The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 10, 1915, Page 14

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" | hits Season Has Begun and Young and Old Come Trooping to The Bon Marche for New Autumn Wearables Fi irst “Children’ s Day” of the New Season ELOPE MOEN; FINE TEAM WORK <> Fall. Beautiful Children’s Rubber Rain Capes at —$1.00 Each— Children’s Rain Capes for school wear, made of striped rubber, lined throughout, cut good and full with shirred hood attached and slashed pockets, Girls’ New Gingham Dresses at —$1.25 Each— A new shipment just received, including twelve pretty new styles in Dresses, made of Anderson And now every Satarday will be “Children’s Day’’ at The Bon Marche with special prices, and special displays of | % Children’s Wearables on the day that it is easiest fer you to | bring your little ones down town. Girls’ Topcoats, Special Just the dearest little Coats you ever siw-—-cerrect style and loose back. —_ there are the wide wale corduroy# 2 to 6 and 6 to 14 years. Gingham, {fn plaids, checks and stripes, light and dark colors. Sizes 6 to 14, A LUCKY SAMPLE PURCHASE BRINGS Samples of Leather Hand Bags Worth to $5 =At $1.89 Each= Samples of New Fall Styles in Genuine Pin Seal, Mat Seal and Morocco Any woman would be proud of one ofthese Hand Bags at $1.89, for they are! Morocco and fancy leathers are used in their making—many pretty shapes and sizes, each one fitted with mirror and coin purse, | Frames are German silver, worth up to $5.00. Pin seal, mat seal, some with vanity novelties. “Tronwear” Best of School Shoes for Boys || Made in Seattle, the Zimmerman-Di Shoe Co. and Every Pair edhe to Give the Falles ret . SIZES 9 TO 12 AT $2.55 PAIR SIZES 12 TO 53 AT $2.95 PAIR Only the very best of oak tanned leather is used in the soles and uppers of the Ironwear Shoes—made of will stand lots of hard knocks that they are boys. Boys’ Heavy Calf Shoes | Girls’ Shoes Ee sso tc) se pase ee | Bete, ht sees 8 to 8 price | Pa 95 a pair. Made of heavy | or Kangaroo Calf with solid leather soles and heels. Women’s New Radic Shoes at $3, $3.50, $4 & $5 Women’s Shoes in the newest Fall styles—among the leading models are the black New $5 Fall $3.95 Others of rough materials in full-belted style } h plush collar, @tzea purcha: permits. this of very fine Serge, long-waisted ronts made coat effect, neatly trimmed; dark colors, Sizes 2 to 6. Girls’ New Wool Serge Dresses —$3.50 Each— With plaited skirts and yoke effect bodice, laced front, and pretty new Corduroy Dresses in plain straight-line styles and belted models, Sizes 6 to 14 years. —Second Floor. YOU THIS HAND BAG OPPORTUNITY silver and gilt finish. Upper Main Floor PG Se calf sure to get from school- heavy gunmetal and $2.00 Pair | Girls’ Shoes $250 ‘Pair ore, with “auil mat kid or cloth tops, with round toe and | low heels; sizes 2% to 6 patent leather with cloth tops, or all black kid piped with white; another style is the Bronze Shoe with cravenette tops to match. WE’RE THE SOLE SEATTLE AGENTS FOR ‘Lackawanna Twins’ Children’s Underwear Lackawanna Twins Underwear is the best made and best-fitting line of Children’s | Underwear that can be secured for the money wear to school. We have them in Shirts and Drawers or Union Suits, and priced as follows: Boys’ ‘‘Lackawana Twins’’ Wool Shirts and Drawers, Sizes 6 to 16 Years, 60c Boys’ and girls’ “Lackawanna Twins” Union Suits, 2 to 16 years, $1.00 a Suit. | Misses’ “Lackawanna Twins” White Wool Vests and Pants, 1 to 16 years, at 50c to 70c. Saturday Special in the Candy Shop 20c Peanut Brittle 15c lb. Peanut Brittle, perfectly fresh, crispy and very delicious; the best peanuts used and plenty of them; special for Saturday, a pound for 15c. —Lower Main Floor, Stiesiey Spactale ta Groceries 4 Cans Mt. Vernon Milk 25c Limit 4 Cans to a Customer—Delivered Only With Other Groceries Naptha Soep; Bon Marche Brand; one of the very best, 5 bars for..... tees Mayflower Coffee; our popular 35e grade; per ib. Fin Dry Onions; 11 Iba. tor 106) for nd 86-lb. sack for.. derieg Ten: fine quality latest crop grades 45e and 60c gradex splendid quality 26e cans for mtons the genuine Spanien Sweet Peppers; per can. ‘Tryphosa Jelly Powder; your choice of ‘or, per package Grape Juice; Washington made; 26c hotties for Mrs. Stro: Salad Dressin; empty jars); small size 9 ond large size, each 19c (retund of 26 tor 174c —Fourth Floor, Saturday Specials i in Delicatessen Wash. Creamery Butter 29c lb. or 3 Ibs. for 85c Po ard, Armour's Shield Brand; large Dalia, $1.45; medium size, 78e; email pails Piente Hama, Armour's Eastern; bent quality, medium welght, per Ib Per Home-made Mayonnaise, made fresh dally. Saturday only, per 1b, Bollea Ham, bent quality Maatern Ham: special for & day, per It Jigs Club es epectal for Saturday Rogers’ Penn one of the t 45c | 12c | 25c | 32kc | 20c | 10c | 19¢ | —Fourth FL | st quality; price 260. ments by Phone— Elliott 4100, | @ m. to 12. Hixpert attendants im the Children's Barber Shop—Hair Cut, Third Floor. Union 8t.—-Second Ave.—-Pike St.—Seattle, —Upper Main Floor. Get some for your boys and girls to —Upper Main Floor, On Sale from 9 a. m. to 12 Saturday lorning No Telephone Orders Can Be Accepted for These Forenoon Bargains Saturday Morning Specials 70c Self Sealing Mason Quart Fruit Jars on Sale at, Doz.IDC “Kerr” Self-Sealing Mason Fruit Jars, the only Mason Jar that requires no rubber ring. Not over 2 dozen to one customer. Lower Main Floor, White Crown Mason Jar Caps 15c Doz. Complete with Rubbe: Will fit all sizes of Mason Jars, From 9 a. m. to 12, Lower Main Floor. 59c Plain and Figured Silks 25c Yard 500 yarde of pretty Dress Silks; plain and fancy pieces of Poplin, Messaline and Pongee, in a good line of colors. From 9 @. m, to 12. Upper Main Floor, 20c Lining Sateen, 36-Inch, 8c Yard | Fine lustrous Sateen, full yard wide; linings and skirts, in colors and black Upper Main Floor, 1244 Figured Silkoline at 5c Yard Good quality figured Silkoline, 26 inchoa wide, in pretty colorings and patterns; come in mill lengths. Special from 9 a. m. to 12. Third Floor, 40c Heavy Cocoa Door Mats 29c Each ||| Extra heavy Cocoa Door Mats, with extra well finished edges; fine for the back porch, Special from 9 a m. to 12. Third Floor. 60c All-Linen Table Damask 49c Yard All Linen Table Damask, 60 Inches wide, in pretty floral patterns and of medium wetght; good firm quality. Spectal from 9 a, m, to 12. Lower Main Floor. 85c Hemstitched Sheets at 69c Each 50 dozen of Hemstitched Bleached Sheets, nizo 81x90 inches, made of fine round thread Sheeting. Special from 9 @ m. to 12, Lower Main Floor, fine for |f) From 9 —_——___ Wry lowest prices. inte 4 |. Elliott 4100 N.P, COOKS AT IT AGAIN | HE HID UNDER SEAT IN TRAIN 50 HER DAD COULDN'T SPOIL This Southern girl, Myra Lenore Wilson, overcame parental ob- iJection by eloping. And the man she eloped with was so considerate jof her parents that he hid under # seat in the smoking car until the train parents behind. They have been on the stage together ever since, and are at the Orpheum thie wee A tall girl, with a full, rich, beau. | then several things hap And |tiful voice, walks onto the stage at |p Orpheum this week. She is fol }lowed by a@ fellow in a drens suit |who walks like Charite Chaplin, and yodels and whistles and make {8 nolee like a train. They are on the program as W © became more and more popu lar as 4 singer. He made a bit In vaudeville, i They became engaged ] And her parents objected. ] -|erandfather was a Methodist minis | ff json and Lenore, “novelty entertain: |ter, and the idea of her marrying an i} i} | | | | Her lors,” and they are.a most musical |atcor was not to be sanctioned. land pleasing pair ; we | Wilson and Lenore, off stage, are |a ¥ They decided to elope =| Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, and altho| She announced to her parents/ |they modestly deny that they haveland friends that she was going to| jever done anything more exciting a neighboring town to sing. They | than thrill theatregoers with their|came to the station to see her off jsongs and convulse them with their | Wilson was on the train. But they Jantics, the fac’ enk otherwixe, | didn't see him | The Wilsons are from the South.| FOR HE HID UNDER A SEAT They, were boy and girl playmates |IN THE SMOKER until the train |[f |together in New Orleans. It was|was well out of the city. | there they became sweethearts | And then he jotned Myra Lenore | j | He decided his carcer was to be|in the Pullman, and they aped to developed on the stage. She di Fort Worth, Te nd were married |f] jered she had a voice, and she wasin/and lived happlly ever after. } |demand at concerts, She began| All that was two years ago, and |i} appearing {n concerts in towns i» |they have been working together i I \| | | came to New Orleans for | the adjoining country. lon the stage ever since. 'HANGED IN CALIFORNIA PRISON = | FOLSOM PRISON, Cal., Sept. 19.—David Fountain was banged here |} at 10 o'clock this morning. On December 14, 1914, Fountain outraged | }and murdered Margaret Miiling, 10, in the basement of the German Lu-| |theran chureh, in Sacramento. Fountain was the janitor, He had been hired from a public mission and little was known of him. Fountain |confessed his crime. His only defense was that he previously had been {if an inmate of an asylum in Iowa Wi | WANTS PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. 10.—-A Canadian physician, Dr. C. J. | | Hastings of Toronto, suggested something new and interesting to the || American Public Health association meeting here today. He suggested | ja public health nurse, who .wouldearnthesalary as Chinese physicians || earn theirs, by keeping the public well W That present statistics on death rates are meaningless and useless |i} | was the declaration of E. ©. Levy of Richmond, Va. No distinction as | } to conditions are made, he sald, nor as to preventable and non-prevent- | | | | | | able diseases. The work done by a good health officer, in his opinion, | | finds no reflection in such statisticn | | | Dr, John W. Trask of the U. 8. public health service gave {t as his | belief that the high death rate among colored people !s not inherent in | the colored race, and that the situation can be remedied {n this country The only way to beat-the housefly’s game, according to Dr. L. M.| | McCormick of Asheville, N. C, is to play It the housefly’s way, which | | is characterized chiefly by persistence, None of the fMy-killing systems hehe serve of themselves, he sald. C! rae must clean up and keep clven. SUFFRAGISTS MEETINFRISCO SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10,- “The hour for federal suffrage has struck” will be the Keynoto of the convention of the Congressional Unien for Woman Sufrage, which will open a three-da September 1. A group of women of world-wide nota will | speakers. Mrs. O. H suffragist, left PF. Belmont, famous New Yo New York yesteriay to attend th panied by a large corps of secretaries. Among the will be Mme. Marie Montessori, Mme, sian ambassador to the United States; Miss Mabel Talliaferro, actress Miss 1. M. Wilson of Nevada, Mrs, Charles W. Kaire of Ilinois and| Miss Eisle Hill of Connecticut. More than 1,000 del froin 12 Western states which hav woman and convention, others attending All Kull Kahn, wife of the Per- tes are expected | equal suffrage laws LOOKED JUST LIKE CHARLEY | “The Goddess” was relegated to the background Thursday night,| | when a score of boys whose ages ranged anywhere from 5 to 18 pranc- | jed around the Alhambra’s stage in true Charlie Chaplin style. The occasion was engineered by Managers Jensen and Von Her berg, who originated the idea of a Chaplin contest, offering prizes of $5, $3 and $2, respectively, to the three best Chaplin tmitators. | Russel Drysdale, 12, of 1114 29th ave., captured the honors of the evening. Russel’s face Was an exact duplicate of Chaplin's, and when | he smiled the Chaplin smile there was no telling them apart. He sot | the fiver. a) The second prize went to Harold Mirk, aged 13, of 3216 FE. Madl-| fon st. Harold came on with an elongated dog of German ancestry, | who answered to the name of Fritz, and whose dignity was outraged at being forced to eat a wiener. The house waa in a continual uproar dur | boys, attesting the popularity of Charlie Chap { H ) | } | ng the showing of the in, CONTINUE MOTHER'S CASE Because the prosecuting attorney's office ts loaded with wo | hearing on the case of the deserte# mothers, brought by G nold, attorney, bas been continued from Friday at 1:30 p. m., in Judge Dykeman’s court rk, the Wright Ar afternoon to Monday, | The commissary department of the Northern Pacific again re | dered {itself immortal Thursday night, pan ren: 4 when, at the dinner of the Bank-| ers’ convention, at the Rathskeller, the N. P, had lemon ples on the | speakers’ table, spelling “Honorable Willam Howard Taft,” one letter | to a ple, The department also presented a cake to the bankers, with a| sultable Inscription, and with a reproduction of the Bankers’ Magazine on top. : Monthly | LONDON t. 10.—Thirty-seven persons were killedein Tuesday's and Wednesday's raids‘against London and the clally announced today. Four of those wounded of the “missing” were later found in the debria east coast, It was offi-| Tuesday died, Thre ° THE SEATTLE STAR Ht i seit Ladies! cefiy FREDERICK @~ NELSON atterns Basement Salesroom Women’s Black Umbrellas, $1.15 Unusual Values Saturd &rib P. han top a timely offering of unusual interest for Women’s Black with tape-edge, styles—mis abrell c . selling Umbrellas on a gon frame, waterproof top and dies in a variety of effects and fancy designs with sterling silver mount- ion, mushroom ings—finished with cord and tassel, and fitted with silk cover Good vale at $1.15 each, —Besement Salesroom Girls’ Autumn Hats, $1.45 to $3.95 UCH charming styles for Girls and Misses in the Basement Salesroom’s displays of new Autumn millinery— modes every bit as interesting as those for their elders, devel- oped of silk plush, corduroy, velvet and silk, for school and dress wear. A moderate price- range, $1.45 to $3.95. For the school girls, Felt Sailors, Velvet Tams and Soft- brimmed Velvet Hats, trimmed only with band of gros- grain ribbon and silk tassel. Priced upward from $1.95 to $5.00. —Besement Salesroom, New Top Coats $10.00, $12.50 $15.00 N especially smart model from the new arrivals in Women’s and Misses’ Coats in the illustration. The material is a serviceable tweed mixture, and the pock- ets of novel design, full belt and flaring skirt, all proclaim its newness. Priced at $15.00. Other Coats in Corduroy, Diagonal, Zibeline, Basket- weave and Fancy Coatings in plain and belted style, some with fur collar; in navy, black, green, brown and gray, at $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00, —Barement Salesroom, All-Wool Chuddar Suitings Special 95c Ye d. Saturd ay D paconse- price for Saturday’s selling on this seasonable All-wool Suiting which makes up admirably in light-weight coats, suits and children’s coats. These Suitings are 56 inches wide, and may be had in Black, Navy, Dark-green and Brown, plain or with self-stripes. Special at 95¢ yard. is shown —Basement Salesroom. New Envelope Chemises 79c MBROIDERY {nsertion topped with fine Val. insertion and edge trims the dainty Chemise sketched, which is made of fine qual- ity nalnsook, and fs an un- usual value at 7Dé, Other styles at this price are trimmed with dainty Filet, Val. imitation Cluny or shadow lace or have em- broidery edging, insertion and beading drawn with ribbon. —Basement Sal Girls’ Coats $4.50 $5.00 $5.75 HE smart, well-made little Coat shown in the sketch is a typical value from our showing of Children’s and Misses’ Coats. It is tailored from a good quality of wide- wale corduroy in green and navy, and full lined. May also be had without the belt Sizes 6 to 14 years. Priced low at $5.00. Equally attractive values in Coats for school and general utility wear, at $4.50 and $5. Basement Salesroom. Boys’ Norfolk Suits, $3.95 With an Extra Pair of Knickerboc hers HE extra pair of kniekerbockers with these Suits is an important feature when service is consid- éred, for it practically doubles the life of the suit Made up in serviceable brown and gray mixtures in the popular Norfolk moc afid tailored to stand Priced low at -95. Basement Salesroom the strain, Brassieres Special 19c the ex O* sale Saturd cellent-fitting Brasstere shown in the sketch, made of good quality muslin and trim med with embroidery insertion and narrow embroidery edge, | Two front or fastening. Special, 19¢, styles ack —Basement Salesroom, Silk-Boot | Stockings 25c Pair HESE Black Thread-silk Boot Stockings are} quoted at this unusually low price because of slight imperfections, which, how ever, have been carefully mended at the factory. They have cotton top and double heel, sole and toe; sizes 8% to 10. Good value at 25¢ pair. —Basement Salesroom New Neckwear 25c EW Collars of embroidered organdie, nets and laces figure in this attractively- priced assortment, also Chem isettes in white and ecru Priced at 25¢ each. —Basement Salesroom =e Cups and Saucers Spec- 0 Set ial Cl of 6 N sale Saturday. medium- weight Semi-porcelain Cups and Saucers in the graceful shape pictured, decorated with gilt edge. Unusually good value at, the set of six. 50¢, Medium-size Dinner or Break- fast Plates to match, special, set of six, 50¢, —RBasement Salesroom Children’s School Shoes Misses’ and Children's Patent and Dul! Calf Schoo! Shoes, in button Style, built over full-toe lasts, with leather or cloth tops. Sizes 6 to 8. $1.50 pair; 8% to 11, $1.75 pair; 11% to 2, $2.00; 2% to 6 2.50 pair, Children’s Patent and Dull Calf Button Shoes, built over & foot-form with Good- oak soles. Sizes pair; 8% to 11, last, year welted 6 to 8, $ $2.00 pair, Boys’ and Youths’ Gunmetal Calf Lace Shoes, with extra ensuring good res 12% to BY heavy soles, service. 8S $2.50 pair, Boys’ and Youths’ Dull Calf Lace Shoes on roomy, fulk toe last, with Goody welt ed double sole—very durable, Sizes 10 to 12, $2.50 paitt 12% to 2, $3.00 pair; 2% to 5M, 8 a eal

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