The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 24, 1915, Page 8

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Made | collars are Fr ace € of seerucker crepe. ly regulation sty collar effects or button fronts Derized cloth Only. special, patr @ months, 1 lawn with « ir embrol: Wwe will sell 300 and Children's Hose 6 to§ Summer ribbed White « Righ or low necks K bad summery “Little Girls’ wanted style: yard. the front. » panel back lengths to 10 yatds l0c a If you have foot troubles, come and see our LI- cented Chiropo- Bist—Third Floor. h waist ged. 1 Children’s 39c ato at 29c For 290 Tuesday we offer Children's Rompers and Tefasts’ S0e Short Dresse Lustrous fast black fiber silk colors,—and with small fruits and flowers ” Day —Second Floor North. 50c value, for sults, dresses or skirts. Made wi round flat collar and gathered | pink and white combinations. Girls’ 79c Middy Blouses 59c Each Sizes 6 to 14 years In Girls’ Middy Blouses, most square and two- | plain and trimmed styles, with | @ with round Mise at 25 Girls’ 25¢ Underwear 15¢ dai al | Style 7—A Style RA srnart ues.” box pleated | n* choot ch ride of atyle with wir at each rid pie dle effect bo a pair sizes With Special Bargains for All Girls From One ae) tyle aime Knees, Blu on Minses Pretty mer Hats, made For Lite Girls’ Day’”’ in the Mil- linery Section (or a Little More) And mothers cam come here on Tuesday—confident t they will to buy summer out fits Jaughters at @ saving Children’s Wool Coats, Worth Up to $4.95, Going at ven 2 ae Just the cutest styles In Coats for little tote, Hox ta, plain and with fancy collars and cuffs and for little boys, o serges, cheviots, flannels and aty f worsteds. that nk striped +n? Girls G Wash Frocks of th Sand 6 to 14 years, Of @ style or elaborately trim m: front and overskirt ef 6 to 14 ye Plain ed and ° be! styl perary coats of wo over tops Tuesday Union Bu white, fine elastic ribbed tred with low ks, no sleey some with knee leng Sixes 4 to 14 years, | pink, b —Upper Main Flor, | at foc ap! For ‘‘Little Girls’ De” in the Shoe Shop In Sizes 8, to 11. Sum- Be a on Tuesday pair fine straw braids—in light J] Gunmetal calf or vici ntily trimmed | lke best—made in the for $1.95 for | heavy More Bargains And We Will Cut Your Skirt FREE if You Buy the Materials in Our Dress Goods Section at 50c Black and White Checks for —39c Yd.— Pretty Half Wool Checks in four of the most inches wide, fine On sale at 39¢ dress while For per skirt back and fror Fine and yard instead of 20c. Sheer 20c Dotted Swiss 15c Yd. July are h THE BON 15c White Lawns at 10c a Yd. 2,000 yarda of White Law 40 inches wide. special at sheer; The Ladies’ Home Journ: me and MARCI Union 8t—Second Ave—Pike St.—Seattle eres © for skirts. inches wide, at $1.00 a yard you money on the mater- jals, but we provide an ex cutter together (so that it is very 2 easy to extra charge to you Ten good skirt styles to pictured here 59c or Over Ser navy cream loom ends from 1 brown, tan 59c a yard $1.50 Broadcloth $1.00 Yd. Rich, Broadcloth ish—ideal Lustrous Black In chiffon fin- fabric all extra nice for purposes $1.50 value, 52 the lot holds out. we not only save to pin cut your and the seams sew) without any Myte O—A p from—four of them —Upper Main Floor. nth whi garnet, Girls’ 79c Crepe Beach Dresses 5 59c¢ Apiece A purchase of 500 Dresses—of fine T Little Girls’ Day At the Bon Marché’s 25th Anniversary Sales Year (or a Little Less) Up to Fourteen Years requires no ironing, | ¢ right Che crepe chever you prefer e od Wa od—v Girls’ Coats Worth to $8.00 at $4. 75 | A splendid tine of Girls’ Coats, ta Many to choose trom rott - Neat-fitting and good- wearing School Shoes jor k I At the Anniversary Sale of Dress Goods % to « in Shirting Madras and floral white goods, 27 and 32 Inches cloths and crepes at 19ca yard yle Sheets et one free ) Dressing) er Main FI a | Tel Elliott 4100 for Floor, Drea. to $1.79 at $1.45 etter sort, sizes 2 to sh materials, plain extee and in sizes 2 red models, ta, Also to Tip ted, checks, coverts and silks. Anniversary Sale Specials for the: Very Little Girls | Tafante’ 10¢ Rubber Pa For “Little Girls’ Day” in Stockings and Underclothes Misses’ 35c Fiber Silk Hose “—25c Pr.— For one day if the lot holds out pairs of Children’s Fancy Sox for —25¢ Pr.— Infants’ and Children’s Fancy Top Liste Thread Sox—some with turn handsome novel at 26c a pair Children’s Parasols 2 25¢ 4 nov effects whichever you her style—with solid soles and double toe caps Upper Main Floor. 52-Inch French and Storm Serges —59c Yd.— Splendid quality all-wool French and Storm long, {n k and Lf |b Style 10—A good | r stout figurea—it Ie 7 Kored with 4 | Inverted vack pleats Anniversary Specials in Domestics—for Tuesday Oe Amoskeng Apron | ine Fancy Printed | ae Striped Ratines, Zhe Imported Chaltltes, Ginghams, 27 inchon | Lawns, 30 and 36 tnehes | inches wide, In bine, tan, | W001 finith—-20 Inches ne Mine ehtrks, not | Wide, lengths to 10 | green, old rose, erar,| wise in flwures, and ards, striped and floral : 40 over 12 yards to 6hc frat yeod 10 pink and black, J@oe| Sara 124c each, yard .. yard Cc ard —Lower Main Floor Tuesday Anniversary Specials in Domestics | 25¢ White Goods at 19c a Yd. patterns wide in also lace 25c White Rose Suiting 19c Yd. Dotted Swiss, 27 inches wide, mill lengtha,| 1%¢ a yard for White Rose Suiting; splendid sheer and fine. 1,500 yards in the lot; worth | welght for dresses, taiflored waists and mid. 20. Anniversary sale price lhc @ yard dies; 36 inches wide; worth 2be Lower Main Floor Our children’s barber shop Is the best place in town to have the little one’s hair out.— Third Floor. panel | | | | I suspected that I had tnadver jtently wounded Anna—where I had meant mer to be playful—thra my remark that the caretaker at Sutro's park had “looked at her as | when HE SEATTLE STAR John Hunt Tells Why He Married Anna Sterling, Who Had Lived “On the Line” nad refuece to sett him he Thetr Haht om how she ti kine ae fool so supertor t thelr ugliness CHAPTER IV BY JOHN HUNT if she had been another guilty Eve. he had announced closing time and we left the garden on the j cliff. | her | brought | | \t fh \ te | | | | i She. maintained that agitation, which to the edge of fainting. was due only to an attack of dizzt nena. In the dusky however, atrank privacy of the taxt As affection grows deeper, the e with whioh one may deliberately of unwittingly wound his beloved grows ten- fold, | realized; and | vowed that | would carefully weigh every word and act to shield Anna from those blundering thrusts that bring needle h che. That jolve wae subsequently to bear an import- ant part in the trend of my life, for it checked questions which 1 might otherwise h asked and which might h brought our love crashing into the clay. Compassion had prompted tt does perhaps mont of the finer | feelings between those united by lasting bonds friendship a weeks, but Aune think of ugly sean, (hone fallen Im the mire? Joho tel had played an audacity that gave mé@ an entirely new thrill She was coquettiah with a studied care; provocative ax a sults blooming like a red rose, It was as if he were making a desperate ef fort to clinch my love so firmly that | would not have the power to resist her, no matter what might come to teat the strength of my affection. And this, she later t me, was exactly what actuated her Whe ofore. ways insisted that I |the scenes of our Anna jeab I gathered her close in my arms, with soothing endearments, and in my efforts to console her, my perplexity vantehed | | | | | | For 10 days I was compelled to| absent myself on important busi ness in the Taft of! region, where soon found myself made! restive by a new torment of lonell-| ness. The ob ind, had dwindled aken {ts place I threw myself feverishly my work, which carried me far out Into the ring of desolation hema in the California ol! regions aw might have kept | Anns. Not a single letter did lreceive, altho I dispatched several written in the hot shadows derricks When I got back | ay from the postal routes, where | realized its import to herself in touch with | appr 1|of my quick responsiveness to her ardent of | tically mould me as she willed 1 was famiahed | heart Jed, office tanks erboon taking the ferry tratn for Mill Valley canyon. San perinitted those days spell of the desert, 1| Wooing I was quickly reverting to A woman had/| the Irresponsible mood of the Stone roasted | tnto| dove and a wild amour Iimited man's ambitions. that | business were slavery It was ridew imed that priviles trips, now ¢ she who arranged our and strolls And always tt was the seclusion of the woods, the fields and the hills, palpitant with the stirrings of early summer, to which she led me keeping away from the city crowds cafes and t She laughed d romped and sang, creating that ung, green, wunny world of which he had once pn no Wintfulls as a desirable n for our com | panionship. | There was almost a pathos In her sprightlin her buoy- ancy: and often as | sat watch: ing her frolic, | felt a tighten- Ing at the throat. For now and then | could detect a forced quality in her happiness Irrelevant tho it seemed, it conjured the picture of my father standing at the station platform with a haunting amile on hie face ne ipped me on the back and sent me out into the world many years ago— emiled tho his heart ached al- mo beyond the bearing at what he knew to be a long part- Ing. | had never again seen him alive, Was Anna’s brave show of gayety prophetic, too? For more than a month thin last two and three times a week jand all day Sundays, Anna ex plained that she was on her vaca tion and I w free from my o'clock in the aft We would carry a lunch to Sauaalito; the for Redwood back of the Berkeley hills for the oak-studded fields beyond Mateo—many places—an time s often 1 was impatient with my work Under the thrall of her Age when a cave abelter, a a The exactions of detected thin and She time Im sure she ed that during this guldance she could prac Bat my welfare at ded and whipped she had She « lfor her presence, but had to wait|me to my work, to the distasteful two days more before | could ar. tasks of life, even when they con |range a meeting. Immediately I de |fiicted with her desires and our tected a decided change. There|trysta, There was about her a WAS A strange tmpetuousness In her|steadying #trength nd dependabdt! xreeting. It marked the beginning|!ty, even while she bewitched me of a new epoch In our mating |with the graces of her glorious Anna became the demonatrative | womanhood ne. It was she who did the court-} The climax came one day tn ng. * that was be-|Niles canyon, to which she had j | | | reation | | place wildering. Where she had timidiy, even reluctantly | dictates of her heart, she now dis responded to the | piloted me with suppressed excite | ment. (To Be Continued.) ‘SHRINERS WILL USE RECREATION PIER AT BELL ST. DOCK Proving the popularity of the ree pier at the Hell st. dock, | warehouse, and cold storage plant lof the Port of Seattle, is the an nouncement that the Shriners have rented offices in the building and the use of the roof garden for the big doings in July The dock wan dedicated Saturday afternoon Thousands visited the heard the Firemen's band and a number of orators and saw the fire tug Duwam Patrol in play speak ish and the harbor launch action The park board having decided at the last minute to co-operate with the port, the recreation pler was plentifully decorated with flow ers, Bunting, flage and a general gala atmosphere gave the pler a holiday appearance, The park board has agreed to lease the roof | for 30 years and make it part of| the regular park system. STATE WILL HELP If the MeBride milk ill ts ap proved by the council, officials of the Seattle milk division will have the co-operation of the atate authori ties In enforcing it. Thin t# the |promise of state agriculture depart: | ment, which ts enabled to work |handin-hand with the Seattle of-| | fieers by the new tubercular tnapec. | \tlon law, which takes effect June 10./ The state has three inspectors King county for this work AFTER TWO MORE W. G. Revan and Peter H. Adams « both bonded jitney drivers, are| Ego d’Allatour, manager of the! charged with opereting vehicles|Itallan Grand Opera company, in| without a permit, Complaint waslauffering from a bullet. wound in| made by O. EB. Carter of the Renton & Southern, WINNERS NAMED Astrid Seattle, in| | | HAVE YOU SENT IN YOUR LIMERICK ON! BUFFALO BILL?| “Speaking of Buffalo Bill,” Said the questioner, rolling a pill, “When an Injun was shot, Did he prefer it or not, When running or while he stood stilir”’ Silly little thing, len't it? Just a sample, tho, of what a limerick In case you didn’t know. And you should know, FOR THE STAR {18 OFFERING PRIZES OF $10, $5, $3, $2, FIVE PRIZES OF $1 EACH, FIFTEEN OF TWO RESERVED SEAT TICKETS EACH TO THE SELLS-FLOTO CIRCUS AND TWENTY OF ONE TICKET EACH FOR THE BEST LIMER. ICKS ON BUFFALO BILL Buffalo Bill is coming to town, you know, as one of the chief features of the Selis-Floto cirous, which Is to ere three day beginning next Monday. That’ the reason for the contest, and those who win will receive their prizes directly from the hands of Buffalo Bill, following the parade of the circus next Monday. And you'll want to see that cir. cus, for it Is now the biggest in t world. So get busy. Write a limerick and send It in to the centest editor of The Star, to reach him not later than next Thursday midnight. Next Satur. day the prize winners will be an nounced. And you'll want to be In the Hiat. SO WRITE THAT LIMERICK. OLDS PRACTICED the knee, thought to have been been caused from a stray shot fired | by Arthur Olds, a teamster, who |was practicing shooting back of Metro's fe, where d'Allatour was dining, Saturday night Esta Anderson, ‘don, | TO acy Day and Mana Lindgren. are HEAR FARMERS | winners in the public school darn-| utside farmers are ur fn ing, patching and button hole mak jtend the meeting of the Pastors ing contest. Winners of the bread | harbors and grounds committee at baking contest will be announced | 19 o'clock Tuesday morning when after the contest Tuesday |the Bolton bill to prohibit. selling 5 jat the public markets after 8 p.m Fourteen Mountaineers from Seattle to Tacoma Sund is 28 miles. walked | will come It|Ject to the bill, tt will proBably be dropped, up. If the farmera ob. Mail Orders Promptly Filled Ladies’ Home Journal Patterns FREDERICK &- NELSON Women’s Handkerchiefs Reduced to 10c Each Shamrock Lawn Handkerchiefs, ha: French Zephyr Ginghams Reduced to 15c Yard GINGHAMS .o fast-color and 31 and RENCH ZI standard PHYR quality, embroidered Handkerchiefs of hem inches wide fancy clear lawn, plaid other staple patterns, reduced for clear- De yard One-corner Embroidered ance to chiefs Handkerchiefs in pe affords Also Handkerchiefs of at 15¢@ yard various corner de | ; | A clearance of about 25 odd pieces of neh Imported Dress Crepes fancy RES ven check and stripe patterns, pure linen in what soiled of the A, M onl { to 10€ ca —Firet exceptionally good valu nme from handling, Initialed Handker C,-E, L and Reduced for clearance riment Fully 100 pieces of Wash Fabrics, in to fetter remnants and full pies 15¢ yard lengths ranging for up clearance —Viret Floor iff nearly es, priced BASEMENT SALESROOM A Clearance of Broken Lines, Odd Lots and Remnants in the Basement Salesroom brings unusual shopping opportuni- ties this week. Girls’ Union Suits Reduced to 15c IRLS’ Ribbed Cotton Union Suits in assort- Women’s Cloth Dresses Reduced to $1.45, $2.45, $4.45 P* ACTI¢ Dresses in AL of navy, one-piece Crepe and ed sizes, reduced for clear- black, ance to 15¢ each. sizes for misses —Basement Salesroom {1 women, sharply under- ea at $1.45, $2.45 and $4.45. SILK DRESSES REDUCED brown green and tan, Children’s Hose Reduced to 10c Pr. Fe st a ig 95, $8.45 ROKE N lines of Chil- j i's Stockings in va- Che Dresses in this clear- rious styles and qualities, ance offering are all this reduced to 10¢ pair. Spring’s sty prettily made —Basement Salesroom | ip in Silk Pe Messaline, Taffeta, Charmeuse and Rai a repe Meteor. The values are exceptional at the clear- | nce prices-$4.45, $6.95, $8.45 and $12.75. WASH DRESSES REDUCED TO 95¢, $1.95 AND $2.85 Some of these Wash Dresses are sl Clearance Values in Ribbons, Laces, Neckwear Fancy Neckwear in vari- ous reduced to 10¢. Silk and Satin Ribbons assorted widths up to 2 inches, reduced to 2¢ yard. Allover Laces in white and ecru, reduced to 25¢@ yard, —Basement Salesroom. ghtly soiled from sizes; and all n sharply reduced for clearance, at 95¢, $1.95 iH and $2.85. —Basement Salearoom | handling, some are in a broken range styles, | in Remnants of Silks and Dress Goods . Reduced to | 39c and 68c Yard if] AT 39¢ Remnants of colors, Writing Tablets Reduced to 3c Ea. ETTER and Note-size Writing Tablets, sharply underpriced at 3¢ cach Plain and Fancy Messalines, Louisines, Surahs, Foulards, Cheviots, Serges, Poplins and Tussah Silks in a good selection of colors, lengths for waists, and widths 24 to 50 inches clearance to 39¢@ 3 AT 68e¢ YARD Dress dresses and coats, Reduced for vard —Basement Salesroom. Odd Notions at Reduced Prices NCLUDED sortment Silks selection and Waisting to 36 Mixed 50 Sharply _ 27 from colors, in widths inches and in a wide of and Suitings and Coatings in black and various colors, to 54 inches wide, in various useful lengths. t 68e yard Rasement Salesroom. underpriced for clearance a in this as- are Belts, sraid, Fans, Shields, Supporters Jewelry, Dress Collar and Trimmed Hats ina Clearance at 65c a includes Forms, Buttons. —Basement § lesroom. Broken Lines Linens at Reduced Prices ARANCE Women's of broken lines Trimmed Hats Small Close-fitting Turbans LAIN, Scalloped or Em- broidered Centerpieces in 18; 24, 36, 45 and 54-inch sizes at reduced prices ranging from 19¢ to 82.25 each. Bureau and Table Scarfs in plain scalloped and hemstitched or embroidered styles, sizes 7, 18x36 and 18x54 inches, priced for clearance at 50¢ and up to 84.7 Linen Lace Squa’ inches, at reduced prices. Scalloped Oval Pile duced to %¢ each. ‘ Remnant lengths of Table Damask in bleached, silver- bleached and unbleached qual- ities, also mercerized cotton in table lengths, at sharply re- duced prices Napkins, hemmed and un- hemmed, in odd half-dozen lots, reduced for clearance. Many useful lengths of Hand and Dish Toweling in bleached and unbleached cotton, linen- and-cotton and alllinen at sharply reduced prices. Broken:tines of Women's and Children’s Handkerchiefs re- duced for clearance. —Basement Salesroom. Narrow-brim Sailors Tricornes Boat-shape Effects suitably trimmed for tailored and Sharply underpriced at Basement Salesroom. street wear, 65e cach 30x30 Lace and Scrim Curtains re Reduced to 65c Pair VER 200 pairs of Scrim and Lace Curtains in this underpriced offering—of just a few pairs, of others a sufficient quantity for home or apartment house needs, some Choice of white, ivory and ecru color, for clearance to 65@ pair 42-INCH BUNGALOW NETS REDUCED TO 10¢ YARD— Pen patterns in 42-inch Bungalow Nets, ecru only, | reduced for clearance to 10@ yard, ~Basement Saiesroom Reduced UST 100 Pairs Women’s Lace Boots inj, Reduced to $1.95 Pair 100 pairs of the popular military-style Patent Lace Boots all with gray cloth reduced to $1.98 pair. in this clearance offer tc to 7, esroom. Dizes Basement Sa

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