Dr. M. EB, Sullivan, chiropody specialist, from while you attend to the reat of your shopping —Third Floor, Union St. Store College, Baltimore, Maryland. She ts ready to serve you at all times in our.Marin- ello Shop on the Third Floor. Men’s Bathing Suits Priced | Boys’ Bathing Suits Priced $1.00 to $2.50 | 50c to $1.00 Men's Bathing Suits, $1.00 and | The $0c and 5$c Bathing Sutts $1.50 value, in combination style | are of cotton, with white or red of plain and fancy stripes. $2.00 ‘and $2.50 suits, in navy and black | arq $1.00 each. ‘wool mixtures, to choose from. menta. Lower Main Floor of the Bon Marche. THERE'LL BE LOTS OF FLAGS FLYING ON THE ‘FOURTH’ YOU'LL WANT SOME, TOO, WON’T YOU? Printed Cotton American Flags Printed Cotton American Flags, seed stripes, clamp dyed field. Six sizes to choose from, ranging in prices from 60¢ to $2.25 each. Fine decorations. 2% x4 foot, at 3x5 feet, at silk American staffs in good colors; Lowest re prices, rt a. 100 each. $1.00 dozen. Fiags $212 Tinh, 200 each i 00 dozen 12x18 ine, 380 each, $4.85 Flags 16x84 ine. boc each, Flags 24x24 ins., $1.00 = Casting Reds with 3 joints, ee ee bamboo lth nickel fittnwe . O5C ot a 30¢ in the different sizes and colorings. @ fee Kaamelea Tame, in oe eee, oe inks fee eved strong line fer 8 rye pr the card. c ‘@ carry a ed emo, taney ede see were the Rats oe tine’ Ciicn S305" Monee ip; mi v gso, and’ Marten at ean and 63 The: Utien' German’ Silver “Triple. Action Spite Reet, click a jexclea ty 2) her Reels, splendid quality, | 1 sniow as WOC We aoe ‘quite a ‘of Base wL in- gjading the Sowdung yellow, May white, can wth — 219 for deep or Mother Montreal, Lord Baltimore, at_spe- low w: . cial prices. —Fouerth Floor. WE HAVE EVERYTHING THAT'S NEEDED FOR OUTDOOR SPORTS SOc Mitts at 3!¢ Each Boys’ Baseball Mitts and Gloves of good qual- Baseball Suite of can- ton flannel; blue trim- med with white: gray White rock ma Maliets and Balls, with Made of hard- spun yarn in Roman stripe effect with throw-back | galvanized wickets; 4- | trimmed oF ity; black and tan leath- ball set in wooden box, | frousate and shirts All | @fa; slightly under regu- pillow, wide valance and Women’s Oxfords and High Shoes, Worth to $3.50 $1.89 a Pair Neat Footwear to Wear on the Fourth Most all leathers represented in this lot of Oxfords and High made with turn or welt soles on good style of last. Not all sizes in all kinds, but all sizes in the combined lines. $1.89 pair —Upper Main Floor. at 790 @ set. sizes, special at 69c. lation sine; full padded. TOWLET pretty complexions must be taken care of these warm summer days. Here are some of the things you ought to have—at lower prices than you are usually asked to pay. 50¢ Cold Cream 29¢ a Jar Just 290 a Jar for Daggett & Rarns- dell's Cold Cream; the boc size. Fino for sunburned faces and arms. the comp! for this sale at i9e Metal Tooth Brush Holder —Free— ith eve ante Brush at te ‘over, © metal Tooth Brush weil be given tree. Space Hnoiding 4 ad- ints otter. (Bis, for tender tect, a amorted odors. ‘ npectal | an a wi eo C | Toner waters, | cians 3 apecial at FREE EXHIBITION OF BEAUTIFUL FANCY WORK oi rene pated worked by Seattle's cleverest needlewomen for our Fourth ontest are on display in the Art Shop. of pretty needlework should see this collection—and it is quite free work done in the children’s class, by little ones of 10 or 12 years old, is specially a —Third Floor, Union St. Store. general? and “Home Journal” Style Sheets for August Are Here—Free, as Usual. BEMARCHE | Union Street. Necond Avenue, Pike street. ‘1 ¢ Main 6425, a 17 acd -2 Price— Juat half-price for our entire stock of Tourist Traveling Cases and Roll Ups. ormer prices 50 to $2.60. F those going on a trip this er, Be Peroxt for this we _TH E- SEATTLE —]HUERTA’S TROOPS DESERT | TO JOIN REBEL FORGES; DICTATOR'S END NEARING | VERA CRUZ, | Mexico City, the dictator's downfall and filght, and anarchy in the cap: | j ttal are predicted by refugegs arriving*from the interior today » From all sides reports reached Mexico City of desertions by federal soldiers to the rebels. Publteatton of these stories wan forbidden, but | | they circulated by word of mouth It was said the federal defeat at Zacagecas was due to a mutiny | 5,000 of the garrison refusing to face the rebels, le Huerta has been withdrawing troops from duty along the line of the Vera Cruz-Mexico City ratiroad, leaving only rurales to+guard it It ts doubted, however, if he can depend on the men he is recalling to : | | June 30.—A general revolt by Huerta’s troops, tn VILLA MEANS BUSINESS TORRBON, June 30.—There is no longer any question that the break between Carranza and Villa is sertous. Villa ts Known to have telegraphed Carranza ho ts tired of the eiving, and will do no more fight ° a Carrangaista commission ts on its held Friday or Saturday treatment he and his followers are r ing until an understandt | In reply he was not | Way to Torreon for a con | ‘HOPE TO PREVENT RUPTURE. WASHINGTON, June 30.—The administration here Js bringing all| the pressure tn its power today to prevent a final break between Car manga and Villa MAY START OWN GOVERNMENT } | } || I] i] EL PASO, June 30.—That Gen, Villa will throw off his allegiance | | H| HI 1] # reach d that ®, which wilt be to Gen. Carranza and establish a Mexican government of his own, with Angeles as provisional president, unless Carranza speedily comes to terms with him, fs predicted today by réBels here and at Juarez. WON'T JAIL EM LIKE DAD DOES | When Francis P. Griffiths, 9, the son of Chief of Police and Mra. Austin E. Griffiths, grows up, the chances are he will defend men tn trouble, Instead of sending them to Jail, His humdnitarian tendencies are shown in the following letter, | written after he had read a story in The Star about Edward Rowan, | ff sentenced to life imprisonment under dhe habitual criminal law: | “I do not think It right, if what he says fs true, that Rowan should | [i be tne prison. eads the letter of the you ter, “Of course, it is none) of my bus but [ just thought I'd give my opinion. It might be | ff that these men that say he robbed them went up in his room, ti spite. I don't think a law Hike that is right at all.” | Rowan was convicted in a robbery case. He agrees with young Griffiths.» At the county jail Rowan not only declared the habitual criminal act unjust, but said bis conviction under the robbery charge was secured ash two men wi knew his past record. IMBIBERS LOSE BANK ROLLS | Imbibing Joy water and losing bank rofis were closely connected || | Inet night. Thomas Burke, who lives In a boat at the foot of King at | got all Ht up in the Victor bar, & th av, 8. and Washington st, last night, and on bis way back to boat was all beaten up by three fl strong-arm men, who escaped with his §6 and other personal effects. |If 8. G, Woodruff, of the Georgian hotel, Fourth av., started tn to do | the cafes with bis wife. He left her early in the evening and went to! “Our House” bar. On his way back to the hotel, he was held up near the postoffice by several men with whom he had been drinking and lost $8 and a valuable watch and chain. When he reported the loss at police headquarters, he was arrested until he should sober up. Charles Johnson, New England hotel, First av, 8. and Main st, was drinking with some. strangers in the hotel bar. When he came to at midnight he was shy $15, When, how or who he knoweth not. | | IF MIDNIGHT basebal| doesn't boom Alaska, she might ae well be given up as hopeless. WOULD PROTECT HOSPITAL Mayor Gill wrote the council yesterday to the effect that there ts absolutely no fire protection at the new Firland hospital, and he recom. | mended insuring the bulldings, at Jeast until they are occupied. The) public safety committee will think it over. A city railway fund was established by ordinance. Into {t all rev- enties from the city car Iines will go, and it will be drawn on to meet all |} the lines’ expenses, i Wi WAS IT A PLEASANT PACT? ) LOS ANGELES, June 30.—Fred Schwartzechultz, waiter, is under |] arrest today, bis wife Nellie having charged he poured gasoline on her | f] clothing and threatened to set ft afire. Schwartsschults declared he and his wife saturated each other's clothing with gasoline, preparatory to the execution of a euicide pact. Mra. Schwartzachultz, who denied |j] his charge, declared that her husband, after pouring the of] on her, I| | threw her on a bed, scratched a match and held the flame within a foot || of her face. | [WANTS TO SAVE SWIMMERS “Boys will be boys,” said Police Chief Griffiths today, commenting on his request for a life-saving patrol on Green lake, as a result of the | drowning, Friday, of 10-yearold Edwin Mitchell. “It's no use to try land keep boys out of the water, I know from experience. Let them | go In and learn to swim, But have some means of rescue handy.” He wants not only grappling hooks and a pulmotor, but a patrol and a guard to save lives and give swimming instructions, TOUGH, WHEN a federal judge decides that lowans cannot steril- ize! XES HAS GOOD TEETH LONDON, Workmen today are reinforcing the timbering | of Westminster abbey's ceiling with steel. Xestobium Tesselatum have | | chewed the timbers so thoroughly that the celling threatens to cave in. | | The Xestobium Tesselatum is a small beetle, which eats the heart out | | of wood: } | | } | | | June 30. NINE BID ON COURTHOUSE Ont of nine bidders on the courthouse construction work, the Puget | | Sound Bridge and Dredging Co, is the lo it, with a price of $806,903, | | and $321,000 added in case the Xtra two stories for the city are built.) |The nine bids were within the limit price of $950,000, The award will| be announced later by the county commissioners. | | WITH BOTH of her ball teams licked twice in one day, Cleveland -| | Is claiming a new record, 'T. R. SICK? WELL, HARDLY | NEW YORK, June 30.—-Col, Theodore Roosevelt motored here to-| | day from Oyster Bay and left on an early train for Pittsburg. He said) | he never felt better. The former president was scheduled to reach | “ittaburg at 7 p.m, He will diffe with a number of progressive leaders and later deliver a speech at Exposition hall, ‘MOVIE SPEEDER IS HELD FLATBUSH, N. Y., June 30.—Accused of running over and killing an S-yearold boy with his automobile, and then fleeing at full speed, | Director James Young of the Vitagraph Co. of America was arrested on| a manslaughter charge. SOME DON'TS FOR FOURTH OF JULY DON'T | } think, because it didn’t go off right away, that there’s no fire there. hold your eye over it to see why it didn’t go off. pick It up right away to see why it didn’t go off. fall, before lighting it, to pick a place to throw it. throw it at your little sister—or little brother. throw it at a horse. go near your pile of fireworks with any fire in your hand. DON’T point a toy pistol at anybody. DON'T look into the muzzle to see if it's loaded. DON'T HAVE A TOY PISTOL OUND! And if you heed all, th there probably won't be any fin- gers or eyes missing on the Fifth, DON'T DON'T DON’T N'T ION'T DON'T ‘s T A R Meee head : Ladies’ : 5 tera FREDERICK &~ NELSON | cy ——-THE FURNITURE ‘EVENT OF. THE’ SEASON The 31st Semi- -Annual Sale.of. Furniture (Third and Fourth Floors) ey Fumed Onk Extenstor? © ‘ . or Rocker ® Table; 54-inch t exten nual ° Porat erml-ann le Price, y Dresser: Semi annual Sale Price, $30.00, « SP ECIAL purchfises from our best factories are in the Sale at prices sharply under regular values, ‘and all odd samples and discontinued patterns ffow remaining on our display floors are marked at decisive reductions for quick disposal. The Sale in- cludes: , 2% Bedroom Furniture’ Living-Room Furniture Library Furniture Hal] Furniture . Dining-Room, Furniture semi-annual event. vse warn A Three-Day Sale of Standard Toilet Sundries At Specially Low Prices—Begins Wednesday FACE CREAMS Eleaya Cream or Cerate, spe clal 336. Daggett & Ramadell's Perfect Cold Cream, special 23¢ and 20e. Sanitol Cream, special 12¢, Pond’s Extract Vanishing Cream, special 14¢ and 89¢. Peroxide Cream, special 15¢. Pompelan Massage Cream, special 2D¢, DENTIFRICES Pebeco Tooth Paste, special 20¢. Kolynos Tooth Paste, spectal 13¢. Lyons’ Tooth Powder, special 12¢. BSanitol Tooth Paste, special 11¢, Revelation Tooth special the. Powder or Powder, Euthymol Tooth Paste, spe- celal 12¢. Glyco-thymoline, special 35¢ and 69¢. Lavoris, special 20¢, FACE POWDERS La Blache Face Powder, spe clal 2%¢, Eleaya Face Powder, special 33. Java Rice Powder, special & Gallet's Violette de Parme Face Powder, special B3e. Mary Garden Face Powder, all shades, special $1.65. Piver's Face Powder, Arurea, Le Trefle and Floramye, special 69e. Roger & Gallet’s Rice der, special 16¢. HAIR TONICS Danderine, special 29¢ and Be bottle. Pinaud’s Fan de Quinine, special 29¢ and FE bottle. Newbro’s Herpicide, special Qe and FE bottle PERFUMES AND TOILET WATERS Garden Perfume, cial 81 ounce. Roger & Gallet’s Fine Ex- tracts, special Houbigant's special $1,389 ounce Piver's Azurea, Le T: Floramye Perfume, s ounce. Pinaud’s Lilas Vegetal, clal 50¢ bottle. Ro & Gallet's Violette de Parme Toilet Water, special G5¢ bottle. Pow- Mary spe- spe- —complete suites and odd’ pieces, priced to the finest grades and all keenly under-priced for this BASEMENT SALESROOM FACE LOTIONS Hind’s’ Hon¢éy and Almond Cream, spectal 29¢, Almond Cream, special 15¢. Gouraud’s Oriental Creath, a liquid powder, special 95¢. Holmes’ Frostilla, special 13¢. Yoodbury’s Facial Cream, special 14¢. Espey's Cream, special 14¢, Curosa Rose and Cucumber Jelly, special 14¢. BRUSHES Whisk Brooms, special 19¢. Rubber-cushion Hair Brushes, special 19¢. Hair Brushes with wood backs, special 50¢. Nall Brushes; wood backs, special 10¢. ‘ Prophylactic Tooth Brushes, special 196, Kleanwell special 19¢. Rubberset special 19¢, TALCUM POWDERS Mennen’s Borated or Violet Talcum Powder, special 10¢. Lebn & Fink's Riveris Tal- cum Powder, special 18¢. Squjbb’s Violet or Carnation Talcum, special 10¢, Babcock’s’ Corylopsis Taleum Powder, special 10¢. Mary Garden Talcum Pow- der, special 39¢ Jar. Williams’ Taleum Powder, Violet, La France Rose and Carnation, special 10¢, Armour’s Baby Balm Taleum Powder, special 19¢, TOILET SOAPS Tooth Brushes, Tooth Brushes, Cuticura Soap, special 13¢ cake. 4711" Glycerine Soap, spe- cial 10¢ cake. Stork Castile Soap, special 6¢ cake. Woodbury’s cial 11¢ cak Roger & Gallet’s Soap, assort- ed odors, special 19¢ cake. acial Soap, spe- Jergen’s Violet Glycerine Soap, special @¢ cake Cont! Castile Soap, special 5Me large bar. La Primera Castile Soap, special %@ cake Physicians’ & Surgeons’ Soap, special ¢ cake. Cool Linen Wash Suits For Women and Misses $7.50 and $8.75 EW arrivals in Tuxedo eff tunic skirt belt and plain skirt Women's sts with three-quarter Linen Suits are in ; others are very practical in the regulation out- ing style with patch pockets and three-inch patent leather Attractive values at $7.50 and $8.75. New White Chinchilla Coats $12.50 well-tailored of good quality white, Plain Balmacaan, for outing and general Price $12.50. also white grounds striped with black, full-belted and half-belted styles, wear chinchilla coating brown or and Women's Misses’ ranging from the medium- smart sleeves and long in plain blue serviceable sizes, Basement Sulesroom Fairy Soap, dozen cakes. Pears’ Glycerine Soap, spe cial 12¢ cake. Pears’ Unscented Soap, spe- cial 10¢ cake. Packer's Tar Soap, special 12¢ cake. Sylvan Soap, special 7¢ cake. Carmel Castile Soap, special Te cake. : Williams’ Barbers’ Bar Shay- ing Soap, special 3¢ cake. Life Buoy Soap, special 4é cake. Jap Rose Soap, spectal Be cake. js special 43c¢ MISCELLANEOUS Mentholatum, special 12¢@, Canthrox, special 29¢, Lustr-ite Nail Enamel, spe celal 13¢. Lambert's Listerine, spe cial 14¢, 28¢ and 59¢. Twenty-mule Team Borax, special 6¢, Witch Hazel, pint-bottle. El Perfecto Veda Rose Rouge, special 25¢, Dorin’s Rouge Brunette, spe- clal 27¢. Absorbent Cotton, Bauer & — Black's, special 29¢, “Mum,” @ deodorant, special 15e. Hygea Nursing Bottles, sat cial Me, Hygea Nursing Nipples, spe- cial 96, Sea Salt, large sack, special 12¢. is Pinaud’s Brilliattine, special 25e. Rubber Gloves, cial 25¢ pair. — Peroxide of Hydrogen, spe- cial Ge, 10¢ and 14¢ bottle, Rose Water and Glycerine, special 7¢, Rose Water, special 7¢@, Glycerine, special 7¢, Facts of Camphor, spectal Bromo Seltzer, special and 13¢ bottle. bee Williams’ Shaving Stick Powder, special 17% ¢, * Combs, special 39¢, Rath Caps of pure gum rub- ber, special 39¢, Traveling Cas spect: B9e. —First Floor, spectal 16¢ y

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