The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 20, 1914, Page 2

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‘STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1914. PAGE 2. . —————————t “ “| a | JOUR GREAT SHOE SALE NOW IN FULL SWING! The m bar. French and Val to 3 inches wide; new Laces, from \%-inch assortment ificent bargains Dainty patterns in fine or coarse mesh, floral and scroll designs. 10¢ and 5¢. These Wonderful Bargains Could Only Changing of Special, yard, iven in WELL AS ONE OF THE BUSIEST. The department store theory is to be eliminated entirely, and in its stead a popular-priced specialty business will be carried on. It is the aim of the present management to do closing out of the following departments: —hbecause we give the usual extra inducem be closed out, will tax our salespeop! are new. Take small on t blame us if you come for the bargains a day or two NOW FOR THE BARGAINS Button or lace, patent, & metal or calf, all .00 Armstrong make, * fl ©...... $3.69 And all of our $4.00 Ladies’ Shoes go at $2.98. Table after table of $3.00 Ladies’ Shoes at $1.98. Women’s Shoes for ranch or rough wear. Lacing and extra heavy, closing out at 98¢. 25c—That’s All can get a pair, !f you come earty enough, at 25¢. Men's Lambs’ Wool Soles now ....25¢ ‘Women's Lambs’ Wool Soles 15¢, 25¢ Children’s and Misses’...........-15¢ ART AND HAIR GOODS $1.26 Embroidered | a50 Pin Cushion Cushion Me ud Feit Pillow a ‘ops $1.00 bid 0c Zephyr German- | 5, *%, town mpertal brand Yarns, skeln | 360 ‘spools Carison ° Currier Co.'s Silks % on, at.......156 2 tor be Royal Soci sty Embroidery onees, skein .. le ours TAnen Thread at oe + Be Fleitsher’s Large Reversible Rugs —Fourth Floor— Very heavy quality Ingrain Art Squares in choice patterns. Can be used on both sides. Extra large sizes at extra special bargain prices. 99.50 Rugs, size 104%x12 feet. . % $10.50 Ruge, size 12x12 feet 4 $12.60 Rugs, size 12-15 fect... $8.45 this department combined with the ains to be found in our other departments to be closed out is makin PANTON'S THE MOST TALKED-OF STORE IN SEATTLE, AS NECKWEAR BARGAINS 25c to $1.25 New Vests, Collar and Cuff Sets, in pique, lawn, chiffon, ets or plain styles. 25¢, 49¢, Embroidered tra special values at ¢, O8¢ and $1.25. Be Made Possible by the ur Entire Mode of Doing Business QG—————— py Shoes for men, women and children. YY Crockery and Hardware. ye Carpets, Rugs and Mattings. RY————» Notions, Fancy Goods and Hair Goods. this as soon as it can be made possible by the ———}> Toilet Articles and Druggists’ Sundries. _———> Stationery. Every Wednesday Is Naturally a Very Busy Day at This Store ents every Wednesday. WOMEN’S LOW SHOES These are odds and ends; probably 75 pairs in one table to choose from. They used to sell as high as $3.00, but they are antiques and go at 49¢, Men’s Sli pers Men's Embroidered pers——-just the thing for holiday gifts. Price 59¢. Men's better Slippers—tn black or tans. All sizes, different styles, all go at $1.25 and $1.98. Values to $3.00. NOTIONS Angora Bretds, t- Basting Thread, black and white, dosen spools for 100 Oe and So Stewart Duplex Safety Pins, up to dren's 260 Hickory Supporters, pair 150 109 Dre Shields, patr . -Te cue Ger- ment Shields ...800 S00 Kletnerts Gem High Point at...36e TREMENDOUS BARGAINS IN THE UNTRIMMED MILLINERY SECTION Wednesday your choice 0 values These Values up to $2.50. Seattie’s Popular-Priced Department Store SECOND AVENUE are all new, 100 Macey’s Hooks and Byes, tube...Be Se Atias Hooke and Byes, 2 cards....b¢ Hatr Nets Se and Se Reowwax, each ...2¢ All kinds of buttons at «. Malt Price Formerly from 100 to $2.00 per dozen. Se paper Ping #60 count . Re 100, Ta, 6o Cube Pine 5 Hatr Pin Cab- {nets ...eeeee+ BO 100 Queen Crimping Pine, dosen .....60 260 eans Petroleum 130 100 Tube Vi up-to-the-minute shapes, toques, small rims and new sailors, with soft or sem!-noft crowns Wednesday your choice for $1.00. $1.00 Trimmings for 25c Gold and silver flowers, wings, quills, fancy stick-ups, flowers; values up to $1.00. Special for this sale, your choice for 25¢. Women’s High Shoes Button or lace, « doren of kinds to choose from. Calf, patent or gunmetal, $5.00 and $3.50 values at $1.98, Misses’ and Children’s High Shoes Lace only, formerly sold at $1.76, $1.60, $1.25 and 98c. A big table of them go at 69¢, DRUGS AND SUNDRIES be Petroleum Jelly ee”) $0e Seven Suther- land Sisters Hair Tonio ..........A8e $1.25 Powder De Asuna ..........%6e $1.16 Powder Le ‘Trufte +2 The 250 Gre | Powder 180 sling. te of Tailcum | Toott 120 Whisk Brooms | bo package Fuller's Earth 180 and Brushes 200 Nall re”) ido “Natl Te oka 100 100 Manioure Sota. . ido Tooth Brushes... “ : Be This, combined with the bargains to be had in our departments to le to the limit, therefore we respectfully ask you to be patient with our employes, as many of them with you. Don’t ask us to lay by goods in departments we are closing out. Don’t telephone for goods from departments that we are closing out. Don’t ask for further reductions, because you won’t get them. after we advertise them and find them all sold. Enough said! IN SHOES! The kind for which you usual- ly pay $1.50 and $1.75, selling out at 98c. MEN’S LOW SHOES 49c A table of odds and ends. They have been here for some time and used to sell at $3.00, $2.50 and $2.00—but now only 49c. 1,000 Pairs Women’s Felt Slippers Just recetved for the holiday trade and dought to sell at $1.75, $1.60 and $1.25, They are selling now et 75¢, O8¢ and $1.19. Crockery and Hardware Tin Wash finsing, | $2.50 Vacuum two or three sfzes, | Washers now .....78¢ Step Ladders at ose, Graniteware Ge, Yee and... «tee and Saucers Cups 100 Jao-a-Lao ...%4 Off emall 100 | All and Suit Grantteware Stow Pans Leather Begs Canes 8 Off All Cut Ginss 1-8 Off Pie 100 | Mtl Graniteware Grantteware All Soaps, Washing Powders, eto, are being closed out. Lay in your winter supply. and $1.25 Barthen Salt Boxes, 360 for 260 Children’s Rain Capes $1.98 Red and Blue Rubberised Sateen Special values at $1.9) Rain Capes. Women’s Winter Coats $1.00 in close-fitting Balmacaan $9.98 Women's Coats in models; made of Scotch mix tures, homespun tweeds, eto. color combinations. In all Splendid bargains at $9.98. Street Dresses $7.50 to $24.95 Smart Street Dresses in Redingote styles, In serge, poplin, silk taffeta, ete. $7.50 to $24.95, Between Spring and Seneca and ..asque wool, crepe, messaline, In blues, black, green, wistaria, ete. pdt: vate Wary ot | | | | } | Mrs Edwin Carman | MURDER! YET THE SMILING DOCTOR GOES ON SMILING ~(Continued From Page 1.) | value in bis eyes. And this strange creature of stone! jand steel seems to realize and re spond to her husband's new lover | like attitude. | There are touches of coquetry in |her manner and dress ‘The day after her realese from the Mineola jail she appeared before | per men in her home on| |the Merrick road wearing a boudoir cap which did not™yholly conceal the fact that the hair underneath tt |was done up tn curl-papers! In the midst of death, of die. honor to her home and her little girl, to her old father and moth- er, with the most terrible charge that can be brought against a human being hanging over her, Mrs. Carman had not forgotten or omitted to curl her hairl From death to curl-papers, rt | the coquetry of a boudotr cap! There ts something strange and gruesome about a woman who could incongruity with no from There is a strange kinship with those grim women of the French Revolution who went on knitting while the guillotine did tts deadly work, and never dropped a stitch as |!t dropped a head! Yet Mrs. Carman ts a well-made, handsome woman of the type which is beautiful only as an unlighted lamp is beautiful. No glow of tenderness, no ewift flame of intelligence warms or {)- lumines the cold outlines of a set and rigid mask. If the face ts ever lighted, I am sure that {¢ ts by a flash of pride! and that, if she killed Mra. Bailey, she killed much more from dese- crated pride than from outraged love. She had reached the “dang ous “ the rubicon of mid: life, she saw, or thought she saw, that her husband had re- fused to cross It with her. Her pride was stung to the quick, and If she killed Mrs. Balley, what passes for a crime of love was REALLY a crime of self-love! Mrs. Carman continued to show remarkable self-posseasion today when the taking of evidence start- ed. Accompanied by Jailer Wm. Hulse, the defendant entered the court room with her head high, her ley clear and sparkling, playfully patted her husband on the cheeks, and smiled cheerfully at the jurors. The progress of today’s session was marked by extreme decorum. Not once did the attorneys raise | thefr volces above a conversational tone. District Attorney Lewis J. Smith intimated that. Detective Wm. J Burns probably would be called by | the stat « » Don’t Merely “Stop” a Cough Stop the Thing That Canses It 3 and the Cough Will $ Stop Iteelt ¢ IED AEPEUDALG FIDD BOD DEDKE A cough f# really one of our best | friends It warns us that thi flammation or ebstruetion tn piace. Therefore, when you # cough, don't proceed to dors yourself with a lot of drugs that merely “stop” the cough temporarily by deadening the throat nerves, ‘Treat the cause—heal the inflamed membranes. Here ts a home made remedy that gets right at the cause and will make an obstinate cough vanish more quickly than you ever thought pos atble Put 2% oW of Pinex (50 conta worth) in a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. This gives you a full pint of the mont pie And effective cough remedy you used, at m cost of only 54 cents. No bother to prepare. Putt directions with Pinex t heals the tnflamed mem tient phiegm in the throat and bronchial tubes thus ending the persistent cough. ough, and stops the formation of To avold druggist for “244 ow Pinex,’ don't accept anything and A guarantos | sophomore by President | | | ly refunded goes with this preparation ‘The Pinex Co, Ft. Wayne, Ind. The Mineola County Jali and Courthouse on Long island, Where Mre. Edwin Carman, Shown Below, Is Being Tried, Charged With Slaying Mrs. Louise Bailey 3 STUDENTS ARE CANNED; RESULT OF BIC BEER-FEST An escapade on Vashon island, in which a barrel of beer figured prom- inently, resulted yesterday in the expulsion from the University of Washington of two freshmen and a Landes, | who said in @ tement that the | university faculty is determined to} maintain discipline, and that any further breaches of the moral code | by university students will be dealt with similarly Two lS-year-old girls, one 18, a chaperon, and two high schools| were included in the festivities on the fsland GERMANS MOWN DOWN IN BLOODY’ VISTULA FIGHT PETROGRAD, Oct. 20— Bloody fighting continues on the Vistula river, the war of- fice nounced today. The Germ were said to be striv- Ing persistently to cross the stream. it was declared they were being persistently re- pulsed, with terrible losses. Algng the line between War. saw and ivangorad the Rue sians were reported slowly but steadily pushing the kalser’s troope back. In this territory, according to the Army Gazette, the czars forces have found 18,000 German dead alone on the fields retaken by them, whom they are now burying. ALLIES ARE FIRM Oct. 20.—In the face of German efforts to break their line and attack Dunkirk, the allies are more than holding their own slong the Franco-Belgian fron- tier, according to advices from the front. Material progress by the allies at many places along the battle line was reported by the Bordeaux war office. PARIS, desperate JAPS TAKE 3 ISLES TOKIO, Oct. 20.—Japan's military occupation of the Marianne, Mar shall and Caroline islands, German groups fn the South seas, has been completed, it was officially an- nounced today. One German ship was sunk and one captured, The German submarine 8-90, which re cently escaped from Kiaochau bay, was wrecked. ADMIRE DEFENSE PEKIN, Oct. 20.—Admiration is expressed today at the effectiveness of the resistance offered by the Germans at Kiaochau to the com- bined Japanese and British attack. The Germans were so heavily out numbered at the outset that it was taken for granted their resistance would be brief. Latest accounts agree, however, they are inflicting serious losses on their besiegers. CANADA HAS A BIG ARMY IN THE FIELD OTTAWA, Can., Oct. 20.—Canada will have an army of 100,000 in the field within a year, word having been received of the arrival at the front of the last detachment of 23,000. The government ts now re- cruiting and training 80,000 more men who will be sent forward tn units of 10,000, the first of which will embark for Europe in Decem- ber. ‘BILL TO ABANDON EMPIRE WAY SUITS Councilman Dale yesterday intro: duced a bill instructing the corpor- ation counsel to dismiss condemna- tion proceedings on Empire way, b tween Dearborn and Hanford st: and Holden st, to Ratnier Beach, which portions the streets and sew- ers committee decided are not necessary for improvement. AUTO STRIKES GIRL An auto driven by Thomas Blankley, 5308% Ballard ay,, struck | S-year-old Virginia Johnson, 6: West Sist st., yesterday, at West 58th st. and 20th av. N. W. The sustained a broken arin was arrested. t STEEL TRUST SAYS IT ISN'T AMONOPOLY PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20.— Presenting a huge array of facts to prove that It was not or- ganized to create a monopoly or stifle competition, and that It has endeavored to refrain from doing either, the U. 8. Steel corporation today flied its brief anewering the government's dissolution suit in the federal court. The brief alleges that the Amer- in Steel & Wire company, the ‘ational Tube company, the Amer- fean Bridge company, the American Tinplate -company, the American Steel Hoop company and the Amer- fean Sheet Stee) company—corpora- tions absorbed In the formation of the steel corporation—were not in competition with one another to any appreciable extent. To prove that the corporation is not now & monopoly, as alleged, th brief states that in 1901, the corporation's proportion of the coun- try's total production of all fin- ished products of fron and steel was only 50.1 per cent. Since then the proportion has been reduced to 45.7 per cent, DEEDS HIS HOME TO GIRL, ENDS HIS LIFE Miss Marte Frisell, a nurse in the Swedish hospital, went to her home at 722 19th av. N., last night and found her father, Pete Frisell, a ‘allroad contractor, asphyxiated by gas. Before taking his life, he had deeded the home and indorsed two checks for $900 to his daughter. Frisell and his wife had been db vorced. A company of rough riders, sim- flar to the famous one under Col, Roosevelt in the Spanish-American war, is forming at Dawson to join the allies, according to officers of the steamship Humboldt, which ar rived here yesterday. ‘ MEAT PRICES CUT TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY) AT FRYE & C0.’$ MARKETS AS FOLLOWS: Choice Shoulder Pork Roast ...... .. 14¢ Sak ee ASC Choice Loin Pork 20c 4 cans Wild Rose Milk ... Look for U. S. Purple Stamp. It signifies purity and q Choice Veal How to Invest Your Savings Unitke the ordinary in- veatment, you may with- draw your deposit at any time, together with the interest it has earned, and use the entire’ sum when you need it most. Further- more, there ts er any ‘guesswork as to what your money will earn here, 45% is the rate this Bank pays ite depositors ev- i; at th y | der s that his money in safe and that he ts in no way Hable for the affairs of the in titution. i aj ' oC) Hit

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