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HE BON MARCHE Pike Street Second Avenue Union Street Ettiott 4100 ” Starting Tharsday Morning, the Factory Sale of Shoes 5,000 Pairs of Shoes at Remarkably Low Prices THIS FACTORY SALE OF SHOES PRESENTS A UNIQUE OPPORTU- NITY TO SECURE SHOES AT VERY DECIDED SAVINGS, for leather is get- ting scarcer, and Shoe prices are going sky high. It took one buyer a whole month of roving around Eastern factories to secure | these special lots. Some of them are Factory Seconds and are not perfect, F every pair is a rare bargain at its sale price. Seeeses IN THE SHOE SHOP) Upper Main Floor Women’s Shoes $2.28 Pair | Women’s Shoes $2.98 Pair $3.50 and $4.00 Patent Leather, Gunmetal Calf $4.00 to $6.00 Shoes, lace or button style, In Glazed Kid Button Shoes, with fancy colored | glazed kid, gunmetal calf or patent leather, kid or or black kid tops, turn or welt soles. | cloth tops, They were factory Women’s Tan Shoes $2.28 Pair : Dark or light colored Tan Shoes, lace or button | Women’s $6.00 Shoes $2.98 Pair with heavy or light welt soles, walking or lasts; worth to $4.00. Women’s Shoes $2.68 Pair | A large variety of Shoes, worth to $5.00, in lace | or button style, and in all leathers, with extra | and regular tops; . but are buckskin tops, ight welt soles and Louis heels. Neat-fitting Shoes in plenty of alzes Women’s $5.00 Shoes $2.68 Pair toes, welt soles and military heels. uptodate las | comfort combined in these shoes at $2.68 SELF-SERVICE SHOE SHOP Lower Main Floor ~ Children’s Shoes $1.28 Pair $3.50 Velvet Shoes $1.98 Pair _ $1.50 Shoes of gunmetal calf, with heavy soles Women's dark blue Velvet Shoes with light welt neat, broad-toe shapes; sizes from 6 to §%, | soles and concave heels. Neat, comfortable Shoes, $1.28 a pair. sizes 3 to 7. Women’s Shoes $1.68 Pair $4.00 Tan Shoes $1.98 Pair Odd lots of Shoes worth to $2.50, Patent leather Women's Russia Calf Button Shoes with weit and gunmetal calf, lace or button style, with low, | S0les, military heels and round toes. All sizes in height heeis. the lot. Special $1.98 a pair. Women’s Shoes $1.98 Pair Tan Shoes $1.48 and $1.68 Pair Val to $4.00 in all style Shoes, with turn or Dark Tan Willow Calf Button Shoes, worth to | $2.50. They will give the best of wear. Children’s peg ottibys icotheuen”” lace or button styles, | cies 8% to 11, at $1.48. Misses’ sizes, 11% to 2, . | at $1.68, Soft-sole Shoes, in fancy or plain ; , | Little Gents’ Shoes, heavy calf, lace Berar ne meet Sonsbehnnss- .28c | and button style; sizes 9 to 13%; pr. Gents’ Shoes, worth to $2.00, of heavy calf | Women’s $3.00 Satin Pumps, dark > » with heavy soles; sizes $1 58 blue, for evening wear; pair.. $1 48 to 13%; pair : 2 Women's House Shoes, worth to 8 50—Kid Shoes, "s Shoes of patent leather, vici Oxfords and Juliets sd or gunmetal calf; sizes 3 to 8. 98c pair . : $1 48 " —Lewer Main Floor, Thursday Economies in Untrimmed Millinery In the Underpriced Millinery Store—Lower Main Floor $1.50 and $1.75 Corduroy | Fancy Trimming Feathers, Hats and Tam o’Shanters, | I worth 50c to $1.00, at..25¢ in brown, navy and green, at ‘ 75e¢ | Fancy Feathers, worth to Velvet Hat — in the | SOc, priced at latest atyles, at. -B5¢ | '95c to $1.95 Felt Hats for misses and children. ..48¢ 1.95 Beaver Hat Shapes, in , navy and brown. 95¢ Nickels and Dimes Will Work Wonders In the Sc, 10c and = Section of the Underpriced Store—Lower Main Floor “Children’s Hose, fine ribbed, | 2 pairs for 25¢; pair. 15¢ | —Lower Main Fleer, Sweetheart Soap, a splendid Wylie’s Sewing Thread, bro toilet soap, 3 bars.. --10¢ | ken sizes; 3 spools ..10 Eereldren's Dresses, neatly Hair Brushes, good qualit Handkerchi f : d, sizes 1 to 4 ‘, a shes, d ality, andkerchiefs, for women oie Pee come priced, each 15¢ | or children, 2 for Silkine Crochet -white and colors, a Cotton, sn Baby Bath Towels, neatly | Absorbent Cotton, large size va stamped for working, each packages, priced 15¢ ! Cole’s “Hot Blast”: Heaters Reduced On account of the patented air-tight and gas-tight construction and patented Hot Blast combustion, there is perfect control of the fire in Cole’s Original Hot Blast Heaters. They give a steady, even heat, day and night, using for fuel the Cheapest grade of soft coal. They are guaranteed to hold fire for 36 hours, and to save one-third of your fuel. $13.90 HOT BLAST Cole's Heaters, HEATERS §$ 12-Inch Size, $10.00 $19.90 COLE’S HEATERS AT $15.00 atte h Size, with Ash Pan 2.80 16-INC H HE ATE RS AT Cole’s Hot Blast, with Ash Pan $17.50 $10.60 woop HPATE RS AT $8.50 Cole's Air-tight Heaters, 18-Inch Size $13.00 WOOD HEATI AT $10.00 Cole’s Air be nbs ‘Heatety 21- Benin Size $16.50 woop HEA RS” AT $12.50 25-Inch Cole’s Air-tight Heaters ‘—Fourth Floor, but | \ slightly checked in the | Patent Leather Lace Shoes with mouse brown | Golden Brown Suede Button Shoes with round | Style and Experience at the Fashionable Horse Shows Comes in Handy Now That He’s Mule-Skinner }} EL PASO, Tex., Oct, 4.—Because of his wide experience in driving fourinhands, gained on the tanbark at fashionable horse shows in New York and the Middio West, Private Paul Patterson, of the First Ohio cavalry, has been assigned as driver of four “outlaw” mules on a combat wagon, detailed to Camp Pershing. In civil life, Patterson Is the law partner of Secretary of War Newton D, Baker, An “outlaw” in a mule that will kick on suspicion and balk with even less excuse, ‘ “GUM RACKS FOR PUPILS! WHY | NOT?” ASKS SCHOOL PRESIDENT (NuMBER Two > 760K X! 1 ha LTHATS me § caine have racks on if the sugges normal school Gum-cheving pupils of Wisconsin schools will which to stick their gum when it is not being “worked. tion of J. W. Crabtree, president of the River Falls, Wis, 8 adopted by school boards. “Pupils have @ right tao chew gum,” says Crabtree it, but they know when and how, Why not teach these con ties to pupils? Permit the pupils to chew gum on the pla. © and from school, But what will the poor chil » with bis gam while the recitation or assembly room? A gum rack at the entrance of | the room, containing a number and peg for each pupil, solves the prob- tom.” “Teachers do} entionall: | “und and on the way AGED NEGRO HAS HAD EIGHT WIVES AT 98 KANBAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 4 Ever married before?” Justice Cast mir J, Welch asked Jones Mitchell, Kansas City, Kan, an old negro, after he had obtained a marriage license at the courthouse. Oh, Lordy, yes; seven times,” replied the negro. He told the marriage license clerk he Was 95 years old | WATCH KEPT IN FAMILY FOR 116 YEARS DANVILLE, TL, Oct. 4.—Claud M. Campbell of this city has a! watch that has been In the family for 116 years. It was purchased in| London, by Eba Campbell, great-grandfather of the present owner, in 1800, It still keeps good time. | EX-GOVERNOR WILLS GIRL LUCKY COIN = NORRISTOWN, Pa, Oct. 4.—The will of former Gov, Samuel W | Pennypacker distributes an estate estimated at $20,000 to $50,000 jamong his widow and children. | One of the odd features of the will is the clause which leaves to/ Nin daughter, Josephine W. Pennypacker, “the silver dollar given me) by my grandmother, which has been In my pocket wherever | have} jwone during the last 55 years.” WN UNJOINTS HIS JAW; QUEER ACCIDENT | | MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va., Oct. 4.—Gilbert B. Wheeler of this city | indulged In a long, luxurious yawn. Immediately afterward hin jaw / | refused to work and he discovered that he had dislocated it. A doctor | | was called to slide the jaw back Into place. While chewing a portion of meat, E. 8. Criswell, by some ust contortion of his tongue got it fastened over @ sharp-pointed back | tooth. A physician, with the ald of tweezers, lifted the tongue back) into place. NEW YORK, Oct. 4—The Gullfows, said to bo one of the first) Icelandic ships to vielt the shores of the Western hemisphere since | the days of Lief the Lucky, tied up in the harbor here Wednesday with a cargo of herring. | Aboard the Gullfoss, a little steamer of 886 tons, is a crew of Ioe-| Handic sallors, officered by Icelandic navigators, and speaking virtually the same language that Lief, the son of Eric the Red, spoke when he| landed at Cape Cod, about the year 1000 | nanan | | $1.58 | CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 MOVIE QUEENS SELL STAR ON STREETS back to New York if she were stranded on the Pacific coast, with out the ald of charity Up, then, spake Dorothy ve | could!” “Bo could I!" her chum And so the wager was made,! amid much laughter, Miss Morgan | says Charlie Chaplin flipped a $100! bill out of bis pocket. In no time at all seven other cinema kings had contributed like amounts to the pot “lt wrote my L O, U. for $800," said Dorothy Pout! A mere bagatelle. It was sportin’, was it not? Miss Morgan states that Henri, her devoted chauffeur, wept un- manly tears when his mistress told him what she intended to do. cried Edna Small, As for Mise Smail’s maid, she| was decimated by sorrow La-la! How beautiful is the de- votion of the serving class! They would sell newspapers. That was part of the bargain, They started right in Los An- geles—sold the Record, “We simply smiled—and once tn a while we found a skate who wouldn't buy, so we'd give "m a paper,” says Miss Small After selling a while they dropped into a tea room and had) lunch. By night they had earned money enough to get to San Francisco— baggage and all On the steamer Harvard they squandered their surplus by send. ing flippant wireless messages to . lie Chaplin, pping off the boat at San Francisco Miss Morgan found 2¢ cents In change in a coat pocket. A tramp came along, She gave him the 20 cents. But the girls sold 1,800 copies of the San Francisco News their first jday, and then made the jump to Portland. | There they had a lot of fun Stopped at the Benson Went fishing in the Willamette. Caught a big sturgeon, Sold the Portland | News. For several days they will be in Seattle, selling Stars, When they make enough money to take trunks and baggage to Spo- kane, they'll leave their present home at the New Washington and | move on to Spokane, And 80 on-—until they reach Noo Yawk, “When we get there we'll collect the $800," they explain, “and return to Los Angeles—elegantly, “And, of course, We won't hold back any press notices Wwe get) when the producers propose con-| | tracts.” | | 80, when you see this pair of | |plucky girls selling newspapers, re-| |member what they are trying to! |}do—and don't get “fresh.” bid won't like it. THEATRES |GRann Sheldon and St. Ives will be at| the Grand today with a little | |sketch, “The Rube and the Sou brette.” Strong and Douglas, in “Kork and Kilts,” will feature rag time tunes on bagpipes. The Lar | well Sisters will sing, step and threaten some real mirth-provok- | ling wit. Deaves’ Royal Manikins will also be featured with "20,000 | Leagues Under the Sea.” Cuba Crutchfield and company do some | regular roping stunts in their | Western dialogue. Wm. Fox's pic |ture, “Sins of Men,” a five-reel |drama, with Stuart Holmes and Dorothy Bernard, will be the fea ture picture. It is a dramatic ar. |ratgnment of the evil men do |Rich Man Seeks to | Win Freedom for | His Wounded Son| | SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 4.— A note from Lieut. Immelmann, | famous German flyer, delivered in Australia, brought Edward Grimwade, Melbourne million- aire, to San Francisco today on his way to London, where he will seek the release of his son, Frank, from a prison Immelmann's note told how! Frank, who is a British airman, had | engaged the German aviator in a jsky duel and how the Englishman, sorely wounded, and with his ob. server dead beside him, brought his aeroplane to the ground, where he was taken prisoner, Immélmann and his German aviators, ration for their defeated antagonist risked their lives to bear a no’ addressed to Grimwade'’s father With shells bursting about them, | they flew over the allied lines and | dropped the message, delivered to the elder Grimwade in Melbourne many weeks tater. He started Hast this afternoon, associate | camp in Germany. 7) moved by admi | which was | ff Hot Water Bottles Feather Boas " FREDERICK 2NELSON in blac nite and ine - Nes : Basement Salesroom The Puritan Sailor Shape Smart and Becoming $3.95 shape is introduced in this It is of black finish, shirred black grosgrain high-crown, 1- A New around ‘Walking Boot ribbon. for Women $4.00 WET - WEATHER Boot, and yet it style a-plenty, too. pictured, dull calf upper, ear welt black Neolin sole and rubber heel. Sizes 2%4 to 7. Price $4.00. BLACK KID LACE SHOES, $4.00 PAIR— Women's Vict Kid Shoes with plain toe, &inch top, Goodyear well sole- and Fancy Pin eather Louis heel. Sizes 4 to 6%; widths A to C. Pric © $4 00 pair —Barement Salesroom, NEW wide-brim Sailor. vet, with lustrous crown and with Price $3.95. A Similar Shape mirrored velvet, mirrored \ fine bound of black faced with plain velvet bound with gros- is $4.25. . ¢ @ has A Youthful Sailor in black mirrored with soft flange e and grain ribbon tyle, as with elvet, Goody and velvet plain facing, $3.95. Very Little Trimming Is Required for These Hats Il be ace Embroidered Beetle, Buckle, priced from 95e to $3.95. —Banement Salesroom. their sr t lines w entuated by a Gold or Silver Rose, or Fur Ornament Smart Styles and Excellent Values Featured in Women’s and Misses’ Coats At Four Low Prices: $7.50 $10.00 $12.50 $18.50 ROM this wide selection one can easily choose a becoming coat for street or general-purpose wear, at a suitable price The materials are Boucle Coatings, Plaid Coatings, Corduroys, Wool Velours fashioned into Semi-Belted Models Plain Flaring Models Full-belted Models —smartly trimmed with large cape collars of plush or : In black, navy-blue, brown, green and com- serviceable Tweeds, Corduroys, and Pile Fabrics, self material. bination colorings in plaids and mixtures Women’s Jumbo-Knit Sweaters at $5.75 knitted from all-wool yarns in maroon, —excellent values; gray, Oxford and cardinal. Strongly reinforced pockets. Sizes 36 to 46 —Basement Salesroom. NEW COATINGS $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 Yard OATINGS in weights and textures that make up admirably into the new modes have been received, in the favored plain colors and novelty mixtures, Fifty-four inches wide, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 yard. THE NEW WOOLENS offer wide selection in the prevailing colorings, and Initialed Stationery 25c Box NITIALED Paper Letter or Correspond- ence Cards with envelopes all letters except X and Z—25¢ box. —Basement salesroom include French Serges, Poplins and Broadcloths for Priced at $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 —Resement Salesroom suits and dresses. and $2.00 yard. Washable Gloves, $1.15 HOICE of gray, ter and Cashmere Stockings, 25c HILDREN’S _ Black Cashmere Stockings, but Newport warm and serviceable, with gray heel and toe. Sizes 6 to 9%, 2B@ pair. Basement Sarcaroum tan shades in these Gloves which wash so satisfac- torily. Price $1.15 pair Basement Saiesroom Kerr Self. Sealing Fruit Jars (Quart Size) Special 60c Dozen N_ exceptionally low price these white — glass jars. They have no rough edges and the air-tight top takes the place of the leaky rubber ring, Quart sizes, spe- cial 60c dozen. Basement Salesroom, Baskets, 15c to $1.00 A large assortment of fancy Flower and Fruit Baskets, dark colors, others in natural finish, to be Priced from 15é to $1.00. Basement Salesroom, ° Miller Corset $1.00 AC pictured, average- figure Corset of good lines, made of fancy coutil, with medium bust and skirt. Two strong hooks below the fastening and two pairs of hose sup- hold the firmly in $1.00. —Rasement Salesroom. Handkaee 5c Each M" S Cotton Handker- chiefs, 16x16 inches, with fancy colored border; Men's plain White Cotton Handker- shiefs, 18 inches square, with ‘einch hem, also Women's Fancy-bordered Cotton Hand- serchiefs all attractively sriced at $e each, Basement Salesroom for long porters garment position. Price some in gilded or enameled