Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STORE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY—LABOR DAY | Bring All the School Boys and Girls to the Bon Marche Saturday And Buy Them New Clothes and Shoes While the Department Buyers’ Sale Is in Full Swing Bayer Gatens, of the Children’s Wear Section, Knew This Day Was Comting When He Arranged This Wonderful Sale of Girls’ New Fall Coats At $4.95 He says he has all sizes in| the lot from 2 to 5 and from /6 to 14—and that they are / the best coats for the money ae he has ever opened a fall season with. They are made in the rrr oe smartest of “Little Folk’’ styles in Corduroys—Zibelines— Cheviots and Fancy Coatings “Just the very Coats for school wear,” said this enthusiastic buyer—as he laid them out for inspection—“for they have all the style—and are made of as good cloths as coats vagy Fy~4 gt Asia the Coats are splendid value—some are belted or half belted | —others have the loose backs—or flare cut—many are prettily trimmed with pile fabrics, while others have a touch of bright scarlet. Girls’ Wool Serge Dresses) $2.75 | Smart New Fiber Sweaters A new shipment just received of Fiber and Yarn Sweaters, with) In yoke or belted styles; some! have braid trimmed satlor “snc: | $5.50 Children’s New Fall Hats Of Corduroy In pretty poke bonnet (| | shapes and piped or trimmed with | IC | ribbon; come in red, navy, black and j brown. —Second Floor, teh kets, V neck and wide eee ee mesh; ‘plain colors and biases} sizes 6 to 14. aes Girls’ New Gingham Frocks And some of Percale. There is a fine line of neat, pretty styles tn belted and Vestee effects. |$1.25 ha “Stand-Wear” School Suits for Boys' I Assure You They Are True to Name) in Every Particular | i ior work- ite positive that thesnappy style, the superior wor nah the fabric excellence will appeal to all mothers with pe pte 6 to 18 years of age. They have the new Bulgarian | three-piece belts and two pairsof pants, full lined | Bring your boys here and let me outfit them for echool. Boys’ School Boys’ Hats at 50c,| Boys ber pg Blouses at 50c | $1.00 and $1.50 | 50c, $1 and se 0 | ber ce taba a: Bes, Ser Set | male'et tueiiare and | made of light and dark | crown and Diamond oF | Tweed in grey wea | jes; | brown mixtures and | colored Chambray and | Telescope crown sty que - Diack Sateen; tapeless | of tweed mixtures and pores of Prien Sel Serges for school wear; ich Milt oe: we 7 | eizes 6 to 7%. | collar; sizes 6 to 16. years, . —Upper Main Floor. , SATURDAY, THE MILLINERY BUYER REPEATS HER SPLENDID OFFER OF New Autumn Trimmed Hats at $3.95 The time has come when choosing a new hat is upper most in the mind of the feminine sex and here’s a good place for selec ting What you want is the latest, of course, and just as reasonable as possible that's what you find in these $3.95 Trimmed Hats Novelty shapes, turbans, tricornes and the popular sailor shapes with feather fancies, pompons, novelty ribbons, flowers or metal : What’s New in Lovely Trimmed Hats, Priced Lovers of truly smart Millinery will be here for new Trimmed Hats at $7.50. All the new shades and black—no doubt the thing you most prefer. Turbans, tricornes, trimmed with real goura ostrich fancies, novelty wings and beads. Also the irregular brim sailors, or with a slight upturn at the back—a very catchy and much favored style of the season with such attractive adornments. —Second Floor. Notice to Those Who Are Availing | A Committee of Buyers Has Arranged These Themselves of Mme. Coates’ Sewing 6 “Real Live Seve Morning Specials Bring your card with you when you come to class, as it will only be possible to let those who These epeciais will be on sale from 9 have their cards with them attend the lecture. 12 only—and no telephone orders will be Buyer Sutherland Offers : The Grecery Bayer Offers These Specials Women’s 98 Gowns 25c Package of 1 Oc Heavy Flannelette 68c Ea. |) pen) Citrus, Gold Dust, Star full length, in blue or pink atrt back, with or withow ola not japtha earline each h; from 9am. to W. Third Floor. * 2 rs 1 4 Buyer Miller Offers { But not over 3 to one Customer and delivere: . “ \ ]| only when other groceries are purchased. Jumbo and Big Five Washington Corn Flakes; fresh and cris) | size packages for....... os a; large size, splendid quality; 5c School Tablets Jast half price for School Tablets, which come tn letter and note size, not ove to one customer special from 9 a. m. to 12 LF ™ Floor. Offers Buyer Goldie Ac Yd. || 5c Bleached Gauze 36 Inches Wide, at jenee, soft and absorbent; t over 20 yards to each; special 4,000 yardn of Blenched latest crop; per ib Sal * 6c pe gi Mri ena Baler Ha, Lambess o./occs AME ffeey a Koo@ blend of 19¢c Coffees, per Ib 29c ‘offees our regular 250 now being demonstrated quailt, mu to 12. Lower Main Floor, Buyer Kalt Offers Figured Siloline, 121 5c Yd inst large #120 selected Onions; . for 100, 25 iba. for Be and 85-1b. sacks for cs ese. ......, 60c | Quality, 36-Inch —Fourth Floor. goed on ty floral patterns; fine for Comfort coverings; comes ||; in mill lengths to dealers ale from 9a m. to 12. None —Phird Floor, Buyer Goldie Offers 9c Unbleached Union 6 Cc Y d Crash Toweling for 2,000 yards of half linen Kitchen Crash Towellngs extra good wearing Crashi not cver 8 yards ta an, customer; special from 9 @, m. to 12. Lower Main Floor, BUTTER 29 Lb. Or 3 Pounds for 85c ® Best Washington Creamery Butter, I make*this price for Saturday only. and Buyer Gatens Offers Girls’ Middy Blouses, Sizes 6 to 12 Years 19¢c Ea. ft beat; per Ib é Tillamook Cream Cheese; deliciqua and appetizing; per Ib Cottage Hama; fresh # dally, 2 and & lbs. each; per Ib % Jlig’s Famous Weinerwurst; fine for Piento lunches; special, per Ib hipment received h Made of Haht welght Indinn Hend, in or . nm, lace front, finished at neck w Collar; piain or trimmed with braid; 9 a Second Floor. lain blue h Satlor m. to 12. —Fourth Floor. | | Fregh Vanilla 4 Marshmallow s, ren here to have thetr hair cut—eut in the | Star Danc intent atylen, priee 2he—Third Floor. e Follo it No. 15, containing |forehead of the first Napoleon and and rapine. showed them bean bringing order out of chaos, and preparing to hold what he had taken, now begging, now jing, now wheedling, now | then he showed them battles’ and i |flag raised over a 2 for 5c] sm: |have devised a remedy which shall |serve us all Mr. said Semmes, ja | examined the photographs, with an ed the photograph of THE GODDESS INTRODUCING... EARLE WILLIAMS as . . Tommy Barclay ANITA STEWART as ... . The Goddess Written by GOUV One of the Most Notable F Read the Story Here; See It on Screen at the Alhambra CHAPTER Ii, There was silence in the toom, at once so rich and rep 4 in its moldings and furnishings, where Gordon Barclay received and gave orders (o #uch of his fellow million aires as were in his confidence, Serkmes and Sturtevant, of all men deepest in his confidence, were strangely moved. The great man for onee had not been dealing with facts, but with fancies. Very quietly and earnestly he had been painting for them that terrific fu ture to which, as he saw it, the reetiess forces of the world were driving. It may have been that the pres. ence of Profsasor Stilliter in the room had a kind of hypnotle effect wpon the two men. At firat Barclay showed them some of the achievements of capital steamers too great to be tossed by the waves, interminable freight trains creeping over bigh trestien, square miles of corrugated iron roofs, the chimneys belching black smoke; streets aa bright at mid night as at noon, and as crowded buildings #o tall that they stag fered belief and swayed in the wind; hospitals, hotels, banks, It brartes, cathedra great acreages of rock and gravel turned into green umbrageous playgrounds for 4 free people. He showed them de partment stores teeming with life, vast terminal stations, tunnels pass ing under broad rivers, great librartes, free to rich and poor alike. The waters of whole counties coax ed by one miracle after another tnto one city to keep its millions healthy and clean, And they stood with him upon the bridge of a warship and passed from the world’s second ocean to ite first, thru the tncred ble ditch, which capital was to bulld, and which men already called the Panama canal And then he showed them some of the fatlures of capttal—men and women starving In hundreds, rot of diseases or perishing of sheer disappointment and despair , soup kitchens he show ; roofless men dying of ex And then in swift dashes he showed them, standing upon a soap box at the corner of a slum, & man tn tattered rage, with the the Hon-roar voice of Mirabeau—a! man who spoke to the wretched and the unfortunate, and the {dle and the mischievous, and filled their hearts with fire and passion and Nate. He showed those same men, armed with guns, with poles, with hatchets, with hammers, stopping a limourine on Fifth av., dragging out an old man tn a furlined coat alive, to the nearest lamp po He showed them that same crowd, ever Srowing in numbers and ange tearing & policeman to pieces; he showed them banks and other strongholds of capital that rose sud denly heavenward {n puffs of sor did-smelling gray smoke, and were| —not. He showed them sleges, In which, flashed from the windows of Fifth av. palaces. He showed them these same palaces a few minutes later,| turned inside out, half in ruins, the! defenders mangled upon the side. walks, And, ever growing in power and leadership, be kept showing them the man with the head of Na- poleon and the Iion-roar voice of! Mirabeau. He showed them a city of pedes-| trians, a city thru which nelther carriages nor automobiles could | move, 80 great was the ruin in {ts rains, beneath which no sub-| ys ran, a city in which no statues va’ hte or things of beauty remained whole,| time and she loved him with all her | a city given over at night to dark ness, to. drunkenness, to murder | And he showed them themselves | fleeing by night, In disguise, a price upon them, dead or alive; and he the Napoleon-Mira ommand. Ming, and leaping cannon—and at last a white fortress, and themselves personally, all three, in the uniform of generals, blindfolded and bound and with their backs against a white- | washed wall led forth stood Finally Sturtevant looked his |friend and master in the face and “Well, what's the answer?” sald Barclay, “that 1 Mr. Stiliiter.” As Professor Stilliter advanced, Barclay sald to the others "The world's greatest psychologist.’ “You do not have to tell us that.” and they bowed to he professor. “Woll,” said Barclay, “let's have look at her.” Professor Stilliter drew from his pocket a folded picture frame of red eather. The gentlemen then| evidence of pleasure not to be mis aken, for the good looks of the Amesburys and their daughter were 18 certain an@ sudden in their ef. |fect upon the eye as isethe beauty of the Yoremite valley. “But,” said Sturtevant, “what ts he remedy?" For answer Barclay simply tough the lithe Amesbury girl with the tip of his finger. Sho is the answer,” he said, “but, by the way, Stilliter, what do you! near of the mother.” Professor Stilliter shrugged hia shoulders slightly “Dond 2” “Dying.” | Barclay was not unmoved. “She! hinks,” he said, “that she is only . |dying in grief. As a matter of fact, : fine for toasting; | H F wet ne tatest [she is taking a great place tn the i epec per tb, pleces, price 35¢; |I\ march of events” f 20e; 2 packages 260 Follos, 10 se “What are the child’s habits?” ae talim Yor bor lections In each, “She has a nap,” said Professor Lower Main Floor, | Union St-—Second Ave—Pike St—Seattie. Tel, Elliott 4100 | price 1B Btilliter, “from 10 to 10:80 and trem ment oor. 113 to 2:30. At other times she is i mostly out of doors with her nurse., {other and crudely blurted forth in and hanging him, more dead than| the hy aring of a child short! was no longer any discipline in the! for a while, rifles | house; even the trained nurse with | He was a much better nurse than/ | wasn't always breaking up a game | streets, above which crawled no ele-| [nurse's bed fn the little Amesbury | that THE SEATTLE STAR ERNEUR MORRIS (gqures in American Literature There t# a wood back of the house, in which she has a playhouse, a see saw, ete, If you wished te see her |1t would be a simple matter, but I jam ready to stake my reputation jon her. She ts absolutely cut to our plan.” | “Which,” said Semmes, “is #0 far | | & complete mystery to Sturtevant | | end myself.” | | In pite of Professor Stilliter's)} guarantee, the triumvirate, aa they} were both popularly and unpopular | |ly called, determined to have a look |} |at the little Amesbury girl for them selves. In a car driven so swiftly that the traffic cops had to look the other way so as not to get dust jin their eyes, tt did not take them long to reach the Ameshury hous They did not, however, draw up be fore the house itself, but tn the wood | | back of it } Here togged out in In-| |dian dress so that she resembled the ornamental wide of a ¢ | found the object of their searct | wan no diffeult task for three men to iull any suspicion that the ebild’s nurse may have had. They |complimented ber uoun the health and good manners of her little! charge, inquired after her mistress |} jand learned with every semblance |i of regret that the Iatter was sink: |i ing hourly, They joked Professor | joxmeet a Iittle on the fear with | nt, they It} which he seemed to inepire the child, But to Stilliter, looking far jahead, perhaps this aversion seemed |e serious thing | “Weill,” he naid brusquely, “am 1 ripsit? In she Cie finest child you ever naw, or inn't she? Just see the breadth of her skull above the ears.” He would have touched her, but she shrank from him. When Bar- clay, however, spoke to her she showed neither fear nor aversion, only a pleasant shynees. “I have never seen you before,” jhe said, “but I ata very fond of little girls, and since I have none of my| own I do not propose to lose sight of you in « burry.” The little Amesbury girl wan of an age when most {mpressions do not | li jlong survive. She would neither re. |member her father nor her mother | |nor her nurse, nor her Indian dress,|}] jnor the playhouse, nor the see-saw |] in the woods; but always she had|] & vague recollection of three ¢ jand important personages, whol} |treated her as if she were more important than they were, and who |i on parting from her bowed over||} her chubby, dimpled hand and kins-|[f ed tt for ali the world as if she had | ff been a prince | It ts curtous that she should re-| if member a little of all this and noth-| [i ing of that mesenge which came) |i] presently from the house— a mes-| H sage brought by one servant to an- 1) H | | were | were no} ‘ome quick, Mary, baby; the missus is dend.” The little Amesbury girl continued } to live on in her father’s honse, The |law sald she might until thi |#traightened out. Thero jrelatives to Interfere. But it was @ strange life. There a face like a horse had to go. jfervants began to neglect work and to amuse There were always friends” in the kitchen. But being neglected by nurse had its advantages, for Tommy Barclay came every day to play with her, and often many times in one day.| The their themselves. “gentlemen nurse was. He knew more games and stories; he wasn't always! “sharp set” for a cup of tea; hell right in the middie to talk to a mounted policeman. | He took good care of her all the heart. 1 | One } night about 12 o'clock, girl's room was empty was in darkness, except for the kitchen, From this came sounds of revelry and of a Victor talking machine, The little Amesbury girl dreamed that a man with immense black-rimmed eyes was bending over her end she waked with a scream. | For once in her life she had dreamed true, for Professor Stilliter was bending over her, and the fingers of his left hand were clasped The house almost chokingly about her baby throat. Jn bis right hand he held| before her eyes a lump of rock crystal the size and shape of a hen's vee | Very far away she heard a voice} said very quietly, “Now fan't scream.” Of course, she tried to, and found that she couldn't | “And now,” said the voice, “you can't do anything unless I tell you to. Get up.” She slipped obediently out of bed. “Dress yourself,” said the votce. For the first time in her baby life| the little Amesbury girl dressed her self. She even tled her own hatr| ribbon in a presentable bow-knot | and buttoned her own tiny boots, | Professor Stilliter had long since} slipped the crystal back Into {ts leather case and into his pocket.| The spell of hypnotism which he| had cast over her by its means! would last as long as he chose. | “Show mo,” he said, “where nurse| keeps your coats and hata.” He se. lected a hat for her and her warm est coat. “Now, give me your hand,” he} said, “and don't make any noise He led her downstairs and ont into the night (Continued Tomorrow) ee | WIFE OF F-4 VICTIM | BECOMES A MOTHER VALLEJO, Cal,, Sept, 3.—While} dispatches were telling last night of the removal from the wreckage | you} of the Illfated submarine F-4, of| the remains of victims, among} whom one is that of Archie H.| Lunger, gunner's mate, the ner’s widow, gave birth to gun residing in this city, @ little girl, Ohio Mai cs, FREDERICKE-NELSON %: Store Closed All Day Monday, Labor Day| Fit the Boy Out Tomorrow With a DREADNAUGHT SCHOOL SUIT (Reg. U. S. Patent Office) the models are the newest Norfolk ty effects with stitched-down belts and patch pockets, which appeal to every youngster who cares about “~/ style —the materials are all-wool gray and brown mixtures specially selected for strength the special tailoring, including the ams and» specially-fastened buttons, means lon double sleeve-lining, taped s ger wear and less need for repairs. every Dreadnaught Suit has two pairs of full-lined knickerbockers, button-bottom style in Sizes 6 to 18 years, The price is $5.00, New White Chinchilla Coats at $12.50 HITE chinchilla with cross stripes of black is the mate- rial in these new Coats which are in smart three- quarter length models, adapting them especially for imme- diate wear. f They are cut along newest lines, in full-belted style, with two-in-one collar, Very attractive values at $12.50, New Corduroy Coats $10.00 and $12.50 Unusually well-tailored, and designed in new ‘Autumn effects are these Coats of soft-finished Corduroy in navy, gray, brown, black and green, plain shades and two-tone effects. Priced at $10.00 and $12.50, —Basement Salesroom. Children’s Underwear Spe- Gar. cial 1 dC) Children’s School Dresses Attractively Low-Priced ment HE Basement XCEPTIONAL values at Salesroom is Well- this price in Children's prepared to meet the Fleeced-lined Vests and Pants, also Boys’ Drawers. Special, Saturday, 15¢ garment. —Basement Salesroom, __—_2imoe GHess & demand for pretty School with a show- ing that includes the practical wash dresses well styles in serge, suiting and wool and mixed fab- tics. Sizes 6 to 14 years. Attractively priced at S85¢, $1.25, $1.50 and $2.50. CHILDREN’S SCHOOL COATS, $5.00— Corduroys, Zibelines, Diagonals and Fancy Coatings are tailored into these smart, practical School Coats. Choice of navy, brown, green, Copenhagen and gray, sizes 6 to 14 years. Price $5.00. MISSES’ SCHOOL COATS $5.75 TO $12.50. In Coats for'the Miss from 14 to 20 years of age, the smartest designs of the new season have been clev- erly adapted to meet youthful requirements. They are tailored from serviceable mixtures and corduroys in new plain or belted effects, and priced at $5.75, $7.50, $10.00 and $12.50, —Basement saiesroom. well - made Dresses as as wool New Camisole Special 50c A S pictured, this dainty Camisole is fashioned J453 6f@eoenmr yo 3 Om wes of a wide band of pink a Crepe de Chine between bt shadow and German Val N S = S h H insertion, finished, at top ew tyles in Cc ool ats . with dainty —ribbon-run For Misses and Children lace beading and edge " ‘ ree and shirred ofter elastic $1.45 to $3 75 . at waist-line, Degas sais ok ile FRSPECIAL care hasbeen —Basement Saissroom, taken in the choosing of these School Hats to include only those that combine good service-giving qualities with Net-top Laces smart, up-to-date style. The Hats of Velvet and 50c Yard Plush with their trimming of IDTHS up to 27 inches in BS ribbon bows, yarn ornaments these Nettop Laces, which = and Autumn flowers are especially suited to every-day are so desirable for waists or > y-day asbeeibsidd.: Conhen 48 White ene school wear, and they come in dark, serviceable colors— black, brown, and cardinal Attractively priced from $1.45 to $3.75. —Basement Salesroom. ecru color, with deep patterns, navy at 50¢ yard, Basement Salesroom glass in this specially-priced Water or Lemon- Set is of clear, medium weight, hand-engraved Hand-Engraved T'''": Water Set The Set, consisting of Pitcher Special $1.50 24 six Glasses in tall, bell shape, special $1.50. —Basement Salesroom. in pleasing grape design