The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 30, 1914, Page 8

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THE SEATTLE STAR ALL ODDS AND ENDS ARE ASSEMBLED FOR A GRAND FINALE AT THE BON MARCHE TOMORROW Kitchen Utensils go tor 2c apiece. Odd lots of China will vets for 5c. Boys’ Wash Suits and Straw Hats will go for half price and less. Sample Furniture halt price. Women’s Neckwear will be sold for 5c. Finest Axminster Rugs will | be sold for $14.75. Laces and Embroideries are less than half price. cost. Odd lots of Groceries will be sold for less than Women’s $3.50 Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords will go for $1.00 apiece, and, in short, the sale of the season’s surplus ends in a brilliant blaze of bargains. § the Women's Garment Store the Clean-up Sale will affect prices on abou a hundred White Waists. They're made pure linen, smartly tailored, with plain or plaited fronts; some have pockets, The cheapest was $2.50 and the best was $4.00. Tomorrow they're all to go for $1.00 apiece. Women’s Automobile Coats, made of ex- / cellent linene, will go for $1.00 apiece. They are full length, loose tailored style and adjustable collar. The material alone is worth more than the sale price. Seeing that all roads are dusty just now, the should go in a hurry. Seventy-five Dresses for women will be closed out at $3.50. These are made of crepes, voiles and stripes, Dolly Varden effects. They have the new sleeve effects and overskirts, priced for tomorrow, $3.50. The regu- lar prices were $4.50 and 00. Women’s Waists that, have become a little soiled will be sold for 29c. Mostly white waists, and nearly a! sizes. Lace and Chiffon Waists; worth $2.95 to $4.95, will be C © — sold at $1.95 apiece. These are made of shadow laces, crepes and chiffons, There are many beautiful effects in the lot. Girls’ Middy Blouses will be 60c apiece. The regular price is $1.00, but it appears that there are too many. All colors and all combinations, of CO +, as well as white. g or short sleeves; sizes from 6 to 14. They ought to sell in a jiffy. derful sale of Embroidery Bands. Over usand yards will be on sale at 25c a Fine Swiss, Nainsook, Batiste embroid- ery, Bands and Galloons, in beautiful shadow work, open work and beautiful Baby Irish effects. Much of it is worth three times the selling price! Embroidery Remnants in lengths from 1% to 3 yards, worth 81-3c a yard, will be sold at 2%c. Lace Remnants, Torchons, Valenciennes, Edges and Insertions, worth 5c and 7%c a yard, will all be sold at lc a yard. Fancy Trimming Laces, Lace Edges and s, Cluny, shadow and net designs, worth 25¢ a yard, will be sold at 15c, and Swiss and Nainsook Embroidery Bands, up to 2% inches wide, will be sold at 2%c, though they’re really worth 10c. N the Underwear Store there will be big piles of the following Garments: Children’s 25c Vests and Pants will be 15c. Boys’ 50c Union Suits, derby ribbed cotton, will be 39c. Women’s 15¢ Vests lof white cotton will be sold at 7%c. And the famous Merode Vests and Tights for women will be 55c a garment instead of $1.25. The Boys’ Clothing Store is planning for another big day tomorrow. Wash Suits worth 50c and 75c will be sold at 39c. . $2.00 and $2.50 Wash Suits will be sold at 98c. The last agg includes Norfolk Suits, of white duck or tan crash, and the finest tx. and $3.50 Wash Suits will go for DD pieces of Neckwear, Stocks, Collars, Chemisettes, will be sold at 5c apiece. | Some of them may be a trifle mussed. The regular prices were 15c and 20c—now they | are all a nickel. Near by is a big lot of Fancy Veilings in black and colors. Most of it is worth 25c a yard, but it’s to go tomorrow at 10c. Remnants of Ribbons, lengths are from 1 to 2 yards, will all be closed out at just half of the marked price. That'll be rare picking for somebody. ‘on it the Advertising | Man's rat Bon Marche. Tie task of selling off the odds and ends will completed by tomorrow Might. Tomorrow the store news iy mt new stocks of autumn . ¢ splendid responses to the incements I have written for is store, “I thank you.” GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE. the Millinery Store there will be a big ot of Beach Hats 1 be The regular prices were and Garden which sold at 10c apiece 75 and 95e. Another big lot of Ratine Hats for girls will be sold at 25e¢ apiece. These were $1.50 and $1.95 earlier in the season, Best of all, there will be one hundred Hats for wom- s surplus (and incidentally therefis lots of wearing time ahead), all to Ae sdld at $1.00 apiece The cheapest in the lot was $3.50, and ‘the best was $6.00. Women’s Felt Outing Hats, which are very much in demand right now, will be sold at 95c apiece. Stitched crown and brim and a narrow band all around the crown. Many happy colog-combinations in the lot. en, the season I* the House Furnishing Store you can get good Screen Doors at $1.00. These ate “front” doors, and the finest kind, but a little bit hurt, otherwise they'd cost from $1.50 to $2.25. While they last, $1.00. Remnants of Screenings, worth up to 1Sc a yard, will be closed out at 5c. Damaged Flour Bins and Bread Boxes, of which we have sixteen, we shall close out at 50c apiece. Fireless Cookers, just two of them, relics of the old that seld for $10.00 apiece, will be closed out at $2.00 apiece. Damaged China will go for 5c. Lit- erally hundreds of pieces of plain and fancy China, including bowls, vases, plates, tea- cups, creamers and hundreds of other use- ful pieces, will be closed out at Se apiece. None can be delivered Odd lots of Household Helps will be closed out at 2c apiece. Match Holder, Comb and Brush Holders, Pot Scrapers, Metal Polish, Meat Cleavers, Cabbage Slic- ers, Ladles, Cork Screws, Butter Molds, Caké Pans and scores of other useful ar- ticles, worth up to 25c, will be sold at 2c apiece. Tea Kettles of solid copper, nickel plated, all of them a bit dented, will be sold at 500 aptece. There are 14 in the lot. Values up to $1.75. Galvanized Water Pails with reinforced bottoms, 12-quart wigé.y Regular price 75c; only twenty-four at th . BOW 26e. Washing Machines, formerly sold for$12.50 Somewhat out of kelter, They will be sold as they are for $3.00 apiece, but there are only two In the lot. Damaged wash bollera-—been in the war—only 15 in the lot; worth up to $1.75, will be closed out at Boe. Wash Tub and Wringer Stands, somewhat the worse for fil-treatment, but easily repaired, will be sok? at 50c instead of $1.50, nants of plain and fancy Silks. Lengths from two to ten yards. All kinds of silks, all col- ors and black. They'll be sold at 2%¢ a yard in stead of 50c and Tic. Near by will be another table of Wool Dress Goods and Coating Remnants from the best sell- ing pieces. Every kind imaginable, These will be sold at one-half the marked price. Subtraction is the easiest problem in arithmetic! Ss STORE will offer a tablo filled with rem- OWNSTAIRS you will find a table filled with D remnants of Table Damasks that will be sold at one-fourth off. Each plece is plainly marked—the length and the price. In the same section another table filled with rem- nants of White Goods, Lawns, Volles, Madras. All of these will be sold at half the regu- lar price. Remnants of Prints, Cre tonnes, Outing Flannels, Ging. hams and Lawns will all be sold at Se a yard, and rem- nants of Galateas, Ginghama and Pereales, worth up to 18 a yard, will be sold for 10c a yard, can buy Bon Marche Flour, 49-pound 81 $1.19 sack, Blue Seal ripe Olives, 2% cans 29¢, worth 35 Wash ing Powder, 26c size, 17%e. Mule Team Borax Soap Chips, 10¢ size, 8c. Mav- flower Cane Maple Syrup, 40¢ size 32%c. Primrose Table Syrup, 35¢ value, 29c, Prim- rose Molasses, 200 size, 17 4c, Bon Marche Preserves, size, 29c; 2he size, 22% Golden Rod Wheat Fla! 30c size, 25¢. Colossal Gree Asparagus, 30c size, 26c. Spanish Queen Oltves, lhe size, 12%c. Stuffed Manzanilla Olives, ifc size, 9c, Queen Olives, iffed with pimentoes, 30¢ size, 26c. I’ the Grocery Store you Union St.—Second Ave—Pike St MNAB SAYS HEATHEN ARE! BETTER CHRISTIANS THAN WE “The spirit of the meek and lowly Nazarene | found mant- feated more in darkest Africa, where hi reigns, than In your enlightened and civilized U. That's @ sampie of what you'll hear if you go to the Tivoll theatre Friday night and listen to the world-wande Alec MeNab, ; Where Ie itr” thrliling stories McNab told Fred Boalt about his world-wide adventures, now with potentate, now with savage, here hobnobbing with a king, there visiting a jungle t The stories were published in The Star some time be fore Boalt started for Mexico. Alec, a Scotchman by birth, though a man without a coun- try by Inclination, will compare the people of India, Africa, China, Japan and interior Austrailia in their code of morals, with those of the United States and other enlightened countries, Sh—h! Alec intends to get married soon, he says. And after that he will tour the United States lecturing, and his bride will go with him, Alec needs money for that trip, That's why It will cost you 25 cents to hear him at the Tivoli Friday night at 8, 'GAS COMPANY ACTUALLY LOSES The state public service commission yesterday ruled in favor of Benjamin De Roy, a resident of West Seattle, in his fight to make the gas company extend its gas mains to his house, The company had refused unless he put up $25 for the mains, Attorney Irvin De Roy took the case up with the com- mission. id quietly that Huerta might almost empt to assassinate him, They let him go #o eas! have gladly welcomed an hon MAKES PILE RAISING WRECK Performing’n feat declared impossible, Capt. Harry W. Crosby, Se att raised the steamship Curacao, former Pacific Coast Co. liner, which sank total wreck at Warm Chuck, Hecate Island, Prince of | Wales archipelago, more than & year ago. & low cost and will realize a handsome profit brought to Seattle under her own steam. The Curacao will be ‘Another case of frenzied “Button, button, who's got the button F iitlon dollare deficit om the United Raliroade books, at San Francisco, and nobody knows who got It. FUMIGATE INFECTED CORN Food Inspector W. H. Adame and custome officials Up a consignment of 5,142 sacks of corn on board ¢! steamship Awa Maru from Kobe, Jap: The grain is filled ind will be fumigated before it is landed for horse feed. SEES HOME RULE PEACE INDON, July 30.—That an agreement had been reached between th home rulers and thelr opponents was asserted today by the! Exchange Telegraph company, & source usually reliably informed con- cerning parliamentary matters. compromise, it is understood, ts on the bill by which the! | home-rule measure is so amended as to exclude Ulster from its opera tom ° PAYSSE DON’T GET RAISE mn ere blocks and blocks of empty wharves along Seattle's water front? That's what Councilman Cooley told Mayor Gill yesterday tn back ing up the proposal to pass the harbor master over to the port com- mission. Hiram jumped right up tn meetin’. “There'd be grass growing on Third ay. today if it weren't for | the shipping,” he sald. Harbormaster Payane will contin@e to hold his [Job for a while at least, though the requested raise in his $1,800 salary won't be granted. The office was given a marine utility clerk, a $900 boatkeeper and $900 clerk. dape are to form # colony in Michigan. Good thing! Michigan will have @ fine chance to study the California Jap question right in her midst FACHG FINE AND PRISON | chur wed ay July 30.—J. W. Logan of Tacoma and W. F. Minard | of Portian@.are facing # fine of not more than $10,000 each, two years’ imprisot t, or both, as a result of their conviction Wednesiny on charges bf Maing the matis to defraud in connection with the location of applicant® on the Oregon & California land grant. | CONSUMERS TO VISIT MINE je Coast Coal Co, has extended the Home Consumers’ league an | tion to visit its briquette plant near Renton and the mines at N tle early in September, at which time {ft will furnish | a special tra’ The league also decided to accept the Invitation of the Seattle | Brewing & Malting Co. to visit ite plant at Georgetown. The league will join the piente at Wildwood park on Auguat 20, | A luncheon of Washington-made goods is being served the Ladies | Ald society of the Columbia Congregational church, at Columbia City, this afternoon. The regular Friday visit of the league will be to the plant of the| Fischer Grocery Co. on Western av. | GILL HANDS SEATTLE A JOLT The shorter distance from Eastern shipping points to Prince Rupert ail Grocers’ association tn its annual |ff over the Canadian Pacific will make that city the supply point for the Alaska railway construction and not Seattle. at a political meeting at Bremerton. will go north through the Prince Rupert port, shipments begin,” said the mayor. “As long as consignments can go! over Prince Rupert line free of duty, that city will be the big one for | Alaskan trade.” Madame Calllaux “feared her honor would stand stripped.” | she took a gun and shot her honor Into every newspaper.in the world. [HUERTA TO LIVE IN SPAIN MADRID, July 30.—That ex-President Huerta of Mexico will make his future home in Spain was stated here today by persons who pro- fessed to have their news from the general himself. It was uniter. stood he and his party would «ail Sunday from Kingston, Jamaica, (on the steamship Patia, landing at Sajander toward the middle of August. * POLICE JUDGE IS PINCHED LOS ANGELES, July 30.—Charged with withholding the wages | of Fred Andrews, an employe, Police Judge Warren Williams and his | August 6, | | The men were arrested after sult had been filed by Judge Williams . following publication of an article intimating that Will- xploited” Andrews, who formerly was a patient at the | county {ncbriate farm. Williams’ case against the Record was resumed today, efforts be- jog made to fill the jury box. WORKINGMEN. QUIT EATING! xe eke GOOD WAY TO SAVE MONEY CHICAGO, III, July 30—“There would be no need for old-age ensions If workingmen would save their money instead of spending lor whisky and b if jer of John Shedd, president of the Marshall Field y, to the query of the Industrial Relations commission as to of stopping INDUSTRIAL UNREST. ‘Could thi would also refrain from bread and meat?” asked Commissioner Gar- rete “1 wouldn't go that far,” sald Shedd, reddening, | Garretson then told Shedd that tobacco and drink are the only | two luxuries many Ingmen ever get. 4) against Editor George R. Young, of the Los Angeles Record, charging | | y not save enough to retire much more quickly If they || | This is the unpleasant prediction made by Mayor Gill last night | He believes steel and foodstuffs |} He necured the vemsel at |i “Seattle and Northwest cities will receive a jolt when Northern | So, |}} | father, C. B. Williams, were arrested an will appear for trial here | Frepenick é>NELSOv| Shopping Service for Summer Campers N camping time, call upon us by mail, telegraph or telephone for whatever you may Mail Orders Carefully Filled Ladies’ Home Journal Patterns need in the way of apparel, dry goods or furnishings and receive it promptly through our efficient Mail Order We point ervice under Parcel Post or Alaska. We merchandise, when purchase amounts to pay postage or y Goods mailable regulations, to any in Washington, Idaho, Oregon, Montana the bulky any steamboat landing or railroad pay nsporta- tion charges on and other $5.00 or over, to lurniture tation in the State of Washing- ton Frederick & Nelson, Seattle Address “Mail Order Department,” “Double-Topped” White Petticoats $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 pictured is the HE Skirt inches below from eight p of trimming, making it es- made of double material waist-line tc pecially suitable for wear with sheer Summer dresses. It is fine nainsook, with trimming of fancy scallops, insertion and edge lace at bottom. Price $2.50. A M%,-inch embroidery flounce set on with dainty in- sertion to match trims another skirt of fine Price $1.50. —flecond Floor of Normandy Valencienne A Double-topped Skirt of nainsook is trimmed at bottom with of insertion combined with flounce embroidery Nor- mandy Valenciennes lace edge Price $2.00. double-topped quality nainsook Box Springs and Hair Mattresses Made to Your Order E build Box Springs and Hair Mattresses to your order in our own sanitary workrooms. We make them to fit any size or style of bed, using good, care- fully-selected materials in the process. The combination of these built-to-order Springs and Hair Mattresses assures a soft, springy bed that will give lasting satisfaction, and the prices are very moderate. Samples may be seen on the Fourth Floor. Full-size Hair Mattress weighing 40 pounds, filled with selected gray, curled hair, covered in satin-faced ticking, for $18.50. Full-size Box Spring built to your order with steel coil construction and well-padded top, covered with satin- faced ticking, $19.00. — —Fourth_ Fiver. BASEMENT SALESROOM Fancy Ribbons Special 10c Yard —an interesting assortment, consisting of Dresden Taffeta Ribbons, in dainty color- ings, also plain Taffetas with shirring cord, in white, red and pink. Widths range from 3% to 4% inches. Desirable for fancy work, children’s hair-bows and sashes. Special 10¢ yard. Basement Salesroom. 36-Inch Allover Net 50c Yard INE Allover Net in and ecru color, with large embroidered dots, suitable for waists and trimmings. Thirty- six inches wide, the yard, 50¢. Basement Salesroom Women’s Union Suits 50c OOL Mesh Union Suits for Wom- en, low neck and sleeveless, with tight knee, sizes 36 to 44. Attractive value at 50¢. Basement Saicsroom. Long Silk Gloyes 65c Pair OMEN’S Black Tricot Silk Gloves, with double finger tips and three-row embroidered backs, sizes 54% to 714, the pair, 65@.* white Same style in white, sizes 6, 6%4 and 7, the pair, 65¢, —Basement Salesroom. The Portland Water-Power Washing Machine, Special $12.50 HIS machine is operated by water-pressure and is at- tached to the ordinary faucet by means of a hose. It will wash the heaviest blankets and the finest garments equally well, and without injury, as the cleaning is done by sg agitation, and not by rubbing. lf eH) F WANG Pare “AE cal > Simply fill tub of the machine with hot water and soap, put in clothes to be washed, connect hose to faucet and turn on the water. The machine does the rest. Special $12.50, WILLOW CLOTHES SPECIAL $1.15— BASKETS, THERMAX ELECTRIC IRONS, SPECIAL $2,25— The depend- able = Thermax Electric Iron, strong and well- finished, with heating clement warranted for five years. Has attached device to support iron when not in use. Special $2.25. WASH BOILERS, SPECIAL $1.25 Wash Boiler, as pictured, made of heavy charcoal tin, with seamless fit-in cover and heavy copper bottom. Special $1.25. —Houeefurnishings section, Imported Oval Clothes Baskets of extra good quality willow, reinforced at edges and bottom. Size 31x231%4x12 inches, Special $1.15. WALL CLOTHES DRIERS, SPECIAL 15¢— Federal Clothes Drier, with eight 24-inch hardwood arms and can be Special 15¢. wall lowered when not in use. Fastens to

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