The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 16, 1912, Page 8

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_THE SEATTLE —— THE INGENIOU$3 OFFICE BOY “Aha!” chortled the office boy Nov — PUBLICMARKETS| AK pke wes — pe eere~ LF oF. Just for Tuesday |r On sale all day at these prices. No telephone orders accepted. 10c Outing Flannels a yard Heavy Outing Flannels. ye and double fleeced an well. 2,000 yards 27 inch i wide, Fengths up to 12 yards. mot over 15 yards to each Tc —S i a Apron ate in lengths wp to 20 yards. Good fine Quality, mostly blues, in Beat checks and broken checks. Not over 12 yards to each 15c Kimono Flannels, Yd. 1.500 yards of Kimono Flannel, 27 inches ide. in neat patterns. Heavy quality, in pink, tan, blue, hello, gray and Breen, at Ide a yard 18c Kimono Crepes Priced, Yard Serpentine and other crepes suitable for ki- monos. 3,500 yards in full bolts and good pat- € i terns, shades that you will like, 10¢ a yard. the new fashions for the coming seaso From 9 to 11 Only 25c Jelly Glasses at) 15e Doz. 1-3 pint size. AN INTERESTING DEMONSTRATION OF THE POPULAR ‘Nemo Corsets ts s being held In the Cor But the boss wasn't interested. Jeead > k. 7 bare ® k cheome, 10 1b a The North End Progressive club will meet at the home of Thomas 8. T' side ay, on thi pm, The Bon Marche’s AUTUMN Fashion Display Of Exclusive Millinery and Imported Gowns and Frocks Two more days of this wonderful showing of beautiful things for Fall and we want you to be sure and come in French millinery from the fore most artists of Paris; exquisite imported gowns, and all ‘From 9 fo 11 only Just for lor Tuesday \$ Combinations 59e Each On sale all day at these prices. No telephone orders accepted. 15c and 20c Cluny Laces, Cotton any lace Edges with bands t> match. In. white. eream and ecru, widths up to 4% ventional designs, Te yard 50c and 75c Fancy Laces, Yard Yard Ratine. Macrame and Venise Lace Bdge Bande tn wh and ecru, 4% inches. wert c ® yard, 37¢ Tuesday $22.50 Axminster Rugs, Oxi? beautiful new Axminster Rugs with } soft plush pile, Oriental and fioral designs size 9x12 fect, at $16.99. Attractive Prices on Fall Dress Goods $1.50 and $1.75 54-Inch | $1.25 Satin Messaline 36 | 54-Inch Sponge Cloth, the Wool Dress Goods at —%5e Yd— A timely offer for Fall shop- ers, 100 pleces of 54-inch Wool Iress Goods from the Garfield and Botany mills. Heavy serges, mannish suitings, prunelias, Gold Shield Coffee, one of the best Piymonth Hock Get , none g Pan Yan Sauce, imported English sauce, small size bottles 5c Holbrook’s genuine 2c Pies fe Mo gfe sliced 25¢ nge, extra. fine black tea Sepeier eb .... 826/20 Lbs. Sugar $1.00)" LARGE SIZE PACKAGE GOLD DUST, NOT mone | 7) THAN 3 TO EACH, FOR Inches Wide Priced at —89e Yd— 60 pleces of those fine, lus- This fabric is now all the trous heavy Messalines that will not slip or pull. such attractive ¢ mixtures and stripes. | wide at 9c a yard on Tue Bargain Tuesday in the $1.25 value in | and show -~ — 20 {hs fine holes of sweet or pint bottles, fancy 2:¢ Kenton Ham, pieces of botled ham 5c your choice of any of our, accompanied with a ot] one POUND PACKAGES )| SEEDED RAISING ! 056 | THREE PACKAGES FOR 1.00 order for gr CASH IS KING AT THIS STORE—THAT IS WHY WE CAN SELL 80 CHEAPI ZoEMARCHE ONE ENTIRE BLOCK ON SECOND AVENUE FROM PIKE STREET TO UNION STREET Very Latest Out —$2.50 Yd— rage for sults, coats and skirts Has fine soft finish, semi-rough in navy, tan, Alice, navy and cardinal black salporgd Store New Fi reguiar 1 cans to » Cl hallenge brand. Home Made Jelly Rolls, our own er Snaps, fresh from one of the Fr rape aa aah 12¢ Corn Meal, 9 sacks, cholee of Quaker Oats, regular 1Se size pack axes, not over 6 packages 10c Sample Tea, a mixture of green and black teas of all kinds Genuine Jw pronerly blen progerly blonds d and freshly Alc Baking Soda, Arm & Hammer, As 4 pound packages for la tea | pretty soon, act sok | 40c; Washington creamery butter renovated butter, 306 Ib) erean ympeon, 4137 Sunny wday eveniig at 8 | school, and Mocha Coffee, \wh } | while trying to Jump on a switch} Jengine In the Northern Pacific| |yards at Interbay. He jumped for} |the footboard and was crushed un | to the * to equ POLITICAL POTJREADY TO SIZZLE, BUT DEMOCRAT NOMINEE ee There ja the same wneertainty in; the election and pomingtion of the | non-partinag judges for # norton | | court Quigley is attempting to | | shift the responsibility for the bhaw to some of his subordinates, tut the fact remains that Quigley will have to ask the superigr court to jlet him open the ballot boxeset ex |tra cost to taxayers, in order ¢o! find out definitely the results ef {that election In the meantime, political actly ity 1s at a standstill, But the pot | will boll and sizzle as soon as th mocratic nominee for governor is discovered, which will happen ording to the latest {Advices from the faroft Quigley Over tn the progressive head quarters in the Butler hotel there is supreme confid lection. The poor showing of both old parties, so far as Jack of num bers in last Tuesday's primary | election indicates, has given the new party men big chunks of joy Some of the Bull Moose candi dates have al ly started in on the final round of thelr campaigns. Dan Landon, candidat for congress agalust LAm-«- Trimmer Ham phrey, has been spending a few days in the Whatcom county dis trict, Dr. Walter Kelton, candidate ifer coroner. has been shaking hands down Renton way, “Cupid Gage, for auditor, and M. H. Cush ing for clerk, have also been push ing thelr campaign forward Edgar ©. Snyder has been chosen state chairman for the progressive party, and Kenneth C. Beaton. retary, Plans are being made to cover the state with progressive THOY ARr 1o0e'r | FaInea cane! | TAAN 1Dontr | \] VENUS cen if ly § Berton jspelibinders, The headquarters ia! | supplied {ty coples of the pro} sautve plattorm, Col, Roosevelt's ‘Confession of Faith” and Hever lidge's speech at the Bull Moor convent in which he coined Pass prosperity around These are being distributed throughout the atate é Affidavits of campaign expenses are coming in at the auditor's of fice. Judge Boyd Tallman frankly admits that he had no expense to get a renomination, except bis fil ing fee of $40, Jobn BE. Humphries paid $483 for the same nomination Bert Jarish says It cost him $129.60 to beat Jennings for assessor on lthe republican Ueket, Will Hanna |republican candidate for treasurer for spent $80.7 John EB, Carrol) 60. justice of the peace, spent ce in the final| George V. Ostroth, for the demo- | feratie nomination for represents tive in the 42nd district, paid $19.60. MORMON HEAD HERE Joseph F. Smith, head of the Mor mon chureh since the death of Brig ham Young, arrived in Seattle Sat urday night and yesterday dedicat ed the new Mormon church at Westlake boulevard and Newton et. The dedicatory’ nerviees took | place in the afternoon and were attended by 160 people. Mr. Smith |i leaves Seattle tonight at 11 o'clock. | Klessly Inst Jur 2s, Victor Tourlel, a coo! morning began sult for ages. Tourle! claims to have been #0 severelly injured that be may {ff lose the permanent use of his right |i arm. Braley My son, when you go to a vodyville show You'll notice th At jokes they h t people wil! xhriek heard since the long, long age The moral is plain if you'll read as you run; And heard twenty) times every week; ; } A novelty adds to our Hut when it comes down to extracting the “Mor The old stuff gets over the best! y be all right when you're courting a dame » talk about Ibeem and such, Itut take it from me-etf you'd win at the game You won't stick t Ibsen so much You'll tell HER that @HE'S of a beauteous mold. A stunner becomiagty drensed | You'll tell all the lies that men always have told, j The old stuff gets over the best! | In politics, business, society, art, | However the world has progressed, It still remains true to the words I impart, The old stuff gets over the beat!” ' News of the Day Condensed for Busy People Seattie Star by noes of any ppt and : aper, oF any attempt to substitute @n- other paper for The Beattie Star. it is the desire of the management to co service for all. are given courteous and prom f your paper fr ny night by ¥ phone thts 0. 360 Main 9400 Ask Cor the Cireviation Department The plant of the Lake Washing ton Turning Worke was damaged by fire yesterday morning to the extent of $20,000, This ts the third) fire that has occurred in the plant since it was built, three years ago. The fire is thought to have been | caused by the dropping of a cigar | in dry shavings Alumni Association the the Uni versity of Pennsylvania will give luncheon tomorrow noon at the Hotel Butler for Dr, A. H. Woods, | of the Pennsylvania-Canton medical | of Canton, China, and Fed. | eral Judge Peter D. Overfield, of Valdez, Judge Overfield was for. merly center on the All-American | football team. The horses on exhibition and in the paddock at the King county fair will be dmmortalized on canvas by! George Ford Morris, a painter of | horses of some note. He left New York in June, and since that time has been in the West, painting horses. The walking jon of the Moun. taineers’ club began yesterday when the advocates of the strenn out life hiked from Factoria to Lake | |Sammamish, eating dinner at the| Hiake and TOCurnins to Bellevue, Walter Taylor, alla Robert Kel- lar, the negro who was caught plum idering the James D. Hoge home, pleaded gulity to the charge of | burglary Saturday and wee sem tenced to from one to 15 years at |the Monroe reformatory by»Jadge Ronald, Tomorrow morning the annual convention of the State Grocers’ ag sociation meets in Everett. One of the chief topics under consideration will be how to beat the ‘dead beats,” who obtain credit, bat pro duce no cash, Weight and meas | ures laws and several other subjects | will be discussed. Lloyd Hamburg, 9, son of Mrs.| Nettle Hamburg, 21st av, W. and} eler st, was killed terday der the wheels, Portland, Or.—Frank Johnson in-| terrupted a suffrage meeting of col-| ored women, stating his opposition cause,” He is now converted suffrage ideas and is also in a hospital The Mariposa arrived in port tast night from Alaska with |from the fell and an explosion followed. Loss claimed, was slandered in the Jap | anene newspaper. He attacked the editor with @ cane sword, inflicting | \ a bad cut. dulcet baritone is distasteful to resi dents on Grand av. hill. John Hale Joined target practice at the singer chauffeur, whose body was 7 |@ robbery and when Pollock refused | | belt line of the municipal railway | |they outlined their request 209 passen- i | kere, the largest Hat in her history | At almost every port of southwest ern Alaska she was obliged to turn away would-be passengers. She brought down 860 tons of copper ore }and 35,000 cases of canned a weaned San Francisco-—in bare feet, mak. ing his way through the house car rying a lighted lamp, Arthur Betz | stepped on the house cat. A yow!| a stumble by Betz | $3,000. | | N. Yamamoto, a Japanese, was) sentenced this morning by Judge Ronald to the reformatory for one | to 10 years for assaulting a local Japanese editor, Yamamoto came | to the rescue of a friend, whom, he | Los Angeles—“Ann ei Lee” wl and hurled his wife's pet cutglass | jj vase. Neighbors rescued him | iy | | | | Mystery Shrouds the Death of Chauffeur SPOKANE, Sept. 16.—Spokane| police today are combing the city) and vicinity in an attempt to un-| ravel the mystery surrounding the | Hf murder of J. D. Pollock, a public two miles from Spokane Three men were seen to enter Pollock's machine late at night The police are working on | theory that the three men proposed | if to ald they killed him. Pollock was shot through wef head and his skull was beaten in. BIG DELEGATION VISITS MAYOR | Rainier Beach citizens want a for their district. When a delega tion of 126 members of the Rainie Beach Improvement club found the mayor, on aecount of his injuries,| was unable to hear their petition at} the city hall, they made a bee lin for his home, aad upon the porch} mayor promised them the pemcal assistance and co-operation. AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Moore—Dark Metropolitan—McKee Rankin in ‘The Typhoon,” Seattle—Dilly Cilfford in “The Girl, the Man and the Game.” Alhambra — Photoplays and vaudeville. Orpheum—Vaudeville. Empr Vaudeville. Pantages~-Vaudeville. Grand—Vaudeville and motion pletures, Clemmer—Photopleys and vauw deville, Melbourne-—Photopia: deville. and vau- that J. M. Mathews |i ) dam- |} Two-clasp French Suede Gloves, pique style, in black, brown, tan, gold and gray, $2.00 pair. dium-gray, $3.75 pair Frederick & Nelson ° Announcing the Readiness of the New Season’s Purchases in MILLINERY, COSTUMES, SUITS COATS, FABRICS AND ACCESSORIES Now on display, and introducing the newest ideas of the great fashion creators for Fall and Winter 1912-13 New Importations of Fine Kid Gloy Include the Following Carefully Selected Numbers: Two-clasp Black French Suede Gloves, pique style, $1.50 pair. style, Sixteen-button French Suede Gloves, Sixteen-button Kid Gloves, piques black, white, champagne, light-tan and me- Sixteen-button Pique Kid Gloves, thice-row 5 pair. comfortably—they do not Rust, Break or Priced at $1.00 and up to $5.00 | the pair. | i ments as to size, pattern and price are me 1A New “Warner’ For Every Figure HE first showing of Warner Corset Styles for Fall and Winter has been timed with the intro- ductory displays of the new Cloak and Suit Fashions. It features for every woman a model that will form a perfect foundation over which the new outer garments may be fitted. The skirts in the new Corsets are even longer than ever, and this extra length has been carefully worked out in Warner models, with several original devices for strengthening this portion of the garment. The low bust still continues in favor. Warner Corsets shape the figure fashionably and —Corret Section, Second Floor, Extensive New Showings of Fumed Oak Mission Fura HE many new arrivals of the past week bring our displays of Fumed Oak F the popular Mission styles to a point of completeness where wid , in Library Tables, Desk Titan :, Hal ue Bookcases, Settees, Lounging Chairs, Rockers and Foot-Stools. The fact that many of the pieces are in patterns now shown for the first time attaches especial interest tothe new displays, yet even more im: pressive to all observers is the unusual lowness of the prices on Furniture so well-designed and of such excellent construc include: Bookcases, $20.00 to $68.00. Desks, $12.50 to $50.00. Tables, $8.50 to $62.50. Twenty-button French Suede Glove ky-blue and peat Sixteen-button Kid Gloves, Paris-point embroidered, tan, browny | and gray, $3.75 pair. embroidered, black, white October Ladies’ Mine Journal Patterns ted on Sale. Corset ‘The lines * Foot Stools, $3.25 to sim Chairs, $5.50 to $47.50. : Rockers, $7.75 to $45.00) — Settees, $15.00 upward. Genuine Goatskin Upholstery adds to the comfort and attractiveness of the Chairs, Rockers and Davenports,

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