The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 13, 1916, Page 14

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A EI IE ih =i ADRS AO AS eat amt tthe AR es gore RE IE, EERE IE LINN TT NU TNT Minnen and Children's Wool faced Bweaters 82. ry FREDERICK NELSON © Basement Salesroom $3.50 Many New Coats for Women and Misses $12.50 $15.00 $18.50 Wool Velours Pile Fabrics | THE BON MARCH for President Wilson BY WALTER E. WEYL (Associate Editor of the New Republic and Former Progressive) My chief reason for voting for Mr. Wilson is my belief that he represents today the liberal, democratic, non-imperialistic attitude in American political life, and that the constructive and Progressive policies are more likely to be developed if Mr, Wi! son is returned to office than if the republicans win. BY CHARLES R. CRANE (Capita id Political nt) | think we should Woodrow W never had to cross a wider, deeper, more dangerous than the one over which he is now navigating us; and we have never had a better horse for such an undertaking FOR SATURDAY—CHILDREN’S DAY 75 WARM LITTLE WINTER COATS At a Specially $4.95 Low Price Chil in this Fancy Coating Tweeds Boucle Corduroys Economy—real mothers iren’s Day sale of Coats at “4 The Coats are just as new as can be, and they are so well made, of fancy mixtures, boucles, matelasse, cor luroys and belted patch pockets, and most of them are styles wool plush, in full flare, half-belted or full Some have plush collars and cuffs and full lined. Girls’ New Serge Skirts at $2.25 In Sizes 4 to 14 Years Girls’ Serge Skirts, to wear with separate blouses or niddies underwaist, 40 Girls’ New Coats $10.50 Growing girls’ Coats at $10.50; sizes 6 to 15 Years. Rich velveteen, with standing collars and deep cuff of fur fabric, Also rich silk plushes, full belted, and others. =o LAST DAY OF A VERY SUCCE They are plaited and are made with a muslin and they are very convenient | Girls’ Dresses $2.50 to $12.50 | Girls’ new Fall Dresses, in all the wanted mater and colors, Serges, checks, corduroys, vel veteens and combination effects in middy suite, princess dresses, straight line and sallor effects —Becoad Vieor, Center, = | FUL “BABY WEEK” BABY DRESSES FOR $1.00 They Were $1.50, $1.75 and $1.98 Cunning little White Dresses, made of fine lawn and batiste in a dozen pretty way All sizes from 6 months to 2 years, with pink or sky blue smocking, Madeira yokes and little embroidered sprays and hemstitched and lots of other cute styles 50c Paraloid Pants 25c Kleinert’s Paraloid Pants, to be worn over reg- alar diapers. Can be washed and boiled—draw- string at waistline. Knit Bootees 25¢ Pair Infants’ Knit Bootees, long and short, witt. finely knitted feet, “At 25c a pair, for Baby Week : Infants’ Caps 25c Each - Knit Caps in plain skull and turn back brims; ‘also knitted Hoods, with plain and scalloped Crib Blankets at 35c Soft Cotton Crib Blankets, size 20x40 inches, in pink and blue, with striped borders, at 35¢. Knit Sacques at $1.25 Infants’ Knitted Sacques, white with pink or blue edging, at $1.25, for Baby Week Infants’ Dresses at $1.49 They're worth $2.25 and 8 sook, lawns and reps; en 6 months to 3 years. Infants’ Sweaters at $1.98 Pretty little Wool Sweaters for infants and lit | Ue tots. Solid colors and combinations in the lot | Infants’ Sacques at 98c Dear little Sacques, worth $1.00 and $1.50; ape clal at 96e. Of cashmeres, some with band atitch. | ing and embroidered. Second Fleer, Center. SS CHILDREN’S DAY SPECIALS IN THE SHOE SHOP Boys’ School Shoes $2.00 and $2.50 Pair 4 They certainly are dandy School Shoes, for they are made of | boarded calf and the caps are of sole leather, making it almost impossible to wear | through them. that good-wearing Sizes 10 to 13% at $2.00; sizes 214 to 5%4 at $2.50. Children’s Shoes Both children's and misses’ Shoes—of gunmetal calf, button style, and good wearing oak tanned feather soles. MISSES’, 1114 TO 2, $2.25 CHILO’S, 8’, TO 11, $2.00 ’ Shoes $2.00 heavy calf skin and heavy soles, Boys’ Shoes, wear, Sizon 2'% with small nails in to give extra to 5%. Kid Gloves $ SPECIAL PRICE *" Washable Kid Gloves, in sand, putty, Newport tan, tvory, pearl and English tan, with one large fastener at very select quality of black Kid Gloves number of “Perrin’s” English tan . Some suede kid, too, in gray and brown; sizes 5% to 7% In the lot. Women’s Underwear Stocks _Are Complete WOMEN’S VESTS AND PANTS AT 50c The best quality of fine ribbed cotton Vests, with Dutch neck, elbow sleeves, or high neck, long sleeves, pants to match; extra sizes included; 34 to 44. $1.25 UNION SUITS FOR 98c Women's fine white ribbed cotton Union Suits, slightly Meeced. Dutch, low or high necks, elbow, long or no sleeves; sizes 34 to 44. WOOL VESTS AND PANTS AT Winter weight Vests and Pants—fine ribbed, part wool gar- ments—vest high or Dutch necks, elbow or long sleeves; ankle Sizes 34 to 38, $1.00; sizes 40 to 44, length pants. 1.35—A Sale A VERY UNUSUAL SALE AT A VERY {not washable), and a Patent Leather Shoes Misses’ and children’s patent leather button Shoes, with kid tops, neat toe shapes and good | wearing soles. MISSES’, 11'4 TO 2, $2.00 | CHILD'S, 81, TO 11, $1.75 Girls’ Shoes $3.00 Pair | Patent or dull finished leather Shoes—lace or button style. Made on that new modified English last; sizes 2% to 6. —Upper Mata Fieor. From 9 a. m. to 12—on the Main Floor Bargain Square Odds and Ends of House Dresses at 69c Including old - fashioned Wrappers and Dressing Sacques, formerly $1.50 to $2.25. Broken sizes, mostly 34, 36, 52 and 54, A Saturday morning clean-up of odd lots of House Dresses and Wrappers, There are a few crepes and Nannelettes, lots of ginghama, oercales and chambrays, in plain and fancy, ligh id wrist. Also a mochas and $1.00 $1.2 —Upper Main Floor. National Candy Day $2.50 Silk Crepe de Chine Oct. 14 3 ° Send a Box of Candy to your friend, wife or mother, it will be appreciated. We carry a good assortment of fresh Candies. SATURDAY CANDY SPECIAL Chocolate Chips at 20c Pound Thin crisp Molasses Chips, evenly coated with chocolate, 30c value; special for Saturday at 20¢ Ib. —Lower Mata Floor. Saturday Special in Music Two 15c Songs for 20c “I'm Dreaming Sweet Dreams of You,” and any other 15¢ song in stock—30c value, for 20c, Sat- urday. —Third Floor, Center Section Buy a Pound or Two for Sunday Breakfast 500 Pounds Little Pork Sausages 16c a Pound Sausages 16c a pound in the Delicatessen Sat- urday, as long as the supply holds out. We've had 500 pounds of fine little Pork Sausages spe- cially made for this sale. None can be delivered at this price. YOU'LL HAVE TO CARRY THEM HOME —Fourth Floor, BUTTER 35c A POUND or 3 pounds for $1.00 Fresh Washington Creamery Butter, guaranteed good quality. We will be glad to deliver it with other groceries. Mayflower Blend Cof- Sugar Cured Bacon, fee, roasted fresh dally | sliced, ib Q9¢, by the in our Coffee Section, | piece, Ih. 27¢, —Fourth Floor, ENVELOPE CHEMISES for $1.69 Silk Envelope Chem- ises—they have just come to hand—an un- usual purchase. Flesh crepe de chine gar- ments with deep yokes, shoulder straps and bottom trimmings of sheer cream laces, run with ribbon Sizes from 36 to 44 Dainty Camisoles for 89c Camisoles, ever so pretty, made of wash satin, combined with net and Valenciennes lace and in- sertion, elastic at waist—lace and beadi neck —Third Floor, NOVELTY SHOES Two New Styles Have Just Arrived—$4 Pr. One neht style is an all-bronze lace Boot, with 8%-4Ineh tops and pin perforations around vamps and lace stays, The other is a field mouse brown kid lace Boot, with 8-inch top, stitched in brown silk. Both styles are moulded over graceful Ntting lasts and are a specially good bargain at $4.00 a pair. —Upper Maia Floor, From 9 A. M. to 12 Only No telephone orders can be accepted for these Morning Specials. Unbleached Outing Flannel, 25 inches wide, not over 12 yards to each, yard 5é, 50c Mercerized Dam- ask, 64 inches wide, good ‘weight, fine pat. terns, yard 39¢, —Lewer Main Floor, ‘ Of fine nain- | / ROSS! TELLS OF WRECKED HOME parched mouth } “It was about a quarter of 6| when I started to leave the office,” | he said, “I asked Abe Wyman (his office man) how things were | going at the house. He said there |had been a party, ‘What kind? I asked Oh, he drinking and | raising hell!’ | asked him who was| there. He said be didn't know just | who all, but he understood Gabe Dalquist had been taking booze to| the house. jagain he saw his home life crash down before his eyes. Pityingly hey bebeld his sufferings —and when his part had been played they came to him and patted him jon the back and told him they i [Were glad the ordeal was thru leaving « lov jing wife, apparently reformed for! ever tre | He had gone away anid, 9 the Hquor craving, tell to worry, He had just thru the happiest month of | ried life. Another two days | alterations to the home, which would make it a fairy pal “That's all Wyman raid 1 did) ace, would be finished }hot know, prior to that, that my | The yearn stretched rosily before | wife and Dalquist were acquainted, | ff | them other than a speaking acquaintance. | | And thes he came back from bis 1 went--home. Roesi's breath | political trip to Boise. It head been | began coming sharply now. ‘I saw ! ja hard and busy one. The testi plain evidence that my home had} pictured the man of affairs | been desecrated,” | 5 ernoon of the| Then he described the final i jbreak with bis wife as all he could |remember of the murder in a local hotel Mr. Rossi,” said his attorney, | the defendant,|“you have stated fully the events jf | flehting for bis life on the stand, | leading up to, and the tragedy?” | if tears tn his eyes, drinking quarts “AS GOD 18 MY JUDGE!” said) jf of water, trying to motsten his Rossl, fervently BREAD AT 7 CENTS ON FRIDAY THE 13TH WINNIPEG, Man, Oct. 12.—With flour rapidly approsching the | $10 @ barrel mark, bread today sold for 7 cents a loaf, and may be ad-| vanced another cent. Flour sold today $3.30 higher than before the/ war. Millers say prices will go higher, and that there is little chance! of a decrease at this time. ‘WE'D HATE TO RUN RISK HE DID! PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 13.1. Sommer left @ trail of money he strolled thru th @ay. He had $1,280 in pocket. Every ti kerchlef he dropped a roll of bills After $400 had been scattered over the pavement, Sommer return. ed to his office. The money was found, handed over to the police and given back to Sommer before he knew he had lost it ONE MINISTER TO EVERY 4,000 LONDON, Oct. 13.—One thousand ministers to 4,000,000 people, or one to 4,000, Is none too many to keep up spiritual life, visit the sick | jand conduct Intercession services, the bishop of London told an audi j ence, in reply to the charge that ministers were shirking field duty ‘CRACKY! HOW TOMMIES HATE MEDICINE! | LONDON, Oct. 13.—Back from the battlefields of France, where they faced death without batting an eye, British Tommies have to be coddied and wheedled Into taking bad-taating medicines. The wounded |men must all take a@ daily portion of cod liver oll. It requires two | purses to administer the medicine, one passing around the medicine! | Itwelf, while another follows with @ jar of jam or other sweets, | |THE BROWN-HAIRED BOY IS EXPOSED rushing thru the | tragedy with accumulated work at [hia Wallace office, too busy to anak jabdout his wife until he started for |J | dome. Listen now to de ment store man wn streets yester led out his hand ywat he pt | | COLUMBUS, 0., Oct, 13.—Beware of the man with the chestnut curls. | Chestnut bair, tn conjunction with several other things, is one of the distinguishing features of the “average Ohio criminal,” as revealed | today by Hertillon Officer Robert I. Miles, after a monthdong examina. tion of ‘all the male convicts in the state penitentiary here | Hair, chestnut; eyes, gray; height, five feet and seven inches: | weight, 140 pounds; chin, protruding; forehead, receding: nose, recti./ |Mnear; fingers, stubby spatulate tipn; hat, size 7; shoes, 714; collar, 15.| The convicts are practically all normal, physically. One in five is tattooed | ‘DEMANDS FAIR DEAL FOR EX-CONVICTS BUFFALA, N. Y., Oct. 13.—Practically all of the delegates to the} congress of the American Prison association, in session here, today {concurred with W. G. MacLaren, superintendent of the Oregon Prison-| ers’ Aid society, who said prisoners should be closely scrutinized prior to release, so that mental defectives may be taken care of. He pointed | out that the defectives released speedily go back to crime. | “We should take care of the defectives,” said MacLaren, “and |should demand that the police and peace officers give other released prisoners a chance to get along. They are all too ready now to hound them back to prison. | TOMATO GROWN THAT’S 16 INCHES AROUND WOOSTER, Oct, 13.—Unless some one can disprove it, Wooster can claim the largest tomatoes grown this year. A few days ago Frank Shafer brought to a local grocery store some produce, among which were five tomatoes, the total weight being 12 pounds, or an average of two pounds and six ounces each One of the tomatoes meas. ured 16 inches In circumference the longest way round. The ir a smooth, red tomato. This is the second year Mr. Shafer o the largest tomato, WOMEN CAR CONDUCTORS WEAR 'EM LONDON, Oct. 13.—Women tramcar conductors at Leeds have! | adopted pantaloons, but you can't tell ‘em unless they (the women) | take long steps. The new garments are baggy enough to look like skirts and are as comfy as trousers, /ENGLAND IS TAKING TO CHEWING GUM | LONDON, Oct, 13.—England chewed 20,000,000 packages of chew- ; ing gum in August, and the habit is growing. Sales of American gum} manufacturers have increased tremendously each month since March. | when only 3,000,000 packages were sold, ; RING LOST 30 YEARS FINALLY FOUND LLANO, Tex. Oct. 13.—After having been lost for over 20 years, | the engagement ring which was placed upon the finger of Mrs. Ret. Brown, of Mason, Tex., by her husband-to-be over 40 years ago, | been found : 7 } Mrs, Brown lost the ring about 40 years ago. | made at the time, but nothing could be found of it ring was found by some children in the jearth. It did not look much the worse for has | A thoro search was | A few days ago the garden, about a foot under par. STRANGE MONUMENT IS RUINED BY FIRE; WAS LEFT IDLE 20 YEARS WENATCHEE, Oct. 13.—When the wife of G. V. Walla: veteran of the civil war, died on Badger mountain, 20 y Mr. Wallace, immediately after her death, moved out of jome, leaving everything just as it was when she died, out of respect for her memory, Since that ti: up to the other da single thing was moved or changed. Mr. Wa lived in a house near by. The unique monument to his wife was destroyed It not discovered until it was too The origin of the blaze is un- 1 i UCH variety in styles, materials and colors tha choosing is greatly simplified. Full, rippling effects, belted and semi-belted styles are included, and fur, plush, velvet and fancy but- tons are the trimmings. Colors—navy, black, green, Burgundy, mustard, brown, also mixtures of black, blue and brown and white Sizes for women and Priced at $12.50, $15.00 and misse An I Meresting Displag of Charming White Millinery $6.50 and $7.50 HE White Hats are lovely in themselves, and yet they will appeal to many on account of the charming contrast they provide with the dull subdued colorings of the sea- son’s costumes. The Spanish Turban pictured, in white velvet, with edge bound beaver-like fur, is Drape Veils 50c HE Veils f mesh, 1% yards long and 18 Choice of I Purple fashionable Drape in Shetland inches wide ald, White, Brown Black 50¢ —Rasement Salesroom. and Price each with $6.50. A Straight Sailor of hatter’s plush, banded with gray fur, $7.50 White Plush Hat with black velvet facing embroidered with grapes and foliage, $7.50. New Dress Hats in Costume Colors Beautiful Velvet Hats with rich trimming of gold and silver, becoming Puff-crown Turbans with single ornaments, and many other interpretations of the new styles, in Rose, Brown, Army-blue, Gray and Black, at i $6.50 $7.50 narrow Neckpieces re 25c N_ attractive of showing Women's Neckpieces at this pric including Organdie Col- lars, Double Collars, with lace trimming and other novelties—25c. ent Galesroom Fancy Silk Stockings $5.00 75¢ Pair Children’s Hats, 95c to $4.95 W' YMEN’S Black Thread silk Stockings with black clocking, sizes 814 to 10, 75¢ pair. —Basement Salesroom A wide range of styles, including Plush Tams, Velvet Dress Hats, and Corduroy, Beaver and Felt Hats with trimming of fur, velvet flowers, ribbons and metallic effects obacoment Qniceibelh Children’s Shoes Low-Priced BOYS’ OVERCOATS $3.00 to $4.50 OYS' OVERCOATS of and mixed coatings in gray and blue and brown and gray combinations, sizes 24% to 10 years, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50. BOYS’ WOOL SWEATERS good weight, with shaw! collar, in gray, maroon, cardinal and navy, sizes 26 to 36, $1.25, $1.75, $2.50 and $3.00. BOYS’ MACKINAW COATS blue and brown mixtures, with belt and patch pockets, sizes 8 to 17 years, $4.00. Boys’ Extra-Trouser Suits, $4.15 Suits in sturdy mixtures of gray, tan and brown, well-made and finished, with extra pair of trousers, sizes 6 to 17 years, $4.15. chinchilla in a heavy in gray, ti IGH-CUT SHOES in button and lace style for Misses, Children and Growing Girls, in patent and dull calf leathers. Sizes 81% to 11, $2.35 pair; 11% to 2, $2.75; $3.50 pair. 5 Girls’ Coats Sizes 6, 7, 8 and ment Salesroom 4 to 6, CHILDREN’S on “skuffer” last, in tan, black and smoke leathers; sizes 6 to 8, $2.00; 8% to 11, $ pair. BOYS’ HIGH-CUT STORM SHOES, in tan and black leathers, with chrome tanned soles and buckles at top, Sizes 10 to 1 i 1to 3 the $3 % to 6, $4.00 pair BOYS’ GUN.M AL, CALF BLUCHER SHOES, with damp-resisting } lin soles, A Shoe that will give satis. factory service, Sizes 10 to 2.75; 1 to 6, pair, PLAY SHOES, HE attractively - styled Coat shown in sketch offers exceptionally good value, It is of good quality boucle coating, in navy and black, fulltined, with collar cuffs velvet Price $3.95. and of —Basement Salerroom. Women’s Union Suits $1.00 OMEN medium ton Union styles: High neck, long sleeves, Dutch neck, sleeves, Round neck, sleeveless. All in ankle length Price $1.00, Basement Salesroom _—————_________! New Autumn Coatings $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 Yard W and white stripes and novelty mixed stripes. Fifty-two and 54 inches wide, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 yard 36-Inch Velvets, $1.35 Yard Just received, a shipment of the rich, lustrous Velvets for the favored shades of African-brown, purple, myrtle green black, Price $1.35 yard Basement Salesroom ARM, substantial Coatings in plain black, red and green, also brown, gray and tan mixtures, black ) fine - ribbed, weight Cot. Suits, in three elbow afternoon dresses and suits. They are in and navy as well as

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