The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 3, 1915, Page 8

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Thursday in the Bon Marché Shoe Shop A Sale of Women’s $3.50 Shoes at $2.79 Patent Colt—Burton Style With the Dark Gray Overlap Cloth Tops—in Sizes 2 1-2 to 7 Smart looking Shoes for trim tittle feet—and at such an attractive price on Thursday Good $3 yes—Judged by any shoe standard that we know of—for $2.79 a pair, They are made of patent colt, button syle, with the dark gray overlap. cloth tops They have stage-length vampse—light wetght soles—and the new shape concave heels—and you will find that they fit so nicely Women’s Gaiters 95c and $1.00 a Pair | Women’s $5.00 Bronze Pumps $2.68 We have just recetved a shipment of Galters | Bronze Kid Evening Pumps, the two-strap kinds, in the new shades of pearl and fawn at 9 also | with hand-turned sole. Have covered Cuban white with Diack braid trimming and buttons; | Louls heels and new dress toe shape—a large $1.00 a pair. Women’s $3.50 Patent Shoes $2.39 | Women’s New Lace Shoes $3.50 Pair Take your chotce of elther dull or patent fin d leather Lace Boots at $3.50 a pair, Sizes to 8, widths B to EB, with tops of battleship ay cloth. —Upper Main Floor. | range of sizes Women's Patent Leather Button Style Shoes at only $2.39 a pair. Made with light fawn cloth tops—plain or patent leather heel foxing and medium length vamp. ps ish Men’s Cozy Outing Flannel Pajamas, at Lessened Prices | Men’s $1.00 Oating Pajamas at 69¢ | Men’s $1.25 Outing Pajamas at $1 | Men's good weight Outing Flannel Pajamas Only $1.00 for splendid weight Outing Flannel | going Thursday at 69c Instead of $1.00. Sizes 15 | Pajamas with pink and blue designs, nicely trim to 18, with good liberal cut, and finished with 4 | med with 4 frogs and full cut braid frogs. | —Lower Main Starting the March Sale of Dinnerware With 500 White and Gold $6.00 50-Piece Dinner Sets —at $3.95— Full 50-Plece Sets—complete service for 6 persons—the dec oration consists of a dainty conventional gold border. This is one of our regular open-stock patterns—and so you can add to it at any time. of 1 covered dish, 2 meat platters, sauce boat, vegetable dish, 6 cups and 6 bread and butter plates, 6 soup plates and 6 Floor. | ia : $15.00 Austrian China Dinner Set —at $9.95— Translucent Austrian China Dinnerware known the world over for its thin, pure white body, with conventional and floral border design open stock 50-plece set $22.93 Open Stock Dinner Sets Go —at $15.00— Chas. Abrenfeld French China Dinnerware, made tn Limoges, France. One of our best open- stock patterns—with red and green border decora- tion. Lower Main Floor, 50-Piece $10.74 Dinner Set Going —at $5.95— Finest quality American Sem!-Porcelain Dinner Set in the new ‘Westover” shape, decorated with multi-colored border design with edges and han. dies gold traced. 50-Piece $12.50 Dinner Set Priced —at $7.95— $12.50 Dinner Set, a fine imitation of a “Min- | ton” China pattern of substantial English semt- porcelain, which is the best made for around When You Can Buy a $14 Seamless Velvet Rug $3.95 ea. For Heavy $5.00 Smyrna Rags— Size 6x9 Feet For $10.90 There Is No Economy in Going Without The Rug is full room size, too—9x12 feet—and is made all in one plece—no chance for such a rug to rip-—and you can have !t In a nice floral pattern or Oriental design—whichever you like best $6.00 Royal Wilton Rugs $1.95 Each Here's a wonderful bargain {in Royal Wiltoa Carpet Samples, in lengths of 1% yards, with heavy selvedge ends with most artistic designs and colors. SBe 5 Birwsocle Pais 43c a Yard | $2.65 Body Brussels Rugs $1.39 Each Get enough Carpet at this sale to supply you| Best Body Brussels Rugs, 1% yards long, with at house cleaning time. 55c¢ value Tapestry Brus-| desirable colors woven through to the back. All sels in both stair and room designs, also suitable | have heavy overlocked ends and with very pretty for hall runners. patterns —Third Floor. Bakery White Goods Specials Specials Angel Food, Jelly Rol! Cake, reguiar price your choice Thursday You can get heavy Symrna Rugs Thursday at less. They are size 6x9 feet, perfectly reversible here much “St. Patrick Favors and Table Decorations r | | | Wine 10c Seals, severn 10c kinds, priced, a box. * | | Seda Crackers (200 rebate whe | hon me gael pig ya Patrick Lunch _ Sets, | tin in returned), regular QQ for 1 | $1.00 tins priced at.. Cc @ for 12 50c a8 ven | Home-made Light Rolls, like ° inches wide, embroidered 4 Q mother ured to make. 4 Qe ucasabet. Credo Pawo: ton dota and figures; yard c selling Thursday, dozen. prised 15c Whites Pigues ténathe 4s" bs designs, court re yards nehes | se. rick Mottoes, boxed for mailing, SOc, Bhe and neatly 25c 1 ower Main Floor. From 9 A. M. to 12 Forenoon bargains at reduced prices. No telephone orders can be accepted for any of them. 20c Sateen Remnants at es aie ee lnree size @1.00 dozen 10¢; scmall size, donen eee Geng Cottons for Less Several lines of Domestics | at reduced prices for the day. Mill Ends of Cheviot —8}c Yd.— Cheviot Shirting, yards, 27 Inc lengths to & | hea wide | Heavy json Crepe Paper Ten- edium shades, checks ar colors and t dozen, b0¢ medal had k H atriper, es, tans and grays. Also p shades —Upper Main Fivor. A Ginghi 25c Scrim 10c a Yard Novelties for St. Patrick’s i sir on Ya. Fine Scrim Remnants tn a great variety «| in white, Ar ym for either Patrick tains. 9 a. m mpage Third Floor. Son tad Be aoe Mill Ends Percale 8'/3c | Women’s 10c Vests 5c Shamrocks, for taMill Ende of Percale, tengths Women's Swiss Ri otton Patrick's Day, eac < a ahd ik see ae r de, Vents, sizes 4, 5 and 6, low necks pan en with neat figures and stripes and sleeveless; 10c value. On ca Tasien ¢ Priced ic a yard sale from 9 u. m. to 12 at bc each 1 Lower Main Floor, 86. Patetete ‘Potatoes, 50c Coverall Aprons 29c BEtOEGy SEED 28-In. Wide Madras 10c | nisting Madras Hats for St. Patrick's Day, Girls’ Gingham = —_ Coverall ards inches grouse, isos 6 to 14. years something new and = bey Di made with pocket and belt and novel, e Fine for —Fourth Floor bound with white tape, 9 to 12 at 29c, Seeond Fi For the Home Gardener—The Annual Sale of Rose Bushes, Shrubs and Garden Seeds—Fourth Floor | Garden Tools—Lower Main Floor McCall and Ladi THE bon MARCH EF} Pike St. Second Ave. Union 8t., Seattle, Elliott 4100 Lower Main Floor, ' Home Journal Paper Patterne—Third Floor. | | THE SEATTLE STAR PORT BONDS AND CREDIT OF CITY MENACED BY CHANGE IN PORT BOARD, PRICE DECLARES don the Price & port Co. attle's or comminsion, John } told the Munietpal le The market for Seattle's port commission bonds ts dead now he declared If we take away from the non-'t political features, the sale of securities of this sort preciat Depreciation of port not alone of the port REVIEWS OLYMPIA MEETING Harold Preston, the port's attorney, told what } the fight being wa John F awced by of the bond firm of uesday comminsion ts will further de port bonds reflects on the credit of the entire elty ! been done at Olympia since Saturday towards reaching a #ettement in the port muddle, Including a review of the meeting between King county sen store and a Seattle delegation last Saturday night “It was urged then that it would be outrageous, after the port commission was created by vote of the people, to take away the peo-) s right to elect their own officials,” sald Preston, “It was further the bill should have a provision that {t would not become ef fective until submitted to the voters at a general election PLAN ANOTHER PROTEST Preston explained the amendment he offered commission of five men, to be ted at the general county in November, 1916, for terms of two, four and six years, crea rotating board “It would help matters If some large body like the Mun! clpal league would send a large delegation to protest to the King county legislature t © said in closing Promptly L. O. Lewis, president of the league, teered to go and half a dozen members sald they would go with him, providing for a port jection ting a PORTLAND'S PRIDE PUNCTURED motto to be hung of the mem Portland’s Pride,” is the new Y. M. C. A., taking the pl “Puncture Portland's Pr members and 66,6 the deciding “We Punctured up tn the lobby of the 8 bership campaign slogan, With a lead of 196 new Y. M. C. A. Tuesday night won against the Portland Y. M. C. A Beattlo obtained 1 new members and Portland's score of 1,01 new members and 590 points Team honors for the Seattle Y.M. C. were won with a rein by the “Winton Six” team, managed by the Y. M. C. A manship club. The race between the “Winton Six the most exciting feature of the contest Splendid campaign work performed by the boys which campaigned in two divisions, known as the “Army,” | Williams, and the “Navy,” led by Dr. Arthur Jordan The “Navy” received 188. 325 Lametend against 71,060 for TOO MANY FINGERS IN THE PIE | OLYMPIA, March 3.~ “pork barre! | polnta, the Seattle membership contest | 495 points, against and “Haswasser” teams was prtmmeet | the There is considerable trouble in getting the * divided satisfactorily among the boya who want a finger in the road appropriation ple. Rep, McArdle, who got an “education on state affairs at $7.75 a day in the state auditor's office, wants the money distributed one way, and Sen. Nichols is leading the senate battle for a different distribution Nichola contends that his plan involves considerably play and is based on the real merita of road work. Both sides are crawing up new measures, and may eventually get together. At pres ent, however, there is a mild deadlock. 7) NICK CARTERISMERE AMATEUR | NEW YORK, March 3.—All New York today rings with praise for | if the courage and ability of Amedo Pulignano, an Italian detective, who | [if lived for months with an anarchist gang in this city and whose fine |i work resulted in yesterday arrest, when Frank Abarno, leader of the } fang, Was caught red handed trying to explode a bomb in St. Patrick's cathedral on Fifth ave. } Abarno’s confession that he and his relates planned to murder Jchn D. Rockefeller and his son, Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius Vander bilt and other multi-millionaires, and then to carry on a reign of terror| in New Yor am also the direct result of Pulignano’s clever acting Pulignano won the confidence of the band and was taken secret counctis. He was with Abarno when he went to St. Pa cathedral yesterday and it was Pulignano who brought one of bombs there. ACCUSED OF FIRING OWN HOME | } Accused of attempting to set his house on fire, Albert L. Harmon was arrested by Detectives Flarton and leas political ; a : | | 5S, a carpenter, $01 27th a Toms on a warrant sworn out by Fire Marshal Bringhurst. He |s charged with arson, and is held at the city jail on $1,500 ball The house where Harmon resided belongs to Gus Maiwald, 822 Pike st. Tuesday Serat. Leo and Patrolman Walt passing place, heard a noise which they at first took for a burglar prowling in the cellar. An tnvestigation revealed a lighted candle a pile of newspapers which extended a trail to nearly th 1 standing on every part of the house. The first was just beginning when the alarm was given Harmon was not at home at the time He stoutly denies the charge. HAS HUBBY PINCHED AFTER SHOW | SAN FRANCISCO, March 3.—Sensational developments wer | promised today tn the divorce case war between Mrs. Sarina F. PRs in y and her husband, Frank De Ralmes Storey, following » arrest of Storey at a local theatre last night on a warrant sworn out by his wife. | Storey, who was charged withneglect and failur to provid ent the night tn jail Mrs. Storey is the woman who gained prominence {n 1910, when | STARBEAMS | for what he had burned the previous € | which excited favorable comment =A she bitterly criticised Col. at Guil¢ hall, London She brought about her husband's arrest after watched him and Mra. Georgi formance of a skit entitled, theatre. Mra. Storey and her attorneys waited for him at the entrance of s theatre with the warrant she had obtained Roosevelt's apeech on “Egypt,” delivered she had Bogue Long go through a per- “The Bachelor's Dream,” at a THAT CROOKED MAN who walked a crooked mile and found a crooked sixpenc Inst a crooked and had a crooked dog, etc. may not have been straight, but it Is not recorded that he ever went into the wrestling game. Mr, Charley Fullerton, the esteemed baseball pitcher, who waa with us last summer and may continue in our midst another season, was in troduced te an interesting pioneer custom which still survives at Tolt Wa Mr. Fullerton, visiting at Tolt young woman of great beauty and rare charm of manner, who displayed so great an interest in the finer points of baseball that he lingered until a late hour explain ng them to her “And the next day he helped her father cut firewood to make up ning, and tried hard to act as Nerton called on a it he enjoyed it,” report friends of Mr. F see ee Mr, Sam Biggs, of 73rd at., bought a cow which was ped ind guaranteed to give large quantities of rich milb d So he couldn't understand why the cow didn't give any milk at all That Js, he couldn't understand this until be learned that, every day before he went to the barn with the milk pail, the cow was weil milked by his jocular and fun-moving neighbor, , se 3 well-known Standard Oil Co., has become a of motion which is best expressed in the fox Mr. Peterson John McLean, of the devotee of that poetry tot and the maxixe. No one else associated with the « with which he 1s connected has ever, #o far as known, shown an interest in the renalesance of the dance equal to that of Mr. McLean, His devotion has amounted even to willing sacrifice. | He «vas in the midet of his toflet, prellminary to departure for a| danco this week, when he cut his thumb with a safety razor | Almost any other person, as {@ confidently ayserted by admiring | frends of Mr. McLean, would have tied up the thumb and remained at home with It Bup Mr, McLean, as soon as he hed completed his tollet cluded a white rag for his cut thumb, rushed right off to the parts Furthermore, he perforr throughout the evening in a manner He compelled the admiration of ali | on-lookers, who noted that, to avoid further Injury to the cut thumb, he was compelled to hold it aloft as he danced, in a fashion made ae eat petroleum refining industry » Which In by the once celebrated Dr, Munyon, Ladies’ Direct- om 4 » Action ca FREDERICK 27 NELSON | f=" BASEMENT SALESROOM Women’s and Misses’ New Serge Dresses ie —— HI new st bolero jacket, Dresses of fine equally suitable for Colors include Copenhagen, Unusually military seen in these French and Storm Serge. business with regulation waist-tine, embroidered belt, lar and cuffs—long sleeves and high or low neck. Skirts are in the new full, black, le ideas are Attractively Priced at $5.75 effects and other low-priced Styles wear, col- and home flare effect. navy, tan, green and good values at $5.75. Separate Skirts at $3.95 vy Spring models these Skirts of durable serge and poplin—for business and general wear. ' k and navy only, in sizes from 23 to 28 waist surement. Moderately priced at $3.95. Unisimined Hats Priced Low 95c| [$1.95) ($2.95) Smart new ak Spring’s new Colors Favorite materials of the season three factors that combine t make the display of Untrimmed \ /PeANey \ Hats keenly interesting to those Nga j \ who look for good style mod- \AF \ a, erate prices eg e Shapes are uried as to for- Papal)? / bid description—just one of the ecome very popular in the 1 is Basement Salesroom in a variety of desirable straws Attractively low-priced at 95¢, $1.95 and $2.95. Basement Salesroom. 40-In. Curtain Marquisette Special 18c Yard HIE Basement Drapery Section offers an unusually attractive for Thursday, in this good, round-thread Curtain Marquisette at 18¢@ yard Of serviceable, square-mesh weave, this material will sightly I special make up 1 or full-length curtains for bed sets and other drapery uses tite, ivory and ecru color. Forty ial 18@ yard Bordered Curtain Scrims in snowflake and corded grounds, desirable col: and is suita A inches wide, ailable in w ors for living-room reduced to 25¢@ yard. —Basement Salesroom and bedr om draperies ; Brassiere Specials, 19c HE Brassiere shown in the sketch is in back-fastening style, made of strong muslin, with two-inch embroidery insertion at top; arm-eyes and neck are fin- ished with narrow embroidery edge Strongly reinforced, excellent fit- ting and unusual value at 19¢. A fitted allover embroidery yoke trims the front of another attrac- Brassiere, and narrow em- finishes the arm- neck. Special 19¢. —Pasement Salesroom. tive broidery ¢yes edging and rei Styles i in Dress Silks at 58c Yard Brocaded Messalines Striped Surahs Striped Twilled Silks Broche Surahs Striped Messalines Glace Broche Twills Black Louisines Among the colors are the new sand and putty shade and browns, Copenhagen, navy, wistaria, reseda, hunter’s-green, lavender and black, Widths, 18, inche Unusual value at 58¢ yard. Basement Salesroom, Women’s Walking Boots Special | $2.45 Pr.| Thursday WO desirable models in this 24 and 26 special ‘Thursday offering as follows Women’s Tan Lace English Walking Shoes, with welt sole heel Women's Patent Button Shoes, made and low “English walking last, over with low heel. Sizes 45 pair. Fifty Pairs of Women’s Sample Button High Shoes in patent and gun-metal leathers, 4 and 414, at $2.15 Basement Salesroom, sizes 3 the pair. —Basement Salesroom. New Spring Styles Middy Blouses at 95c ] YOUR attractive new models in Middy Blouses are recent arri- vals in the Basement Sales- They are made of good quality galatea, fea- turing all-white, white with collar yand smart braided embroidered effects. Sizes 6 to 20 years. good room. contrasting also cuffs, and Unusually at 95¢. —Basement Salesroom. Boys’ Corduroy Knickerbockers 85c ARD - WEARING Knickerbockers for the school-boy, made of good grade corduroy and well-tailored, sizes 6 to 16 years, excellent value at 85¢e pair —Basement Salesroom. Crib Blankets Special 10c HESE _ soft- finished | Baby Blankets are made of selected white cotton and are finished with blue or pink bor- der and overcast edges. They measure 29x39 inches Nearly 600 of them available Thursday at the special price, 10c each, —Rasement Salesroom Table Tumblers Special | 25¢ | Set of 6 N sale Thursday in the Basement Sales- room, Table Tumblers of thin-blown clear glass, 7¥4-ounce size, special, the set of six, 25¢. —Basement Selesroom. Embroidery Flouncing 15c Yard MBROIDERY Flounc- ings and Corset Cov- er Embroidertes in a pleas- ing assortment of patterns, up to 17 ceptional inches wide, ex- value at 15¢ yard, Basement Salesroom Women’s Hose 25c OMEN’S Fiber Silk-boot Stockings with cotton tops in black and white, 8% to 10, exceptional value at 2Q5¢ pair. —Hasement Salesroom, sizes Union Suits, 50c INE-RIBBED Cotton Suits in Princess style, low sleeveless, with tight knee, Sizes 5 and attrac: tively priced at 50¢. —Basement Salesroom, Unton neck, value, _———

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