The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 2, 1915, Page 8

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T NOW FOR GOWN DAY At the Bon Marché’s June Sale of White With a Host of ‘Specials’ in Dainty White Gowns Why, for as little as 19¢ you will be able vo buy a Gown that would be mighty cheap at 25c—it will be 2 muslin gown to be sure—but made of a fair grade of white muslin in the slip-over style—-with the popular kjmono sleeves—and either pink or blue overstitched edge And that is the starting point—for here are nearly a dozen more “good thin to say nothing of those that we haven't room to tell about Gowns of y { Via . Gone act A pe eyeing ee Ce 81.25 A Hutton ¢ y trt or oF naook June Sale of White Canvas Pumps —at $1.55 a Pair— For One Day Only the Shoe Shop Will Sell Women’s $1.75 and $1.95 White Canvas Pumps for $1.55 a Pair They are the popular “Rubber” sole style, with low or spring heele—and we can give you all sizes from 2% to 7. —t Af All Women’s Cloth Suits Worth to $39.50 Are Reduced to $23.95 Come and Take Your Pick of These Fine Gabardines, Suiting Serges, Tweeds and Novelty Mixtures, Checks, Hair Line Stripes at the Reduced Prices For the time of the “Better” Suits has come—anid to hurry them out a bit we take all the cloth suits that are worth up to $39.50— AND CUT THEIR PRICES DOWN AT A SINGLE CLIP. The woman who has waited till now is going to Main Floor. TO $23.95 be wonderfully repaid for her patience—for these Suits are all excellent value at their original prices— and the tailoring and the way in which they are trimmed are simple beyond criticism—and the selec- tion is so wide that you can have practically any style that has been at all fashionable this season A Sale of Silks and Dress Goods | activity on Thursday—for not only have the prices been deeply cut for the occasion, but the | lines reduced are jast what most women are looking for for their summer apparel. $1 and $1.25 Fancy Silks| | Dress Goods Worth to $1 —45c Yd.— —50c Yd.— For ose day we any Se @ yard for $1.00 and One of the best Dress Goods bergatna of 1h $1.25 26-inch Satin Messaline, 24-inch Printed quncen at B00 a neluded are 50-In. beavy Radiums, Satin Stripes, Brocades and two- ee wie 0nd colors; 84-Jncn Radiums in street and evening shades 40-inch Gabardines. $1.00 White Silk and Wool Poplins ee Yd.— Genuine Silk and Wool Fepline which contain very slight weaving imperfections that are hardly noticeable. Splendid for waists or dresses—4) | most-wanted Silks; full 36 inches wide Rich and inches wide lustrous. Jet black. On safe for a day at $1.00 Satin Messaline & Taffeta —75c Yd.— Black Taffeta and Satin Menaniine, two of the 89c Satin Stripe Messaline at 38-Inch Crepe de Chine Silks Crown, winch or waists. 1 dre 40 tnches wi Special Prices in Pure Drugs and Toilet Needs } Just to Tempt You to Come in and Get Acquainted With Our New and Convenient Drug and Toilet Article Section—Handily Situated Right at the Lower Second Avenue Entrance 5c package Toothpicks, | 10c Household Drugs 65c and 75c Torey 2 packages, Se. Razor Straps at 35e. t-lb. Hospital Cotton, 6c— _ Scott's Emulsion, 25c size, 17c. ep at 65c Belladona Plasters(Sea- | Glycerine Rose Water Sanitol Tooth Powder bury & Johnson’s), 9c. | one 10 Phenolax Wafers priced | 15> gote at 29c. | 100 Bottle gs 5 yards B. & B. Gauze, special, 29c. $1 or Paste, 13¢. Lustrite Nail Flash tubes, 25c size 10c. Fi inaud’ s “Beauteviva” of Powdered Alum at 30c. 1° 106 —Lower Main Floor, Another Big Sale of 65c Cork Linoleum for |} —39c a Sq. Yd.— By Far the Best of All Inexpensive Floor +, be for Bathroom, Bed- room, Pantry and Kitchen—and Just the Very Thing for Camp or Summer Home Good, heavy quality Cork Linoleum geometrical de signs—and a goodly range of patterns and colorings to select from in nice out —Third Floor, North, A Good Budget of Domestic Specials for Thursday 714 Ginghams at 10c Lawns for 20c Dress Crepes | 12'/c Linenes at —5c Yd.— | —7c Yd.— 124c Yd. | —9c Yd on Apron Ginghams, in alist é Solld-colored Jacquered onch weave Linenes. lengths to 20 yards, 27 eres hawey, $7 18s, | cones, 30 inches wide h inches wide, neat blue | wide, lengths to 10 yds. | in pink, tan and biue, | ch fine and sheer 12%c a yard | Try Our ihe Special in the Sixth Floor Cafeteria, Our Licensed Bring the Little Chiropodist 7 e) is glad to see and I H FE Ones to our talk with you at Children's any time—Third BON Barber Shop— 1 a i Union 8 cond Ave—Pike St—Seattle Tel. Elliott 4100 Third Floor. A sale that will make the Silk and Dress Goods aisles of the Bon Marche hum with | 39c a square yard on Thursday—as long as the shipment holds | against the chances parringe }len seemed very re dealt with one man s prominent from the ranks of shi ing figures forming the backgrou of her shame, the ji had seen ber that night in the Pacific | Then, | ateps back along t resumed what she | | | | | | 8500 and $600. units along the side streets, out the largely served in this way by the/ saloons dom Eur the left,” will, |the German people think aright.” CHIEF OF FOREIGN bureau of foreign commerce comme at 8:10 Wednesday night | speak | me meeting of the cham Thursday at the Raths THE MAN WHO DARED BY JOHN HUNT CHAPTER XI In the hour of a's dintroasing confession, the dismal nectos jot wise men and nate en in of happin Magtia nitent with a Oddly, | felt no depression in her frank recital. Her own shame and loathing for her spotted past softened the shock of her disclosures—as true re. pentance always wipes the naked horror of tr sion. But she hadn't fintshed man with whom st. dance hall she sald while I gut I'm cold let's walk her faltering she been continued Anna. shouldered his another “He way into my up there on the ‘alley’— because he was physicaty strong; because he protected me when equabbles arose; be. cause he stood between me and the things even a vile woman resents; because the other giris h stalk, It w ause he knew then that I sted on taking me to the dance hall—an a demonstratic power over me, | am sure, He was ugly mood alley’ he got w 1 agitated, The | voice. “VL admit that | am afraid of Martin” —with a shrinking to ward me. “Are youwould you be afraid of him, John? He's so big and savage.” In that shifting hensions to my shoulders, the confidence it implied and the protection It pleaded, | felt a quick exhilaration. And | gloated over the hard efficien cy of my muscles which permit ted me to an “No, I'm no! of her appre with r frald He'll not harm you, An 1 tried to let her kno atl lidn't expect her to b or shameful past. re t all to ea arried Anna alc sn't how I got tnt« tinued, “Mont think they have t a #tor The ft the underw je in me hat first Ind biame an the | “With me, the first fal | came about largely becau my own mother's blindness to my natural tendencies. Instead of giving me a normal outlet for my excessive energies, she diverted them to dangerous channels. She insisted on my being a girl when | should have been merely an ‘it.” hurrying me into womanhood when | should have been only a girl afraid | would be come a * y/ a ellly f which is the crime of ma mother In denying her d outlet for natural play denied innocent | | } | ely explaining how I wa ittingly, but nevertheless ¢ ly, prepared for the fate of ¢ endowed with too much gender. iH WANT COMFORT HITCHED ON TOP. "STATIONS ON | THE SIDEWALKS The campaign to establish a number of downtown comfort Stations as substitutes for the hich close January 1, en new impetus Tues day when the Commercial Club and Municipal league took ac- tion favorable to the plan. Both clube adopted the re- porte of their committees, reo- ommending the building of these units and setting the price of construction. The stationa will cost between of bronzed tron, slightly inconspte- ornamental, about They are designed to be placed at the edge of the sidewalk It 1s proposed to locate these thru now downtown district, The reports of both committees" [laid spectal stress on the necessity ie such sthtions. BELGIAN TELLS NATION'S PLIGHT Dr. EK. KE. Pratt, chief of the and domestic of the department . will arrive in the elty and will foreign com membership at noon ar, on p at American the June Plans prepared by| the building department show them jto be | uous, nix feet wide and nine feet high of} i} were jealous of his attentions Wane, T wanted <0 Bay, 02 51m made me sort of proud of his |sirl. | was told that re crude attentions. ere igh gem ag ma athletics for girls; # , 4 PB mre them coarse and boisterous, And 1 woe nee Dad—bless him!—always swayed afraid of him, repel by Mother, backed her stand, al- {If but | tolerated him because | |‘20,! believe he secretly disagreed could command his strength “| was over-dressed, encour } 4 ; vag ry rypalaag was aged to be idle, allowed liber. | ties | should not have had, and “You have pletely ox led those that would | htm from my life, John. But he st lelded My girlhood or me in his coarse, air dangerous. What followed was nd he may run counter almost inevitable.” |Path again. I don't know (To be continued.) OF WATER TANK 1 \ } 1 i Ray William Thurston and Mise | | Frieda T. Anderson devised Hl | | | i | i | | brand new way of getting married | Tuesday afternoon. They w Married on the roof of the water | tank at Volunteer park | Before the ceremo: were |formed the bridal pa on the lawn near one of th tains, where Rev. Wm. E }made out the papers and p |formed other formalities, This | done, the party, which consisted of a few intimate friends, proceeded ito the big standpipe at the south ern end of the park Thurston is the son of Mra. F. M Dyer, 622 First ave. W. The bride is the daughter of Mra. Ander son, 3903 Fremont st. The newly weds will make their home at oly Sixth ave. CAPT, GILMORE, PIONEER, DEAD Capt David Gilmore, elvil war veteran and pioneer ship owner, is dead at the age of 73 years, after & serious | six weeks at the Minor h most figure in shipping les, ing well known from Seattle to an F iematbelae Fo: m1 e aster o Dr. Charles Sarolea, a native of| the Gomtmoore, nate Vag ene Relgium, on leave from the Univer. jan interest in the safling vessel sity of Edinburgh, spoke last night! Grace Darling, then purchased the at the Y. M. ©. A. on “The Martyr brig Levi Stevens. He bulit the of Belgiun and answered | first cracker factory in the North. pointed questions bearing upon the| west in 1882 . ° | social and economic phases of the! He leaves a widow and one an war, daughter, Mrs, Stanley Ballard; al He would rather trust the {gnor-| sister, Mrs, John McGrath, and a/ ant Russian moujic, he sald, than | brother, Capt. James Gilmore “kultured” German. | “The Belgians have no kingdom | he said, ut they havea kine RAVENNA PARK TO This war, with {ts great sacrifice | in the end, result in making CELEBRATE FOURTH Ata ington ting held at the Wash Children's home, Ravenna heights, {t was unanimously voted to have a Fourth of July celebra tion this year In Ravenna park on | July 6 | MF. Jones was selected general manager and Richard Bushell, Charles Butler and L. Covington | & committee of arran inte. The exercises will consist of | short speeches by able men, muste, band patriotic songs and a picnie [ dinner, | Me HE SEATTLE STAR vc, | FREDERICK NELSON °°: | Patterns White Dress Fabrics at Special Prices Special 19¢ Yard 27-inch White Mercerized Poplin, spe 36-inch Edelweiss Suiting, special 1% 36-inch Plisse Crepe, special 19¢ ya 46-inch Middy Twill, special 19¢ yard Special 25¢ Yard— 36-inch Lace-weave Dress Crepes, 38-inch Sheer Dress Organdies, 36-inch Plain White Dress Crepes, 36-inch Cotton Crepe de Chine, ‘ Linen - and - Cotton Towelin 36-inch Fancy Open-mesh Crepes, With red Or Blue bovdae Euan 27-inch White Corded Piques, mediutn welt, suit ordered Cot ‘ al ing, adapted for able gol Sa els, hand towels ‘ fs ‘ towels, special Ee White Seed Voiles, umme eussiieet tas Ge re « inche y and durable White Mercerized Dress Poplins, superior grade inches, spect inches wide, special 45¢ yard Crochet Bedsprea with fancy corded stripe, 36 inche wereeonee White Dress Voiles with fan ; beictbeygersen feng wide, special 35 ard —First Floor —Basement saiesroom BASEMENT SALESROOM The June Sale of Muslin Underwear ITRACTING no small share of attention in this special June selling of Undermuslins are the many styles manship value at the prices quoted. Gowns, patterned with m¢ glory pink, Special 75¢. design or soft nainsook, of 2 with pretty ming inch Corset Covers in the Sale, 19, 25c, 29c Combinations in the Sale, special 29c¢ Long White Skirts in the Sale, 45c, Envelope Chemises in the Sale, special White Chinchilla Coats, $12.50 be included in the June display of White »Wear comes this shipment of 25 White Chin- in time to Coats Th are made of a dependable quality of material in three-quarter length, with two-in-one collar and half belt. Unusually good value at $12.50. WHITE CORDUROY SPORT COATS, $5.00— A new shipment of the popular White Corduroy Coats has just been received. They are in polo length, with full e¢ and convertible collar. Sizes 00. g $5 WHITE CORDUROY SKIRTS, $3.95— outing wear with two patch pockets. Price $3.95. for and good quality Very desirable Skirts of Sizes 24 to sports corduroy, 30 waist measurement CREPE DE CHINE WAISTS, $1.95— Several new styles in Crepe de Chine this moderate Choice of white and 34 to 44 White Dress Hats White Hats for Street White Hats for Tennis White Hats for Golf and Outing featured price in the Basement Salesroom Millinery Section at prices rang 50¢ to $7.50. Children’ s 7 124c Pair HILDREN’S Black Ribbed ings in to 9%, good value —Barement Salesroom, Stock- sizes 5 unusually at 12%@ pair —Basement Salesroom. 9-Piece Ciscdilne Special 95c A 5 pietured, the Set consists of nine pieces of Brown Glazed, White-lined Cooking Ware, as follows: One 8-inch Covered Handled Casserole One, &inch Mixing Bowl One 8-inch Pudding Dish Six 38-inch Custard Cups at OGe¢ the set on sale Thursday Basement Salesroom. and trimmings in these garments all proclaim their unusually good Nainsook or white Gowns in kimono style, trimming of pretty Val Normandy Val. motifs or men lace edge, special 50¢. Two-inch embroidery trims the polka-dots blue or lavender on white Kimono or Slip-over Gown of embroidery loon, specially priced at 75¢. 55c, for women and misses, —Basement Salesroom Basement Salesroom Linen and Domestics | Specials Bleached Cotton ed 4 Inche Huck Towels, Bath Towels of f ent qua well-bleach finished, size special $7 ¢@ each Mercerized Cotton Table Dam. ask v ns, 63 spec ise Fi wide, «pectal If in dainty Gowns. The design, work- Empire, High- or V-neck = Gowns with long sleeves and with Slip-over or Kimono-style Gowns laces, of colored crepe { heavy Bar muslin or lingerie ck with an exc ally ow variety of lace 1 embroidery trimmings, square neck of an_ especially specially priced at OB¢. pretty Gown of fine lingerie The entire waist and kimono cloth, special 69¢. sleeves of an Empire Gown in Practical White Crepe Plisse sheer lingerie cloth are fashioned of dainty Swiss embroidery, and the waist is joined to skirt part with inch-wide embroidery bead- Special wring of ing drawn with ribbon $1.45. trim The June Sale values are just gal as attractive in Gowns at 89¢, $1.15 and $1.25. 35c, 45c, 55¢ and 65c 59c, 65c, 75c, 95e, $1.19, $1.28 and $1.45. 95c, 50c, 59c, $1.25, $1.45 and $1.95 , We, $1.19, $1.25 and $1.45. —Basement Salesroom. are these Waists to sell at flesh-color. Sizes Fancy Ribbons, 10c Yard NUSUAL of Plain cluding floral checks and plain colors in widths up to 5 inches. The yard, 10¢. Basement Salesroom. Girls’ tiien Suits Special 15c IRLS' White Suits in low values in this assortment and Fancy Ribbons, in- patterns, stripes, plaids, Ribbed Cotton $ neck, Union ff sleeveless style, special 15¢. —Basement Salesroom, sizes 2 to 16 years, Brown Glazed Teapots 25c New of English Brown Glazed shipment Teapots in several attrac- tive shapes, one as_pic- tured, 4- and 6-cup sizes, affords exceptional values at 25¢. Basement Salesroom,

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