The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 1, 1914, Page 3

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STAR—W 1914, PAGE Nal INESDAY, Stars and Authors of “The Million Dollar Mystery,” | Playing at the Colonial JULY 1, | FOURTH OF JULY TWO DAYS’ SALE OF READY-TO-WEAR FOR MEN AND BOYS, WOMEN, GIRLS AND CHILDREN The 4thiis a time we all feel like celebrating and appearing at our best. Allow us to assist you in a dignified manner, to obtain the desire of your heart at a moderate price. We have inaugurated a Two Days’ Sale at prices that certainly should appeal to the pocketbook—no matter how modest. EXTRAORDINARY. VALUES IN Women’s Suits and Coats for the Next 2 Days, Your Pick at. $13, 98 person's fancy, from the most ultra fashionable ones, in a varied aterials, including silk poplin, motre, uitings, in quite a range of this oe ae from $13.98 WOMEN’S COATS $6.98 : ¥9 ‘ i nce ¢ in 90, for the next Surema nis the ruf SEASON’S GREATEST CLOTHING SALE RE-ORGANIZED Veith-Cammack Company Sale August prices in Jul old instituti another ation in charge of this fine n demanc be cleared so that away Women’s Suits, in Values Up to $35, season shall wn production and selection Right here now y u would find in most to sult ¢ ' to the tment of m fashionable stores at the vulds and ends—job lots season's or undesirable This is anne merchandise a sale of roduction This is a sale of the choicest, mo : and w exclusive to be found on the Nx This is a sale that fine merchandise rthwest ur Coats ulous low pri alues up to of $6.98 every one’s fancy. Some have tallored, fashioned of ratine, honey- y coatings, in all the best shades Pat $6.98 offers gr money than it has ever been your privilege Furthermore, this —it goes right out of the satisfaction or that plain sale guarantees es further comb ¢ of the season, for the next 24 to 44 » days WOMEN’S SILK DRESSES $20.00 VALUES FOR THE NEXT 2 DAYS, YOUR CHOICE article You cannot afford the extravagance of missing this opportunity. Much interest ¢ the actor | now Thanhouser sorial, “The Million Dollar Mystery such an array of talent in various lines been ock Newest spring and summer models, fashioned of messaline, $15.00 $17.75 $20.00 ay ot tion of a filr This photograph wa silk, poplin or satin, in either high or low neck, three-quarter For Men's Suits For Men’s Suits For Men’s Suits thors, actors and actre | / “6, trimmed with silk net, lace and fancy buttons, in son Values to $25.00 Values to $30 00 Values to $35. 00 T shown in the pleture are of the most desirable colors. Sizes 24 to 46, $20.00, $22.50 and Mahe apiag i ee gL Rg Rae Women’s $2.00 Wash Waists $1.19 Adier-Rochester and Veith — > “ The Bt pe a: y ke MacGrath a Cammack Company Specta! $30.00 Adier-Roch: °, pan hous 0 n nc ath ' For the next 2 days, 20 dozen Women’s Waists, in summer Veith-Cammack models—fashioned of voile, crepe or lawn with either high or Suke—these are America’s ow : : Y fri finest tailored, ready for serv 4 low neck, three-quarter or long sleeves, trimmed with self frills, lace embroidery and fancy buttons. Sizes 34 to 46, fee garments. Also included urchas¢ Women’s White Wash Skirts $1.48 are English Blue Serge sults that are standard val Nothing more desirable for the camp or seashore than a Wash Skirt. It's comfortable, {t's serviceable, it's summer Mke—in ges at $25.00. pique. linenette and galatea cloth. Why pay $148 $2.00? For the next 2 days.. Two Great Specials Men’s Suits {2 the"toum EXTRA! |:: pi 85 Boys’ suits ues, lisle; Take your choice in values up to few pick white. FLAGS—Throw all care aside 7.00. Not one of them but is worth at least $2.00 more than we White Shoes and Slippers for one day. We have all sizes in Flags. Secure your have marked them now. You can have them in Norfolk and D, B., WOMEN’S $2.50 White Lace Oxford Ties, the kind that's Flag here and save money Handkerchiefs — instead lc and all colors, including Navy Blue, All sizes, from 5 to 18, cool. Sizes 2% to 5: 1.59 A pair ...sce . WOMEN’S $3.00 White Poplin 5 tor be. Two other great special Bathing Suits Pumps; up-to-date styles; very of be each, take & in Handkerchiefs A Big Shipment of Worsted neat in style; all $2.49 —_—_ 2 for bc and 3 for 10¢, 25c Boudolr Caps—French Bathing Suite, Just arrived, for men” sizes. A pa’ G Und for W MISSES’ $2.00 White Mary Jane auze Underwear for Women. “aie Vests and Union Suits. Pumps—the Free and Easy volle, trimmed with lace and ribbons; very stylish. 50c value. Fourth of July price, 25¢ 49c Auto Velis—Any color and boys, women and you wish. Standard children. lengths and widths. Dust- poser ie. hice --7 proof, ‘om the smallest to the largest. Men's Worsted Bathing Suits, 85¢, $1.35 and up. Special values in vests at | SliPnerm, Sizes 12 to @q BG Se, 9c, 186 and 250, pipe hg Union Suits at 25c, 35¢, 48¢ pleted, will ad& a new tone to in-| om See. CHILDREN’S $1.50 White Pop- terlors and make st!houettes more| Also the Foroskatt = Mn Mary Jane Pumps; also in cide ‘with th © weapo attractive. | teats. Any style wanted, Kid Dress. They're cute he Welhes were found cchind 6 +88 BLOOMERS—All colors, seco | fn the Fourth A pair GOC h Pal ROSE ELIZABETH TAPLEY OF yarn on the Pal h ead, 12 , | an and descendant of one of the | SAVES MOTHER signers of the Declaration of Inde. PE EL July 1 dys Brown,| pendence—Josiah Bartlett. All of her relatives on her father’s side| 13, saved her mother’s life last night | by extinguishing her clc othing, which | for several generations have been |seafaring men. Miss Taploy's moth-| caught fire while she was kindling a fire, by wrapping a heavy bed er was the first in her entire family | to marry outside an old Holland family. Miss Tapley {s married, her| jreal name being Mrs. Frank E.| quilt about her, Holahan, and hac a daughter, Rose- = mar born In Janu , 1907. } NEW LAW VALID THE SUFFERINGS OF LADY! Constance, {n anticipation of her| : ldeath or dishonr at the hands of| OLYMPIA, July 1.—In a dectsion| the Emperor Maximilian; her flight | handed down yesterday the supreme|to the camp of her imperial brother, | court sustains the constitutionality| Emperor Constantine; her conver-| he law levying an excise tax of| sion to the Christian faith, and bap-| xpress companies. |tism at the hands of St, Maternus — | provide a religious tempering of th Never ated in t Sidney Frank Standard values $30.00 Adier-Rochester | grade suits and ah Also included cone English Weave Gold Labe! Serge Suit eas and alm e most w and the ster 1b Mr. Hite expecta Suits for men and young men tallored suits double cost are seldom as fine in fabric, tailoring or style. which Dollar M The second tnetal and rons until Saturday night > parts. It is r organ, which has taken two months to Install and ten month was Pp ory nt of this serial It ts ¢ n in conjunction w r to use in warran ior shineless al Values tn custom of starts today at the Colonial tend” and new $ to build. tee JIM REYNOLDS, THE SHERIFF) Nat Tueson county, had been trying | Marm eaufully to capture “Red” An-| Pe when Georgy Crater, 4 came to ask the nd of his daugh * Pathe scenic Park ' » educational Special Attention BROKEN SIZES $18.00 to $25.00 Men's and Young Men’s Suits, Over coats and Raincoats—all represent the very highest standard of workmanship, fabric and quality Melbourne Until Saturday Night Through the Flames,” two-part | : urnuffin ket Hab age. ung man,” sald the lasso that confoundod t and show what you are made o' Carter did his best, but without SALE OF Furnishing Sale of Silk Bosom SHIRTS $2.00 and $2.50 value Shirts, made with silk bosom and silk cuff to match, body of shirt something absolutely new and Gloves for Women— full elbow length; silk all size black or Special 48c, Men's Suits, up to $20, for Straw Hats In a big sale $2.35 and $3.35 t Instead of $4.00 and $5.00, t In all new shapes and styles t t n Grace, his sweethe: de Grand Unti! Saturday Night cided to ald him. Dressed as an| "The Adventures of a Girl Report ern tourist, she lost herself in |r.” a tworeel “Bess, where she encountered |the Detectress. r comedy He was more an-|"“The Lost Arrow,” Nestor drama, and a damsel dis pAb nighty appeal to him. Mission Alt Week he The Or f drama. nettle | eos } Alhambra Until Wednesday Night| “Laeiiie Love,” cwo parte; “Ani-| mated Weekly,” picture news | be ae $i value Silk Neckwear.$ 45 SOc value Silk Hostery..§ 25 $2 and $2.50 Shirts $1.35 $3 and $3.50 Silk Shirts. $1.85 wonderful value at $5 Silk Shirts $3.65 $1 Olus Union Suits.....8 .75 Sheet 2 $1.15 ma; Joker than bad, ress made a Throwing caution to the winds. escorted her back to the ment Reynolds Aecided that so clever a girl deserved the man she wanted, and as for the bandit—he went free T all. | hie ts the etory of the Western comedy drama which started at the | @ Class A today, together with a two- At the Home Until Friday VEITH-CAMMACK COMP ANY part Lalilan Gish drama, a Keystone| “Lucille Love,” No. 10.” two M, A. WEIGE, Manager. comedy and an educational | parts he Awakening,” drama Seattle's leading distributors Adler-Rochesier fine clothes, Knox and Stetson hats; also Manhattan shirts eee |. ‘Cross the Mexican Line,” drama: SECOND AVENUE, CORNER JAMES STREET San tn "enue ole a Yue gas | “Balle Jone the soreee aceeee OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 10. Closed All Day Saturday, July 4 rough straws, sennite and split straws Panamas $4.65 instead of $6.00 and $7.00 newest shapes and biocks. RESIDENCE THEATRES 3 washable, Values to $2.00. Special 490. GLOVES— "Niagara Maid,” Fownes’ and Kayser's Silk Gloves, all colors, all 38c lengths, at 75¢, 48c and ertson = (Mru. Figman) its the! se bb hte lnext Lasky feature to be released. | At the Pleasant Hour Until Friday} Roth Figman and Miss Robertson), “! >. 3, two parts were fn the allstar cast that pre comedy; sented “Fine Feathers,” including * two-part euch stare at Rose Coghlan, Robert ‘SHOOTS. WOMAN Edeson and Wilton Lackaye . o | OSCAR APFEL, CHIEF DIRECT-| or of the Lasky studios, is working on a new light, which he calla the “Mercury Spot,” which, when com-| Love comedy Boys’ Worsted Bath- ing Suits, 65c, 98¢ and up. Women's and misses’ Bathing Suits, in French batiste and Jersey ribbed, for the next two days, $1.50, $1.29 and $2.38, Bathing Caps, 19¢ and 45¢, BOISE, Idaho, _ July 1A coro her's jury was endeavoring today to establish a reason for the killing of Miss Mary Palmer, 35, by her uncle. Milton Prow, 60, who committed sui-| 186, silks. Just the proper lengths. Special for 2 days’ snie, 65e, B7e and... 9 429 63 Combinations — Corset C & and Drawers. Nice garments, trimmed with laces and embroidery, Extra spectal, 63c. New Things—Just received by express—Vellings, Collars, A Chemisettes, Ribbons, Ruch- ings and Hair Ornaments. Wed., Thur. and Sat. THE COOLEST THEATRE IN TOWN New Ventilating System Just Installed Fri, poisons of the body, the brain is full of apprehension and worry. By= ” eryone has remarked that a “f . liver” means a person of Pe temper, easy to anger, Lying here with one leg in a pl ter cast and the other foot in bandages to protect its blist THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE HOSPITALS ARE SADDENING PLACES.—CHAPTER 195 » per cent o Her Delightful Comedy ALL ON ACCOUNT OF THE MILK THE FABLE OF THE GOOD FAIRY An Unusual Comedy by George Ade THE LITTLE HOBO And a Square Meal Save a Train Circus and the Boy Another of Those Pleasing “Sunny Jim” Stories PATHE’S DAILY PATHE’S WEEKLY The Latest World’s News JOE ROBERTS Banjoist THE BIG } Cie ae OLIVER G. WALLACE Organist Complete Report || of Market Today || Prices Paid Producers for Vegetables and Fruit ted dally by J. Ww ‘ } a potatoes | graph drama at the Melbourne, {s a jrich master Prices Paid Producers tor Poultry, Veal and | land Washington mery, solid pack Cheese oncin triplet a ° a6 | this week |etar reporter could | There 1s a love story in 1, ly” and sterner war features of the five-reel | photodrama, “The Triumph of an| Emperd at the Seattle theatre eee ‘THE ADVENTURES OF A Girl Reporter,” a two-part Imp drama at the Grand today, relates |how a girl, the soctety editor of the Dally, succeeded in unraveling a robbery mystery that the paper’s not untangle. too. oe “THE RAGAMUFFIN,” A BIO. part of the new show that opens to- morrow, It is the story of a bit of heroism of a poor boy, the son of a discharged gardener, called by his the ragamuffin “ALL ON ACCOUNT OF THE Milk,” Mary Pickford comedy, is at| the Clemmer on today's new pro. gram. George Ade also mak in a pletorial reprody well-known fable of Fair Other thi on the pro: gram are Circus and the Boy The Little Hobo,” “Pathe We Pathe Daily.” his bow of his The Good | Clemmer Until Saturday Night “All on Account of the ye Mary Pickford comedy Fairy,” a George Ade comedy; “The Little Hobo,” drama; “Pathe's Daily Weekly, world’s news ‘Maria's Sacrifice,” a drama of Italy. ee Class A Until Saturday Night The Rebellion Kitty Belle,” a two-part Majestic drama; “The Out law's Nemesis, nhouser drama; Ten Million Be ducational "ee Colonial Until Saturday Night “The False Friend,” second of the Million Dollar Mystery series; “Hearst-Sellg Pictorial"; “Glacier “THE REBELLION OF KITTY BELLE” A two-part Majestic. Beau tiful scenes and a pretty play “THE OUTLAW’S NEMESIS” Thanhouser, A_ thrilling, romantic play of the rugged West. “CAUGHT IN TIGHTS” A Keystone comedy “TEN BILLION BEES” Keystone Educational com edy BALLARD AT THE PIANO. The only theatre in Seattle where you can see a first-run, 10-cent show, for | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) I found, at instead of going to sleep I had |gone back into the region of uncon clousness, where they tell me I lingered for days on the borderland of life and death. I had vague visions of nurses and stiffly starched uniforms; of | Dick looking, oh! so unhappy and |worried; of Mollie's soft lps | pressed ggainst my burning hand; Jof Aunt Mary's soothing voice; but the rest were only shadows, which sometimes soothed and sometimes fretted me. Now when I am able to write again, they tell me that I have {been in the hospital over a month nd that it will be another weeks, at least, before I will be able to walk, I suppose I should | be glad that I got out of it as well jas I did. Railroad collisions are seri- Jous matters. Because I delayed ay j/dinner, death passed me by. EB person I left in the car to go into the dining car was Killed These sudden accidents make one understand nothing else what helpless beings we are, Fate takes us and us along the OR. EDWIN. J. BROWN st due patniens telling what wil | methods exactly work your vat inatic Washington ding. when I awakened again, | four | sunshiny path and then just as we are beginning to sing from the very joy of living, it flings us with wan | ton cruelty out on the jagged stone Jof physical pain or among the wolves of disaster to die Poor Dick looks awfully worried and I have not had a chance to ask him about the affairs of ourselves or those of the family, I wish I jdid not have to go back to the hotel. The doctors say, however, I can leave tomorrow and I shall be glad to get away from the hos- pit The place where the poor bodies of suffering humanity are mended {s saddening. It seems to me sometimes af though nature was not only mere!- less, but malignant Iam often reminded of what | Robert Ingersoll once said in my jfather's hearing. It was very early in In 1's career when every- one was questioning his sincerity and a number of clergymen waited upon him to ask some questions. The first one said; “Mr. Inger- soll, you have so much to say about the mistakes that have been made in the plans and creation of this world, how would you improve upon it?” Ingersoll looked up with a twinkle in his eye and answered: “I'd make good health catching, I'd make a poor little overworked, sickly woman stand up beside some great hulking, husky man and catch good health, I'd make little puny babies immune from disease and Hable to catch good health.” Think what a beautiful world this would be if we could make | good health catching I don't believe anyone who is ab- solutely healthy can be as sad and orrowful as one who is physically weak or tll, L have noticed that neople with weak hearts lack jcourage; those with weak lungs are usually discontented; and whe the kidneys fail to eliminate the surface, is conducive to thougl on the weakness and ills of thes body and my weakness brings 4 ry. I am worried about Dick, is a. am sure there is something mot than my unfortunate accident om: his mind, tee As soon as I get out of the h ‘ pital and alone with him, I si know, for Richard Waverly canj keep a secret to save his life from what I have known of th neither can any other man. (To Se Continued _Tomorrow) BOTTOM STRUCK ABERDEEN, July 1.—Lumberm here are of the opinion lumb prices have reached the rock bobs tom, and expect an early rise and a. quickening of the market, HARVEST IS r KENNEWICK, July 1.—Haryeste. Jing the largest wheat crop in yeam@t a started here today. Thousands : acres will yield more than 20 bu els each 3 pi <n ‘The Pink of Hea 3 is every woman’s g but sire are troub with sallow convient headaches, spirits—until th yee sure relief mag foun

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