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Pike Street Second Avenue } For here is the “Heathe rhanksgiving doren $1.55 LINEN DAMASK §$1 All-Linen Damask, 62 inches wide with wide Heavy quality with white satin finish in spot design open border. taffeta, in fine poplin brocades, hues of Autumn; So beautiful, Silk Crepe de Chines, and only $1.25 a yard on Wednesday. They'll full 40 inches wide, and idea! for waists, dresses or underwear Crepes and Poplins $1.25 We've 50 pieces of these 40-inch Silk-and-wool Canton Crepes—a splendid, heavy grade, in new and scarcer shades and black-and-white; also Silk and Wool Poplins in pretty plaids, at $1.25 in all conscience, when nsider lately. BED COMFORTERS, 63x74, BED COMFORTERS, 68x76, BED COMFORTERS, EACH, $2 you ¢ 50 OO $1 $2 yea Underwear at 25c | Boys’ and Girls’ Fleeced Shirts | Good heavy and Pants, in gray Or white, | fleece lined; sizes 1 to 6 years. | toes Sizes 8 to 12 years at 3c. Sie Sizes 14 to 16 years at 35c. - Sleeping Garments Boys’ and Girls’ Union Suits, | heavy fleeced cotton, in white or | gray, priced this way | Sizes 2 to 12 years at 50c. Sizes 14 to 16 years at 65c. fingers warm; The k Dollies as g the best o ted Cros en terials are Union Street $1.25 LINEN DAMASK 95c All-Linen Da 70 inches wide, good weight | in smooth fir with neat floral patterns; 95¢ a yard $1.35 LUNCH LOTHS 98¢ All-Linen Hemstitched Lunch Cloths, size 36x36 | inches, with pretty floral patterns; 98o each | $1.75 NAPKINS $1.50 DOZEN Firm weave, smooth finish Linen Napkina, with floral patterns, size 18x18 inches; spectal $1.50 a $3.50 NAPKINS $2.95 dnen good looking yay inen with neat floral patterns and satin finish y satin 2 inches: a doren $4.50 NAPKINS $3. Heavy double Damask 23% inches, wide Extr Broadcloth, for suite and drew Chiffon # patterns $2.00 LINEN DAMASK heavy in good look a lustrous popular colors The patte Daw with dout n THE BON MARCHE Eitiott 4100 Cloths, Alb k Table satin yral pal —Lower Mata Sample Pieces of Fine Silks $1.39 a Yd. surg of $1.50 to $2.50 Dress Silks, All 36 Inches Wide Beautiful yard-wide Dress Silks in bold stripings and broad bars in satin stripe in ombre stripes. some of them are enlivened here and there with a brighter line. Silk Crepe de Chine $1.25 | 52-Inch Broadcloth $2.50 so shimmering and so durable are | colorings are at $2.50 deloth. hes wide and handsome You Can Have New Linen on Your Thanksgiving Table at Little Cost inches, size 63x65 DOZEN Napkins, size floral patterns, 75 DOZEN Napkina, sit6e 234% floral $1.05 inches rd oor Damask, tterns at $1.65 y the deep rich the favorite material of the season a yard. Beautiful, in 25 of the most 40-In. Chiffon Velvet $3.29 an Sample pieces of Chiffon Velve' ed manuf go at PLAID BLANKETS, WHITE BLANKETS, $5.00 w we erstoc $3.29 a yard. and only one piece of each LARGE ALL-WOOI part-wool Union with paten Wavies Underclothes and Stockings for Little Boys and Girls. Children’s Wool Hose | Black Stockings with Merino heels priced according to s from 5 to B'2 at 25c. Sizes from 9 to 92 at 35e. Cashmere Union Suits at 85c “Seconds” Sizes 8 Dr. Denton’s Sleeping Gar- ments at 50c to $1.10, according | Boys’ heavy to size. Made with feet attached, | Suits, natural gray part wool; sanitary and clean. | closed crote ‘ , 25 and Winter Union Suits 10, 12 and 50 grades to keep little also fleece-lined Kid Mittens and Gloves. —Upper Main Fleer. care, any We have a complete | $2.50 Kid Body Dol at $1.95 Kid Body Dolls, 19 Inches | with bisque heads, sleeping | and curly wig; fitted with Roh MaeNTAL | ings and slippers A small deposit will hold the Toys you want selecting now, while stocks are fresh and new Good lines of Children’s Woo! Mittens and Glow Pure Drugs and Toilet Needs at Temptingly Low Prices tall stock green, They m pturer at In Lots of Blankets and Comforters Here Full stocks of good warm Bedding at this store at prices and ¢ that are low enough have been’ soaring $4.75 A PAIR BLANKETS, $6.00 navy, purchased from put half price, to green and black Upper Main Ploor, PR. wer Main Mlowr. Boys’ All-Wool Mackinaws in Sizes 26 to 36, Priced $6.50 The most popular and most suitable Boys’ Coat for all sorts of wear—these are Norfolk style, made of 28- and 32-ounce all-wool materials, in beautiful plaid patterns. MACKINAW OVERCOATS AT $5.00 Splendid warm Coats-for little fellows—the ma- | all-wool in brown plaid patterns. red, tan, gray and are made with the 2% to 10 raglan style sleeves and come in sizes Upper Main Fleer, | Dress Ginghams nd Dre: neat to 10 yards 9c yard. check ngha: Yard * of good quality inches wide patterns; lengths | Shirting Madras 15c Yard 1,000 yards of Shirting Madras, 32 inches wide comes in | White Outing Flannel 6c line of Doll Heads, ength stripe patterns; to 20 yards “i quality W » Outing nel, 24 inches wide; all full not over 12 yards ch —Lower Main Floor 50c size Malvina Ce 25c¢ sfe Freeman’s Fa foream at .......... 29¢ | Powder at ..... 15¢ | 50c size Wisdom’s Robert 7Sc size Ricksecker Toi | ine at .. pos Tees 29¢ | Water, Tiara Lilac, Golf | $1.00 size New bro's. He rpi- | Oueen and Ping Pang.59¢@ | ee st -2200+e OOE | 35. size White Pine Cougl 50c size Danderine, special | <* *" Vhi ir A) \ at 29¢ Remedy at vevcces ae Kirk's 1 Soap, a | $1.00 size Lydia Pinkham’ For Cozy Slumber Bad 5s ves Ge | Vegetable Compound. .65¢ JUTING FLANNEL ie GOWNS HOU BIGANT S rE XQUISITE PERFUMES AND AT 95c PREPARATIONS Made slip-over necks Houbigant’s Iris, for the toilet, | Honbigant’s Ideal Toilet | have scalloped ribbon at A | trimmed extra Houbigant’s Ideal Face Powder | Houbigant’s Rice Powder sizes, 18 to are high neck at.. $3.60 | Houbigant’s Quelque | style and full cut garments Houbigant’s Violette Ideal Face | Extract, per ounce..... Third Floor Powder at $2.45 | 16-ounce size Russian os nal i Fitts Houbigant’s Toilet Powder (Ideal | Oil at Free Lessons in Knitting Reteuen) at Whe | 2he size “Sin-1 Ol, special at and Crocheting Houbigant's Violette Ideal Soap, ive Mrs, Luscomb is with us from each $1.60 ounce size Bay Rum, spectal | th Fleisher arn factor Royal Houbigant’s Soap. .$1. 60 at 10¢ will glad to show you Houbigant’s Ideal Perfume, 2%- | 2-ounce size Senna Leaves, spe to make all sorts of pretty ounce size, at $4.7 cial at 10¢ | things of Fleishe Mais Floor. Art Sh a Bring Your Sick Dolls to the Bon Marché | Doll Hospital | to Be Cured Linen Sale with its special prices in the famous | Linen, despite the high cosi of linens. 3.25 PATTERN CLOTHS $2.50 ur Doll Hospital can fix up all in hort Me Patients are vart being replaced at a small Legs, Wigs and Eyes 14-Inch Kestner Baby Dolls at $5.50 Cunning Baby Dolls with laugh ing mouth and sleeping eyes, short | baby hair and bent limbs; mat finished bodle pe New Hiding. | Christmas time Better do your | —Hasement, This Is Handy Bovine to Have Around Place; Hulls | Walnuts for Her Owner ELYRIA, 0., Nov. 14.—The problem of shucking walnuts without staining the hands has been solved by ©. 0, Merry He has put a cow that is fond af walnut shucks in a pasture In which there is a large walnut tree, The cow chews off the { shuck, swallows it and leaves the nut clean and ready for u {The cow shows no signs of being deranged and gives milk of a superior quality, Merry is looking around for a convenient but- ternut tree, with a view of trying a still more novel experiment, MINERS WOULD HAVE VICIOUS MULE SHOT MONONGAHELA, Pa, Nov, 14.—-Miners employed at the Mangah mine are united on the firm demand that Pat, a vicious mule, be put to death for his many crimes, which to date are little short of actual murder, Vat belongs in the same category with Mis ri Maud, whose , countless victims are too numerous to mention, Pat-—Knockout Pat the miners call him—has sent three men to the hospital within a month, and in each case did it with nigh hind foot ACTRESS WANTS $100,000 FROM ESTATE 4 single blow of his SPRINGFIELD, O., Nov. 14—Katherine Johnstone, New York jactress, and her alster-inlaw, Mra, Helle Johnate have filed five sulte here, seeking $176,000 from the estate of the late John W. Book. | walter, multhmillionatre globe trotter The former claims $100,000, in addition to a bequest of $30,000, tn the will, due for companionship and service during the 24 years of tray time she compiled employer proposed San Reno, Italy, this oling with Mr for Mr. Hookwalter’s marriage to her, sh: cut short the Bookwalter thru Europe, during whic various books, He sets forth, but bis death at arrangements THIS FORTUNE WON'T HELP HIM MUCH ST. LOUIS, Mo, Nov. 14.—John Drocetta of Belleville, Il, either! will have to become fll or die before he can obtain the use of a fortune eft him by hin deceased sister The sister, Mrs, Mary Ganotte, bequeathed one-fourth of a tate of Drocetta. Mrs, Ganotte provided that the share her brother gets is to be placed in the hands of the public administrator and is to be used only for paying bills incurred for sickness and for his funeral SHE OFFERED TO GIVE HER HUBBY AWAY KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 14--Mra, Willlam Doerr offered to give her husband to Mra, Violet Moore, manicure and divorcee, accord to her testimony, when Mrs. Moore sued Doerr and his wife for charging assault. Mra. Doerr testified Mre, Moore refused to take her husband. The assault occurred, Mrs. Moore charges, when she threat ened to tell Mra. Doerr she and Doerr had been friendly HIGH COST OF LIVING FREES INSANE MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga, Nov. 14.—Because of the bigh cost of liv Ing, many of the 200 inmates of the State Hospital for the Insane here those who are not considered “dangerous to society”-—are to be re turned to friends or relatives, or to the counties whence they came his announcement was made here by the tnatitution’s trustees, who | sald the cost of feeding the inmates had incressed 75 in the last year OLDEST ODD FELLOW DIES, AGED 96 BALTIMORE, Md. Nov, 14 The death of James the oldest Odd Fellow in the United States reporte He expired in a Baltimore county hospital, at the age of years, Mr, Stanfield was « retired farmer and had been active until about a year ago. Ho was a} charter member of the Shiloh lodge of Odd Fellows, one of the first | ‘odges of the organization DEER BLINDED BY LIGHT ARE KILLED SACRAMENTO, Cal, Nov. 14—Blinded by the powerful rays of an engine, two deer were run down by a night train on a run over the |i Sierra Nevada mountains, Game Warden Neale says the deer are now making thelr way from the higher altitudes to the canyons for the win-) ter. In their descent they frequently follow the railroad track HAS CHOIR PRACTICE FOR HER FUNERAL FINDLAY, 0., Nov. 14.-—-Mra. Mary Ulion, who died in Findlay re tly, made all arrangements for her funeral, including a quartet to r She had the members come to her house several times during her last days to practice the songs she wished sung at her funeral FIND BONES, MURDER FARM IS SUSPICION WAUKESHA, Win, Nov. 14——The existence of a murder farm on the aite of the historic old Park hotel is believed to have been proved by the finding of the bodies of a man about 25 and a boy of 6 years, according to the resulta of an exhaustive examination. Medical experts declare the bodies have not been interred longer than a dozen years and that they are apparently of white persons CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 GOV. LISTER IS OUT FOR NONPARTISANSHIP also left their impress on his men-| gratitude to the people of this state tal attitude. The governor is more/I am aware of the signal honor responsive to the public at large |they have bestowed upon me—and today, while four years ago it was|I want to be worthy of it. I want to some degree minimized by the|to serve humanitarian interests big debt of gratitude the governor |and also the commercial needs of felt to the democratic PARTY the state. I ask your co-operation,” the| Mothe governor told the King County | injured w year large per cent Stanfield. Pension “The rkman is ent Democratic club Saturday, “so that | tied to ‘first ald’ for hospital and I may be of greater service—to the | medical costs. I hope we can con democratic party? NO. To the) vince the legislature that this is a people broad-minded, helpful piece of leg A Personal Triumph islation, Our children must be r ears ago the governor) given every possible advantage to to Olympia as a surprise tive at home with their mothers— as much to himself as to/and to that noth nd an equitat *. In a three-corner ers’ pension law, based on human two others had absort |itarlan principles, should be en light while Lister won the elec: | acted by a few hundred votes, a man | ely known to have been in the | “It is idle to go about this state fighting sham battles between re publicans and democrats over state This year it is altogether differ-|and county affairs—-when all citt ent. Lister's victory is a personal) zena are alike interested in the one. It is a tribute to him, for he| welfare of the state and have no alone on the state democratic |actual party differences to fight ticket, won out over, To that end—to remove nar Rogers a Democrat, Too rownéss and create a broader out Again the similarity of careers |jook—state and county government of Governora Rogers and Lister 1#] should be nonpartisan. evident. Rogers, like Lister, was Learns State Well 1 democrat, Rogers, like Lister,| “These changes can be brought was the only democrat on the state |about by legislation. But I do not ticket to win out. And it was un-|think the governor's office should der Gov. Rogers that Ernest Lister | be’ limited to mere approval or ve obtained his first training in state |toing of bills, I have been critt affairs, for Lister was secretary cised in some quarters early in the the board of control under Rogers. |campaign because I have traveled Lister was little more than a boy |a great deal about the sta: I be then, but he knew Gov, Rogers and |}ieve it is one of the best things I loved him. He is now, in a new|have done. @ governor should generation, living the Rogers ca-'bhe informed first) hand of condi under present-day conditions. {tions in the state. haps something of that thought] “I shall continue to keep myself was in the governor's mind as he|so informed, and it shall be my aim talked of the future. |to assist, in the moral support the What are my plans?” Lister re-| governor can give, any enterprise peated the question which looks towards the establish Wants to Help State ing of a greater payroll in Wash “They may sound vague to you. |ington, The state needs a perma but to me they are definite,” he nent payroll, Our shipbuilding aid, “and they are summed up in| plants will help a great deal in that the idea that I shall summon all | direction, 1 hope that I can assist my energy towards removing nar-|the various commercial clubs row prejudic nd acting in a|their plans to bring factories here broad-minded way for the interests Happy Over Prohibition of the whole state. “When work is only season “LT have learned a gr deal of | both the employer and the employs human nature in these four years. |seek to gain at the other's expense I have learned much during the |every advantage possible. Perma campaign, Tf have seen tlit most nent work means better conditions men will ¢ id to reason 1\of employment, It creates broad. know that the people, as a whole, | mindedness. want to be fair and just--and they | rejoice in the decisive defeat want to be treated fairly and just-|of the booze bills. Their adoption iy, The public ts grateful for hon-|would have hampered true prog est service, It is only an individ sand Washington wants prog ial here and there who takes the | ress humanity, commercial ad jrank of the ingrate, 1 am full of jvancement.” Dolls Hand-Wrought Sterling Silver Jewelry ANEW iin \ f of Arts & Crafts novel ties in disting tive, hand wrought pat terns with an tique stone setting Phe assortment includ Bar-pin Brooches, La Val lieres and Watch Fobs of various designs, in Sterling Silver. The prices are at tractive: $1.00 to $4.00. A new assortment and me combinatic in antique effect ntere ingly priced from $3.75 t $8.00 ca iret Floor Smart Winter Boots For Women and Misses FEW popular “Lace numbers suggested from stocks that offer the in for and ideas of the moment and combinations, shopping lasts pedestrian, rt dress wear: Eight-inch Lace Boots in biach siazed kid with Nght- or dark-gray kid top, blind eye lets, plain toe and leather Louis heel. Price $8.50 pair. Eight-inch Lace Boots of al! over Parisian-brown kidskin with blind eyelets, fine hand-welted sole and 2inch leather Louls heel, $8.50 pair Eight-inch Lace Boots in a combination of black and white kidskin, with medium-length light close-edged sole and leather Price $7.00 pair —First Floor smart vamp, Louis heel Dining-Room Wall Papers T Dining HOSI re-decorat who include the the plans ill find here selection of Wall appro- priate patterns for this pur- room in their for the holiday season w a large ‘apers in pose. Some very attrac tive patterns for the guest also fe room are atured furnished on AN orders performed by expe Estimates papering and tinting workmen First Floor. rienced RICKENELSON ©: Women’s and Misses’ : New Silk Dresses, $28.75 Very Interesting Values 7 ~ Waa i ord mil pats new Dresses, in Charnteuse, Messaline, Taffeta and pretty combinations of these fabrics with Georgette crepe. There are some styles also, in Georgette crepe combined with A numb have no dupli- ORTY-FIVE é. er of these Dresses cates The prevailing colors are black, rose, navy-blue, green, brown and Copenhagen-blue. Old-Rose Messaline Silk in the full-plaited taupe, i The collar is of lace and suspended from the with re Georgette ¢ ket messaline is ht of the h the $28.75. bag of waistline. Price Taupe or Navy-Blue Charmeuse ss at left. The full gathered skirt ha over the hips and a crush girdle en- he tassel-trimmed collar is of white Ge and this material also finishes the ruffled sleeves at the forearm. Price $28.75. —Second Floor. Basement Salesroom Winter Sports Hats Reduced to $1.50 N extremely low price for these good-looking Hats of French Felt and Velour. They are in becoming sailor models, Tan Rose Navy Light-blue banded with grosgrain ribbon Just 36 in the offering, $1.50. at —Basement JAPANESE SCARFS For Making Combing Jackets 3 for 35c HE sketch shows what an attractive negligee garment can be made from three Japanese Scarfs and a little ribbon, and a fin- ished model for copying s on display in the The Scarfs are print- Japanese designs and fin- e shades, hemstitched 3 for 35e. ished with Price, —Basement Salesroom. New Plush Muffs, $4.50 i. CIALLY the plush-trimmed c s of the season are these New Muffs of soft, deep-pile plush in black and beaver color smart with Large pil- low style and melon shapes with satin cuff at $4.50. priced Basement Salesroom. For greater convenience longer service and better baking The Ohio Steel Range HERI and are numerous special features in the construction to the than The “Ohio” Hot-Blast Firebox an exclusive improvement which ens design of the Ohio Range which com- mend it practical housekeeper » and none is more important ures complete com- bustion of the heating elements § clements which escape unutilized from the firebox of ordinary construction This means better, quicker, cleaner cooking at a smaller cost for fuel "a Four Sizes of Ohio Ranges: priced, with $65.00. complete water connections, at $52.00, $55.00, $59.00 Third Ploor,