The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 12, 1924, Page 10

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_ THE SEATTLE STAR ¢ a —= { oe | IE Xpo Girl Makes Candy eae i THE BON MARCHE | fe 115 Smart Silk acai Wool Pressmen Offer Aid to Men Autoist Gets Little Chance in Newspaper Strike to Defend Himself ® Reduced One-Third a cove $6,000,000 | auce _Year Reduced to 1 Navy Canton Crepe $50.00 1 Orchid Georgette Crepe 16. é 1 Oyster Roshanara Sport Dres } Georgette and Satin—Black 2 Navy Blue Satin Models ~ 1 Cocoa Brown Canton Crepe 1 Navy Blue Georgette Fine Quality Crepe Dresses 30 Roshanara Crepe and Georgette } Roshanara Crepe and Georgette 7 Roshanara Crepe and Georgette 4 Satin and Crepe Dresses 26 Roshanara Crepe and Taffeta 2 Wool Charmeen Navy and Artichoke 2 Dresses in Woolen Sport Fabric 3 Charmeen in Navy Blue / 11 Sportwool and Charmeen { r\ 3 In fine quality Sportwool | 9 Twill Dresses—attractive models 16.50 Y \\ Sec Floor—The Bon Marche Babies’ Slipover Sweaters $ 1 2 Special , In link-and-link knit; in collar; in sizes 1 to 3 years only. Infants’ Short White Dresses | Reduced One-Fourth | A Special Group—Specially Priced! Tailored 2. 4 5 Summer Felts Pacific Fleet Ends Maneuvers SAN PEDRO, ¢ b Fs The Pacific coast fie He maneuve fon. The ¢ eeption of part. The beard 50 ieone of the the when she candy m is filling containers with some candy produced in 3 ckiest girl in town tried her h ng at the Imperial Candy company. Here she}! of the $6,000,000 worth of Seattle every year } self tan and blue. Large rt busin in Hawailt not Io vestigate the of Seattle. | names of the sition Me andy-mak industry ————————————— Haga Made of Voile, Organdie and fine Nainsook. There are both hand and machine made among the lot 4 touches of hand embroidery on the machine made, B THE BON MARCHE and hand smocking and tiny rosebuds of colored em MENT broidery on the hand-made models. Sizes 1 to 3 years 27-Inch Khaki, 25c We'll give you a cool Job.” Tom f Pakage Lg Agathe ett Spel 1,000 yards; good, heavy quality; 27 inches wide; in LEAN-CUT, well blocked felt hats! Nothing could meet more whole-heartedly the varying demands of summer sport and street wear than this versatile mil- linery. Finely blocked, and trimmed with grosgrain rib- bons and dashing buckles. In the candies were awaiting being packed nto Jara And nhe did her y industry lengths to 10 yards gid a5 Sheeting 29¢ Bates’ Crepe 20¢ wanted sands, cocoas and blacks of summer! Third Floor—The Bon Marche the state h about $4.0 in Seattle Third Floor—The Bon Marche D R E S S E Si A mBR ep ting pal Cretonnes! Curtainings! nd we ma And All! DOTTED AND Curtains! ra eet FIGURED 89 TELLS WHY COPS Camp Pillow Cretonnes | Appropriate and Inexpensive for Summer Homes | 36-Inch Newest Cretonnes Hy Sizes Gay Cretonne of sae x q 4 for any rooms, ex com yr NEED AID Wa sled to its or for ZO | grenine a wise wey wt, BOC 200 Dresses! a Allover Patter cacy em Pa - Severyns Says Public Can : Neat de 3 5 C Plain Marquisette, a Yard 35 Styles! All Bargains Help. Offivers 32-Piece open meshes ice 25e iy er Da De Lace and embroidery trim—scalloped inp Cottage Set i ble quality for "Sim © camps and To be Dad in skirts—velv. i aIts—side panels “The policeman under th skirts—velvet ribbon belts—side panel iNigadtn rad Cha papas opie Marquisette Gabtaane: Pos $1 4“ with lace insertion—triple pleated tier effects with lace insertion—lace yokes, collars and cuffs, Rose, peach, scarlet, jade, navy, brown, peacock, green, black and lavender miscond dividual when make a man of him. That, according to Chief of Police W. B. Severyns, is the root of all criticism directed against the police fores; In an address before the Seat tle Retail Grocers’ absocis Masonic club room: night, Severyns outlined his qua yrat Neatly hemsti Hemstitched iceable. viceable edges Crossbar Marquisette, Pr. $1.65 and trimmed White, tched and trimmed with good, ser White, cream and ecru with and ecru edge: very cream yards Ruffled Voile Marquisette 45c Plain dot and block designs—suntast colored edges in blue, rose and gol police problems “The public can aid by W SHIPMENT! getting ac quainted emuan, his “ ” = ty screen Sig lle emrig Maxecon’’ Garden Hose | Printed Oil Cloth Covers 75c Ww P Si Ik Th ad the ‘public should refrain from un 25 feet 83.45 Table ollcloth covers, for square or round tables omen’ s ure | réa just criticism and prejudice. Crit! 50 feet $6.75 different dosigns—in blue—45-inch: size. A better quality corrugated black molded Garden Hose. Made by “Goodrich” Rubber Company % inch in diameter. Complete with coupling Union St. Basement cism where it is due, but when Jt ts not due, let the officer alone. “If the public wanta better officers they should demand better men andi give them more an incentive for honesty. The smart and educated man does ne want work on the police force because of the criticism and the low s rd of pay. | “When the individual falls by the wayside the policeman alone {s | blamed “for him delinquency. But if they take their proportion of blame, | f0 should the home—the greatest fac. | tor of all—and the schools .and the| GLASSIC Music BILL SLATED Couch Covers, Each $1.75 Roman striped of blue Fringed all around, Fourth STOCKINGS, 1,080 Pairs - Seamless feet—triple seam backs — elastic lisle fore —in black and the popular summer shades—sizes 8 95° IDEAL BLANKETS FOR CAMPING! 53 Single Plaid Cotton Sheet’ 51 Double Plaid Cotton Sheet BLANKETS 93° BLANKETS $4 .95/)) —SECONDS— —SECONDS— EACH PAIR 66x80 66x80 ae na at dia Bargain Prices! and green combinations. for summer camps. Floor—The Bon Marche PIKE STREET — SECOND AVENUE — UNION STREET — SEATTLE The Fourth Horseman Rides Park Board Head Explains | New Drive Plans leg was injured. An accident while riding the rails was the cause. He was sick, Pestilence had ridden his life. It had been years s the first two horsemen had trampled on him, but the third one came Century crawled under an old wagon in R. E. McConaghy’s tr: fer yard at Occidental and M chusetts we ea Feapiancs: Trample venee * Hoofbeats Pound in Seattle Purchase of the waterfront be- s. He wouldn't a h Te |tween Luna park and the light+| McConaghy's offers of uid. He got erchants’ Association to | now, to come before the city coun Sota @iliprobably next week, is. neces-| BY FIELDING LEMMON In the days that followed “came| MeConaghy called the police Present KFOA Program | ; porty now | THREE of the dreaded Four} the second horseman, Famine. And {After Century had been there 500 Ss jsary to protect’ park property no’ Horsemen of the Apocalypse} this member of the quortet left on | dy or two, and asked them to ta | Mac c | Arranged by the Seattle commu. Mra. Mac Ay lowned by the city, }have run their destructive cue te soul of Louts the him to the hospital, The police df memory of nity Service for the Metropolitan Mer- | Wilkins, acting chairman of the |over the life of Louis Century, Un-|hungry and anguished nights, of {Rothing. McConaghy called again Si es atent chant ciation, the following |poard of park commissionors de-|er their cruel hoofs have been | pleadings for food, of the pitiful |@nd again. Finally the police be: iY 4 radio program will be given at sti-| cared Thursday trampled and crushed the dreams | scenes of his brothers and sisters |eame angry at being bothered by a | |tion Fthodes store, Friday | “Te eee and hopes ofa lifetime. crying for nourishment, and of his| the request to aid a sick man 5 to 8\ an | | evening, 8:30 o'clock “Tho park board has endorsed the; WAR CAME FIRST, and the;mother standing up thru it all! “Duya think we're nursemaids?’ “the ‘Tr piook| Proposal, which includes construc: |horseman's toll was Louis’ father.|and mothering the brood. they asked McConaghy. John A. Alleman, violin; Miss sarah | tion of a bulkhead, or sea wall, to] | FAMINE followed, and Louis und) Louls worked in the vineyards as} SO McConaghy called the health _ Knlaiit, plano; Geo, Gregory, cello. | protect AIKI ti or Marine drive, {Other hungry mouths cried and|a boy, He was also in the army for|@epartment and an ambulance was and directed by Mme. ¥ te las it will be known,” Mrs. Wilking | begged for a while, but the dreaded shadow of |Sent to the place. The ambulance izes } " nr of the Beattie Civic Aympnony | Ly I, niLw the third of the|the Hirst of the’ Horsemen made | drivers held a conference and then Not all sizes | ereumetan Aira’ Wientawacy | “Unless a bulkhead 4s conatructed | horssimen: bor dowel on kylie in /hbm ie it jlett without taking Century, 84 to H A Aba Galina init evens slong the avenue, tho city's bath. | his In ars and wasted away| Beforo he was 30 yeara old he ednesday the country author in all styles | Violin 1 “Alleman: ling beach at Alki is in danger from |!8 once powerful frame: came to America, hoping that here} ties promised to remove the man to 14 to 2\ : Vite uea atk Alot % higar | storms, Large sections of the drive| And now, in tho offing, inevitable |he could cast Into oblivion the|the county hospital John ¥. Alleman, violin; Mis Sarah | 1) been washed out in the past |/“nd dreadful, comes the o| memory of Kamine, He went to} Sy ere IT Str | |" Knight, piano; Geo, Greory, colle. land the entire. street ts in a pre. | hoofbeats of the fourth and last of |California and found a happy niche} (ENTURY na survived: three One ap wo aps} I violin Concerto: cul eorialtion the horsemen—DBHATH |for himself in the vineyards. the horsomen. For 64 years Sandal St les! A Be ay eA a re kate Wen Aw Oy, Paying on the street was com-| He waits the coming in Soattle Veanen, nrentattion Louis had Cin baffled the fourth, But. the y E Wiest ‘ pleted last 3 and the drive | SM te WRN iA pa livelihood and |jast of them is approaching. Every ts! MSR UX kid Be TeTC ahd Rokeds should be protected for Its 3 ot 1s CENTURY was born inj Ms prosperity was not what it v day his hoof s sound loude Fancy Cut- US) J. Mayer | possibilities," France, near Nancy, in 1860, | (ime. It grew worse and|Century is a very sick man. Soon K acoompantat, | pan ot long afterward camo the Fran-| Worse. Finally he took to the road}the fourth horseman—Death—will ki ; ¥ vere ANNERLY TALE Se bite it And the Horse, {4nd began to tramp from city t Plain patents and kids, and many with combinations of red. All have hand- PONE ; EE can ieore Tie eaniee fe ride over Century life. f sven CARE Pn | “Wille, have you no manners?” |inan of War rode over the Century | ty pen whieh ick. turned soles and spring heels-—sizes 1114 to 2 have low heels. Heattle} “Woll, If T waste them now I}home and it waa loft futherless a hte By di valuation nak Count See ‘@ vl won't have any when company |'The monster left in the heart of |[HREE weeks ago Louis Century |iytion t gee Mins aieeeant penitt comes, Boston Lranseript, }Louls a hate for war crawled into Seattle, His right incubator before st storing it away,

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