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2 | els, waistline or tunic effect | newest eolored collars. “Wirthmor” Waists, Always $1, Always Worth More | ered panels down the front: | with large lace trimmed collar. THE BON MARCHE The Smart New Coats at $14.50 Are Making Winter Popular That is because they have such dash and style at such a very mod- erate price. No scarcity of models, price be low There are lots of flare, belted Coats, some some plush trimmed and some tail red, wide of collar and wide of cuff ~—as becomes the fashionable Coats of today In nut brown, black, green and plaids and mixtures. Very Siacial Geute and Satin Dresses $15.00 They are the kind of Dresses you usually see for $19.50 and $21.95. iy a number of pretty Fall colorings, Tho if you please—bright colored embroidering and yarn embroidery or with half long, loose models, full-belted and fur trimmed plain navy, chec plum, fancy The loose, one-piece mod. trimmings are the very beading, contrasting One Waist of vollo has embroid. oft batiate The new Wirthmor Waists are models of charming simplicity another with group tucks and insertion, and still another of A smart semi-tallored model is developed in gabardine lace cloth —Second Floor, Nerth. An Unprecedented Sale of Ostrich Plumes at One-Third Less Yet in the face of both these facts, the Bon Marche holds this sale and offers you Deautiful Ostrich Plumes and Ostrich Bands at a straight reduction of 331-3 per cent its regular retail prices, OSTRICH BANDS ONE-THIRD LESS Buy Your Ostrich Feather Bands at This Sale and Trim Your Own Hat. Many Styles and All Colors Are Included OSTRICH FEATHER BANDS AT $1.00 EACH OSTRICH FEATHER BANDS AT $1.30 EACH $2.95 OSTRICH FEATHER BANDS AT $1.97 EACH $3.95 OSTRICH FEATHER BANDS AT $2.63 EACH Fancy Trimming Feathers, worth 95c to $5.95, in all the latest styles and obtain- in black, white and colors, at one-third less. OSTRICH PLUMES ONE-THIRD LESS $1.50 $1.95 epretrich Plumes Made of Finest Quality, Three-Ply Selected Stock—In All the New Colors at One-Third Less 95¢ OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES AT 63c EACH $1.50 OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES AT $1.00 EACH $1.95 OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES AT $1.30 EACH $2.50 OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES AT $1.67 EACH $3.95 OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES AT $2.63 EACH $4.95 OSTRICH FEATHER PLUMES oe $3.30 EACH A Sale of 500 Boxes 98c ~ 98c Fiber Matting of Stationery at if Shopping Cases —10c a Box— | —for 69c— 500 boxes of a good-looking linen Paper “Get Acquainted” Bargain in the ranged Trunk and Suit Case store and Envelopes, some in initial, some in tints. A good assortment to choose from We Matting Shopping Bags, size 7x11x15 inches, made with strong steel handles, at 10c a box, as long as we have any. —Upper Main Fleer. four brass catches and reinforced frames, for 69c —Fifth Floor, Union Street side : : October Sale of Pure Drugs and Toilet Articles An Entirely New Set of Specials for Taesday, in Addition to Monday’s Special List Jergen’s Benzoin and Almond ; Melien’s Food, the 75c size, spe- Lotion, 15 size.. - Be | cial at - 49¢ > cial at 1 pound Theatrical Cold Cream, | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | Lysol, 500 size, special... «.«-B9¢ | Compound, spec’ at......6he@ at ‘ Wisdom's Robertine, 50c size, at | Jad Salts, the size, special Nuxated Iron at +O LOE cevvcccins a6 sense 49 Listerine, Purola Peroxide Cream, the 25c| Sloan's Liniment, $1.00 size, | gt. size, special at ...... -19¢ | special at ... + OE | Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Sozodont Liquid, for the teeth,| Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia, 5c! ‘Tonic. SOc size at 26e size, 2 for. size, special at Capillaris, the 5¢ Lavoris Mouth W. Stuart's Draven gle eae te special at cial at ...... Pape's Diapepsin, 50c size, ape ze special the $1.00 size, the $1.00 size, special a Tablets, spe- vetee ee BBE “Heather” Linen, imported direct from Europe, and offered to you Tuesday at about import prices. All-linen Table Damask in a good heavy weight, full 72 inches wide, pattern, at $1.50, instead of the customary $1.75 a yard. $2.00 Lunch Cloths $1.50 Hemstitched Linen Cloths of unbleached | linen, size 56x80 inches, in floral-patterns Turkish Towels, size 17x28 inches, not over 6 to each, at . B¢- 10c Cotton Crash Toweling, full 17 inches wide, special at All-linen Crash Toweling, 10 inches wide, not over 10 yards to a customer, yd..10¢@ | 12 yards to a customer. $1.75 Linen Cloths, unbleached and hem- Checked Apron Gingham 8c Yard stitched, size 56x70 inches, each..$1.39 | standard Apron Ginghams, in neat checks, $3.50 Napkins, heavy satin damask, 95 | lengths to 20 yards; full 27 inches wide, at 8¢ linen, size 22x22 inches, dozen 25¢ Cotton Ser 4 7 ie 15¢ Yard $4.50 Damask Table Napkins, Cotton Storm Serge, ria « wide, in blue, size 2314x234, dozen... black and brown; lengths to rds wer Main Floor, in the neat dot $2. 25 Napkins $1.75 Doz. Splendid wearing Table Napkins of all linen, 20x20 inches; fast selvedge and neat patterns Outing Flannel 7c a Yd. Lengths to 12 yards, in pink and blue striped Outing Flannel, 27 inches wide. Not more than size pure linen, JONS—UPPER MAIN FLOOR, , UNION STREET SIDE. HALLOWE’EN FAVORS AND DECORA HALLOWE'EN NOV Ik { even if the jj I am dent to on one liberal, States lad to reduce because I think th my re progressive, intelligently I shall vote for him, the United States needs more enligh cidedly does not need a back wa 1 like the moral fiber of Mr. dent has. A high-class conservative lk dangerous to the country at t type of reactionary would be, blind many to the real issue, He word In the republican platform. stereotyped reaction, common-pl There i« no doubt whatever that Woodrow |Why I’m Going to Vote for President Wilson | By Neneen Hapgood (Noted American Editor) asons for voting for the prest really all do come down to iison in the radical leader in the United refore, because 1 think that the tened liberaliam, and that it de ve toward toryinm Hughes, but he problems that the has one-tenth pnomnie presi » Mr. Hughes is possibly more osent moment than a lower because hin respectability will has said he agreed with every That platform is a piece of ace, unenlightened, uninspired What the tariff plank means was shown by Senator Gallin ) } \ 5 ) 5 {the vision of our underlying cc ‘ 5 5 } kor, the other day, when he said Hl too much of a concession to her { came back this time, th } ley bill, I do not believe the t i face backward. DELEGATES SEE SOLDI 4 PASO, Tex., Oct. 16.—Deleg | ention congress today witnessed thi since early summer. These forces r in one place since t their week * program of war games problems on a large scale. CHICAGO, finds iteelf w Oct, 16 ‘eflected in the army CHICAGO, Oct. 16 operation for sterilization rather th Judge M | fenses against small girls, | would consent to the operation woul? that the Payne-Aldrich bill was esy, and that if the republicans 1 be a swing back to the Ding nited States wants to turn tts | ERS IN MANEUVERS ates to the 23rd International Irri 6 special maneuvers of the 60,000) regular troops and National Guardsmen who have been mobilized here the largest number of American soldiers ever gath | conclusion of t ivil war, began and the working out of actual war ‘MANY WOULD BECOME OFFICERS IN ARM The military large | regular soldiers and other candidates who were taking examinations at the federal building today for appointments as officers in the world now guards mood in which the ruite regular PREFERS STERILIZATION TO PRISON | Levin Shapiro, aged 65, chose to submit to an an go to Joliet penitentiary for % Kavanagh sentenced the old man to prison for of-| but offered to suspend sentence if Shapiro Hlinots has no sterilization law | ‘DAIRY MEN TOUCHED FOR $1,200 BY FAKER CHICAGO, Oct, 16—-With the crowded with delegates attending th | try. Butter and Egg association, a man escaped with $1,2 posing as & substitute for a Fallroad t lobby of the Hotel Sherman here he convention of the National Poul |, stolen te licket seller in the hotel lobby GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP OF RAILROADS? WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 hess within the next decade, | York, executive secretary of the rea! Unele according to Benjamin C Sam in going into the railroad busi. Marah, New | preparedness committee of the In | tercollegiate Socialist society, an organization backed morally and finan. j cially by Amos Pinchot | Every railroad in the United § | Mareh today PAULA “FINDS REAL TRAG* EDY BEHIND SCENES AS THE PLOT THICKENS o— 1 hearsal, Mary Madden | words, that I w readies itkinaintiie nw emed to me at that firet re Margie.” sald Paula, a walled out those looking upon the | Igreatest acting in the world. 1} know now that I was seeing, not) jacting, but truth and tragedy "That will do, Ming Newton,’ | waid the manager as,1 wiped my | leyes, ‘your emotion shows tempera | ment, but you had better save your }tears until later.” | ] Margie, I did not save my tears. but I had plenty to shed later when the tragle story that began at that rehearsal, and which bound |the lives of Mory Madden, Earnest | Lawton and myself together, was | ended, “'Come out and get a bite to eat with me, Miss Newton,’ said Law }ton that first day I was so excited that I felt food would choke me, and was about to} tell him so, when Miss Madden | called out as tho going out to lunch | with him wea a regular thing, ‘Oh, le nest! Iam too tired to go out | just rest here until the after-| |noon rehearsal. You can have| something sent in to me from the} restaurant.’ ‘May I stay with you, Miss Mad ‘den? 1 asked impulsively | “She locked up quickly and |seemed about to assent when Mr. | Lawton spoke. ‘I have asked Miss [Newton to take lunch with me, Mary. I'll send you something’ A look of ine ity passed over her foce. “1 don't think I need anything but a pot of cotfee,’ she murmured Run along, child, and amuse his highness while he eats” | “‘Mary!' his sharp exclamation | {fairly cut the air ‘Don't; we #re not still rehears she said, wearily “I went to luncheon with him, |not knowing that we had left be hind a woman who had loved him, jand who was suffering as only a Shall a Judge jing.” will pass from private | membered j answered somewh | tion, 100 miles in all.” wait ownership within ten years woman can suffer who knows she is losing the man she loves. j “But euch ts the irresponsibility | of youth that very se 1 had for.) gotten everything but the man sit ting opposite me—a man who was treating me with the caressing usement he would use to a! ehild—a child who interested hin® | immensely You did that last scene with me splendidly, he exclaimed ‘I hope I shall do it better, 1 said. ‘You see, I am not used to telling a man I love him and I am | |@ little fussed.’ You need never be afraid of telling me you love me.’ I looked up quickly at his tone—‘on the stage,’ he continued smoothly It was only when Mr. Lawton looked at his watch after we had finished, frowning a bit, that I re ‘Oh! we have forgotten Madden's coffee” 1 was mis-| in a minute. Mr. Lawton | t angrily: ‘She out for some by this time. Mary knows I have a very poor memory except for my part and a pretty «irl “His look called the color to my face, and it was still there when we reached the theatre, where the rehearsal had already begun.” (To be continued) RAIL HEAD BACKING WOODROW WILSON CHICAGO, Oct. 16 has probably se President F. | D. Underwood, of the Erie railroad, is for President Wilson's reelec Approving the same idea held by Judge Lovett, of the Union Pa leific, Underwood said in an inter view published tod ay that the dem jocratic party had “achieved the seemingly impossible and is worthy of a future trial.” He expressed himself as not holding the view that Wilson had oppressed big business. Gone Wrong Be Given Another Chance? | DECISION WAS NOT WRONG | Editor The Star: I have care fully read, for the first time, Judge Milo A. Root's opinion in the case | of Harris vs. Great Northern Ry,, reported in 48 Washington Report, | page 437. What's the matter with | it? I cannot see any favor shown the defendant, Great Northern Ry In that », the railway company sought to avoid a damage of over $5 per cwt. on household goods | damaged in transit on the ground ‘that a certain low schedule rate limited the liability of the company to $5 per ewt. or a total damage to the shipment of $214 Judge Root's decision, by Judges Hadley, Crow and Dun bar, affirmed a judgment to Har- ris of $1,454.10 Judges Moun, Rudkin and Fuller- ton, dissenting, stated “the judg ment (of $1,454.10) should be re. versed, with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the (railway company) appellant On rehearing, Judge Root's opin jon was upheld by the entire court The opinion reads to me as tho the shipper was favored in that he was | | not acquainted with the rates and |contract. Print the part you think \is wrong, that the readers may in telligently judge the case for them selves, joined in jother than good, | Root, Let us have fair play, and if Root’s opinion can be shown to be sound law, and I am sure in favor of the shipper, 1 will do all T can to defeat him.’ 1 am not his neighbor CHAS, PETRODDSKY 1204 North 43rd St. CHAS, ETROVITSKY, Bait The Star To query, “Should a Judge, Gone Wrong, Get Another Chance?” and applying it to the case of Milo A would seem to me enough to make a voter blush with shame who would vote for him This was nob the only case in which Root showed himself biased in favor of the corporations, and The Star would perform a real service to the honor of the state of Washfngton if it would investigate | this man, and his acts while on the your } bench, and make it so hot for him that he would have before the election The facts are at Olympia, Mr itor, Get them and expose this scheme to get a tool back on the bench by those whose interest he would serve, and make it thus for ever imposslble for a man of his character to aspire to an office so sacred to our institutions. | A vorrrR, | to withdraw FREDERICK&NELSON Home Pattern 9172 Misses’ One-Piece Dress HE youthful-appearing Dress developed along the lines of the one pictured (Home Pattern 9172) is the styles for Misses. one of season's favorite trim it effectively, or a design colored wools on yoke, cuffs Soutache braid will may be worked in vividly and belt. For size 16, this model requires 534 yards of 36-inch serge and one-half yard of 36-inch satin for collar and cuffs. Home Pattern 9172, Price 15c The Autumn Home Book of Fashions brims with suggestions for smart outer garments that easily developed by even inexperienced needle- Price 25c, with a pattern certificate. First Floor. Window Shades Special: LIVE - GREEN Water Color Shades, mounted on automatic rollers, 3 feet wide and 5 feet 8 inches long, special 3O@ each; 6 feet 8 inches long, special 35¢ each Oil Opaque Shades in olive- green color, mounted on Hartshorn automatic rollers, 3 feet wide and 6 feet 8 inches long, special 5O¢ each. —Firat Floor, Frederick & Nelson Furniture Polish for cleaning and _polish- ing all kinds of fine furn- iture. Does not put a gloss on dull-finished sur- faces. Price, 25¢ and 50c bottle. —Hourewnres Section. Basement can be women. The Wanda Heater HE “Wanda” Heater (pictured) has proved its worth in past seasons to many Seattle homeowners. It burns coal or wood, or both, heats quickly and evenly and is eas- ily regulated. Built for long service, with heavy cast top and heavy blue steel body, and is well-fin- ished in every detail. Three sizes: bottom, With 20-inch $22.50. W ith fire pot. 22-inch fire pot 24-inch fire pot, —Third Floer. Boys’ Union Suits $1.00 OYS' Merino Union Suits in natural color, sizes 6 to 16 years, good, comfortable weight, $1.00. 60 Black Velvet Turbans To Sell at HE Hats in this collection are of the small turban shape es- pecially becoming to matrons, some perfectly plain and others with bow or band self material, requiring no further trimming. Elongated Turbans grain binding Novelty Turbans with upstand- ing points at side. Children’s Underwear 42c Garment ROK in Chil- dren’s Part-wool Vests and Pants, exceptionally low- priced at 42¢ garment. —Basement Salesroom. with gros- sizes Turbans with satin-bound band and bow and other styles—all unusually low-priced at $1.95. —Besement salesroom Cotton Blankets Attractively Low-Priced ARM felted-finish Cotton Blankets, woven of good quality cotton yarn and extra durable, in gray, Size 64x76, $2.25 66x80, $2.05; tan and white. 70x80, $2.95 pair. ‘Three sizes and weights: pair; Plaid Cotton Blankets of good wearing with soft fleecy in blue ind tan and gray and rose combina- size 66x80 inches, $2.45 pair. finish, size 70x80 inches, $3.45 pair. quality, nap, Cotton Blankets for use as bed sheets, in several weights and sizes, white, tan or gray with contrasting border, $1.25, $1.50, $1.65, $1.75 and $1.95 pair. —Basement Salesroom, New Scrim Curtains, $1.20 Pair HESE quality, tions, Plaid Blankets of heavy weight and soft New Outing Flannels, 10c Yard C' JLORED Outing Flannel of a very desirable quality, soft and fleecy a variety of new Curtains are of fine texture and good weight, in durable Serim, in white, patterns. Twenty-seven inches wide. ivory and beige color, finished with 2- 10¢ yard Price inch hemstitched hem and Battenberg Basement Salerroom. border. ‘Two and one-half yards long. Attractively priced at $1.20 pair. —Basement Saicsroom, Linen Initialed Handkerchiefs 15c Each OMEN’S well-finished Linen W Handkerchiefs with '4-inch, hems and well-embroidered initials in the fol lowing letters: A, B, C, D, BG; FL J. K, L, M,N, P, R, S, T and W, at 15@ cach. Ree New Trimmings 15c and 20c Yard IVELTY Silken Braids and Edges so desirable for trimming children’s wool dresses, also the fashionable Metal- at 15¢@ and 20¢@ yard. Basement Salesroom, priced a lic effects, ment Salesroom,