The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 10, 1916, Page 8

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'Men’s Da collars, Men’s $1.45 Silk Front } Soft Cuff Shirts, Priced 92c Men who like Shirts a little out of the ordinary certainly will want some of these silk-front Shirts 92c. Front and soft cuffs of good quality silk with matched bodies of percale in plain white, striped and two-tone fancy stripes in bold or more quiet shades. Hand Style— Wonderful ~ Values at 25c Just splendid for business wear are these Men’s Ties we offer at 25c. Open-end Siik Four-in-Hands, plain white, solid colors and newest fancy patterns and colorings | MEN’S 50c SILK TIES 38¢ EACH 38c each, or two for T5c, is the price of these Silk Four-in-Hand Ties at the Anniversary Sale Plain colors and new fancy patterns and stripes MEN’S $1.00 SILK NECKWEAR 69c for these Men’s Hats derbies ME Thureday at 55. rials. pair for a day MEN’S SUSPENDERS 25c A PAIR The Anniversary Sale presents a splendid bar- gain in Men's Lisle Suspenders. They're made of short lengths of 50c webbing, and offered at 25c. MEN’S 50c NIGHT SHIRTS AT 39c For Thursday—Men's Muslin Night SBirts at ME? soles, heels and toes. 39¢ each. Made with V necks, trimmed with fast color braids. Just the right weight for sum- | color combinations, mer wear. MEN’S 10¢c HANDKERCHIEFS Sc Of fine cambric, neatly hemstitched. MEN’S 12'%4c HANDKERCHIEFS 10c Of cambric, some initialed—10c, or 3 for 25c. gingham, in stripes and checks neck, under side-front COVERALL APRONS 39c Bound in white. other opens down the back in stripes or figures—slip over the head, lace in front—with collar. EXTRA SIZE APRONS 89c Jersey Sport Suits at $19.50 So New So Serviceable So Very Smart Made of fine wool Jersey cloth—ideal suits for motor- ing, golfing, canoeing. They never wrinkle. White pearl buttons their only trimming. The model pictured here is belted and has a shawl collar that can be buttoned up close, and oddly fash- ioned patch pockets — full skirt. In latest sport shades— Copenhagen, light blue, rose, canary, yellow and emerald. —Second Floor. chambray. Third Floor, South. vertible or military collars gaily colored silks are shirred or full plaited all at $19.50. Anniversary Specials in Domestics PRINTED LAWNS AT 4c A YARD 4c a yard for Printed Lawns; 1,000 yards in the lot, 26 inches wide, and in mill lengths. Many neat patterns to choose from. DRESS GINGHAMS 7c Dress Ginghams, in different size checks and | plaids and pretty colors; 27 inches wide, in | lengths to 20 yards—%,000 yards tn all | 36-INCH OUTING AT 9c A YARD White Outing Flannel, full yard wide—2,000 yards in the lot; full bolts; Mght weight; priced at $c a yard Thursday. | on both sides mixtures A YARD nice for porch or in blue, green and red gray, made of new rags. wer Main Floor. also plain chambray. Fastens from the arm and down Two styles of Coverall Aprons— one slips over the head and fastens on side-front, belt all ‘round—the MIDDY APRONS 50c EACH Middy Aprons of pretty percales sailor / Extra size Slipover Aprons of checked or striped Amoskeag ging- ham, trimmed with bands of plain a. An Anniversary Special in Men's Cloth all short lines of our 75c and $1.00 value A number of different mate High-grade Silk Ties—every scart made with | ME} slip’ band, of reps, crepe, Morgador, moire crepe, Yotton Sock failles and fancy silks, in exclusive patterns and | _ Medium weight Cotton Socks coloring#. This New and Pretty 85c Ivah Apron for 75c ON APRON DAY Just as pictured—of Amoskeag THE BON MARCHE Pike Street-——-Second Avenue——Union Street-———Elliott 4100 THE SEATTLE STAR At the Bon Marché’s TWENTY-SIXTH ANNIVERSARY SALE Men and Women Who Buy for Men Will Gladly Come to This Sale For prices have been deeply cut for this one day—and the merchandise is all so new and timely—just what you would have to buy at regular prices daring the next week or two. Men’s Sport Shirts | Convertible Collars | And many who enjoy outdoor sports will find this a splendid offer in Sport Suits. Have convert- ible collars that can be worn open or as regular roll Percales and Oxford cloth, in plain white, | hairline, cluster and fancy two-tone stripes, on white grounds. Extra value at 55c. 55c ~ Sub Shirts ~ Men’s Neckties in Four-in- | Away With All Odd Lines of | Men’s $2.00 and $3.00 Hats at $1.00 Apiece A half to a third of the original prices Broken lines of soft felts in gray, brown, tan and a few black | Special at $1.00 each CLOTH CAPS AT 55c EACH | ape to Ko *S 12%4¢ COTTON SOCKS 9% black, white and | gray, in fast colors, reduced from 12'4c to Se # ’S FIBER SILK SOCKS 21c PR, | Men's Fiber Silk Socks, made with reinforced Tan, navy, cadet, gray and smoke colors to choose from; 2lc a pair. MEN’S $3.50 BATH ROBES $2.45 Heavy Blanket Bath Robes, in plain and fancy lendidly made with spacious | pockets, heavy cord at walst with tasseled end MEN’S LEATHER BELTS Soc Black Leather Belts with fancy German asllver | buckles that can be engraved—spectal at 50c each at the Anniversary Sale Thursday —Lower Main Fleer. Women’s Coats $19.50 They Were $21.95, $24.50 and $29.50 But style and size ranges are already broken, though they have only been here a matter of a week or so Ultra-smart models, full or half-lined—made with con- or the wide cape collars of Some flare gracefully from the shoulders, while others Some nice Sport Coats, too- —Second Floor. Anniversary Sale of Floor Coverings $9.50 RAG RUGS AT $6.90. 6x9 Rag Rugs, with beautiful stenciled designs in shades of blue, pink and J Just splendid for small rooms; $6.90 9x12 GRASS RUGS AT $7.95 Regular $8.95 Grass Rugs, that are especially camp smoothly woven, with Greek key border designs summer home—very 9x12 RAG RUGS AT $10.95 Plain colored Rag Rugs with two-tone bordered ends in art shades of blue, pink, tan and French Priced at $10.95. “Third Floor, Col. Mosby, NearDeath, Was Terror to Union Troopsas Guerilla Leader May by) i in ® howpital the Intrepid lead Geertiias,” whieh WASHINGTON Gol John 8 M y in ko er of Mosby's ! 1 1 1 1 terrorized the ith during and immediately after the civil war 1 here wn a Just old age,” doctors give as the cause of bis illness Col. Mosby has been falling since he was disminsed, on account of age, from his office an attorne in the department of Justice, five or six years ago. Hie te 83. | Col. Moaby was a practicing law. |i | yer when Fort Sumter was fired on the act that started the civil war, |i Mosby served at first as foout | with the Firat Virginia cavalry | When the Union troops i stormed Richmond, in 1862, Monby outwit the of 0 and safely Col, John 8. Mosby fedorates to the Union trate They were dent As a reward for valor, Mosby was given command of an in dependent company of cavalry, and the deeds of this band, which became known as “Mosby's Gueriilas,” occupies a thrill- ing page in the history of the great internal struggle. i} He became an intimate friend of Gen. U. 8. Grant after the war and | | was appointed to the consular service, but in 1886 returned to the Unit-| }ed States and was a lawyer in San Francisco for several years i | | BALLAINE ANSWERS JOSLIN| re and representatives in|] e Alaska railroad bill ed in the every provision | advocated and re provision Joslin ad Editor The Star: In Falcon Jos lin's torrent of words in The Star | charge of Tuesday he is careful to conceal| who incorp jth things First.—That he gave out a news| jected every {paper statement a column tn length | vocated | Just before the convening of the| The following letter from United |} Present session of congress crit!-| States Senator Chamberlain on this cising and attacking the location | subject ts very much to the point of the government Alaska railroad, | Jand saying the princtple of govern: | ment ratiroad ownership tn Alaska would be a fatlure until the Kov ernment bought the Guggenhetm railroad That statement w tively by the Gug winter in appropriations for the government | railroad. Second.—That when the govern |ment railroad project was taken up |Dy congress threo yenra ago he had ed, which he has stated in a letter over his own sig nature had the O. K. of Steve Birch manager of the Alaska synd It would have created a Gugger ail het commission in advance to buy the worthless Guggenhetm raf and connect ft with the Joslin r road. Not a word nor a line of Jonlin's bill waa accepted by the/and his Guggenheim lobby that they committees or by congress |had better save their wrath for a Third.—That I proved Joslin to|later date in the camnpaten. 1 have be a Guggenheim lobbyist in dis-|some more interesting documer guise, to the complete satisfaction OUN EB. BALLAINE VILLISTA COLONEL 1S KILLED} BY H. D. JACOBS jand Baca fell dead United Press Staff Correspondent! Alvarez recelved ADVANCED BASE OF THE/the Ko a@ bill all prey Let me sug icon Joslin 20 pesos from nment as AD advance on AMERICAN EXPEDITION, Provi-/the reward for Baca’s death | dencia, Mex., April 28—(By Cour! - i) ler to Columbus, N. M.)—Manuel Baca, famed Villista colonel, is E. L. GAUDETTE DEAD | dead in, His demise “took” thie) | time, however BELLINGHAM, May 10.—Ed-| He may be rated as permanent-| ly, nodoubt-about-ltly dead. American officers ot Dodd's command offictally nounced him so i rode into Santo Tomas on . & fugitive seeking a hid ing ace, after Dodd's men had cut his command to shreds tn the fight at Tomachic. His big white horse was wound od tn the neck mund L udette, millionaire lum: berman, ts dead here today of apo plexy YUKON MAY GO DRY | DAWSON, Y. T., Mer. chants, employers a prominent } Col pro-| May 10. ] conservatives, liberals and social ists have launched a dry campaign Baca must take a woman into here today thru a large organiza hiding with him. Put this time he ton, the people's prohibition move made a mistake in picking the|Mment of Yukon territory woman. | hagas The pretty daughter of Teando WANT LOCATIONS | Alvarez caught bis eye. The Vil-| | lista leader slipped from his horse and advanced to where she stood| Two gas en- i in the doorway of her father's!|« are looking for locations here, ] } | | manufacturers of home according to a communication Dan He seized her arm; she ecream-|tel L. Pratt, of the Pacific Motor ed. Alvarez rushed to the door! boat and Motorship, has sent to the with a rifle, firing twice as he ran,' Chamber of Commerca Confessions of a Wife | ALICE'S SPEAKING FACE CALLS /and known many of them intimate. | UP STRANGE THOUGHTS id I have never known one so | ff Alice, my little nurse, came & or so old that she did not |i » to Influence her i me this morning with the str a man by est expression on her face. It was| feminine wiles a mixture of astonishment, relief} It is nature. You see it in the and a little shame. little I did not say anything to her, | conscious! for, little book, one thing | hav iting her tiny flirts with grandpa by rl of 4 when she un i] soft cheek | | | learned and learned thoroly is that|and curves her roguish lips in the no one has any business encroach.| most endearing, and innocent of ing on the private thoughts of oth-| smiles. You see it in the faint tint | ers that comes to grandma's face} There may be times, possibly, when her favorite grandson gath- | when we may take a hand in other |ers her up in his athletic arms and people's affairs, for {t 1s always| proclaims loudly that she Is pret impossible to act without some|tier than any girl he has met at |one knowing something about It college. But ‘s th ts! They may} Ho be entirely private property be big enough to let Dick forget I'll tell you, little book, some-|}me, I know he has had a great times my thoughts are so private| recrudescence of his love for me that I hate to repeat them to my-/lately, You see, little book, he self. Even to you, I have not voic-| must have felt two kinds of pity ed, or rather written, some of the|for me. The pity of my heart-hurt very vital things that have been|and the pity of my bodily hurt. Of born in my brain and are now liv-|one of these he was the cause and ing in my heart. Some time I may|he has manfully tried to make {t tell them to you, but not now up to me. | } | I am going to try and | However, my long Illness and| He told me the other night that the knowledge that to me come|he would not have me changed in these unbidden thoughts make me|any particular except to be made think that others have them, too,| physically well (1 have long dismissed the {de “Why, Margie,” he said, “as 1 little book, that I am any differ-|look back on you as a wife {t al ent from the erage woman) and|most seems to me that you are almost unconsciously 1 have come|the one all-around woman in the to them print themselves on | worl! the ones es of my friends and loved You kept my home perfectly and made it a home indeed. You It was with a very feminine feel-| always had for me the food I Hked. ing of triumph that IT found, log|and it was cooked to perfection. | |that 1 am, I had the power to lure/did not realize this until you were |Dick back to me the other night,|so long In the hospital and I had and yet I knew that if I remain as|to eat what some other woman or I am IT must comply with his re-|perhaps some man considered a quest—I must not ask him to dine| well-prepared meal | with me and make myself as pret-| “You have a brat@, Margie! | ty as I can to receive him Sometimes in the past I have not The tempter at my ear tells me| considered this an asset in a wife, to do this—every woman in this| but I know now that wherever my world like 1 that she is irre-|curiosity or love of excitement | some circumstances, | might lead me, you were and atill t or best feminist of |are the only woman that does not one that declares | bore me to death after I have be. she hates men—likes to feel she | come well acquainted with her— | can mould them to her will by the | learned her whole little bag of | force of her brain if not by rea | trie ks, as it were json of her feminine magnetism | That night—-forgetting 1 was | Let me whisper a great and very | just a log—I wrote a letter to secret confession to you, little| Dick. I'll let you see it, little book, book, I have seen many women (To be continued) Vy FREDERICK&NELSON| Basement Salesroom HI on over mart Sports Coat wash dre inent factor in Recent arrival sasement popular linen collar « $1.50, $1.95 and $2.95 Many pretty styles in Wash Skirts for out- ing, camp and made up in linon and gaberdine in white and gray, and awning stripes of black, blue, tan or rose. S sport wear, The skirt pictured, of awning striped gaberdine (priced at $2.95) may be com bined with the coat sketched to make a jaunty outing suit WASH WAISTS, $1.25 Pretty frill models in soft cotton voile, plain white, stripe and check patterns, sizes 34 to 44, $1.25. assembled at little cost Silk Turbans Hemp Sailors Lisere Helmets Peanut Straw Mushroom Shapes Lace Straw Sailors Manila Straw Turbans Milan Turbans Panama Sailors Two moderate prices—95c and $1.45. The assortment includes Trimmings Suggested for These Hats: or outing costume, i Salesroom coat at $5.00 inch Milan Hemp Sailors Sports Coats, $5.00 0 convenient for slipping 4 prom. displays, e full, flaring models and belted effect gaberdine, poplin, corduroy, velour and fancy coatings, in black, na white, rose, Copem hagen, gold, tan and black and white checks and plaids, The ¢ picture of e ¢ GINGHAM PETTICOATS, 50¢— Well-made ginghams, dresses, priced at 50¢. —Basement Salesroom, Univinimed Holts, Sc aiid $1.45 ITH such a variety of Shapes to choose from at these attractively low prices, and so many moderately priced trimmings, the materials fofa modish summer hat may be Petticoats of for wear Daisies, 95¢ Wheat in assorted col- ors, 45c. Foliage, 25¢ to 95Se. Field Flowers, 75c. Sweet Peas, 45c. Black and White Wings, $1.50. Imitation Goura, $1.50 Pink Wings, 95c. Small Navy Wings, 75 9] Basement Saiesroom © A Purchase of Baskets In Five Low-Priced Groups, at 10c 15c¢ 25c 35c 50c HE price-advantage secured by us in this pur- chase is passed on to our customers in this Thursday offering. Included are Candy Baskets Sewing Baskets Scrap Baskets Lunch Baskets Grass Trays Basket Flower Vases Fruit and Sandwich Work Baskets Baskets of rattan, mahogany, bamboo and fancy straws, exceptional values at 10¢, 15¢, 25¢, 35¢, 50¢. —Basement Salesroom. An Exceptional Offering of Leather Novelties | eohaaaaesed purchase enables us to quote very low prices on a large assortment of Leather Novelties, including pieces for personal use, for gifts and prizes, among them: Card Cases Coin Purses Drinking Cup Cases Handkerchief Cases Manicure Cases Magazine and Book Covers Novelty Hand-bags and many other items, grouped in five lots at 5c 10c 15c 25c 50c ~Basement Salesroom Double-Service Apron, 75c HE well- made Apron shown in practical, the sketch is in reversible- front style, and covers the Made of sturdy gingham in blue or and and blue or gray and white dress entirely. pink checks lavender stripes, trimmed with fancy piping. Very good values at 75¢. —Basemont Salesroom. 1,000 Yds. of Outing Flannel Special | 6c | Yard ANCY Flannels of weight, in stripe effects of pink or blue on white suitable Outing summer grounds for children’s undergarments, gowns and pajamas. inches wide, special @@ yard. women’s night men's Twenty-seven Basement Salesroom. Dress Goods Remnants Reduced TTRACTIVE savings offered in this collec- tion of Dress Goods Rem- nants, which includes Serges Tussah Royal Granite Cloth Nun's Veiling Heavy Suitings Challies in lengths ranging from one to 5 yards. Excep- tional values at the reduced prices. —Basement Salesroom Cheviots Wash Bowl and Pitcher Special 75c * special interest to those O itting up camp or sum- mer home—this exceptional value in a White Crockery Wash Bowl and Pitcher at T5e. —Rasement Salesroom Boys’ Sweater Coats, $1.00 EW arrivals in Boys Jersey Sweater Coats m dark maroon col sizes 28 to 34, attractively priced at $1.00. Boys’ Heavy Gray Sweater Coats with shaw! collat, sizes 26 to 34, $1.25 and $1.75. Boys’ Wool Sweaters in navy and maroon, will large collar, sizes 26 to $3.00. fe Boys’ Knickerbockers 1-wearing gray brown mixtures, sizes blue, Basement Salesroom fast-color beneath house to 18 years, 75¢ and ie Bees. ESS. § BS Ress Bess exer. 2 =. ~ £2e7_ 22, 2°. 8 z in | a

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