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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HE BON MARCHE | == | Lovely Little Baby Sacq ues and Kimonos At Very Unusual Pricings A sample the daintiest little Sacques and Kimonos, bought especially | for Baby Week, at reductions of 10 per per cent, 50 per cent in most line of cent, 25 ~» Cases s\ ing y Ik crepe Ef ay Cunning little garments in silk crepe * ? de chine, cashmere, crepella and flannel, some bound with silk, some silk lined, some beautifully hand embroidered in French knots and wreaths Infants’ $1.00 and $1.50 Sacques, of cash /Mere, some with band stitching and em- ORR ree 95e¢ Infants’ $1.50 Cashmere Kimonos, cream Ik binding, at........ $1.25 Tnfants’ $1.75 Kimonos, finished with silk | Infants’ Sacques, hand embroidered anc made with kimono sleeves, at.....$1.98 Infants’ $4.75 Sacques of white cashmere, Infants’ $4.50 Silk Crepe de Chine Sacques 50c Paraloid Pants at 25¢ Kieinert’s Paralold Pants, to be worn over regu | Infants’ Sweaters at $1.98 All-woo! Sweaters of zephyr yarn, in stripes and colors or with contrasting bands. White, q 1 ; @ We washed and boiled; draw- Bu. Copenhagen, old rose, coral: worth up tc | AT, ‘apers: can shed and bolle string at waistline; special at 2% —Second Vleer, BABY WEEK AT THE BON MARCHE e Mothers’ Training School Will Meet at 2:30 P. M. in the Assembly Hall, Second Floor | Nurses’ Demonstration, the Proper Clothing for Infants _ The Teeth of Little Children, by Dr. N.C. Puckett. Everybody cordially invited to attend. Silk Ribbons A Wonderful Offering of Fine Silk Taffeta Ribbons Buy Ribbons for holiday fancy work, and get two yards for the price of one. Buy Ribbons for millinery, for hair bows, for dress trimmings, for anything, while are able to quote such very low prices. 1 and 114 Ribbons, Worth Sc a Yard, at 2 Yds. 5c 2, 3 and 5 Ribbons, | Nos. 7,9 and 12 Ribbons, | Nog, 50 and 60 Ribbons, ! cYd | 0c Yd. Worth 35c and 40c, at 5c Yd. 10c Yd. = = 20c Yd. $6.00 Fulton Go-Carts for $4.50 Just for Baby Week Only $4.50 for Fulton Semi-Collapsible Go-Carts, with flat steel frames, reclining Upper Mate Poor, All widths in pinks, blues, | Nos. 16, 22, 40 Ribbons, | reds, greens, browns, laven- Worth 22c, 25¢ and 30c ders and yellows. ed wheels. They’re worth $6.00. Fulton Collapsible Go-Cart with pad- psi | $3.25 Baby Bassinettes of imported willow, seat and reclining back, rubber-tired | with two side handles; 23x36 ins...$2.75 CIS, At wee senses eee eeeereees -36.95 $2.98 Bassinettes, size 19x30 inches, spe- 95 Light-weight Folding Go-Cart with | cial at ........... a erie elie $2.25 trong steel frame, stationary back, $1.69 O Light-weight Folding Go-Cart with ining back, at......... heedies $2.95 Infants’ $1.25 Toilet Baskets of imported | reed with four handles, 15x18 ins....79¢ —VFoarth Fleer. e Dresses of the Hour Are Here at $19.50 In Fine Serges or Satins Clever Satin Dresses, pretty serviceable Serge Dresses or lovely combinations. The satins are in blue, green and plum, the serges in black and navy. Many have the large Georgette or French flannel collars. Late style models, plaited from the yoke; also the tunic or waist-line effect, beaded, yarn embroidered or button trimmed. ‘Motor Weave’ Auto Robes V2 60x80 Inches, $6.75 The Auto | bespeak comfort \¥ when motori: old day. Soft and \ fleecy, in wine, navy, green and brown, with gray facifgs and borders—with stitched hems. We're sole Seattle agents for these excellent robes. Stylish New Autumn Coats ‘Special’ at $15.95 You will surely want one of these Coats when you see them, for | they’re only $15.95. Lots of different styles and smart materials, including cut velvet, chiffon broadcloth, zibelines, pebble cheviot, nov- elty coating and wool velours—some are fur trimmed, others with veivet. —Second Floor. $4.00 Hair Switches $2.50 Real British Combings— Colors Guaranteed IN BROWNS BLONDES DRABS AND BLACKS aby Week Specials in Baby Foods On Sale in the “Cut-Rate” Drug Store 75e size of Mellen’s Foods, apectal 49¢. $1.00 wize of Horlick’s Malted Milk at 7R¢, $1.25 size Imperial Granum Baby Food, spe clal at 906, 50c size Nestle's Foods at 88¢. Miller's Sanitate Nurser, bottle ond non-collaps ible nipple, complete, 20¢, each 106, Hygia Bottles and Nipples, congplete 20¢, each 10¢. —Lower Main Floor. Fancy Striped Outing Flannel 7c a Yd. Je a yard for 2,000 yards of Striped Outing Flannel, 27 inches wide, and to be had in lengths up to 10 yards. Apron Gingham at 10c Yard , 2,000 yards of Apron Gingham, in lengths up to 10 yards, full 27 inches wide, 10c a yard; tn blue checks. 18 Percales at 124 Yard $4.00 Hair Switches, 22 Inches, $2.50 $4.00 Hair Switches, 24 Inches, $2.50 Paris says larger Coiffures for Autumn and Winter—that means that Art will have to come to nature's assistance in many cases. This timely Fine quality Percales, 1,000 yards in all, 36 sale of guaranteed Eritish combing Switches at | inches wide, lengths to 10 yards; lots of neat stripes. $2.50 will be a real help to many who like the coming modes of hair dressing. One of the latest styles 1s shown in the etching above. —Third Floor, Shirting Madras at 15c Yard Shirting Madras in neat patterns; nice for mak- ing house dresses as well; 32 inches wid with silk binding and kimono sleeves, at #f) | bands and edges, at.... $1.50 | with nightingale sleeves, at. $2.25 4) Infants’ $2.00 to $3.00 Sacques, hand em- | Infants’ $5.95 Sacques, hand embroidered broidered in French knots, at...... $1.75 | and silk bound, at.... .. $2.98 i jt . —Seeond Fleer, Ce About Half Price | 15c Yd. | ' |PATRIOTIC HEN i | Kramer of this place laid an egg to which Ix attached a silk American | and adjustable dashes—fitted with three-bow leather hoods and 10-inch rubber- |[| Why I Am Going to Vote for President Wilson BY RAY STANNARD BAKER (Author of “Adventures in Contentment”) | for Wilson i I be (> My chief reason for because \ lieve him to be a thoroug! made an unequaled record in the last three years in securing ‘the passage of legislation embodying ideas for which earne progressives have long been working, because in no admin istration since I can remember have the old special and priv ileged interests been so utterly without influence at Wash ington as they have been since Mr. Wilson upied the Whit House, because, as Thomas A. Edison says, if Mr. Wilson blunders, he always blunders forward; because, in short, he is a clear-headed, steady-handed leader who can be trusted to take the broadly human and democratic attitude toward pub \lic questions, I trust him beyond any other leader to meet | I the stormy events that are before us with the true American | | spirit | Sourdoughs Pan Gold - as Women Bake Pies at Arena Land Show Every day, cash p are being; Thursday will be Cookie day awarded tn the he voking con: | with h prizes for the best plates tests held in connection with the|of cookies Land Products exposition at the| Friday is Layer Cake day, and Arena Saturday prizes will be awardes | Tuesday White Bread and for the best and most artistic prey | Pumpkin Pi y, and Wednesday |aration of one can of salmon. | will be Loaf Cake day | An additional prize of $5 has There will be two contests—one| been offered for the contestant | for white loaf cakes, and the other| who takes the most prizes in all jfor any but white, The chief! the contests: | Prizes in cach contest are $5, $3 y in Alaeka day, and, be jand $2 in cash. After the contest, t in the exhibits the cakes will be sold for the bes. | from the North, veteran Klondikers | efit of the Day Nursery }panned gold to show the visitors | | Tho entries have to be made by how it was done in the days of ‘97. | 3 p. m. on the day of the contes.*, Increasing crowds are flocking |Home economics instructors from |to the Arena for the afternoon and | | Washington State college are the jevening concerts of Ferullo’s Ital | | Judges. ian band i ‘JOSHUA IS SOME PRACTICAL JOKER, EH? j DAILEY, Mich., Oct, 10.—Joshua Tripe recently completed a course }in sign painting, and, to exhibit hin skill with the brushes and colors, | he painted a picture of a board feace‘on the side of a barn standing at | the aide of the main street. So realistic is the picture that ceveral | farmers have skinned their knuckles trying to hitch their horses to the fence, and every little while a bird gets a big surprise when it tries to alight on the top board. But the biggest laugh is on the stranger who was chased by a bull-| dog. The stranger sighted safety in the supposed field beyond the} fence and attempted to vault, He nearly dashed his brains out against Ithe barn. Joshua says the fun he has had has more than repaid tim for the trouble and expense his course incurred THERE’S TOO MUCH “BULL” ANYWAY MEXICO CITY, Oct. 10—A decree signed by Carranza, pro- j hibiting bull fighting and announcing a death penalty against | bandits and highway robbers was published in today’s news- | LAY FLAG IN HER EGG : TEMPLE, Pa, Oct. 10.—Hens in Berks county hold fine records for | laying many eae ud hatching freak chickens, but now comes the most | peculiar of all freak laying. A Plymouth Rock hen belonging to John | fag, Ix3 inches in size. | The hen set up a loud cackle, and when Mra, Kramer went to the! nest, from a soft spot at one end of the exg protruded the flag, the | shell belng hard over all the rest of the parts It ts thought that the hen swallowed the flag while the egg was forming. A watch is being kept to see what the hen lays next. FISHERMAN HOOKS BIRD THAT HOOKS FISH CLYDE, N. Y¥., Oct. 10.—John Conolatio was fishing In the Clyde river, a few mornings ago, and whilé in the act of pulling in a fish something huge from the sky dropped without warning into the river) }and grabbed the fish that Conolazio was just pulling in. The thing | came up out of the water and started skyward with the fish, line and hook, and then the fisherman saw that he had hooked a large crane. Conolazia hauled in on his line and soon was able to grab the crane | by the leg. After a battle royal, the crane was made captive by being ed to a stake, The fisherman said it was the scare of his life when the bird dropped. He had just been reading a lot of war news and) thought it might be a bomb from a Ge: airship. Confessions of a Wife Canin penn ton Apour? | ruled all the objections of that sour | jold manager. HER FIRST JOB ON THE “Mr, Lawton was just like one! BROADWAY STAGE of my friends in mother's drawing j\o— ————-® | room, and yet he was all business “I could not get home .quick/ mma, I'm to have $36 @ week! | enough to write to Emma. | had | ppink of it! | cinched my job! “As I wrote this, Margie, I did “AN my loneliness will soon be/not know $35 was a small salary over,’ I thought, ‘for surely I'll find }for an actress. Out of It, I would some one at rehearsal with whom /have to buy three costumes—an 1 can chum.’ It shows how inno-/actress has to buy all her own | cent I was that not for a minute | wear in a modern play—and I had did I think of Earnest Lawton. Here is my letter Margie: “Well, I'm ft, Emma dear, I've L, | to live the next four weeks, as no to Emma,/one is paid for rehearsals. “Still, Margie, 1 thought my whole future was made. 1 did not under got my chance on Broadway and /stand that 1 had been given the! we open in four weeks. Just ax 1) job simply because a man who had about given up everything, | could give it to me liked the took and was makiog up my mind [| in my eyes or the curve of my lips | would never reach that manager,; “Mr, Lawton, I learned afterward, thru whom I knew I had to get the knew he had to have a new love part of Elga in a new comedy, that | affair each year to help him on an acquaintance seemed to think | with bis work, for Farnest Lawton would suit me, the plum dropped|/was gn artist and I have decided, | right into my lap. |}from my many experiences, that “Twas sitting disconsolate in| an artist has to have some woman, the outer office, when the hand-|if not in the foreground, working | somest man I had ever seen walked | with him, at. least in the back | thru. His great brown eyes looked | groynd, for whom he is working. | into mine, and I knew I had, as! ot Was curious about the people you say, Emma, made a hit. | at rehearsal the next day, The lead “Then Mr. Actor—I knew he | ing woman looked worn and tired was an actor—walked in as tho he|I learned afterward that she had owned the place, and in a few| been working outside New York minutes I was usbered in, And oh,|for years, and this was her first Emma, I got the job, or perhaps ¥)chance on Broadway. Broadway, should say I got the part, that eats up energy, talent, health |“ ‘I cannot conceive a nicer man |and hope, and yet is the goal of ev than Mr, Lawton, He was so sure | ery actor.” | I could do the part that he over- (To be continued) | Tempting Sum of Money Causes Man to Part With] Pets He Intended to Keep| BERLIN, Mo,, Oct, 10.—Joseph R, Carson, a veteran of this place, evidently has established a new business, that of selling dogs. Carson was the possessor of a fine matched pair of black and white youngsters. So true were they to their master’s com- mand that when he called them by name—"“Buster” and “Lad die"—they would answer promptly. He was very proud of his well-mated pets and intended be- ing #0 for a long while to come, but the other day a stranger passed by, and, seeing the dogs, offered a tempting sum for be oe Carson accepted and the stranger went his way with’ his prizes, aS a NN tcl bi tay New Black Velvet Ha other colo Golden-brown, Dark-brown, Mole, Taupe, Napo- leon-blue, Navy and Black. Twenty-four inches wide, $1.25 yard. CORDUROY FOR COATS AND SUITS, in shades of plum, cardinal, beaver, Copenhagen, myrtle-green, mole, wine, dark-brown, seal-brown, navy and black, 33 inches wide, $1.25 yard. Silk Crepes, $1.00 Yard FREDERICK &NELSON hy PD id oO Basement Salesroom Women’s Suits at $35.00 Very Interesting Values VER thirty styles to choose from. Sizes 306, 38 and 40. In Black, Brown, Navy, Green and Plum. Developed from Velours, Broadcloths and Gaberdines of excellent quality, beautifully tailored. Fur, plush and velvet trimmings. An advantageous purchase is * responsible for the unusually-low price quoted: $35.00. ~-Secona Floor. 100 New Coats Received $12.50 $15.00 a straight upper-brim of velvet and grosgrain ribbon alternating in sunburst effect Both are banded with grosgrain ribbon Priced at $3.95. Prices: $16.50 $18.50 WELVE smart models are featured in these new arrivals, among them the Coat shown in the sketch, Which is tailored from Imitation Bolivia Cloth or _ Diagonal Boucle Coating —cut 48 inches long, on generous, flare lines. Has belt all around and large novelty pockets. Collar and cuffs are of fine quality plush. MUSTARD and BURGUNDY Price $16.50. —Basement Salesroom. Colors: —women’s and misses’ sizes. New Fur Muffs $5.00 NEW purchase, offer- ing very attractive values in Black Concy Mufis. They are in melon and flat shapes, with lining of good quality black satin. Price $5.00. —Basement Salesroom. $3.95 HE sketches show the smart simplicity of these Hats for sports and general wear. They of fine qual- ity black silk velvet, one a narrow-brim model, the sailor are Women’s Umbrellas —Basement Salesroom. $ 1 .00 en IGHT-RIB Umbrellas brim with Velvets and Corduroys $1.25 Yard OFT, rich Velvets which make up admirably in dressy costumes and suits are shown in a wide r-assortment, with fast-black, water- proof fop and _ straight wood handles in a variety of styles. Price $1.00. ‘Basement Saiesroom Shadow Laces 25c Yard ATTERNS adapted for many different uses are featured in these dainty Shadow Laces. They are in white and ecru, 12 to 24 inches wide. Price 25¢. yard. including Laurel, Dark-olive, Very desirable for Autumn street and afternoon frocks is the Cheney Silk Crepe. Rose, Pink, Cream, Copenhagen, Reseda, Navy and Black, 31 inches wide, $1.00 yard. A all in Stamped Table Runners es sei RUNNERS of linen crash in, natural color, solid or outline embroidery, attractively priced at 35e each, Women’s Fleece-Lined Union Suits at 50c SUITABLE Autumn weight in Women’s Fleece- lined Union Suits, three styles, as follows: High neck, long sleeves, Dutch Low neck, sleeveless, ankle length stamped with Net-top Laces that offer very attractive values are in widths from 18 to 27 inches, with Venise pat- tern running four inches deep from the edge. In white and ecru, 35¢ yard. —masement Satesroom. It is shown in Gold, —Basement Sa)esroom. Women’s Handkerchiefs 5c and 10c Each neck, elbow sleeves, Sizes 34 to 44. ice 50¢, Basement Salesroom — spose AINTY corner-em- broidered effects in Women’s Handkerchiefs, some in all-white, others with designs in color, 10¢ each, at 35c Women’s Handkerchiefs of sheer Emerald lawn, with '%4-inch hem, 5¢ cach, Basement salesroom conventional designs in color, for —Basem@nt Salesroom, acne

Other pages from this issue: