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gq shown, eatery INDUSTRY [S BOOMING Church Officer Is Charged With Embezzlement After Fight With Waitress BY R. H. WHITNEY NEW YORK, May 30.-Connecti eut's “non-bigamous bigamy” indus. try continues to flourish! Are you tired of your wife? you tired of your husband? Bother with divorce? If you have no moral scruples You can scurry to Connecticut with the girl or man of your heart, tell &@ We or two, and get married quietly. | They won't prosecute you, or trou. | ble you, or bother you, unless you | remain there over night. If you do that, you're a bigamist; if you dont you are not. STATE TECHNICALITY LEGALIZES BIGAMY That's the technicality in Con Deotiout jurleprudence that has Dinaed the way for half a dozen fmen of more or jess prominence, tn | tioding a New Jersey jurist and a) New York broker, to take unto themseives second wives without i their first wives Tho mtest ts Shubet K. Siver, | a, bt the First Reformed sh Of New Brunswick, N. J.,/ disappeared May 4 | Imvestication disclosed that he bad tloped with Adelie Goyrin, a Young French waltreas of Perth Am- | boy. A warrant tesued after Siver's | @ivappearance charged he had stolen | $5,200 worth of Liberty bonds be | Jonging to the church. } Bix days Inter news came from | Greenwich, Conn, that Sliver and) Mies Gourtn had been married by | Fretice of the Peace Albert S. Mead the day following their departure | from New Brunswick. MOTHER CONSENTED TO DAUGHTER'S MARRIAGE Siver had gone to Greenwich on April 29 and made application for a Neense, under the fiveday law. On May 5 he apy with Miss Gow | rin and handed” Justice Mead an affidavit signed by a Mrs. Katherine Gourin, which gave consent to her @aughter’s marriage, Adelle being under age. In his application, Siver said he was single and that “this is my first marriage.” As a matter of fact Sliver left a ‘wife and two children in his New Brunswick home when he whisked @orthward with Miss Gourin. But the le he told in Connecticut @sn% considered perjury, because, gain, the couple hurried right out ‘ef Connecticut and upon their ar. ftval in New Brunswick Siver pub the banns. Are Why awaits his return to her. Zamm! Angrv Cook Starts SAN MATEO, Cal, May 20.—Hiilda was cook in the James P. Sweeney home, untih— At 2 a. m. the Sweeney family was awakened by what sounded like an earthquake or a regiment of burg lars. They got up to investigate and found— bad access to the chureh deposit vault. One was Siver. On May 10 Prosecutor Joseph Strik. er, of Middlesex county, obtained a | ‘warrant of arrest for Siver, charg: ing him with embezzlement. The Burns Detective Agency was imme- diately hired to find Siver and the Police of the United States were the famity china set as ammunition and the pantry and kitchen walls as targets. And all because the family Siver, when seen | nad been late for dinner the night be in New Brunswick, said | fore, Until 2 o’clock in the morning when her husband's infatuation | she grieved over the insult, then got for Adelle wore off he could return | up and started her protest. to her and she would forgive him.| 1; took two policemen to remove ‘The Siver case is similar to that | rida from the premises. ef Herbert Thornton Andrews, New York broker, who made a second " “in Connecticut and | brought his bride to his own home Hotel Committee of Adelle Gourin, who married Shubel K. Siver, now sought while wife No. 1 confidently }as a Liberty bond embezzler, Dish Barrage H | sion closes today. where both wives lived for a time. And it is similar, too, to the case of former Vice Chancellor Lane, ‘who married Geraldine Garrison Kerr, only to run away, 64 days later, to Starhford, Conn., where he Made another woman his wife. He returned and is living happily with Geraldine, while wife No. 2 lives in Northern New York. No one is prosecuted. C. of C. Will Report The hotel committee of the Cham- | ber of Commerec will submit a re port Tuesday morning to the trus- tees of the chamber, summing up their attitude toward the action of the regents of the Untversity of Washington in rejecting the propos- al of the Metropolitan Building Co to erect a $3,200,000 hotel on the unt versity’s block on which the Metro- politan theatre now stands, { FIVE SHOTS STOP GRIZZLY Gus Cook of Dundee, IUl., claims one of the biggest catches of the Cariboo country in Nort hern British Columbia. It isa grizzly, eight feet long, weighing 800 pounds and having three-inch claws. It took five shots to kill the animal. The last was fired when it was only 10 feet away. THE SEATTLE STAR BIGAMY AS (connecricur Brive No. 2) ‘CURIE DAUGHTER | A SECOND SELF Aids Her Famous Mother in| Laboratory BY MARIAN HALE NEW YORK y 30.—"M. er sald to 6 dren really trade first t « Curie threw back her head and laughed. “And what do you suppore she an ed? ‘I've been reading “Tom Sawyer’ and I want to know if the typteal American child ts wicked.’ | Mother ia #0 curious.” There Irene Curie struck the key | | | | | | | 1 | Tabloid Recruiting on for civMlan summer military camp at American Lake. Washington pioneers to hold an }Rual reunion Tuesday and Wednes day. | ¥. W. C. A. celebrates seventh an niversary of Bainbridge island sum mer camp. | Fpppy campaign of American Le | Supply of 75,000 | jal sold out. Seattle women take up wrestling land reg’lar sports under auspices of YY. W. CA American Rose society given of-| ficial sanction to rose show planned | | here for next month. | Supreme court to render decision | on application of Edgar KE. Mills, Seattle, for retnstatement to bar. “Visions of Cinderella.” dance) spectacie, by children, Shrine audit-/| orium, next Friday and Saturday. Take care in unwrapping your R-rrreef your tops’l, matey! Queen | City Yacht club made initial cruise | of season Sunday on Lake Washing ton. | new auto lcense! Don't lose certifi and unscientific. It ls to protec ple like Eve that p er and I must work in laboratories “Hut Eve is the light in our lives Why should anyone want her to make test all day instead of danc ing? You might as well wish that I danced instead of experimenting “It is all in the great human |drama. iwn’t it? One lifts the cur: | |—well, she THINKS.” note of the impelling motive that has made Madame Marie Curie one of the world’s foremost scientists the discoverer of the world’s most precious substances, radium © apprecta io ly her mother’s second | fl nt working for her de | independent re Irene Curt ae suing hea ator The other aiding her mother in her 6 daughter, Five, visiting America with them, is quite different Eve ts gidd somber Irene nays the simple, Put of that mother and I are glad. Eve is unthinking tain—and one drops it—and that is all. We appointed and we take our place, 1 jf we are wise we do it with the utmost simplicity eferred to Madam Curte's great discovery and to her hus also Was a sclentint with her in her researet “Mother, y men and wo! marry,” she said do better especially same interests and can work to | gether, But, this is important, | mother discovered radium alone! I asked whether her mother op. posed the use of radium for commen clal purposes, believing it all should be conserved for scientific researches | and ures | “Mother thinks only of actenee, not of commerce,” she maid. And to this further inqutry, “What does your mother think of America? thin was the reply We haven't had time to think An answer now would be superficial. | And mother can't be a superficial thinker. If she were nhe never woul are each sinks that better if they! She thinks they | if they have the have solved one of the great secrets superficial women don’t do things like that. When my mother uinks | WITH ONLY 15 DAYS of his sen tence for+ petty larceny unserved, Nels Johnson, prisoner at the county jail, excaped Saturday night from the county hospital, where he was being treated for an injury to his eye. cate, inclosed in small envelope in| package. Seattle boys, members Junior Americans, tks loige juvenile or-/ ganization, initiate Bellingham boys | Saturday | Homing pigeon found at Albernt, Vancouver island, by J. M. Thomp:-| son. Leg bands inscribed F. 7889 and A. J. 20 B. | Trade enterprise and development | of Seattle praised in article in New York Commercial, national trade magazine, | M. M. Dawson, man who told) Uncle Sam how best to insure nol diers and sailors, in Seattle on trip to | Mount Rainier. | | “Seattle's Greatest Needs,” Cor. poration Counsel Walter Meier will | tell Municipal league what's what, | 16:30 p. m., T at Blanc’s | Summer enc pr to be discussed at confere nd Sunday Armory. | 1 Rzesehe 9-year-old| boy chess marvel, to meet local play. | ers in Standard Furniture Co. rug | department June 6, He comes from Warsaw. | Cecil D. Wills, son of Dr. and} Mrs. Park Weed Willis, 1316 Colum. | bia st., elected editor-in-chief Class | Record, year book of University ot] Pennsylvania TUESDAY AND WEI At 10 o'clock, t BEAUTY Thursday and Friday. Attention Girls in front of Winter Garden Theatre. All contestants will be filmed and shown on the screen in this theatre. The winners will appear in person with Mr. Cody on the stage afternoons Wednesday, All contestants be at theatre at 10 o’clock. If you like to whittle you'll appreciate this He's man’s skill. Dan Galvin, Paducah, blacksmith. From one k of pine wood he carved six interlocking rings and at- tached chains. Under the chain is the stick as he started on it. JNESDAY MORNING here will be a CONTEST TheBonMarché MEMBER SEATTLE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU The June White Sales Begin Tuesday Our Best Values in Many Months, and in Several Instances, ‘the Best in Years Pongee Bloomers, 1.95 Chemise, 125 Skirt at 1.00 FRESH, CRISP UNDERMUSLINS- Every Piece Is Brand New—Except One Lot of Philippine Underwear—Reduced 35 Styles SES 1.95 a hiss 1.50 {S—of fine lingeri y tri GOWNS-of fine lingerie cloth, elaborately trimmed GOWNS—f lingerie cloth, trimmed with front and with front and back yokes of lace or embroidery medallions, or of Windsor crepe or flesh-tinted ba- back of lace or embroidery—Windsor crepe gowns in plain colors or flesh or lavender figured. tiste hand-embroidered. CHEMISES—f lingerie cloth with deep yoke, back CHEMISES—front and back trimmed models of - and front elaborately lace or embroidery trimmed, or satin striped batiste in flesh color with medal- lions of embroidered net. SHADOW-PROOF SKIRTS—of sateen with tucked ruffle, or muslin with deep lace flounces. CHEMALOONS—f lingerie cloth trimmed with embroidered medallions, lace edges and ribbons. ENVELOPE CHEMISES—lace, embroidery and ribbon trimmed—1.! 25. A GOWNS—f fine lingerie cloth—six slip-over styles prettily lace-trimmed or made with embroidery. ENVELOPE CHEMISES—with deep yokes of lace insertion and lace edges. SKIRTS—with fitted tops and flounces of wide em- broidery. LOOMERS of flesh batiste—finished lace-trimmed ruffle—5S9¢. ONGEE SILK BLOOMERS, finished with hem- stitched ruffle—1.95. HILIPPINE GOWNS and Chemises—formerly 4.95 —reduced to 3.95. 21 SaleLots of Linens, Bedding,T owels,Fabrics } LONG CLOTH NOW 1.95 BOLT Lingerie finish—in 10-yard bolts. Was 2.25. 35e NAINSOOK NOW 25c 45-inch Nainsook for children’s wear and women’s underwear. 25¢e CHECKED NAINSOOK NOW 19¢ White checks—lengths to 20 yards—386 inches wide. WHITE VOILE AT 30c Fine and sheer, for summer wear—lengths to 20 yards—88 and 40 inches wide—30c for the White Sale. WHITE LAWN 19¢e YARD Fancy White Lawns, 25 inches wide—corded stripes and checks—lengths to 6 yards—was 25c a yard— reduced for the White Sales. 10.75 LINEN TABLE CLOTHS NOW 5.38 Cloths size 68x68 inches—in.dot and floral patterns. 13.50 LINEN NAPKINS 9.75 DOZEN Size 22x22 inches, in dotted and floral patterns. THIRD FLOOR- SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE lingerie cloth. SHADOW-PROOF SKIRTS—f sateen with scale loped hem—for wear with summer or house frocks, STEP:IN drawers of flesh batiste, hand-embroi- — ered, Crepe de 3.95 4 Chine at GOWNS-—Tailored and hemstitched, or made with deep yokes of rich cream lace. CHEMISES—#£laborately trimmed with embroidered Georgette or net medallions—lace and ribbon rosettes—shown in bodice top or built-up shoulders. All are exceptional values. RINCESS SLIPS of fine lingerie cloth with bodice top, elaborately trimmed—2.25. KIRTS OF FINE MUSLIN—deep flounce of lace insertion and edge—2.95. 4 121%4¢ HUCK TOWELS 10¢c EACH All-white Huck Towels—size 15x34 Inches, 20e HUCK TOWELS NOW 15e¢ White Huck Towels with red border—16x82 inches, TURKISH TOWELS NOW 85c Well bleached Turkish Towels—19x89 inches—good ]} weight—formerly 40c each. | SEAMED BLEACHED SHEETS 89¢ Made from medium weight muslin—72x90 inches before hemming. PILLOW CASES 19¢ EACH Made from light weight muslin—size 42x36 inches. BED SPREADS 1.95 EACH m” White Honeycomb Bed Spreads—size 74x85 inches. -THR BON MARCHE