The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 11, 1912, Page 8

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a a ~ sn Full Speed Ahead at The Department Buyers’ Sale For the Buyers Are Bringing Out Many Notable Bargains—For a Bumper Thursday Bon Marche’s The Lining and Wash Goods Buyers Offer Two Good Ones 20c Heavy Lustrous Black Sateen, a Yd. Heavy lustrous black sateen, fine for waist linings or children’s bloom ers. I will sell the 20¢ quality to- morrow at Sc a yard Comes in lengths from 1 to 10 yards. It always comes in handy, so better get a sup ply now. Main Floor. jo jt J.J. SHEA «: Buyer of Linings * Dress Goods and Silks Bargains in Laces and Embroideries GK Mex 35c¢ to 75c Fancy Laces yd bands and edges, widths Fancy trimmi euch net Oriental and up to € in and ecru at 2 25c and 35c Cotton Laces 2,500 yards of 10¢ Inches cream and oe lace cdges and t embroidered mat ie a in white Thomas Goldie Domestic& Linen Buyer The Bon Marche’s Autumn Fash- ion nd a yard bite widths up to 6 Both openwork a designs to select yard 15c and 25c Embroideries I have 2.000 yarda of these fine Swiss and nainsook broidery edges, bands a alloons, in widtha up “oe blind and openwork de and Wea with strong scallops. Malm Sept. 16th, 17th and date open. B ———— Iles arin) ‘ nut eet gt 7 Rauway, ) BON eel FoR Gnocrny BUYERS Third and last car of those famous Yakima “Elberta” peaches—at 45c a box this time, while they last —from 60 to 72 delicious freestone peaches in prime con dition in each box—Come if you can—~if not, phone your order in. 1 will see that you get good fruit. fous for wheat cakes, Pretzels, fresh from one of the 2% cans for largest bakeries, 5c Oc No. kind, tomorrow, Ib..... Orange 0, regular Ibe packages, ideal beve fechas vee: 10¢ | Mayflower Coffee, fr Bakery roasted | DAY } ying 3 pounds 25¢ | Extra Special in the | 22c Silkot Silks 25 and 27 Ins. Wide pot, with “ sitke, 4.000 : yard, at 160. Also mill pieces In good lengths, worth I 2c o yard, | h width On in. te school Domestic Prices 7¢ Comfort Prints, a yard Once Again I Cut 121ic Suitings 27 in. wide oth in neat patterns, dots, sprays, checks and stripes: Not over 20 yards to each at Sc @ ard of Fine “Elberta” Peaches This Time I Will Sell Them at Abe A BOX aT THE SALE GFilastings 1 Grocer tf ae > | Spanish Queen Olives, larwe bot - | thee, regular 20c bottles j Carnation Milk, 7c can) | Noi. bortic 15¢ | Violet Oats, 9c pkg. Leone Muscatel late eo, Je a can for Carnation ik ‘omorrow I will sell Violet) when ordered with other | Oats at 9° a package. Not] cerien. Not over & cans to) | K. ©; hakinn Powder, d-ounce | | ° packages to each. | each. | | cans, for this sale, 9c | - | « Norgbum, Ferndell, delic Supreme or Wild Pore Lard, i Brand, guar No. 10 eod strietly 1 teed to pi =i! Fresh Bees, fine qual daa gonranioea ta’ ple will go tomorrow $6e Kind, pound . 2c | Two-layer cakes 19c) denen Ts Tic teed quality, ton fee a cakes 27c| | If Salaml, the genuine, for Guod quaaiy, ter Me enta.'s cae. Oe | ale, @ 2c Per | s hole , New Teas “Your c mph © of our tn th in 4 I regular 60¢ grades for ‘ this sale . c | Ammonta,/ extra strong. phish Guava Jelly, Mra. Kern's beat Bulk Peanat Batter, Rogers rade, for none better, 22i¢ | ctighrated brand, teeny hursday bans 2¢ pt ees 2 | Cc Bloetn; large Senee” | 1c Doughnuts 12c al | dozen | Java and Mocha Cake doughnuts, our x. ie lar Ihe Kind, on sale tomor-| | properly blended s $1 row at 12¢ a doz Feahly roasted, 3 Ibe . aenonacenee eres ~ pound 3 ea oh LOTS MORE GOOD THINGS HERE THURSDAY AS WELL AS THESE, sosMARCHE ONE ENTIRE BLOCK ON SECOND AVENUE FROM PIKE STREET TO UNION STREET or to~ | | | | | 2C Sample Tea at 23ca | A mixture of green black tea Of all kinds tomors row at 2 @ pound. THE SEATTLE STAR Bubsorivbers to The Seatt wilh a favor by a thie office at onee of an ure escurs b ular delivery mY Atempe ther mange management { ervice for all, i pte If your paper, ‘rie h IGNORED SMALL FRY Teacher—-What can you say of the Medes and Persians. Young America—I never kept track of those minor league feams.—Harper's Weekly, Houlton, Or.—Harry Schmidt, an| elderly German jnoner, Was ree | cued just in time to save hin life! | when the jail burned down. Marshal Long Insinted on putting jhim tm another “jug” he put up a | Vigorous fist fight A DEEP PUZZLE, “What Tommy?" 1 was just wondering what used | uver @ public address in the Y. M.} are you thinking” of, fo run on all the raliroad tracks! | before they Invented trains.” |DARROW WILL SPEAK TOMORROW Clarence Darrow will speak in the Dreamland rink tomorrow night on “Industrial Conspiracy,” under the auspices of the united Inbor or \ganizations of Seattle jin Los Angeles. jwin Darrow, who was recently ac jquitted on a charge of jury bribing it is understood give some interesting side |ghts on the MeNamara trial and | hia own prosecution, and the lectare in expected (© bring out a big | crowd. | | today | Brewers’ Association | } | | |presented at Darrow is conceded to be the most | eloquent spokesman for labor in the country. FRANCE FACES FAMINE PARIS, Sept. 11.—Hunger and |wuffering stare the poor to the face jduriog the coming winter here, = [frigid summer, wet and sombr having ruined the crops from bread | jto wine. The news has been pub | jlisbed broadcast. The price - of | bread, now the highest on a, | will Ko bigher, wine will be searc for poor and rich, potatoes ditto. | Neve t bas Europe seen such a sum-/ | mer, GOOD WORD FOR “DAYS” NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—"Twas a) | little too warm for whiskey and a | little 60 cool for beer” in the last six months of 1911 and the forepart of 1912.” said a statement issued | here by the United States This, the statement says, explains why beer sales fell away 1,105,218 barrels in the fiscal year ending June 30. AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Moore—Gilbert & Sullivan Op era Co. in “Pinafore.” Metropolitan—McKee Rankin in “Peace on Earth.” Seattle—-The Pollards in geant Braue,” Alhambra — Photoplays vaudeville. Orpheum—Vaudeville. Empress—Vandeville. ‘audevilie, udeville and motion “Ser- Clemmer-. deville. Melbourne—Photoplays and vau- ile. -Photopl.ys and vau- [ERR Re * AT THE MOORE * * * REL REAR EMER EERE “The Pirates of Penzance,” by the @ilbert & Sullivan Opera Co., the Moore theatre last night, was as successful as the “Mikado.” The “Pirate” to many | min is the best of the Sullivan opera | | best | staged The light opera is about as delightful as one would wish to |hear. Arthur Aldridge as Fred erick, the Pirate's apprentice, and | Eugene Cowles, in the role of Maj Murgatroyd, are both seen at their Of course, De Wolff Hopper, las a “bobby,” kept the audience al- ways amused with his abandance lof humor, The same opera will be again Friday. Tonight Pinafore” will be presented, A THEATRICAL DITTY BY whom shows? The Tired Business Man, |For whom the tights in rows and rows? The Tired Business Man. And who—as managers explain | Wants just the silly and inane, Because he hasn't any brain? The Tired Business Man, RTON | BRALEY. the vulgar For are all | Who 1s it loves the lowbrow stuff? The Tired Business Man Who wants his jokes both broad and rough? The Tired Business Man. Who speaks of worth-while plays as aad,” Who falle for dancers thinly clad, Who causes playwrights to go mad? The Tired Business Man! Who is it dominates the stage? The Tired Business Man. Who makes the press and rage? The Tired Business Man, Who wearies Jones and Brown and Smith, And you and me and all our fith? And who's a managerial myth? pulpit The Tired Business Man! YOU'LL FIND IT HERE News of the Day:Condensed for Busy People When | eu Or.—Degpairing ting action from the police, State je on street cars be and Springfield. drunks who re tween Bugene DIFFERENT NOW “Why have you cut that lady who has just passed? Yester day you were moat cordial to ward her?” “That is my dressmaker, and | paid her my bill this morn San Franciaco——Arrested here as a “drunk an forgot his The then learned a wrinkle in tattoo freaks when they discovered “Fread Harev lower Chile Mexico stamped on jthe man's forehead name ne | Alaska Junk company, 1120 tet ay, &., sustained $16,000 damage by la fire Inet night. The fire was letubbern and the thick smoke ma Jit difficult for the firemen to wo Home of B. L. Gates, 1018 Roan oke ay I }#105, belonging to housemald, | stolen. terday found Samuel L. Lovell guilty of grand larceny. He was eharged with ob 500 from the stock he Colonial Oil company and diverting it to hin own uses. Between “Relations Japan and tonight by Masum! Honl, president ot whisha university, Kyoto, Japan. The meeting will take the form of a banquet at 6 o'clock at jthe ¥. M. CA. At & he will de ©. A. auditoriam on hema ‘ Education in ane “ FOUR. ARTIST: Ss TO” APPEAR IN SEATTLE William B. Clayton, manager of the Seattio Symphony Orchestra, has arranged a series of four con certs for the murtc-loving public of |Seattle during the coming season | Leading in popularity and repute jtion will be Mme. Gadski, the fa moun grand opera soprano. She and | ber Ist. ne Genee, world dancer, will appear with her own orchestra in a concert February 10. One of the most popular of the numbers will be that one given by | Mischa Elman, the young violinist |who has created a sensation. He | wil be here March 3. Jowef Lhe vinne, the Ruesian planiet, closes the season with @ recital April 10. ‘SEEK TO SAVE | CONDEMNED MEN | (My Catied Pree Leased Wire) LOS ANGELES, Sept. 11.—De termined to save the lives of 15 men in California penitontiarics | junder sentence to hang for murder, | Miss Bunice McMillan, secretary of | the Los Angeles anti-capital punish ment league, is clreulating petitions | today praying executive clemency.| Sho hopes to secure before 000 signatures September 17. To committee of 10 has been named to solicit subscriptions. MAY ‘BE CARDINAL UNOERWO0O A UNDLAW OOD Mer. Kennedy, | college at Rome, mentioned in dis- patches as likely to be America's new cardinal, “IT CUTS NO ICE”. | NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—The ma jJority of the newspapers here re- |gard the result of the Maine elec tion as Icking {n national signifi- jeance, They say the progressive |republican coalition to redeem the state led to the democratic disap. poinfment, but do not regard the re- sult as any indication of party strength in November. PRIVATE CAR FOR WOODY NEW YORK, Sept. 11.-—For the use of Woodrow Wilson, democratic nominee for president, during the | campaign, the democratic national committee has closed a contract for |a special combination club car, to |be in use until election, The car j will be held at Seagirt, , When not in use, but it is not Steclies to be long idle, ARKANSAS GOES “WET.” LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 11 Incomplete returns received today indicate for a certainty that state wide prohibition was defeated in yesterday's election. The recall is still in doubt. ‘Phe entire demo: cratic state ticket was successful VICTIM OF PLANE MINEOLA, L, 1, Sept oI Struck tn the chest by a flying aero. plane, several of his ribs phercing his lung, Geo, Monnord, a pupil of the Moisant aviation school, who was injured while watching the flight of Gustave Salvinas, a Mex day. of get! was entered last night and | was | Jury in Judge Ronald's court yee | America” will be the subject of an | address at the Occident-Orient club| will be here the evening of Novem-| famous | Taine | | $1,000 necessary to ald her work, a} ‘ector of American} jean army officer, is dead here to- BASEMENT SALESROOM | 3,000 Yards Standard Percales | Special oe ‘Yard of variou zés, pretty figure doubletglg te patterned with) | plain and faney dot nal value An hipsitent Selling of Children’s “Sample” Wash Dresses Special 5c Each ERE is the opportunity to outfit the school girl with sev- eral good, serviceable Wash Dresses at a very large sav- ing in price. The materials are percales, lawns and ginghams of excel- lent grade, patterned in checks and plaids, in a large stripes, | fashioned i variety of light and dark colorings. The Dresses are ila in low neck, short sleeve styles, trimmed in embroideries, laces and braids, and very carefully cut and finished, j The sizes range from 6 to 14 years. Priced at remarkably heavy discounts from regular values - ~at S5¢. ~—Basement Satesroom. Fall and Winter Suitings, Special $1.00 Yard | ERVICEABLE weaves of Storm Serges, Cheviots and Whipcords, from 5046 wide, rtment of colors, including black, navy-blue, brown, pecial values at $1.00 yard. inches in an ass | don-smoke, olive-green and mahogany. | | are to be featured tomorrow in the Basement Salesroom: Undermuslins Section, as follows: Misses’ Colored Crepe Gowns Special 75c— Crepe Gowns for Misses or Small Wom designed in a pretty kimono model, trimmed drawn with The materia! is white, patterned with chrysanthemum de- with linen pattern lace insertion, } ribbon, as shown in the picture. sign in pink, blue or lavender; white with rose vine design; white with small pink or blue dots. Sizes 15, 16 and 17. Special value at 7 Kimono Gowns, Special 50c— in slipover style, with kimono sleeves, in trimmed with dainty embroidery Gowns made nainsook, at 50¢. edge. Women’s Nainsook Gowns | Nainsook Combinations ~ Special 75c— |Special 58c¢— Gowns in kimono style, of good quality | nainsook, with round embroidered yoke set in with Barmen lace insertion. The yoke and the narrow lace edge that finishes the garment are laced with ribbon. An excep- tionally pretty Gown and unusual value at 75¢. Notions, Toilet Goods, Jewelry: Attractive Two-piece style, as pictured, co The embroidery yoke set in with B | y) cover and circular drawers. | insertion, and the drawers, neck are finished with Barmen lace match. Very good value at S8@s i —Basement Tooth Brushes in assorted Whisk Brooms, 10¢. Embroidery styles, 10¢. Boys’ School Knives, 25¢ 25¢. Nail Brushes and Hand | . 44 5o¢. Gold-plated Scrubbing Brushes, 15¢. } good quality, cardio Hardwood-backed Hair | . Hand Mirrors, good qual- | 354 i} Brushes, 50¢. ity French plate, 759. Two-piece Belt i} “Ideal” Hair Brushes, | Jergens’ Fancy Perfumes, gold, silver and 55¢. | Pot opular odors, bottle 10¢. | finishes, 25¢ each. i} §=6Solid Steel Scissors and “Fairy” Bath and Toilet Enamel Brooches Shears, various sizes, 50¢. | dane, dozen, 43¢. lar colors, 25¢. — Basement Women’s and Misses’ One-Piece Serge D Special $5.75 that will find especial favor at this low price, in the D RESSES eyes of women who are planning a trim, new frock for walk- ing, at-home or business wear, They are fashioned of good grade, durable serge, in black, blue, brown and tan, and made in high-neck style, with long sleeves and plain or paneled skirts. Some show trimming of buttons in the same material, CTT Sizes 14, 16 and 18; 34 to 42, Specially priced at 85.75. Women’s and Misses’ Raincoats Special $2.45— Seventy-five of these good Raincoats in a very favorable pur- chase, They are rubber-coated over good grade cloth, sewed and cemented, Sizes 14, 16 and 18; 34 to 44. Very low-priced at $2.45. —Basen At Salesroom,

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