The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 25, 1916, Page 8

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THE BON MARCHE Pike Street-——- Second Avenue Union Street-———Elliott 4100 1,000 Pairs of Lace Curtains for Less A Sale of One Mill’s Season-End Surplus Stock AT FAR LOWER PRIC THEY HAD BEEN BOUGHT IN THE REGULAR WAY. $1.25 Hemstitched Lace Curtains at 98c a Pair Lot 3—Beautifully finished and evenly woven lace curtains with hemstitching. Various weaves in Arabian color only, specially priced at 98c a pair. $2.00 Scotch Net Curtains Ecru Color Only, $1.50 Pair Lot 4—Very wrviceable curtains for any room THAN IF Nottingham Lace Curtains Worth to 95c at 59ca Pr. | 1—Lace Curtains at 59c a pair—2% to 8 | } Sey lengths in Scotch net and madras weaves, 1} im white and Arabian color, Values up to %5c a Hf pate, Neat 98c Lace Curtains 2 1-2 Yards Long, 75c Pr. Lot 2—Neatly bordered and allover designs in Jace curtains in madras and fish net weaves—2% yards long and 36 inches wide. White and Arabian | to choose from. | Baby Week at the Bon Marché Special Bargains in Baby Wearables ‘ENTER YOUR BABY THE SILVER TROPHY q WEIGHT GAI G CONTEST i li you would like to have Mrs. Max West's books on “Infant Care” and “Prenatal Care,” leave your name and address in ‘The Bon Marche Baby Shop and the books will be sent to you Mi} free of charge, by the Children’s Bureau of the U. S. Depart ment of Labor, direct from Washington, D. C. est— ELE: V GER For Infants and Children urse Hubbard Is Demonstrating “Vanta” Garments Showing the many merits of these pinless and buttonl~ss garments that are so to put on and take off—and that will not scratch the softest skin Nurse Hubbard has come all the way from Chicago in order to be with us during by Week. SAMPLE SWEATERS % LESS WHITE DRESSES AT 39¢ ‘Twenty-five little tots’ sweaters in white or White lawn dresses, sizes 6 months to 3 years button up to the neck and roll collar style. van ceca and skirts of embroidery, special at INFANTS’ DRESSES 98c CROCHETED SACQUES 25¢ pin tucks. sale. INFANTS’ 15c BIBS 10c LAWN BONNETS % LESS Infants’ bonnets, sample line of lawn and pique, } Tape bound of! cloth bibs in conventional and | | priced at 36¢ and up—for Baby Week. | “Many pretty designs—t15c value 10c. 4 Nyt ae = 1 = 25c RUBBER PANTS 19¢ Infants’ white coats of Redforda, “camimeres | A specia} purchase enables us to sel! Infants’ ry 5. Stork Pants for 19¢ for Baby Week. Pe he ee ee ee Semi-Annual Factory Sale of Shoes Hundreds of economical folk are buying good shoes here nowadays at less than | factory cost. H~—- You can buy them too, if you choose—for this is the Semi-Annual Factory Sale of oes—when, by buying surplus lots, canceled orders and sample shoes from the big ctories, we are able to give you these price advantages Women’s $3.50 to $4 Children’s Sample Shoes Patent Pumps $2.29 Pair at $1.39, $1.79, $2.49 Women’s $3.50 Canvas | Women’s $4.00 Russia Pumps at $2.29 a Pair Calf Shoes $2.59 Pair | | 60 a pair ‘Third Fleer, neat designs. Ecru color only at $1 a “Vanta"” Abdominal Binders 25¢ and 50c. “Vanta” V Binders 250 to 60c. “Vanta” Pinless, Button- tess Shirts, 25c and up. “Vanta” Gertrudes $1.00. Women’s $4.00 Bronze Men's $3.50 and $4. 00 _* Pumps at $2.29 a Pair Shoes at $2.69 a Pair [Just Unpacked 1,000 Boys’ Wash Suits We've Filled a Whole Window Full of Them at a Special Price —98c Ea.— Sizes 3 to 8 Years, in Tommy Tucker, Junior Norfolk and Middy Styles Nice little wash suits for present wear. Plain colors and striped and checked effects with collars and cuffs of contrasting colors—in cham- brays, galatea, Indian Head, gingham and Madras cloths. Either long or short sleeves with low Dutch collars or collars to fit up close around the neck. pper Mata Floor, Glazer Griffith, Nathan lizabeth Har Baby, Ada M Winifred | Upper Main Ficor—South. : Special prices for | For Baby Week Domestics wetnesday and the or Baby Wee : ‘ biggest stocks of do-| A Special Display of the Books Recom- Bedding mestics and bedding| mended by the Federal Government in all Seattle to choose for Parents. | from. L Phe’ Cs z . A t | ie Care and Feeding of Children, L. Plaid Ginghams 6c Yard | Emmett Holt, M. D., 75¢. Fancy plaid and checked ginghams—2,000 yards | Care of the Baby, J. P. in the lot, 27 Inches wide, lengths to 20 yards, | MoD, $1.50, Dress Percales 6c a Yard The Development of the Child, Percales, 31 inches wide, light ground with neat | Oppenhein, $1.25 patterns. Lengths to 10 yards at 6c a yard A Study of Child Nature, } Pillow Cases at 9c Each rison, $1.00, 200 dozen pillow cases, sizes 42x36 inches, | The Truth About the tly hemmed and ready for use, at 9c each Alberty, $2.00. 60c Bed Sheets 49c Each | Natural Education, Sackville Bleacheed bed sheets, size 72x90 inches with | Stoner, $1.00. flat center seam. Not over 6 to a customer. | A Montessori Mother, Dorothy Canfield 75c Bed Sheets 59c Each Fisher, $1.25. Upper Main Floor. Bleached bed sheets, size 81x90 Inches, the | z seamless kind-—good quality—not over 6 to «|| BOYS “STAND WEAR” SUITS $5 customer | Best $5.00 School Suits we ever sold—made of good wool fabrics and tailored according to a $1.75 Spreads $1.49 Each | | our own epecifications—2 pairs of knicker- Heavy crocheted bed spreads, size 78x88 inches, | | Shockers with every “Stand Wear” Suit with nice looking Marseilles patterns, $1.49 “ aes mete sete —Lower Main Floor, woe ercedeeteaa South are these Scotch nets with the latest borders, tn | | CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Boy in Murder Case Raises | Hard Problem for Police | room tn the New Ceell hotel, het he said Gleason ts employed at the Col man dock as announ and the I boy had done sor is for him . suddenly what are you going to d with me?” Joe asked It startled the room. The men looked at each other, They were Jused to many heartbreaking # Long years of police work made them callous to the usual tragedy, But here was a new prob tom A 12-year-old boy! “Well, what are jwith me? And no one answered The boy has been turned over to the juventle court No charge will be placed agatoat him until Judge Dyketan has |heard every angle of the case. | He ta the son of Mr. and Mra Martin B. Burke, who live at 3832 |24th ave. 8, W | The father ts employed at the |Pacifio Coast Steel Works, at Youngstown Murder! Realdes Joe there two boys. and @ girl, 4 few months ago Jare three other ch |5 and 9, respective | o- | The boy's arrest followed a tip furnished the police by Dr. John M Henderson, 4527 44th eve 8. W }On Sunday night, the doctor re | ported, a boy nervously asked him ifor a lift in his auto to Youngs jtown. The boy sald “the police | were after” him, and urged the doc |tor to drive faster, Dr. Henderson |aald he believed the boy was weak-| |minded, and only took his tnco- herent mumbling» for tmaginative | babble. | Acting on this tip the detectives jetarted a systematlo search in | Youngstown At noon Monday Detectives Cor |neflson and Yoris were waiting out |side the Washington school. Joe was arrested as he left the/ school house on his way home. |The boy was a pupil In the fifth | grade. In the meantime Detective Hay den had called at the Burke home on a general round of investiga tion of Youngstown homes. Mrs lof her boy | Joe had Seen away from home a |large part of Sunday Monday morning he arose ea jand got a paper. He came he | with it, read the story of the shoot jing, and showed it to his mother |. Kaowing he frequently foamed }the front, Mra. Burke sus pected fr son. Torn by the impulse to tell the police about her son, and her in inct to shield him from the law, © broke down when Detective Hayden queationed her. She told him that Joe was prob- abiy the boy the police were look ing fo ind Hayden was awaiting |the boy's return from school when he recetved word that he had ai ready been arrested ee “He has been such a strange child,” Mre. Burke sald. “He loved to roam, and thinks it manly to stay away all night When only a little fellow in Chicago, he used to strike out and explore the city from end to end aboard the street cars.” “I've seen ‘em shoot men in shows,” the boy explained to a room full of detectives Monday afternoon. “All cowboys carry guns. | just wanted to scare the old fellow. The gun went off. | didn’t know it would. 1 told him | was sorry when he started unbuttoning his coat. Then | got scared when he fell. So | ran.” He told how he tied his hand. kerchief over his face, the way the at bandits do, and hid behind hack, with the auto- matic he “didn't know would go off.” Joe didn't cry. . It was while searching along the waterway for an ax he had buried that Joe decided to play bandit and point the automatic at the aged | millworker, Sunday night. you going to do ‘The famtly came from Chicago a| Barke had been suspicious! story of the d smiled as} He went over the shooting in detatl he trled to convince the ficera that it was all in a day's} ay Wl juvenile after an im orgt. O'Brien, of the tment, learned Monday that t ny has ha ative fet fn his }since he was struck on th } with a ball bat four years ago ‘SCOTT-OBREGON EL PASO, April 25.—The border meeting of Gen, Hugh Scott, chief of staff, and Al varo Obregon, de facto govern ment war minister, Is believed to Indicate practical acceptance of Carranza’s ablest military leader as the chief factor in | Mexican affairs, | The conference ia not expected }to open for a w | meantime, Gen, Pershing’s n will hold the Ine from | Columbus pott-Obregon confer. | has been announced for » and suarez, It ls now rut it may occur in Eagle Texas, Juarez has never | friendly to Obregon STILL AFTER VILLA COLUMBUS, N. M., April 26.—A detachment of United States troops ‘s reported to have started the final dash after Villa while the main untts of the force are concen trating at Namiquipa and Dublan “FIND” VILLA TRAIL WASHINGTON, April 26.—Re newed hope for Villa's capture arose today upon receipt of Consul | Letcher's report from Chibuahua City, “reliably” locating the hunted | bandit 60 miles southwest of Satevo and west of Parral Striking sailors’, cooks’, waiters’ nd firemen's unions on coastwise steamship lines are preparing a re ply to an offer made them Monday afternoon by offic of the affect ed lines, to giv crease in wages The offered increase would mean an addition of 82 » a month to their pay roll, officials say Se- | attle lines interested are the Pa cific Coast 8. 8. Co. and the Pacific. Alnaka 8. 8. Co. CRITICISE MANN LAW| WASHINGTON, April 25.—An- geline Lombardo, of Seattle, charg- ed with white slavery, is free to- day by order of the United States supreme court, which held the Mann act faulty FLIER KILLS WOMAN PARIS, April 25—One woman was killed and three men wounded when five German aeroplanes raid: | ed Dunkirk today, hurling six bombs thru the roofs of buildings! below them. The war office de clared officially that but slight property damage was done. | ARREST CHAUFFEUR | NEW YORK, April 26.- Louts | Windler, @ chanffeur, fs under ar- | rest here, charged with complicity | in the theft of four packages of | mail containing several hundred | thousand dollars’ worth of securi- tes. | 1 DRINK COSTS $287 EVERETT, April 25.—Frank Hart, owner of the Vancouver ho tel, at Arlington, unexpectedly | entered the court room yesterday, pleaded guilty to selling one drink of Hquor, and was fined $287 Confessions of. aWife | WHAT THE GARDENER TOLD I found this in my mall this morning in a beautiful box of carv ed olivewood beside an exquisite branch of Salvia cut from deepest red coral, The envelope was post marked Italy, and inside was this allegory “What the Gardener Told Me.” “One day the Summer Sun passed thru the garden gate and } was gone. “It 1s always hard to have peo. ple we love go away, but it fs dreadful to have some one say doleful things about our friend's departure This js what happened to the garden flowers on that fateful day As soon as the Summer Sun had passed out of sight, Fear climbed over the garden wall and shouted, Pray as hard as you can, for Frost is coming ‘'He will throw bis wh about you soon, and the | will say that you are dead,’ » “And all the plants but one grew | slek and trembled. “Away over in one corner beau tiful Salvia lifted herself straight toward heaven, She paid no at tention to Fear, but grew, if pos sible, more beautiful, and sang many little trala-las, and one of the lines of the songs she sang was ‘ whole life is a song of thanksgiving. Why should I pray because I fear? The other poor little plants be gan preparing for Frost. They | shrivel id grew pal a sway in the whole The only thing that defied it was the flaming Salvia he plants wal and waited roat did not and when morning the ga awakened the glorious copper sunlight of Indian Summer, Fear climbed over the wall and hid on the other side You see the Summer Sun had come back for another good-bye kiss, and found the only thing in the garden—which be had left so lovely—that pleased him was Sal- via, and he kissed her into wore | brilliant beauty | “Came a day when the copper | }Sun passed out in a gray haze that made the Salvia so beautiful | |that the other plants were furious. |[f hated her and |i |1y Jealous, They called her a hussy and a lot of oth Jer names that had better be for- | ten. It was bad enough to have | ar in thelr hearts but to have | Jealousy and Hatred added wa | terrible The poor unhappy things su fered fearfully, but Salvia went to | sleep that night thinking of the Sun's kisses and with so much |bliss in her heart and so much charity for all the world that the ugly thoughts of the other plants did not disturb her in the least That night Frost’ came down from the North and covered the garden with his white coat, All the other plants died with hatred in| their hearts, but Salvia's last breath was only love It did not hurt Salvia any more to die than it did the other flow- ers, and think of all the joy she | had of the long Indian Summer | days.” | The gardener said there were a lot of morals to this story, One had something to do with “living gloriously to the end,” but I have forgotten part of it One was, Cowards die many times before thelr death—-the valiant taste death but once. i} The gardener kept still such a Jlong time after he had re i [these morals tor that I asked | him of what he was thinking Of a lady, that used to walk in | |this garden,” he answered. “Al-| ways in my thoughts I call her Sal. vis, but | have heard her husband call her Margie.” oe Little book, little book, that is | the most beautifal compliment I ever recelved, because it describes, not what Tam, but all that 1 would | be. (To be continued) burly of |i CONFAB IN WEEK | FREDERICK &NELSON Added to Our Displays of Smart Fashions for ro} ¥} the Out-of-Door Woman: $15.00 NEW SPORTS COATS $16.50 $17.50 $19.50 $22.50 TRICTLY in the vogue are these newest Coats of Wool Velours and Jersey Cloth, in their joyous colorings of bright rose, gold, blue and green, also striking black-and-white checks with blue or green overplaid. ing color enhance vary from 30 to 40 inches. women and misses. Novel designs in cuffs and pockets of contrast- their attractiveness, Lengths There are sizes for —flecond Floor, SPORTS MILLINERY To Accompany the New Coats Is Just as Original, Picturesque and Daringly Colored Country Club A Bangkok with rose top and under-brim of hemp; trimming and narrow band of light-blue; vertible to many different Price $9.50. white white picot ribbon brim con shapes Washington Large Roll-brim Georgette Sailor of fine Chinese straw, white with orange Milan hemp flange Banded with Milan hemp and trimmed with beaded ornament. Price $15.00. Basement Brassieres Special 19c RONT-FASTENING Bras- steres of firm muslin, with embroidery -trimmed yoke, underarm reinforcement and trimming of narrow em- broidery braid edge. Special 19¢. —Dasement Salesroom. Initialed Stationery, 25c NITIALED Writing Paper or Correspondence Cards with Envelopes, in a good selec- tion of letters, one-quire boxes, attractively priced at Qe. —Rasement Salesroom. Val. Laces 25c Bolt NE- and two-thread Val laces in @ variety of dainty patterns for trimming under musiins and children's wear, bolt of 12 yards, 25¢. —Basement Salesroom. Women’s Vests 10c to 25c UMMER-WEIGHT Vests in regular and extra sizes, low or Dutch neck, wing sleeve or sleeveless, Swiss-ribbed or plain, priced trom 10¢ to 25¢, Basement Salesre Aluminum Tea Kettle, $2.25 8S pictured, large, substan tially-made Tea Kettle of pure spun aluminum, with ebonized wood handle and knob, Seven-quart capac An exceptional value at —Housewares Cinderella Wenchow Braid in navy- blue, with cross-stitching in variegated colorings and band of buff cire ribbon tied in bow at back. Price $9.50. Lady Katherine Small Mushroom Hat of new-blue linen, with cross- stitch trimming over crown and flat applique linen wreaths. Price $9.50. White Flannel Crushers in various styles, distinctly utilitarian, and always be- coming, $2.95, Rainier Park Gracefully-shaped Hat in crusher style of Belgian- blue = faille; adjustable head-sizes. Price $5.00. Merton Fiber-Silk Hat in two- tone combination colorings to match sweaters. White crown and Belgian-blue brim faced and banded with white satin, also several other color-combi- nations and styles, $5.95 to $6.95. —Second Floor. RAG RUGS For Summer Homes HE Summer vogue for chintz effects in draperies, wall papers and upholstery, creates a natural demand for quaint Rag Rugs in cool, refreshing tints. These Rugs are just as desirable for Colonial living-rooms and bedrooms in town residences, as for use in the Summer cottage. A very comprehensive selection of Rag Rugs, dis- played in our Domestic Rug Section, features the following varieties: PILGRIM RUGS, sizes 24x36 to 9x12, priced from $1.26 to $26. QUAKER RUGS, sizes 2x3 to 9x12, priced from Tbe to $14.00. PALATINE RUGS, 27x54 to 3x6, priced from $3.00 to $5.00. DIMITY RUGS, 2x3 to 3x6, priced from $1.00 to $2.75. OLD HOMESTEAD RUGS, 27x54 and 30x60, $1.25 and $1.50. —Second Floor. Dress Woolens Reduced to $1.00 Yard F Nppend 400 yards in the offering. Tweeds (50- and 54-inch), Fancy Mixtures, Black- and-White Checks (42-inch), plain Prunellas, Gaberdines, Poplins, Serges and other desir- able items. Very attractive values at $1.00 yard. —Table Square, First Floor. Hand-embroidered Crepe Negligees, $1.25 A’ attractive as they are practical, these Empire Negligees of washable crepe in Copenhagen, pink, light- blue, wistaria and lavender. Trimmed with hand - em- broidery in conventional de- signs and plaited ribbon frills, and shirred over elastic at the high waistline, Priced at $1.25. —Second Floor. New Traveling Bags $5.00 UBSTANTIAL Traveling Bag of brown cowhide, full leather-lined, reinforced with corner pieces and equipped with good Six- and 18-inch Price $5.00, Third Floor. lock and catches, teen-, 17- sizes.

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