The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 7, 1915, Page 8

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4 ‘Tt’s a Shame to Sell Handsome New Embroideries and Laces at These Prices But Wednesday Will Be My Day at THE BON MARCHE’S DEPARTMENT BUYERS’ SALE And I am foing to sell pretty Embroideries and Laces at lower prices than I have Because I want to sell more JESSE H. CAREY. ever done in my many years as Embroidery Buyer, WHY of them than I ever did in a single day 35c and 59c Corset Cover and Embroidery Skirting —22c Yd.— 18 and 45 Beautiful Flouncings Worth From $2 to $5 —$1.50 Yd— New, Handsome Patterns, 27 and 45 Inches Wide On soft crepes, sheer voile and fine Swiss—the embroidery work on some of the pieces runs up to 24 inches wide; the designs are simply exquisite—some in metal effects, others in large skirting patterns, The finest lot of Embroidery ever offered at $1.50 50c to 75¢ Embroidery 35¢ Yard Pretty Allover Embroidery tn small | terns, on fine Swiss and cambric; 22 wide Beautiful Embroideries, Inches Wide I have offered many a bargain in Embroidery in my day, but I have never before equaled this. I have a splendid lot of patterns in eyelet and openwork designs, and the materials are Swiss, Nainsook, Cambric and sheer Voile. 50c and 69c Flouncings 35c Yard Fine Swiss Embroidery Flouncings for Infante’ Dresses and Skirts in small, dainty patterns some with hemstitched hems, others with ruffled edges; 30 inches wide. neat pat. to 30 inches Suitable for baby dresses and waists. 2,000 YARDS OF BEAUTIFUL SHADOW LACES Fine quality Shadow Laces in dainty floral patterns; widths ranging from 2% to 6 inches. Suitable Lace for dress trimmings and exceptionally fine and pretty for lingerie. A splendid lot of choice selections. Shadow Laces, Yd Shadow Laces, Regular 15c Values, for Shadow Laces, Cc UC Worth 20¢, on Worth 10c, on » Sale for only Yd Yd} Sale for only —t New and Pretty Art Needlework And | want you all to come and get some of the special xX . values I am offering as my share of the Buyers’ Sale— and these specials are all bright, new lines, specially pur Net? say ° chased for this day of the sale. Beautiful Hand-Made Battenberg | 69 Cc E Scarfs and Centers, 98¢ Values at a. For my day at the Buyers’ Sale I have some good bargains to offer, more that I cannot mention here. size 29-inch—round or square style. 65 FUDGE APRONS, STAMPED IN NEW DE. SIGNS, AT 49¢ EACH. 15¢ Stamped Towels at 8 Each Guest Towels, stamped with scallops and «imple | designs on linen-finish huck; large size. Special | for Wednesday, 8c each. 19¢ Battenberg Doilies 1212 Battenberg Doilies, measuring 9 inches In di: eter; come in neat designs, and splendid values | for only 12%c each. 59c Centerpieces for 39c Each | Pretty Battenberg Centerpieces in both the Tound or square style; come in the 18-inch size. Price 39¢ each. 39c Satin Damask Scarfs 25c White Satin Damask Scarfs, size 18x54, and | Centerpieces, size 28 and 36-inch; stamped In the newest designs. Visiting tadies are invited to come in and see our complete needle work department, and, if they | choose, to take a lesson o7 two in embroldering and | crocheting. Announcing The Bon Marche’s Autumn Fashion Display | Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, September 13th, 14th and 15th An extensive showing of the correct modes for the coming season In Street and Evening Hats Apparel for formal and informal wear Costume fabrics—and garnitures MORE BARGAINS IN DOMESTICS Cries Buyer Goldie as he selects three special values for Wednesday at the Buyers’ Sale 7c Percale at Percale, 28 inches wide, neat pat- 5e yd. terns and in lengths to 10 yards, 15¢ Eden Flannel Eden Flannel, 27 inches wide: Qe d comes in neat patterns and in y . lengths to 10 yards. } | | 15¢ Galatea, 27-Inch | Galatea Cloth, in full rite 10 and mill lengths, figured and IC y 4 plain pleces, y —lower Main Fleer. Buyer Hastings Offers Many Grocery Specials ee rn ee STANDARD CANNED TOMATOES,, 25¢ '10c J D ir and many The Scarfs are size 17x50 and the Centerpieces 45c Stamped Gowns for 25c Night Gowns of good quality mustin, entirely made up and stamped with simple designs. Spe- celal at 25¢ each. 39c Pillow Covers for 25¢ Tapestry Pillow Covers in variouw figure and | — designs; made up ready for the inside pillow 65c Stamped Pillow Cases 39c Made of best quality 45-inch pillow tubing and mped with pretty designs; come in both the day and night styles 89c Stamped Night Gowns 59c Made of fine quality Nainsook, entirely made up and stamped in pretty designs to be embroid ered {n white or colors. 98c Stamped Crepe Gowns 69c Crepe Night Gowns, entirely made up kimono style and stamped tn pretty, designs. The Buyers Offer These Special Morning Bargains From 9 A. M. to 12 Only But Say They Will Be Unable to Accept Any Telephone Orders for Them 10c White Cambric 5c Yard 2,000 yards of Blue Grass Cambric, 34 inches wide full bolts of perfect goods Not over 15 yards to each. Lower Main Floor. 4 / : Children’s 25¢ Waists 12'/2c Kaltted U wal of splendid quality white cotton with straps and buttons; come in sizes 2 to 4 years. From 9 a. m. to 12 Upper Main Floor, 30c Japanese Matting Rugs 15c Japaneses Matting Rugs of medium weleht and well finished edges; come in Ortental 27x44 Inches to 12 nice for underwear. From 9 a. m. to 12 designs: sine Third Floor, Mason Pint Fruit Jars 45¢ Dozen Verfect Ball Mason Frutt Jars, pint size complete with porcelain lined caps and Not over 2 dozen to each. From 9 a Lower Main Floor. From 9 a. m rubbers m. to LENOX LAUNDRY SOAP, ONE OF THE BEST BRANDS, 3 BARS FOR Delivered with groceries FOUR LARGE SIZE CANS FOR. Delivered with other grocertes M. & J. Serle Coffer, two of the | Faney Spanish Queen Olives; | Biuing or Ammonia, Mayflower finest Coffees; ver ib. extra large size; 25¢ nrand; large size bot Bhey or 2 ibs. for $1.00 | bottle for .. 19c | tles, each 124c | | . . . ¢ O14 Vashioned Sealing Wax, fine Special Santon Coffer, freshly | Imported ©Ollve O11, one of the | Z-lb. nec pest bran enuine Ital for sealing fruit jars Sepia a 65c | er oi tie vote tor. , SVC | per cake dc . | Pure Ground Binck Vepper, guar fample Ten, green amd black: | Pure Older Vinegar, aatesd abaeniutaly pure all Kinds mixed tomethér; OES @ | brand, our 60¢ i pay poeee 19c er pound charge for Jum: : 7 3 gallon jug Pure Baking Powder, Mayflower sifted from the brand; 1-1, cane n Tea | Plekling Spte: priced for regular 260 grade 123c¢ Get Quick Ser 19c | per pound . Wednesday, und vo me Food at Our Fourth inter Get Your Boy a Price 85.00—Upper Main Mloor 2.95 Pair—Upper Union St.—Second Ave,—Pike St.—Seattie. Mate FL Tel. Elliott 4100 7 Main Floor, | I’ve Got Oodles of Dainty Bargains in —Third Floor. | THE SEATTLE STAR THE GODDESS INTRODUCING. EARLE WILLIAMS as . . Tommy Barclay ANITA STEWART as... . The Goddess Written by GOUVERNEUR MORRIS One of the Most Notable Figures in American Literature the Story Here; See It on Screen at the Alhambra After the tragic death of John was tired, build @ low lean-to shel: | oan Meath {tt have supper or not, according | a Ament of the .|to luck, make a workmanlike fire year-old baby to keep his fedt warm, curl up in| parmdive |his blanket and pass @ luxurious | hee for |Dikht, waking at daylight, bruised, | rm the world. At sore, cold, and for some reason she Is suddenly thrust into/known only to those who love the windy to proton ta tied ner "| woods, perfectly happy and con to feet the t Mite tented. ry girl most, wf been One night @ few days after Mary rg Paphnmty « Mackstone had treated him #0 cay ® few days, howe LD bimoseit ti jallerly, Tommy camped on high (Inge as the adopted son of Mr. Barclay. ground by the headwaters of «a Time te + fight poe Pe nheod ‘9 | brook |]| fay. whe has plansed’ te have ‘Tommy | Presently the moon began to rise lwek and that always made Tommy “ire mournful and sentimental, Being arty emg young man, he sighed, and began to imagine that he and she (a ro ~ mantic edition of Mary Blackstone CHAPTER V. with better manners and less world Mary Hlackstone sat for a very | ln had come to this wilderness long time, staring into space, She|t weape from the outside world | didn't want to give up Tommy. She and to make thelr home didn't want to give up all those| Then bis head fell forward on his wonderful possibilities that her) breast, and he dreamed that he father had talked about so solemn-|amelt boiling cauliflower, It war ly after exscting from her a solemn |a smell to which he was particularly promine of secrecy. Could it be| sensitive, and which he particularly true that the old order of things, a) hated. He waked up with an angry president catering to this vote and/ start, and the smell persisted that, a congress continually throw-| He was angry and disgusted. ing obstacles in the way of enter-| And his feelings for the people who prise and efficiency, was to change| had not only invaded his solitude all of a sudden? Her father said) put had brought a cauliflower, more so, The people would begin telthan one, possibly, into the north. clamor for efficiency in high places| ern woods, were not fit to print instead of buffoonery, for trained | itis only satisfaction was th {p men Instead of demagogues. They the morning he would hunt Mem would clamor to be not flotsam 404 | down and tell them what he thought jetsam in a sea of polities and 10 | oF them competence, but integral parts of| “nut no had a bad night, and when |wuch @ machine as the Standard Oi!| b> at last he did get to sleep, he slept or the Steel Trust, with some one do heavily that daybreak didnt at the head of it that would see to the comfort, cleanliness and effi-| "ke him. By the time he had clency of every one of. those in.| Washed and breakfasted tt was half tegral parts. Instead of taxes to/PAst feven, which is a shocking pay, the people would clamor for hour in the woods, dividends to spend, and they would| _ He climbed to the top of the hub get them. Her father said go. |Fleld glasses in hand, he began t« / They have ground down the search the whole landscape far and Trusts,” he said, “only to find (near for traces of human beings that they have ground them. | What he hoped to see, and what he selven down at the aame time, [did presently see, was amoke, a pale Now the pendulam fs swinging | 4methystine column of it rising the other way Gradually the near the base of one of the moun trusts will regain what they have|tains. He took its bearings very lost. What ts the next step? Great-jcarefully. It was directly between er trusts? Yes, but beyond that,/him and the smallest of three bar. staggering belief, « trust of trusta./ren oliffs which formed the first A trust In whore hands will be ali|upthrust of the mountain, and ie the tru of business of a whole) judged, about half a mile this side continent, and whose stockholders | of the cliff. shall be the inhabitants of that con-| At the base of that cliff was a tinent. Poverty and degradation | rattiesnake den. |will cease to exist. The head of| “Just like a man who would that trust may be called a chalr-| bring cauliflower into the woods to man, a president, dictator; perbaps/camp in snake country.” he he will be called king. And already | thought. “Wonder if I can pick one ithe powers who believe in this com-|up with these glasses.” ling change have such a man in their] The distance was jeye. He will not be the first king; jhe ts very young, but he will be the was about to give up when jnecond. After him, who? Why, a}ly a man walked son of his body, trained from birth |to fill that great position. And you, my dear, if you wished, might be T haven't found a snake, but |that son's mother and wear a dia |!'ve found the next beat thing. Now | dem.” what the devil is Professor Stilliter dotng In this part of the world?” Again he Hfted the glasses and again saw the professor. He ap-| pe to be polishing something | Jand dropped ft skillfully so that it/ OP the sleeve of his Norfolk jacket. | [hung from her shoulders to her fect |NoW and then the something flasb-| like some royal robe; still laughing | °4 brilliantly In the sunlight. What | she darted to one of those giane (°ver {t was, Professor Stilliter| topped tables in which things | Presently dropped it into his pocket, | curious ané rare are often kept.| yen is way into a dense clump | rom this she took a golf crown | °% bushes a the very base of the : cliff and disappeared. that had been taken from the grave) nut Tommy was not to investi-| oe ee een an end calle | &At@ those bushes at the foot of the | jcliff. He was within a quarter of a twisted together. And she put this! mite of them, walking swiftly and upon her head and went and stood | quietly along an old lumber trail, }in front of a long mirror, Then she/ when ddenty his quick esr began to play-act—to look very) caught a sound of footsteps and at haughty and dignified or very &ra-|the game moment his quick eyes clous and condescending, to extend | caught a glimpse of something jher hand and to be kissed by im-| white that moved. He stepped | jaginary courtiers; she was half in| quickly into a thicket of alders, | aden: | ually into the Meld of bin vision—and out of It. “Ww I'm jiggered,” said Tom- | Suddenly, with an excited laugh, she canght up a great piece of gor |meous ancient church embroidery ithat Iay across the back of a sofa, | jearnest, half laughing. crouched low and to all intents and | She heard a soft footatep; there! purposes was blotted out of ex-| was no time to discard the crown]! istence. and the robe. Blushing crimson,| and feeling very ridiculous, she ‘turned and saw one of the footmen. | His wooden face showed no sur- prise at her eccentric costume; he did not even appear to see it. He} carried a small silver tray on which |was a white card | | Who {s it, Bentadge?” ‘Mr. Barclay, madam.” Her !mpulse was to run to the {mreat hall stair and call down to} Tommy. But she hesitated. Then| her eye roved once more, and she caught a glimpse of herself in the long mirror. | “Tell him,” she said, “that I am not at home.” Tommy, sure of his welcome, had been told that Miss Blackstone was at home, and had leisurely followed the footman upstairs to the door of the little sitting room. When he heard her say coolly, even coldiy, “Tell him that I am not at home,” he felt as if he had been struck between the eyes. And then anger seized him. For she had promised that she would be at home on that particular after- noon, and now here she was saying that she wasn't | Of course there was nothing that he could do but turn and go. And,/| the one word, “Wake!” | of course, he did these things. | Expression and light came Into} When he was tn the open air he| the great eyes; and she looked about drew a long breath {her with a kind of startled delight “T'll get out of this damned city,”| A stick cracked. She turned her he said, “and if she happens to| head toward the sound, but Pro-| jwant me for anything she'll find] fessor Stilliter had made good his} that I'm the one that's not at) tiptoed retreat Along the trall, his heavy baby face streaming with sweat, came Professor Stilliter leading by the hand a slim and lovely girl who carried her head like a princess. She wan dressed in a white gar ment that fell in unbroken folds from her shoulders to her feet, like a Roman toga. On her bare feet she wore thin sandals, on her bare head a cirelet of gold, in which Jewels flashed. Her mouth had an expression of celestial gentleness and smoothness, but her eves, half shielded by their lids and lashes, were without expression. She seemed to Tommy like a girl, not of this earth, walking tn her sleep. Having passed Tommy's hiding place, Professor Stilliter turned | from the trail and led the heavenly vision to a sort of natural seat that overlooked a quiet pool from which | Tommy had often taken trot She sat reflected fn the pool, and looking straight ahead of her, and not seeing—if you know what 1| mean. Professor Stilliter had let} go her hand and was tiptoeing off, | abandoning her apparently, but when he had gone a little way he} turned and made curious passes in| |the alr with his hands, and spoke suddenly in a voice of command, home. To Be Continued | clay owned a hunting preserve in| FITZ WANTS LIGHT the Adirondacks, and seldom went | "The preserve was reat witderncss.| RATES REDUCED, One dirt road led from the railroad | wade | camp at the head of the biggest|ing that the Renick law does not | lake, but otherwise the region boast-| prohibit transferring money from | |you had to make your way from one| Tuesday afternoon planned to rec-| landmark to another as best you|/ommend to the council that the |plenty of condensed food in tins or|budget to retire bonds and meet trust to your skill with rod and/bonded interest, be stricken. He! Tommy would leave the train at|ing rates, which the counell has | Four Corners, hire a team, and get| voted to raise to 41% cents per kilo himself put down somewhere along | watt hour, |the road leading to the main camp. | cents, IAke many other rich men, Bar. near it | station at Four Corners to the main| Councilman Fitzgefald, contend: | ed only a few narrow trails. And|the general fund to other city funds, | jcould, And elther you had to take | $227,969 now included in the tax rifle to keep you from going hungry. | algo recommended that street light be again reduced to ‘| He would then choose a eae | Counellmen Dale and Hanna are almost at random, walk until helwith Fitzgerald tn these changes, Present The New Autumn lashions For the approval of Seattle women, intro- ducing the favored modes for the new season’s every occasion, in | Millinery ! Suits Wraps Costumes | Fabrics | Accessories i A Special Selling of New Gloves at $1.15 Pair Has been arranged for Wednesday, and includes 700 pairs of imported Gloves in one-clasp style, pique sewed. Choice of black, white, tan and gray, with con- tras ery. ting piping and self or contrasting 4-row embroid- An offering that is both timely and exceptional, at the specially-low price quoted, $1.15 pair. Also featured for Wednesday, unusual values in 16-button White Glace Gloves, overseam sewed, with 3 clasps, at $1.65 pair. First Floor | School Suits (Reg. U, §. Patent Office) —the models are the newest Norfolk effects with stitched-down belts and other which appeal to every youngster w about style. features ho cares —th® materials are all-wool gray and brown mistures, specially selected for strength. —the special tailoring, including the double sleeve-lining, taped seams and specially-fast- ened buttons, means longer w need for repairs ar and less fo} —every Dreadnaught Suit has two pairs of full-lined knickerbockers, in button style. Sizes 6 to 18 years. The price bottom Basement Salesroo’ New Lace-Sleeve Corset Cover Special $1.00 XCEPTIONAL value fs of- fered in this dainty Cor- set Cover. which {s fashioned entirely of Fisheye pattern Val. insertion and Swiss em- broidery bands in vine ato The short sleeves are formed by many rows of the Val. in sertion sewed together Especially suitable for wear under sheer waists. Special Wednesday $1.00, —Basement Salesroom: o Demonstrating Kerr Self-Sealing Mason Fruit Jars In the Rasoment Salesroom, ia Bs is, E e e tl P C y 2 or eel PS I le ee te

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