The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 9, 1916, Page 12

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THE BON MARCHE Pike Street-——Becond Avenue- Union Street———-Elliott 4100 2 P. M. Saturday Short Prices for a Short Day - Silk Skirts, Special $5.95 BUT ONLY FOR A SINGLE DAY Silk Skirts Are Included IN BLACK, IN FANCY PLAIDS AND DARING STRIPE EFFECTS Silk Skirts for $5.95 until 2 p. m. Saturday, Sports Coats $10 to $24.50 This Store Will Close Sharp at $7.50 and $8.89 Chiffon Taffeta | and they are the $7.50 and $8.89 Skirts—cut extra full with the fas! able flaring lines. There are both plain gored and circular model Some belted at the waist Some with new and smartly-cut yokes. Some with plain and rope shirring around the | hips. Some trimmed with self-covered buttons or velvet Sports Coats are the most popular top coats at | present, and we have a very comipiete line at low | nw . r LISTENS TO REASONS | FOR SUPFRAGE PLANK IN PLATFORM RUSSELL iB The Star's own convention correspondent, Charies Edward Russell, n of newspaper interviewers, faces the journmlistic batteries him elf when Mra. Antoinette Funk, member of the congressional commit | tee of the American National Women's Suffrage association, interviews j him on the political value of 4,000,000 women votes. G.0. P. CONVENTION SO | HONEST IT GIVES THE | THE SEATTLE STAR The Store Will Close At 1 p.m. Tomorrow PREPAREDNESS PARADE DAY $4.95 and $5.95 Fine ingerie Blouses $3.95 Shantung silk, silk prices. Wool and silk jersey, Made with mixtures and woolens—in vivid col sailor or roll coflars and sashes VOTE-BUYERS A PAIN | BY CHAS. EOWARD RUSSELL Lingerie and Voile Waists with % Sa embroidering and lace trim- Middy Blouses 95c to $1.95 ming. Others of imported cotton All sorts of Middy Blouses—of white middy cloth crepe, with hemstitching and em-/ and stripes, regulation style, at 95c. Black and broidery. Most attractive styles. | white satin stripe twill, $1.25; Japanese crepe, gal- : —Second Pieer, | atea and twill, coat style, $1.45. Others at $1.95 FOR A SHORT SATURDAY Y INT THE SHOE SHOP WOMEN’S WHITE SLIPPERS $1.50 Women’s White Canvas two-strap Slippers, made with light turn soles and Louis covered heels. Just what every one is wanting just now. Sizes from 21% to 7, at $1.50 a pair. MARY JANES $1.29 Growing girls’ canvas Mary Jane Pumps, made on good, comfortable lasts, with ankle straps leather soles and heels. SCOUT SHOES $2.00 TO $2.50 Boys, youths’ and little gents’ Scout Shoes, tn easy tan cat, with alk soles, $2.00, $2.25 and $2.50. 2 —Upper Main Floor. Sport Shirts Will Cost You Just 55c In the Men’s Store on Saturday > ( ¢ In the Self Service Shoe Shop—Lower Main Floor MARY JANES $1.49 A PAIR White rubber sole Mary fitting style, with Jane Pumps, straps instep Most comfortable, most sensible Men's Shirts ever invented. They are made of good percales and Oxfords with convertible collars that can be worn up or down In pin, cluster or blazer stripes, or plain white with fancy facings And $1.00 Buys a Bathing Suit Men’s Bathing Suits for $1.00—made of fine jersey WB} knit cotton in navy blue or black, with white or red i stripings. —Lower Main Floor, Shop Early Saturday—Last Delivery at 1 P. M. Saturday the Bon Marche Autos will make the Se 1 Delivery at 1 p. m., taking all goods sold up to that hour, except deliveries for Suburban routes, which will go out as usual on Monday morning. Girls’ Tub Dresses at 98c| Women’s Union Suits 50c | Worth to $1.45, 2 to 14 Yrs. | Sizes From 34 Up to 44 An exceptionally good offer in Girls’ Tub | Snowy white garments, these, at 50c | Dresses for Saturday. Jacket and Bolero | fresh from the mills. Summer weight Union style, two-piece effects—Middy Dresses and | Suits with low neck, short or no sleeves long-waisted models. All prettily trimmed. | Some have French band tops, some ribbon Gingham, chambray, linene and middy cloth | run. Choice of cuff or wide lace trimmed are used in the making. Priced at 98 | knee style; all fine quality —Second Floor. | Special From 9 A. M. to 12 Shop Before Noon Saturday and Save Money These Forenoon Specials point the way to real economy be accepted for any of them $1.45 Panama Shapes 69c | Men’s B. V. D. Shirts 25c 12 B. V Women’s real Panama Hat Shapes in medium size sailors, oval crowns. Splendid | Undershirts—samples—in sizes 40 and for outing wear. Price 69c. —Second Fleer. | Ooty. worth to $1.00, for 25c, 4 —Lower Main Floor. Girls’ Middy Blouses 39c Printed Lawns 5c Yard Values to 79c in Middy Blouses of Indian Head and twill jean; regulation Printed Lawns, 36 inches wide; seconds style or with vestee; white or contrastingly | 4 1214c quality; in mill lengths. Not over 10 yards to each. No phone orders trimmed —Second Floor—Center. —Lewer Main Floor, 4 pper Main Floor, No telephone orders can | 9 D 42 From a. m. to Men's $2.45 Silk Waists $1.95 : Crepe de Chine and Wash Silk Waists| 90¢ Mercerized Damask 39c in stripes and plain colors; embroidered, || Mercerized Table Damask, 64 inches tucked and hemstitched; worth $2.45 wide, in fine pattert No phone orders cnaeerne Weer: | at thie orice —Lower Main Floor, House Dresses for 39c White Kid Belts 39c Each —Upper Main Foor. Women’s Gingham and Percale House - ; Dresses, sizes 34 and 36. Extra size per-| 1, 114 and,2-inch White Kid Belts, with cales, 52 and 54. Wrappers, sizes 34° 36 | White kid covered buckle; sizes 28 to 42; and 38 shanna ‘Sheen, | extra fine quality. Special 3% Women’s Hose 5c Pair | Fast Black Seamless Cotton hemmed top to dealer 5c Crochet Cotton 2 for 5c Elgin Maid Crochet Cotton, cerized, and in all staple colors + spools to each 10c White Shoe Polish 5c Nova, a white shoe from 9 a. m. to 12 at No phone orders taken. Hose with | me orders; none sold to each peer Main Floor. $1.50 Crepe ie Chine $1.10 40-inch silk crepe de chine; 25 street and evening shades and black; good, heavy quality, at $1.10 a yard. —Upper Main Fleer. fine mer Not over —Upper Main Floor, cleaner. On sale of 10c, —Upper Main Fleer. >, instead | Noted American Economist and P Nea (Copyright 1916 by Newspa CHICAGO, June 9 Loud yells do not a boomlet | make Nor hot alrs cop the dough Minds innocent and youthful take For real what's nly show. Old wise guys sit in study brown | And give all this the up and down. or ae) | Full many a boom comes to town behind the brass band and rides [home In the ead and aflent hearse. When Garfield was trying to nominate John Sherman and really nominating himeelf thirty-six years ago, he said something depth of the ocean not being termined m the height of the passing waves. It ts #0 here, in a way }to cheer the drooping On the Friday and 8 fore the convention met, the col onel's friends started for him a big f enthusiasm that was to convention managers off about the its. ng was well planned and a observers that ought to have known better, fell for it But tho convention © not taken off their just looked around and eald, Ther Teddy playing horse agalr gut little boy'” and went on shuffling the cards as before w 1 This, of course, is a good thing It doesn’t help to have any nomi nations carried by bayonet charges One reason why the drive didn’t catch hold in just the way expected was THE GREAT MIDDLE WEST. Thus justly famed region has all its crops in and they are looking fine, and It doesn't feel in its heart any particular throbbings about this chip and shoulder business, It's for America, all right, and the old flag and all that, but it isn't what you would call keen for a trouble hunt at this Juno- ture. So when many thousands of am! ablp Youth went tearing past with Kreat three-cornered badges and making stzzle for R,, old Si Per. kins of Blue Grass, Iowa, just and sald {t wa: smiled pleasantly good fun and this waa a lively town 1 right and NEVER JOINED IN CHEER! So the nomination was decided on a basis of calm calculation tn fa sand dance, WHICH IS AMED GOOD THING The fact is, of a dent tn politics any more by just opening your mouth and let ting out a yell that curdles the cir cumambient. What goes now Is SOLID, MER CHANTABLE ADVANTAGE What BUSINESS have you t to offer? That's the a—salesman hip, good pusiness, goods against goods and that sort of thing I suppose you might have been| able once to rush the convention trenches with a loud glad ery, but that was before the Hon. Reed Smoot and the Hon. Murray Crane got to RUNNING things. These) gents are all for business. You could pass either of them through a coffee strainer and not get any more sentiment than there ia In a grindstone. There is another thing about this | convention calculated to boom up| optimiam two points on a rising | market | All the other old timers will agree with me that {t {8 far and away the most honest convention we have 2 I mean, of course, among conven- | tions where there was any kind of aj fight There are fewer men that can be bought, and stay bought, which ts well known to be the final test of an honest man! | have seen conventions where votes were offered on street corners like potatoes In a truck wagon and delegations walked openly from headquar- ters to headquarters comparing quotations. A gentleman whose business Is exclusively in this line of commodities tells me, that he | had succesded in buying only | thirty-two delegates all told. It was the smallest number he had ever dealt In at any con- vention, and In hie opinion It showed the business had gone to pot, and all this talk about id Dernocratic Conventions for This Newspaper) that tends) you can’t make much | olitical Expert Attending Repub per Enterprise Association) | Prosperity made him tired HH thirty-twe wasn't enough to make a | thowing for hie living expenses and he didn't see how he wa going to hold up his head af this mong hie business I hike back to various times when & good, thrifty delegate that knew (ff what was what could rake down |[} enough at one convention to keep him going for the next two years, | and times seem changed indeed. =| Think of 1918, for instance. | There's many a now barn dotting | the arable regions of our broad land that owes its origin to that prosper: |] ous season I don't know what has brought about the transformation, but I sed with Joy Nobody has yet appeared tn our midst or elsewhere who can tell hy we sbould have national polit. | feal conventions, but if we must in FULL EUGENE HOWARD | honest o—______________. DAPHNE POLLARD TO PLAY | MATINEE SATURDAY Th » flict them upon ourselves, most of 1 | isan ay Bo tee manga di yt Mey countrymen are strongly pre} | | Daphne Pollard would leave | ludiced tn favor of having Kom |} during the middle of “The | | | | THIS ONE WILL GO DOWN IN HISTORY AS 80 HONEST IT GAVE SOME OF THE BRETHREN A PAIN, Elder of Moore Comedians Tells Why His Job’s a } Tough One float in the preparedness rade. The performance w start at 11 a. m., and will Passing Show of 1915” matinee Saturday to get in the Star's pa i be | sa | | Over in time for Daphne to slip HE ‘PLANTS’ THE JOKES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 will play the entire matinee. WHAT SORT OF A | MAN IS HUGHES? | tinued, his | else. enunciation than into her Miss Columbia cos- | tume and mount the float. She “that nearly every actor tn the business is more careless about anything | “All we have got in the world is reful enunciation, funny faces | and personality. Nearly every ding, altho guished looking body has personality, but doesn’t [person in the days of the life tn use it. Nearly everybody can enun. |surance Investigation and during poses eo = f ob.ehg bag his two terms as governor of nw ' jometimes m in dow m'se as York st has given way to a to whether my face is funny or style of beard almost kindly tn ap- | Boe esis pearance. io looked up. His long, slender, taperi®e white | Don't get discouraged, brother,” bands—his most attractive physteal he said 1 wouldn't worry. Your feat ndicate & person of fine | ° is funny.” ne lities, of warmth of feeling MPT, | + 8 Th 0 who have come into close a rabbit nest on the White House ing him rich. at the Jawn today, “The peculiar thing is," he con- Thursday, BURTON IS FAVORITE commencement exercises! thur Hacker, 30 | FREDERICK&NELSON | PRINCE AUGUST IS HELD IN JAIL Schrader, Widely Known “Healer,” Runs Afoul of Federal Laws NEWSPAPER ‘GETS’ HIM personal relations with him know | him as a genial person, 8 goo? AMONG DARK HORSES mixer, altho cartoons, photographs, | | ° paren _investignt were me ' CHICAGO, June 9—Senator Bur | poke gee ooh) ton loomed up as the strongest tirely mit renee pee peree’ candidate for G. 0. P. = ' ma presidgntial nomination in bettin o 1. Al mmany assembly Cola. bere today, whan Ste! Prince” August Schrader man iret call on Hughes |O'Leary, Chicago's premier layer, LOS ANGELES, June 9.— hee year r , a governer) quoted the Buckeye state favorite Upon evidence presen to areas : ore at the governor | son's chances at 4 to 1, the United States district at- € ed | Burton was quoted at 6 y torney here by the Los Angeles Boys,” sata Al, coming ont ofthe] terday, " # $ tl YOO) Resend, Prined™ Augeat Rake hs past hd es woe A Gcguithadl Ms | “The Ohio delegation is strong der, self-styled divine healer, H . nor | for Burton, and the fact that Nick| '8 behind the bars on a charge fs all there He is one fine chap. | Longworth, Teddy’s son-in-law, is) Of using the mails to defraud. Baptist clergyman Baptist clergy- | one of the delegates, makes it look His brother “healers,” Rev, man, hell! Hughes is all to the Jas tho the two parties might com.| August Algard and “His Maj good. When I left him I slapped! above, Willie Howard; below,| promise on n,” said O'Leary esty” Francis Schlatter, are him on the back and I says to him, | Eugene Howard. | Some plunging on the other can.| Under arrest in New York. ‘ a fine fellow even if you | didates continued, the same as yes-| We have overwhelming evidence ublican “The hardest job in ‘The | with Roosevelt quoted at |*8#inst these ‘divine healers,’ ” said 1 this 18 the man who loves| Passing Show of 1918 Is my |oven money, Hughes 6 te S. Rout |Postal Inspector Walter Cookson, dogs usic, children, golf, legal! job," declared Eugene Howard, |5 to 1, and Weeks and Curaming |Who worked up the case problems, detective tories and| as he looked at his brother |7 4,1" nmlns. | “We have been working on tia Emerson's essays! | Willie in their dressing rooms case ever since the Record supplied . * | at the Moore theatre last night. the federal grand jury with a mass At his beautiful home here in “1 don't care what Willie, or PATROLMAN SHOT of data, upon which that body re- Washington the large library is| George Monroe, or Marlllyn turned secret indictments against Justice Hughes’ favorite room Miller, or Daphne Pollard, or | the trio.” Here he receives most of his visi any of the rest of them say. | Motoreycle Patrolman Lou Gay The method pursued by Schrader tors; here he works on the Intri-| The Howard brothers, famous {s suffering from a painful wound! and his confederates was to accept Jeate problems connected with his| Comedians, were stripped down jin his left hand as the result of an/“gifts {n the name of the Lord” duties as a supreme court justice; to salmon pink B. V. D.s. accidental shooting Thursday. Gay,/from the physically afflicted here he has his law library and his Eugene was talking for publi- who was returning from his shift,| These “gifts” ranged in size from volumes of Motley, Gibbons, Hume, cation, had entered the police assembly /5 cents in stamps to $5 in money. Darwin, Huxley, Spenc Carlyle | Willie, in lingerie of the same|room and was removing his shoul His Majesty” Francis Schlatter and Emerson shade and cut, sat looking into the|der-holster when it caught in the and “Prince” Schrader claimed to But Justice Hughes does not | !ooking » rubbing off the grease | ining of his coat. 1 pistol fell heal any affliction, from a toe ache confine his reading to these | paint to the floor and discharged. ‘The |to blindness books, He gave Hugene one of his “Chris-| bullet entered Gay's hand between hey did it, they claimed, by “| confess,” he said, “that | |titn” looks, the third and fourth fingers, break-|Dlessing a handkerchief and in like a good blood and thunder I have to ‘plant’ the lines in] ing the bone in tho third digit structing the invalid to rub the swashbuckling romance. Next |@¥ery humorous situation,” Hugene | blessed handkerchief over the af to a good thriller of this sort 1 said, “then Willle comes along and | flicted part for a few minutes each to & good thriller of thie wort | nuit then, Wille comes woo «4/0 MAN KILLS SELF": fashioned detective stories.’ _ a sas audience do pts Bet | This procedure was accompanied ord say, we night as we Pr t Datiniseee sagt Aquilla Gove, 71, of 6518 Holly st. Ye Prere Oe eh ae <a FINDS BUNNIES ON “I work on the theory that the|onded ne ee A RUeEAY 1b Sh8 OS? | tccarniead n'a, week ha win ts ae man in the back seat ts entitled to|Of Ms home by firing a bullet into he Akere! blessed 4s much fun as the fellow in front.|MS brain. Despondency over ill- |another handkerchief to be bles WHITE HOUSE LAWN (2°26 meets news Is believed to have been the {slong with an offering to, God y to Ket the lines over to him—| "ese Is hatp the good-work along.” ind my facial expressions, too | Schlatter and Schrader have op WASHINGTON, June 9.—¥ Careful enunciation and person-| Jerated all over the United States, dent Wilson can have all the Bancss ating cathere NS amine | STUDENTS MARRIED jofticials declare hind feet of rabbits he can carry, if jart | Fifty friends surprised Mr. an@ he wants ‘em for campaign hoo Eugene 18 interested in his pro- A, V, Setterling of Seattle, and|Mrs, Daniel Barnes Jers apart dooes, Policeman Dalrymple found | fssion Leona St. John of Snohomish, for-)ments, on the eve of their 26th That interest, and the study he|mer pupils at Pacific college, wero|wedding anniversary when they a flock of twenty baby bunnies In| gives to funny business, are mak-| married before an audience of 300 gathered at the home of Mrs. At 22 Wallingford ave. Tuesday night,

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