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eI ae THE SEATTLE |tablished by Mrs, C,H. Anson, who belle she has solved the high > leost of living problem, It was a five-course dinner and everyone was happy. News of the Day Condensed for Busy People sas | Negotiations were yesterday amer Governor, of the Pa- poor return, according to Peter|Closed with the American Mail cific Uoast Mteamehip campony, ar-)Vichos, who’ invited a homeless | Ste mehip company by the peer rived in port t night from San /stranger to share his dwelling, A/ Pacific Steamship ¢ mens aos = Francisco w and arrel followed purebase of the steamer Admira re Farragut, She will be brought © Reavy cargo of ae oy ava around the Horn at once and placed dine, She reported a fine trl — | Oaktand, Cal—A burglar burgled | on the Seattle-San Franciaco run. tea F E. @. Crook, af 7A2 West happened here when J an ranciece.—— TOOR, tne wake and und a man} Colorado man, believes in| t tleon Awakened AeA le house, A|_ Plirtations Walter Few was fairness. off a boat A chase, a seuffie and the **Une to the extent of for his he found his wallet, containing $150, | hurgtar’s hands went up before his|™#hing prociivities. Walter stop missing. Then a stranger stepped | own gun }ped two elderly women Saturday up and handed him $20. night, but he stopped the wrong ones, Sergeants Kent and Wilkes way | Portland, Or.—"This le a much! gathered him in and Judge Sil Portland, Or.—“Help, I've scalped me »mfortable place than I ex-|baugh did the rest @ man!" shouted Thor Johnson, | pected,” sald Mra. W. T. Rowse, in slightly elevated, rushing into the |carcerated in jail for refusing to] The bathing house at Aiki beach police station with a wik in his tell the whereabouts of her L-year-!nad been cloned the senaea, Of hand. Investigation proved he had| oid daughter You'll wait some ter a remarkably successful sum: snatched it from the head of a bar /¢ime before I tell you what you| mer, Since June, the opening day, tender . 60,522 people have donned bathing i | " |wults and enjoyed the waters, The San Francisco.—Kindness repaid) Monrovia, Cal.—-A dinner for 23) attendance at band concerts has im the form of a fractured skull is/at a cost of $2.12 in the record os | want to know [been estimated at 300,000, ON WEDNESDAY— —At The Bon Marche’s— Department Buyers’ Sale I Will Give Bargains in Corsets Such Emma Aa orse as Are Not Often Given ©~~~< a —$3.00 Corsets For—— Cc. Ba La Bpirite $2. 00 iylor Corsets broche, in heavy satin finish pale pink and blue, medium ‘ bust with draw string and | jong skirt Size to 26 at $2.00 instead of $3. } 7% B. & J. Brassleres for $1.00 to $3.00 Ferris Samples at BR and J of strong Hrassieres, made batiate boned” with d0e |] walohn, button and cross in the back. Ye f lnene thy walets edged with lace, sizes 34 to 44 % 50 Corsets, All Sizes, at " Brassieres of Cambric for Seomen. ong skirt ft ab g of x wines, 39¢ value at Ibe Second Mieer, Wear? 1 do it for a twe-fold reason foremost—at this big buyers’ sale of buyer has to give tet ours every good bs as oF else take @ back seat and other departments forge ahead i want every mother with little folks needs of the O Poca || 'Girls’ $1.50 Tub Dresses Priced at Q8 | Children's $5. 50 to $6.95 Coats Priced r rey breasted and w to clothe to know how well we look after the little ones, And so I cut the prices quite deeply that while it means money lost mean trade gained later knowing will now—it Giris ool dresses of an excellent quality of percale, in pretty pla nd cheeks, trimmed with plain materia to match. Have ocean pearl Luttons and tcops of w braid sea § to 14 years SH 95 $3.69 Wool Dresses $1. 19 | “50 and 15 Rompers at 29¢ Giri Greene made of Danish | iren’s rompers of plain or checked ging checks, rt Oe with Fr 10 and 12 years ered pants; stzes € years at 59¢ Dresses at 45e Each dren's little wash dre ble gingham with sleeves with plaited skirts ibe Drawers Priced 10c with three tucks né in sixew 2 to 13 Second Floor, A $20 Talking Machine $14.15 And this price includes one double face record, needies and a needic box— on, made of and » to 6 years lin drawers hem a pair, Biases value 15¢ for I want to place one of our new “Bon” talking machines in every home in Seattle— At last I have reached the goal 1 have long been striving 7 for—to be able to give you a’ Dp real bargain in a good talk ing machine. THIS $20 TALKING MA- CHINE IS MADE OF GOLDEN OAK— it is hornless and will : take any 10 or 12-inch disc rec- ord, it has the new swivel sounding box and can be wound while playing—it is made especially for us by one of the best makers of talking ma- chines in America—and is « Twas TALE lee Prices le Raserd: Albums 10-Inch Album 98¢ 12-Inch Album $1.49 No contract ge are included in this rale—Vourth floor Pike St, Side. a Your records with J I get all the new wore world beater for the | longer ti No: records a8 #00n as rl ter for money. pe we path war waa just come in and hear your fa- vorite record on it. with gilt titles and and will hold 16 F they are issued. Ze Outing Flannel Special fe a Yd. 2,000 yards of outing flannel Look Out For The Bon Marche’s Autumn Style 10¢ Nurses’ Gingham Special |] | 6c a Yd. | Inches wide’ in checks and {Tomorrow T will welt 6,000 yards Inches wide” tn ch ad of nurses’ stripe ginghame 27 Not over 15 yards to each io each. Wanemects, ST 8 Te Rot to each. Basement. a Aang? | Thos. Goldie. Sept. 16-17-18 Thos. Goldie. OUR BUYERS ARE GIVING THE BARGAINS NOW, ooMARCHE ONE ENTIRE BLOCK ON SECOND AVENUE FROM PIKE STREET TO UNION STREET | production of “ * \* ‘|ACTOR’S MOTHER THOUGHT © HIM IMPOSTER AT $15 PER} OWEN M'GIVENEY AS” Talk about your rapid rises from to affiuvence. Here's a kyrocket career that has | the clones story of the California bonanza days beaten a mile. A dozen years ago Owen MeGiveney, the quick change hting and at the Orpheum this week by play- ing five characters in his one-man iit Sykes.” wae a farmer | do! the chor tending the herds on a amali farm in the north of Ireland. Uo to that time @ sock or shoe had never been on his foot. it is with a mixture of pride that he has never schooling In his life. when he is but 26 yeare old, he is had a day's ponents of Sh ens living. As @ farmer boy McGiveney was not even a dreamer or a reader Like Topsy, he “just growed,” and be was 20 years old when the latent histrionic talent in him came to the surface with a rush, Aa he pute it himaetf, “I wae like Kipling’ fool, followed hin natural bent.” MoGiveney started doing Shales pearian monologues for the benefit of students in English colleges in order to familiarize them with: the characters and the lines, and en able them to pase their examina tions In literature This work was and poorly paid, and M turned longing eyes toward the Set ter remuneration of the profession al stage. It was not until two years peare and Dick- long and hard ago that he was asked to take o amal! rt in a sem!-profeesienal production of “My Sweethedrt,” and an English manager who éaw it immediately offered him # better part In a larger play. Hie suceess started from that point. He speeial ized in Shakespeare and Dickens, and today stands without a peer In quick change productions from their} AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Moore—Gilbert @ Sullivan Oper era Co. in “The Mikado.” Metropolitan—McKee Rankip in Peace on Earth.” Seattle—The Pollards In “Ser geant Brue.” Alhambra — Photoplays vaudeville. Orpheum — and Vaudeville. Grand—Vaudeville and motion pictures. Clemmer—Photoplcys and vag deville. Melbourne-—Photoplays and vau deville. RARER KK AT THE PANTAGES * * ee ee ee ee ee el Featured by “A Monkey Hippo-} drome,” the bill at the Pantages this; week is unusually good, A monkey which leaps from a swinging trape high in the air to anotiver one is the most interesting feature of this number. Next in quality comes Earl Dewey and his Four Dancing Dolls. The dolls scored a bit hit, and Dewey's) work Was appreciatable, Arthur} | Pearce and Gladys Van are a clever) |pair, “The Law,” @ comic sketen with Chot Eldridge and Harriet) Barlow, is a laugh getter, Georgia Davis and Watson Scott, in songs and dances, are pleasing. The three Sinclairs are good tumblers, Ce i i i ol le a a a a AT THE ORPHEUM see tet te tk ttt tte tt tk Local heroes of the fourrownd arena are advised to go to the! Or- pheum this week and from “Australian Bob, the kid with the kick in four hands.” Bob t# a big kangaroo, who appears cin as laughable and clever an entertain- ment a8 any animal act ever-ehown) He Is ably assisted by | in this city, the Gordon punchers, Lowe and De \the regulation bell ‘turn, while ong of the hitg of loventig 18 “Fagan? Decision; Brothers, expert bag - audience whom it is hard to con Yet today,| regarded as one of the greatest ex: take tips | Vere do} boy daneing) “NANCY” AND “FAGIN” | He will leave the stage by the “Nancy,” and person would have time to cross behind the scencs,| will appear at the opposite entrance aa “Pagin.” There are those in the|f] vinoe it is the tame man. MocGive | ney ascribes his success to system }He has bis brother and another “dresser” who yank hin makeup from him Instantly upon leaving the stage, and who have the makeup for |} his next character laid out in sys-| tematic order to conserve every second of time He is never from the # more than 10 seconds in any change ] “My father is dead.” said Me Giveney, “but my old mother is stil! living in the little thatched cottage on the little farm in the north of Ireland. But ehe hi I the com-| forts in the world now. | take care of that. When | first began to make ae much as $15 a week in a Londen music hall, and gave her the greater part of it, she was amazed, and was fearful thet | was imposing on the public to take that much money for what | was doing. Now | am making several dollars more than $15 a week, and mother still gets her share of it, and while she never refuses to take what | send her, | have a feeling that she stilt thinks | am imposter to make as much money as ! do. j “[ was never struck by the! glamor of the stage. Before I went to it I knew it was a hard, tedious grind, but I saw that it was the only way to turn my talent for quick changing and acting into real money, and even now | far that my acting loses some of the power in the changes. A man cannot give the best in him when he is always figuring on slipping out of his clothes the next minute and hooking up into something entirely differe in the shortest space of time. [ut Be "Il agree with me that it n a bit with the audience tions t the request “ot the au nee, assisted by Mabel MecCane, who has a splendid voice. Owen M |Giveney {s easily the headliner of the bill, appearing in a bit from | Oliver Twist, and carrying on the actions of five characters by his marvelously quick changes. His | production ts a classic. Delro fair- jly makes the Piano Accordeon talk and talk sweetly, while the La Maze | Trio have a funny and clever tum- | bling turn. The news of the world is told in the movies. | | Re Se re Ye + * AT THE EMPRESS * \* * indie din Mindi india tin ieee tei te The Empress puts over some good ones this week pre's lots of snap in the bMl, and the acts are | all of unusual merit. The headliner, “The Pool Room,” is fine. It is a | dramatic little slice of the under | world, with a good lesson for t young man in the plot. Charles| *| Wildish as the crook who “got” a man he was “sticking up,” and|ff jlater took to dope, is gruesomely ||} ood i McRae and Levering do trick bi-|f cyclo riding that Is excellent. They | present a pleasing combination of || | comedy and skill. A song and dance|f jact by Marie Hylands and Con | | |stance Farmer was well received, | They close with a clever medley of} popular songs. “Scenes Behind the Scen shown by John Delmore and Olt Adair, as exceedingly funny.) Frank Scott and Harry Wilson, i] centric funmakers, sure do a lot of | fun, to the amusement of the aud. | fence. Hugh Loyd shows the aud- |tence that e @ rope walker can| | spring something new « Alaska gold nuggets, mounted oni stick pins, will be favors at a ban-| quet given to the American Asso- i | | ciation of General Passenger and | | H | Tie ket Agents, which meets in Se. attle Thureday. | The biggest “shipment of canned | salmon from the North this season ia coming on the steamship Cor-| dova. She comes from Southeast ern Alaska, with 46,000 cases of the canned fish, A CHORD OF woop, * |playlet presented by Claud i@nd| Smith — Sappingtsi-22' a voice {If Fannie Usher, Joseph BE. Howard,|of wonderful tlanfe, \) composer of a score or more papa: | Joneé It's not surprising — | lar ballads, sings his own compost: he's «tith a eee | STAR The Fali stocks are n mplete, and we h ness for your choosing ovep twenty thousand yards of new Cretonnes, in an 1 rar of « » flowered patterns that suggest t end pe jilities for dainty curt and portieres, box The qualities have been chosen with care fre best est d foreign sources The prices 1 1 25c, 35c, 45c, 50c and 65 | IFREDERICK & NELSON] ! Now Is the Time to Select Cretonnes rr Taos et a HE pretty Cretonne-furnished room you have been longing for may wel} be planned now, for it is during the somber winter months that the cheer will be appreciated to the fullest. 1T iness of such a room —First Floor, Annem | 9x 12 Chenille Axminster Rugs | Special $30.00 ster Rug mate of Axmi Chenille A will give long se is the thet grade It is a wook back, worsted face Rug with deep pile, and ice under severe co The designs are copies of fine Oriental carpets, and the colorings cleverly repred he spirit of the originals To close out discontinued patterns, we offer a e Oxl2-ft price—$30.00. On Sale in the Rug Section, Second Floor, Annex. mited number of these fine Rugs, size, patterns suitable for livir office— ig room, dining-room or at an excepti low . | Added to Fall Displays in Women’s and Misses’ Wea NEW SUITS FOR WOMEN, AT $35.00— wale Serges, Chevidts, Silk-mixed Worsteds, in plain-tailored, Nori effects, featuring new two-tone ‘ the staple black, grays and bro Price $35.00. —distinctive styles in Wide Dig onals and and demi-trimmed and combinatic 34 to 42 NEW 45-INCH COATS, $15.00, $18.50 and $25.0 navy, Sizes the arter-length C in smart heviots and tan and t measurement. NEW WALKING AND AFTERNOON DRESSES; WOMEN’S AND MISSES'’— cl 1 har corduroy ; ar three-qui n mixtures, ions in eolienne, charm black p riginal erea white, Sizes 16 and 18; $25.00 and up to $45.00, NEW SILK WAISTS, $4.95 AND UPWARD— smart tailored and semi-tailored Waists of soft chil taffeta in the new plaid and Persian effects, also a and black. Excellent values” and tine tan, 34 to 42. gray, Attractively brown, upe I Ss range of plain colors, including browns, tured at $4.95, NEW SCHOOL AND DRESS COATS FOR GIRLS— corduroys, broadcloths, 1, tan grays, and $10.00. navy English tweeds and herringbone orfolk styles with fitted in velvet and buttons. stripe coatings in collar, also loose effects # Prices, card brown, and ¢ sailor collar tastefully trimmed $11.50, $13.50, $15.00 and $17.50. Sizes 6 to 14 years. Items From Various Sectiongy BOYS’ RUSSIAN SUITS —in good quality blue | NEW SERVING TRAYS brown and | — Second Floor. be : WOMEN’S BLAZER-STRIPE OUTING | _ 1”. S°!"! oF silver, under gl pe SHIRTS fit 3 s BATH SALTS— made of French flannel, and white, black and white, —of superior qual galatea, -in walnut and ebonized finish, am embossed stripes, sizes 214 to 5 years, leather mat, hand-¢i in light- blue cardi- nal and navy, navy and white, and car- jars, violet, lavender and ¢ dinal and white combinations. Price, odors, $1.25, —First 00. —second Pioor. | AN IRON GRATE FOR YOUR PLACE —a practical electric Curling Iron, three new patterns in black @ with cord and plug for attachment to 20 to 30 Price $3.7. —First Floor. inished ; $5.00 and $8.00. Housefurnishings heavy and well-f electric light socket, wide, any i “ELECTROCURL” | Mocha Gloves, Special $1.15 Pr. MEN'S clasp, in black, Mocha SILK AND CHAMOISETTE GLOVES, SPECIAL 35¢ PAIR Women's Two-clasp Silk Gloves, double- Arabian Gloves, with soft, velvety surface, pique sewn, Wi and tan. Special values at $1.15 pair. LONG AND SHORT SILK G SPECIAL 65¢ PAIR Sixteen-button Milanese Gloves in pongee-color. with doub Short Silk Special 65¢ pair. length tipped, in tan, brown, pongee, pink, sky-blue and lavender, also two-clasp Chamoisette finge also Gloves shades, chamois color—broken Special, 35¢ pair. ' Gloves in natural sizes and colors-