The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 8, 1915, Page 10

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| LADIES VISITING SEATTLE THIS WEEK With the American Bankers’ Association—or the Brotherhood of American Yeomen Are cordially invited to visit our Art Needlework Section—they will find one of the best-equipped in the country—and specially interesting just now Autumn designs are on display when all the new —Third Floor, Center. 50c Is All Ask for These Pretty, Novelties in $1.00 Fall Neckwear Because This Is My Day at the Bon Marché Buyers’ Sale And they are so new and so pretty that you will be glad, I know, of the chance to buy them at half price. And all the new things can be found in the collection— Embroidered Swiss Vestees—Georgette Crepe Collars and Fichus—Large Collars trimmed with wide lace (and cuffs to match) and perhaps a dozen more dainty styles. And lots more bargaine—for my day is going to be a memcenrio AG) » Py day for those who want pretty Neckwear—Ribdbons — Veilings and Ostrich Ruffs. Maire ‘Taffeta: Ribbons } LOC Y . | S0,Russian Net Veiling O50 Yq]. Moire Taffeta Ribbons / Heavy, stiff quality Taffeta and Moire Ribbon with satin stripe, and small checks and flowered Ribbone tn pretty light colors; 3 to 4 inches whe. Also soft Satin Ribbons, 35c Hairbow Ribbon, Extra +20 Stiff Quality, Six-Inch, Yd. Cc In plain Taffeta and Moire Taffeta, of extra stiff quality, which is fine for hairbows, Comes in white, pink, sky and many other light shades. Beautiful Ribbons, Worth | 25 From 40c to 50c a Yard, at / iC This lot Includes six different styles of Ribbons that oan be used for hairbows or sash; plain taf feta, moire, plaid styles and brocaded Ribbons; , 5 and 6 inches wide. I'm offering thie Veliing at exactly half price— and tn the lot you will find white and black hair Une offects, plain and bordered meshes, Boe, 18 Inches Long ! 1.20 Finished at end with allk tassel, Come tn white, Diack and in two-color effects—etylish and appro: priate for Fall wear, 75c Values, On Sale for | Walet Sete of Sheer Organdy—Vestees with etther high or flat collors of embroidered Swiss large Volle Collars edged with Venise lace, many other styles, —Upper Main Floor, Bon Marché’s Autumn Fashion Display Will Be Held on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 13th, 14th, 1 But even now the beautiful opening display windows are being unveiled—and may be seen and enjoyed any time you are passing Seattle's Big Store “1 Can Save You Mach on— andi | Your Purchases of Autumn Underwear’ |) jston, and with hundreds of Chinese and Americans attonding, the last | | Is Bu: Aharen’s message to you—as he hands in this splendid list of “Good Things” | for T ursday at the Buyers’ Sale. “Baby Comfort” Shirts at 25c Ea. “Baby Comfort” Shirts are known as the best finished and the most comfortable | for infants’ wear; they are part wool, andcome in all sizes. On sale for one day only at 25c each. Children’s Union Suits at —25c— Heavy Cotton Union Sults {n white or gray with drop seat; good weight for early Fall wear; sizes 2 to 13 years. 50c and 75c Underwear at —29c— Forest Milis Vests and Tighte—seconds and bro- ‘ Women’s $1.00 Union Suits —49c— Fall weight, fine elastic ribbed Union Suite of pure white soft cotton; come in two styles; sizes 34 to 44, Boys’ $1.00 Union Suits —75c— Wool-mixed Union Sulte of good weight; come ken lots of fine Lisle and Cotton Underwear; | in natural gray with patent closed crotch; sizes sizes 34 to 44. | 6 to 16 years. Children’s $1.25-$1.40 Wool Pants at | | Women’s Wool Vests and Pants —75c— Worth from $1.25 to $1.40 a pair; very fine wool, in white or gray; ankle length; button at sides; sizes 8 to 16 years. —95c— Forest Mille and Springfield fine wool Under. wear for women—worth $1.25 and $1.60 a gar- ment. On sale for 95c. 65c and 75c Union Suits at 39c Ea. Women’s Low-neck Sleeveless Union Suits—the lot consists of several different weights, and they come either cuff or lace knee style; sizes 34 to 44. Some garments have slight imperfections in the knitting. —Upper Main Floor. This New Middy Apron for 50c on Apron Day Miss Satherland, Apron Bayer, Has Provided a Unique Bargain List for Tharsday And heads it with this attractive new Middy Apron at 50c. It’s a handy garment—just as pictured here—and it slips over the head and laces up the front—it has a trim-looking sailor collar —and is made of good percale, in light, pink and blue, and checks and stripes. Apron anc Gingham A; ~ wl by i fo ‘nnn Pr. nage Brag f Neat Coverall Aprons, made of blue f and white checked gingham, with cap | blue and white check gingham, kimono / to match; neck, yoke, cuffs, pocket | style sleeve; fitted at waist, and can and belt bound in white. be fastened at either side. 50c Bungalow 3-Piece Tunic Sets 89c Full-size Bungalow Aprons, made of Each Set consists of a gored Skirt, good percale in light and dark colors; | fitted Tunic and a Dutch Cap to neck, cuffs, pocket, and half belt at | match; made of good percale, tn light back are bound tn white. or dark colors. —Third Floor, Buyer Plasterer (He of Cut-Rate Drug Store Fame) Offers One 50c box of “El Perfecto” Veda Rose Face Powder FREE With Every Purchase of One 50c Box of “El Perfecto’’ Veda Rose Rouge—as Long as His Supplies Hold Out 10c packages of — | 6c Mermaid Sea Salt Rose Water Each | $1.00 sine Noten’ Milk, speciel at Aromatic Cascara Witch Hazel Alum Precipitated Chalk SOc size Beta Quine (for making Sealp Treat- 29c “Tooth Paate, .25¢ Buyer Goldie Keeps at It ‘Hammer and Tongs’’ With His Domestic Bargains Fine Bleached Flannelette, 10c | 6c Printed Challie{| 10c Ginghams Muslin 6c Yard Value, 7c Yard 4c Yard | 32-Inch, 714 Yd. ioe yards Bleached Good quality Flan. | Printed Cotton Chal. | infin’, Dress Ginghame uslin, firm, even qual- ie, nches wide, in| in neat patterns and tty; $6 inches’ wide; | "elette, 27 ineMe wide, | Crate) and Persian | colors; come in lengths full bolts of perfect | in neat patterns and | patterns. Not over 15 | to 10 yards. goods. good staple colors. yards to a customer. —Lower Malin Floor. eh... eres BOC pel * ewe 58c | 100 box of Arnica Powders; Salve for . +e 2 c 15 Ihe 1 Relindona Vinste: c spe i each | : see Lysol; regular 600 bottles: 32c an cleaors, special at (large and small), spectal 25c | —Lower Main Floor. Boy's Raincoat and Hat Combination Set. Complete Set Bpeclally Priced at $2.50—U pper Main Floor, Watch for the Many Special Bargains Not Advertised. pon MARCHE Union &t-—Second Ave—Pike St—Seattle. Tel, Elliott 4100 and Men's Rain- coats from 83.05 to $15—Upper Main Floor, Plucky Girl Makes Her Fortune as Banker for Miners in Nome M ret, Werconsy Miners brought their pokes of from ®) gold dust and nuggets, Handsome she said to} ‘ i ‘a: aha the seon Europe, | Commissions were paid, « What shall we|>ank flourished. During the win ter when mining was at a stand still the sisters loaned out omney at regular Alaska banking interest With an adventurous spirit, the It sure was easy money,” said girls went to Alaska, Tho sisters | Mins Pogey | Mulrooney joined the general rush | here recently on a visit North, | North. When Margaret (“Peggy”) Mul rooney, at 19, returned Paris boarding school her sister, “I have and it was good do now? To which the sister replied “Let's make our fortunes.” from the “After making our ‘stak In Alaska they oatablished a/in Alaska we bought an apple ranch | bank, with the elder sister as preat {at North Yakima, Wash. And t dent and Miss “Peggy” as cashier |too, is almost as good as a pa and secretary, Their bank wan at streak in Alaska.” Nome City Bho is not yet 20, ‘AH KING'S FUNERAL HELD With two American and one Chinese band in the funeral proces: |rites over Ah King, wealthy Chinese merchant of Seattle, who was! | found dead several days ago tn Sacramento with a bullet wound in his head, were performed here Wednesday. The body was taken to Mt. Pleasant cemetery from a big tent erected expressly for the occasion. At the cemetery an imaginary burial was followed by a return of the body to an undertaking estab- |Hshment, where it will be prepared for shipment to China. Dr, M. A. Matthews preached the funeral sermon. DON GAY CAN'T RECOVER | Donald Gay, University of Washington senior, and one of the most popular men on the university campus last year, who was Injured in & jitney accident Isat Friday in San Francisco, has but alight chance| for recovery, according to J. Y. C. Kellogg, who returned Tuesday! from the Southern city, and who was injured in the same accident. Kellogg, with Gay and Harold Huston, another Seattle boy, were) riding in the same fitney. street, struck them. He has been unconscious ever since, Kellogg sustained a wrenched arm. Ho was to hare conferred with Gov. Hiram Johnson as to the future of the progressive party in| PARAISO OWNERS OBJECT A petition aaking the district court for benefits of acts of congress Umiting Mability, was filed Tuesday by the Long Beach Steamship Co., owners. 4 the Pacific Coast Steamship Co., charterers of the steam-| |ebip Pa hich ran {nto the steamer Admiral Watson, causing her to aink at the Hell at. dock. They charge that the libel filed by the | Watson's owners against the are out of all reason. j ‘AUTO VICTIM FATALLY HURT C. J. Fatrhurst, driver of the automobile which Tuesday strack jand seriously injured James E, Moore, of Portland, on Jefferson # | between Second and Third, and who was arrested as a result of t jaccident, has been relased on his personal recognizance. city hospital, fatally injured. “LOVE WIFE” HAS BABY DAUGHTER NEW YORK, Sept. §.—Mra. Ida Sniffen Walters, alleged poisoner |of two of her children during the time she was the “love wife” of Lorly | Elton Rogers, today gave birth to a daughter, Rogers married her a ;month ago, that the babe might bear his name, and clear the woman of the stigma of her relations with him. | Since that time she has been in seclusion, That the birth of the child will have a material bearing on the charges of murder against her, was tho belief here. It was predicted she will never go to trial, | largely because of the difficulty of obtaining a verdict not influenced | by sympathy for her. REVENGE MURDER MOTIVE | GOLD BAR, Wash., Sept. 8.—Revenge {s now believed to have been the motive of the double murder here last Sunday, when Edward Pfeifer }and Morris Schneider were beaten to death by unknown assailants The fact that Schneider, at least, was a defenseless old man who could not have put up 4 vigorous enough defense to warrant the ettack that must have been made upon him prompts this theory. There are no clews as to who committed the crime, Another jitney, approaching from a cross| jf Gay was hurled to the curb, striking his head. |4 THE SEATTLE STAR Mulrooney, who was || With his skull fractured, a leg broken and one shoulder wrenched, ||] that state, but was prevented from doing so by the accident, i | Moore, who 1s salesman for @ Portland publishing house, is at the | {| | FINE BRITISH STEAMER carried two American passengers, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, be- tween two American ports, thus violating the American admiralty laws, the Canadian Pacific Steamship Co. has been fined $400 by Collector of Customs John F. Pugh, Faulknef and his wife boarded the steamer here and disembarked at Ketchikan. TO REBUILD ALASKA ROAD YARD, Alaska, Sept. §—The Alaska Northern railway, pur chaged by the government to be used as a link in the new government railway, will have to be entirely rebuilt, ft 1s announced, so the gov- ernment rolling stock used in building the Panama canal can be utilized on it, THUGS ATTACK JIT DRIVER Two men early Wednesday morning boarded a jitney bus driven by Frank Jackson at Firat and Columbia and forced aim to drive them |to Third and Blanchard, where they attacked him | came and the pair fled, one of them leaving his hat and a loaded re | Ho yelled, help| |volver behind | | ‘SAYS NATIONS WON'T DISARM PARIS, Sept. 8.—King Alfonso of Spain expressed the beltet in an| Interview here today that, after the war, the nations, instead of dis. arming, will arm more than ever, He expressed regret that the war had necessitated postponement of his proposed visit to America, JUNEAU, Alaska, Sopt. 8.—Becanse the steamer Princess Sophia | FREDERICK é~ NELSON Basement Salesroom OLLOWING close upon the first Autumn showings in the Main Sections upstairs, the Basement Salesroom announces completed assortments of the new fashions in Fabrics, Garments and Accessories, offering a maximum of style and value within a modest price range. The Sections making up this great Salesroom oxtend you a cordial invitation to call this week — <== and inspect the new things. Women’s Smart Autumn Suits $12.50 $15.00 $18.50 $22.50 —Specializing on an Exceptionally Strong Showing tures ming Sizes 16 and 18 years; 34 to 44 bust. of Good Styles and Values at $15.00 HE styles shown in the fifteen-dollar line include the jaunty short jacket effects with plain skirts; also the longer styles in demi and plain-tailored jackets, with plain or inverted-plait skirts. The materials are good, serviceable weaves of serge, poplin, tweed, Bedford cord and diagonal suiting, in black, navy-blue, green, brown and mix- Furs, buttons and braids are used for trim- Values especially commended to the woman desiring good style and service at a very moderate price—$15.00. Other lines of Wearing Apparel in Which the Basement Salesroom Is Splendidly Pre- Fe to Meet Popular-Priced Requirements, include: WOMEN’S AUTUMN DRESSES, $5.75, $9.50, $12.50, $15.00 and $18.50. WOMEN’S AUTUMN COATS, $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00. WOMEN’S AUTUMN SKIRTS, $3.95, $4.50 and $5.75. WOMEN’S WASH WAISTS, 95c, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. WOMEN’S SILK WAISTS, $1.50, $1.95, $2.50, $3.75. CHILDREN’S COATS, sizes 6 to 14 years, $5.00 and $5.75. $5.75, Smart, Up-to-Date Style in Low-Priced Millinery HE plays in Millinery dis- $7.50, CHILDREN’S DRESSES, 85c, $1.25, $1.50, $1.95 and $ 3 SILK PETTICOATS, $1.95, $2.75, $3.50. COTTON PETTICOATS, 50c, 75c, 95¢ and $1.25. CHILDREN’S SWEATERS, $1.95. MISSES’ AND WOMEN’S SWEAT- ERS, $2.50, $3.50 and $5.00. Basement Salesroom New Dress Woolens and Coatings UCH a variety of new the Base- weaves in Dress ment Salesroom at this time are of special inter- est to the woman who appreciates good style, yet would keep her hat al- lowance within modest Goods and Coatings and so many new colors that it is easy to make a good choice and keep to a modest cost. limits. Fashion's most favored ideas are here array—the small draped- whose back is finished with velvet “ears” or wings, the tiny hat which sits high on the head, and the “Mary Gar- den” Hat which rolls up sharply in back and forms a crown hat poke effect in front. The deep wine shades, dark navy, Russian-green and African brown are the principal colors, for subdued effects are emphasized in the new modes. Prices are attractively low—$5.00, $6.50 and $7.50. Crepe Kimono $1.25 S shown in the sketch, this attractive Empire Kimono is made of flowered crepe, with the skirt accordion-plait- ed. Choice of navy, peacock- blue, lavender, pink and light- blue, with collar and cuffs of hemstitched white lawn, Very good value at $1.25, —Basement Salesroom. Fleece-Lined Union Suits, OMEN’S Fleece-lined Union Suits in desirable Autumn weight, ankle length, with high neck and long sleeves, Dutch neck and elbow sleeves or low-neck, sleeveless style; sizes 86 to 44, attractively priced at 5O¢. MISSES’ UNION SUITS, 81.00 AND $1,25— Misses’ Part-wool Union Sufts in white and natural color, sizes 2 to 12 years, $1.00; 14 to 16 years, $1.25, BOYS’ UNION SUITS, $1.00 AND $1.25— @ Boys’ Part-wool Gray Union Suits in medium ribbed weave, sizes 4 to 12 years, $1.00; 14 and 16 years, $1.25, CHILDREN’S FLEECED UNDERWEAR, 25¢— Children’s Fleece-lined Vests and Pants in sizes 16 to 34 —Basement Salesroom. attractive value at 25¢ garment. —Basement Salesroom. Broadcloths are prom- inent in the new displays and may be had in a large selection of the new shades at $1.00 and $1.50 yard. Plaids are already ex- tensively used in the new costumes, alone or com- bined with plain color— priced at 50¢ and $1.00 yard in the Basement in wide high these dull, Salesroom, All-wool Coatings in de- sirable colors, at $1.50 and $2.00 yard. Corduroys for the sports coat or for the more dressy fur-trimmed garment, 58¢ and $1.00 yard. The New Silks: The showing of Silks in the new plaid and stripe patterns is especially large, comprising many new col- ors and patterns—all at- tractively low-priced. Crepe de Chine in a wide assortment of colors for blouse or evening frock, 40 inches wide, $1.15 yard. —Basement Salesroom. Fancy Chiffons 50c Yard “uy HESE dainty Chiffons in floral aftd stripe patterns make up_ into handsome dress blouses. Choice of a good selection of colors. Low-priced at 50¢@ yard. —Ba 50c ment Salesroom. Ostrich Ruffs, $1.25 LUFFY Ostrich Ruffs black and white, also natural and white combinations. Good value at $1.25 each. Basement Salesroom. in plain FL, Ge ee a

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