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THE B Bon Pike Street Second Avenue a ween Street Eniott 4100 100 More Swagger New Coats Join in the Sale at $15.95 Making a Good Coat Sale Still Better ANOTHER SPECIAL PURCHASE IN TIME TO GIVE ADDED INTER | AND MOTOR COATS AT $15.95. Navy Blue Pebble Cheviot Coats, with Beaverette trimming on the “$1 5. 95) edge of a wide collar... Velour Shopping Coats, cities plainly tail- ored, with belted fronts | 3 colors, navy, balsam, iva 15. 95 | ble Cheviot Street Coats in navy blue brown, with fancy cuffs and full belted, and full fur collars of $1 5. 95 k coney .. REACHES THE BON MARCHE JUST T TO THE GREAT SALE OF STREET Navy Blue Velour Coats with wide flare | and wide fur collar 5. 5 natural fur, for $1 9 Velour Shopping Coats in navy blue or brown, with side belts and wide cape col- lars underlined with $15. 95 | black plush trimmed with Black Plaid Motor = on ae 95 large saucer —Second Floor. of buttons FRIDAY—MOTHERS’ CONGRESS DAY Under the Patronage of the Mothers’ Congress and Care of Children’s Teeth, by First Aid in The Formation of Child Habits, Callison Parent-Teachers’ Association Be, C.-C Dr Mann Albert Lessing. by Dr. Adah L the Home, by A Demonstration of Cooking and Serving of Foods for Children, by Prof. Effie | ior class of Home Economics, ington. Friday Specials in the Baby Shop Cunning little little Bonnets at one-third less $1.98—Knit at Raitt, assisted by the sen- University of Wash- Baby at one-third less——-dear all-wool Baby Sweaters and these are only Coats tootees for 23¢ a little of the splendid bargains you'll find at this store for Bargain D Little Bonnets One-Third Less Dainty little Baby Bonnets, made of silk crepe de chine, silk poplins, silk bengalines, | with dear little rosettes and lace and rib- | bon trimming, all at one-third less, because | they are samples. $1.50 White Bonnets Little Bonnets White Bonnets White Bonnets $2.50 Little Bonnets at $1.67 each $2.75 White Bonnets at $1.83 each $2.95 White Fall Bonnets at $1.97 each at $1.00 at $1.17 at $1.32 at $1.50 each each each each Friday in Baby W eek Sample Sale of Baby Coats One-Third Less Forty little Sample Coats, samples of some of the season's daintiest lines, at one third less than usual retail prices—only one or two of a sort. Here are a few the pricings: One $2.50 Coat special One $2.95 Coat special One $3.95 Coat special Two $4.50 Coats special i Three $4.95 Coats special at $3.30 Three $5.95 Coats special at $3.97 Eight $7.95 Coats speci; Second FI » Center, Friday Sale of Untrimmed Millinery Lower Main Floor In the Lower-priced Millinery Section, | These interesting specials in the less ex- pensive lines of untrrmmeds and trimmings. Fancy Feathers at 15c They're worth up to 75¢ and are sented in stickups and wing effects, in black and Fall colors. 95c Felt Hats at 48 Misses’ and children’s Felt Hats for school wear. Red, black, brown and navy, at only 4c. $1.50 Corduroy Hats 75c i Misses’ Corduroy Hats and Velvet Tams at just half what they should sell for. Brown, navy and black in the lot. Hats at 69c, 75c and 95c New styles in Corduroy Hats for misses and children. All the new Fall colors are here at one | price or another. Velvet Shapes at 95c New Velvet Hat Shapes that will cost you but 96e. In black and colors, both sailors and turbans, $1.95 Beaver Hats 95c Beaver Hat Shapes at a low price Friday navy, brown, green, purple and red, at 9c. | Mill Ends of 8c 1} Calico at 5c Yd. For Friday Bargain Day, a gale of 8c Calico at bc a yard; 2,000 yards, in Nght and dark patterns, lengths to 10 yards, 24 inches wide, not over 12 yards to each. White Outing Flannel, 25 inches wide, not over 12 yards to each, yard 6c. 12\/c Dress Percales, 36 inches wide, lengths to 15 yards, yard Black, 10c Canned Beo-no. Gebtrardt’s Fri $e Ginghams, in checks, etripes and plain chambray, not over 15 yards to each, yard 10c. No telephone orders taken for these special items. $ Beef Hash. Beef. Snion’ Corned Gebhardt’s Chili Con Carne. Gebhardt's Deviled Meat. 25c Canned Meats 19c 10c. Libby, McNeil & Libby Canned Morris & Co. Factory Sale of Shoes Lower Main Floor Friday specials in the Self-Service Shoe Shop—-where you sell yourself, fit yourself and carry your package home : Infants’ Shoes 28c a Pair Infants’ soft sole Shoes, iu bronze, black and fancy colored leathers; sizes from @ to 3, at 28c a pair. Boudoir Slippers at 68c Women's Boudoir Slippers, in black or fancy colored kid leather, with soft covered soles; plenty of sizes Children’s Shoes at 78 Patent or kid leather button Shoes, with flexible turned soles, made on natural shape jasts, sizes 2 to 5. 2 Children’s Shoes at 98c Kid, patent or dull calf button Shoes, with turned or heavy soles, neat broid toe shapes, sizes 3 to 8. Women’s Shoes at $1.98 Button and lace Shoes, in tan, patent leather, velvet, calf or vici kid-with low or high heels, Women’s Shoes at $2.98 A special in Shoes of gunmetal calf or pat ent leather, with military or low heels, plain or capped toes. All sizes A Sale of Canned Meats Many lines of canned delicacies were specially purchased for summer picnickers ing them off at cost or less, Some of the labels are a little scuffed and scraped, but we'll fuarantee the contents. but this wasn't a pienic season, so we're sell- 18c and 20c Canned Meats 14c Armour's Veribest Veal Loaf. Armour’s Veribest H. Loaf. Pickled Lamb's Tongue. 15c Canned Goods 11c Gebhardt's Spaghetti and Chili, Golden's Olive Chow, 4#0c AND 45c MEAT, CAN 34¢ Empire Dried Bi Rex Corn Beef, joles. Foods 71/4 | Cooked Corn Beef. Morris & Co. Roast Beef. Why I’m Goi ng to Vote for President Wilson By William Marion Reedy (Editor of Reedy’s Mirror.) | will vote for Woodrow W States because he is the only candidate for that offic structive, peace democratic American in for of the United i ho has a con. president policy for war or peace—preferably He has strengthened our banking system paved the way for the farmer to utilize his credit without paying tribute to usury, set the country in the way of readiness to engage in world commerce without | | submission to foreign control, jegisiation for the ie has provided for prevent an orgy of naval and military expenditure. provide for getting the money from the cl struck a fatal blow to child labor, es tablished the eight-hour day as the ndard for the workman and peaceful arbitration of disputes be my and navy, with checks to His revenue me of people wh sions most largely represent the appropriation of community- ted values, He has been neutral between Europe's belligerents in the only way he could be neutral—by standing for the integrity of the law of nation of humanity. for the rights of American life and prosperity, for the | exico, he handled a mightily muddied situation in a man-, ating Mexican so eignty and at the up. ments there giving most promise of ability to restore law | verely, but no critic hy | personal or political. 1 and liberty were fo nothing for either were howling, there any pigeon-toed, knock-kneed, or who heels and toes interfere when walk LJ If there be those who have any | | MEN CHANGE THEIR IDEAS OF WOMEN SOON AFTER MARRIAGE—ELIENE %: “Mollie and i talked on thi ject the other night, continued |Ellene. Then the thought jumped into my brain that now I would | find owt what was making Mollie |so restless | “What did Mollie say about the subject? Surely Mollie and Chad wick Hatton are perfectly in ac jcord,” I said with more positive |ness than I felt. | “She said,” answered Eliene, ‘she and Chad one evening dined \with a clever woman, On their! | way home, when Mollie remarked | it was a pleasure to meet suc | women, he answered: ‘Yes, dear, but a man would soon tire of her as a steady diet. If a woman nev- ler makes a chill run down your lback and your teeth click together, jshe has no use for living” | ‘But, Chad,’ said Mollie, ‘don't you love me because of my brain?” |" “No, dear, I love you in spite of your brain, was his response. I looked at ‘Why, Chadwick Hatton fe Hove with Mollie Waverly she was so clever,” I said, “It was just because she was an extraordi- |nary girl that. drove him to tell her of his terrible experience with his first wife. Had she been a foolish little miss, he would have made |love to her as he had made love | probably to a dozen others, and let her io her chance. “Why, Eliene, when he |tho matter over with me, he could not possibly deceive Mol lie, first, because he loved her too well, and second, because Mollie | would immediately tell be ing.” | “Of course,” interjected Eliene, ‘he said that, but look around you Do you know one wife who has re. talked lof the physical delinquencies enum: | lerated above, | panther, j animal and bas that rarity in a pro- boy Jonce who was ————@ }tained her husband's love by Eliene in surprise. | *|\tamily affairs, he said | was ly. | All the things President Wilson has done have been criticised se shown that what he did was unnecessary to | be done, or could have been done better. | am for Wilson and his program because there is no alternative, am for Wilson, all friends of democracy | who were doing Pretty Dancer Would Help Girls De elop Panther-Like Figures Emma Francie | just drop a line to Emma Francis, who will be danc ing at the Alhambra theatre in Or. pheum vaudeville all this week, and | she will tell you how to become perfect In form and lithe as any Emma is as healthy as a wild fessional dancer—a perfectly sym- metrical figure. Also, she has a temperament as sweet as a June “Do you know,” she said yester- |day in her dressing room at the/ “that a girl came to me | shamed to go in} bathing, she was so bowlegged. 1/ old her of the movements we prac- | ice under the direction of the great Russian dancing masters to | develop the long muscles, and with- in a year her legs were as straight | as mine Alhambra, Confessions of a Wife the | exercise of those charma and| \graces with which he fell in love? “The other evening I saw a | mu show, In which the girl! jand man were always quarreling and breaking off their engage pen When they were now en aged, he would tell her she was beautiful and perfectly satisfying, and as soon as she again let him put the ring on her finger, he would begin complaining. Her hair was not plain enough, her | | Kown was too decoliete, her man- ner too impulsive, and so on i] man has certain conventional jideas about what he wants his wife jto be, but never by any chance | would he fall in love with that kind of a women.” What will be the outcome, Eliene?” I asked, “Will a few clever women like you and your lit tle coterie of ardent and aristo- cratic feminists change the whole attitude of masculine thought?” “Don't call us aristocratic, Mar- lgle, because I have begun to think that when the hard-working wife of |John Zabotake asks for literature on birth control, when she decides she must be reckoned with in all that she, too, is a human being, and not a chattel, we | must conclude feminism is not aris |tocratic, but most decidedly demo cratic.” (To be continued) ‘GREECE AGREES TO ALL ALLIES’ TERMS PARIS, Oct. 12.—Greece has ac i ed all the conditions of the al including the disarmament of forts, the internment of the Greek fleet and the use of the rail-| ways an! canals by the allies, it announced today Motherly Face and Garb Boon to Aged Woman Thief, Who Is Again in Toils of the Police BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 12.—With her famous motherly smile untarnished by time, Lizzie Dillon, 70 years old, known to the police of every city in the United States as one of the most skillful and successful “moll buzzers” (pocketbook thieves and who has served fully a third of her life behind prison b: again in the police toils. arrival in active. Sh an ountry from Liverpool, in 1880, Liz- undersized woman and would be The police say she formerly worked in collusion with the famous Dan Corrigan. The couple watched the death adver- tisements, it is said, and attended public funerals. When the service had progressed to its most impressive point, Lizzie and Dan, seated apart, would each somehow “lift” pocketbook, If e flow of tears, pr nd Dan would simply the mourning relat When arrested, Lizzie wor motherly of little poke bonnets, knot under her chin, framed a face so benign, her thought the circumstances a long gray cape and the most its fastenings, tied in a bow 0 free from guile and worldliness, it could well be used as an advertisement for homely domesticity. Let Our Housewares Section Help You in Autumn House-cleaning HE right tools make for efficiency in house-cleaning as in everything else; the lack of them makes this phase of housekeeping something to be looked forward to with dread. Here is everything to make the operation easy and thorough; from the odd ments needed for this or devices for electrical Paints Varnishes and Wall Tints —they play an important part in every well- thought-out cam- paign for Autumn home-brightening. You will find most of the good kinds of ready mixed prepara tions well-represented here Muresco Wall Tints Floor Polishing Brushes Gold and Aluminum Paint Orange Shellac Rialto Interior Varnish Chi-Vo Fiat Varnish Spar Varnish White Japalac Enamel Lion White Enamel Ironite Floor and Porch Paint Rainier Inside and Out ride Paint Japalac Stain and Var- nish Rialto nish White Shellac Paint Brushes Floor Waxes Housewares Section. Linoleum Var Basement “Vanco” Mop Wringer Special $1.50 STRONGLY- BUILT, Family- size Mop Wringer, of galvanized iron; pressing lever han dle downward forces water out of mop. Attaches to any water pail, Special, $1.50. wares Basement Sundries For the “Handy Man” the Sec- —stocked in Housewares tion: Furniture Casters Rubber Chairles Tips Metal and Glass Fur niture Glides Caster Cups Metal, Wood and Glass Furniture Knobs Picture Wire and Mould ing Hooks Hammers, Tacks, and Sorews Kitchen Hooks, and Hat Hooks Bathroom Fixtures Stove-pipe Coat Stove and Enamels Le Page's man’s and China Cement Housewares Section, Basement Glue, Dit- Instant Feather Duster Special 10c L ONG Brie - handled a-brac special 10¢, —lLousewares Section, Basement, short Feather Duster, or the cleaning. A Splendid Brightener: FREDERICK & NELSON FURNITURE POLISH HIS Polish we especi- ally recommend for cleaning and polishing all kinds of fine furniture. It is exactly as used by the furniture finishers in our own workshops, and is now put up in hand form for hou in 25¢@ and 50¢ bottles To be obtained in the Furniture Section, Third Floor, also in the Housewares Section, Basement. By way of suggestion: hold use, ial and VACUUM CLEANERS O adopt the dustless or Vacuum Cleaner way of carpet and up- holstery clean- ing is to ensure thoroly clean homes with the expenditure of but a fraction of the time and labor required under old-fash- ioned methods of sweeping. Our showing of tested Electric Sweepers —in- cludes: The Hotpoint, $25.00. The Frantz-Premier, $35.00. The Baby Hoover, $53.50. The “Special” Hoover, $65.50. —ceach a splendid value at the price. Sets of extra cleaning tools, for up- holstery and hangings, are priced from $7.50 to $12.50. The Hugro Vacuum Sweeper is an especially efficient hand-oper- ated machine, which cleans by means of a powerful suction created by bel- when run to and fro over the lows, carpet ‘Two $8.00; Bissell’s Carpet Sweepers in improved models, ished cabinet cases, each with metal gany-finished models: with maho $9.00. case, wood with finely-fin- $2.00 to $5.50 ~—Housewares Section, Basement. Old Window Shades Renewed “Eureka” Window Shade Cleaner brightens up soiled and faded window shades almost like new. It is simply applied, does __ its work quickly and enough of the clean- er for cight to ten shades is contained in one bottle, at 50¢. Housewares Section, Rasement WELL- MADE Step-Ladders A STEP-LADDER dites many These are strongly made, well finished, and under each step is a steel reinforce ment. Three sizes: §-foot Step-Lad ders, $1.50. 6-foot — Step-Lad ders, $1.80. 7-foot Step-Lad- ders, $2.10. handy — expe- housekeeping tasks. Housewares Section, Basement, other home repair job, to the most improved Floor Wax Special 30c Pound HIS is a Wax of superior quality for use on floors and interior woodwork. One-pound can, spe- Housewares Section, Basement Brushes For All Household Purposes OU 8 ECLEANING tasks have been wonderfully lightened of late years by im- proved methods, but we still have to do a little old-fashioned scrubbing, so we have Brushes of many kinds ready to help the am- bitious housecleaner. Scrub Brushes, 10¢ to We, + Refrigerator Pipe Brushes, with long wire handl Radi and 45c. Window Brushes, 50c, 60c, 85e, $1.00 to $3.00. Dusting Brushes, 15c, B6e to 60e, Hat and Suit Brushes, 15c, 20c and 50ce. Tufted Furniture Brushes, 20c. Wool Floor and Wall Brushes, with two han- dies, $1.00, $1.25 and $2.00. Sink Brushes, 2 for oe and up to 1c each. Vegetable Brushes, 5c and 10¢. Stove Brushes, 20¢ and 25c. Floor Waxing Brushes, 15-pound, $2.25, 25-pound, $2.75, Shoe Polishing Brush- es, 25¢ and $1.00. Shoe Daubers, 15c, Hearth Brooms, 25c, 50c and T5e, Bristle Ceiling Brush- es, $1.50. Household S5e to T5e, —Housewares Section, Basement. The O.Cedar Polish Mop T is like taking a va- cation to clean floors and woodwork in the “O-Cedar” way after using the old-fashioned methods. O-Cedar Polish clean- ses and brightens, isn’t sticky or greasy. The Mop itself is so fash- joned that one essily cleans the out-of-the- way corners. eypires Mops, and $1.2 soc, or Brushes, 35¢ lie, Brooms, Te $1.00; hal siting ; gallon, $2.50. Housewares Se Basement Special $2.00 UBSTANTIALLY- BUILT Ash Can, 26 inches high and 18 inches in diame- ter, with reinforced sides, fit-over cover and raised, ventilated bottom, Special at $2.00, —Housewares Section, Basement.