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} THE SEATTLE STAR 65c Linoleums 43c Sq. Yd. Though Prices Are Rising Every Day The best lot of Figured Cork Linoleum we ever se cured for a sale of this kind, and this, mind you, in spite of the fact that Linoleum prices are soaring skyward Newest Fall designs here—in inlaid wood designs, floral patterns and neat blue and white tile effects Third Floor, North BARGAIN FRIDAY AT THE BON MARCHE With Many Lines of Interesting Merchandise Specially Underpriced for the Day 150 Girls’ Serge School Dresses Reduced All sizes from 2 to 14 years,in several styles, but mot every several CPrsize in every style, for this is adisposal of prices). Many nice tailored Dresses, so practical for school wear; embroidered or piped styles; lots of straight line and novelty styles with plain gored or plaited styles. In Copenhagen Blue, Navy Blue, Garnet and Brown —Serond Fieor, ¢ Untrimmed Velvet Shapes in | Fyi ale of Boys’ School Retr See $198 Values | eday S y Suits, Sizes 6 to 16, at —95c Ea. Yl —$3,95— ades » > i. le, green bor i sear tories weapon: freer jolts Boys’ Schoo! Suits that are bee ateret, ae yies and man: garian style jacket with atitched-on three-piece aaa pe peers we” | Soe ane patch pockets; full lined knickerbockers styles. with taped seams. Many of the Suits come with 95c and $1.50 Novelty Hat Trimmings for | two pairs of kuickerbockers, in gray and brown 50c Each oe - | tweed effects. | Boys’ and Girls’ Sweaters 59c | That are $1.00 values, in sizes 24 to 34. Some | cotton, others cotton and wool mixed; Ruff Neck | or Byron style collar®, in maroon, cardin: Friday Specials in the Corset Shop C-B A La Spirite Corset, $1.00 Value, Special, at | 89c A good, medium tength Corset, a comfortable and welbfitting model, made of strong, serviceable coutil, neatly trimmed with lace and fitted with | supporters. Sizes 19 to 28. | Corset Forme, Special at 38¢ Each Handy for people doing their own dresemaking. —Third Fleer. You Save a Third at This Friday Sale of $1.50 Lace Curtains at —98c— A PAIR In Nottingham, Madras end Cable Net Weaves A good chance for you if you want any inexpensive Curtains for your home A good chance for you if you're running a hotel or a lodging house ; Good Lace Curtains, both good looking and good wearing, in nice designs—2!4 and 3-yard lengths, in white, cream or Arabian. —Third Floor. | The Sweeping Clearance of Men’s Shirts WITH BROKEN LINES OF MEN’S HIGH-GRADE SHIRTS AT REDUCTIONS OF 25 TO 50 PER CENT Mostly the larger sizes—a fine sale, this, for the fellows who wear 16)4 and 17- inch neckbands—for they have all the bestof the choice. Five big lots to choose from. Men’s $1.00 ’s $1.50 Fine Madras Percale and and white Boys’ 50c Shirts at 39c Each light and dark colors and neat patterns. Sizes 13 to 14%. —Upper Main Floor. Men’s Shirts | Men's Fine $2 and $2.50 | $3 and $3.50 | Quality $4 Values, Each Values, Each Shirts, Each Shirts, Each Madras Shirts 95c | $1.25 $1.75 $2.50 Women’s $3.50 to $5.00 Shoes —for $2.69— 500 Pairs in This Special Lot—in All Sizes and Plenty of the Wider Widths Black suede, dull kid, gunmetal calf, patent leather, whichever you will, with tips or plain toes—and black or colored cloth tops Also English Walking Shoes in dull calf, low heel style, in $3.50 quality—but $2.69 a pair on Friday —Upper Main Floor. $1.50 University of Washington Pennants $1.10 State University Pennants, made of good quality felt, extra large size, with Seal of Washington beau- tifully embellished at the head of the pennant. 81.75 Pocket Flash Lights, case complete ‘$i Kiver- y Battery and reinforced lens, 1.25 size 1%x9 inches, each « $1.88 Nickel Vest Pocket Flashlight, with tungsten lamp and Ever-Ready battery, each secesaveses c Friday “Bargain rage From the ‘Domestics fe Calleo, 25 Inches wide, navy blue back 4c _17c | ground with white figures; per yard | [fe School Suiting, 22 inches wide; stripe. check Outing Flannel, 27 inches wide (with slight tmper- | and plain pieces; 123 c tions) tn white | per yard 59 6c | —Lower Main Floor. Men's Shirts 2he Pennants, size 9x19 Inches, of Broadway, Lincoln and other schools, each 19c SOc Felt Pennants, size 14x36, including high schools, universities and cities, each 39c —Fourth Floor, Bhe Seeo Sik, 26 inches wide, in s plate and dotted styles; per yard.. and COlOTS; Per YATA .....6-:sssessevcevesecss For Bargain Friday—4 Cans of Carnation Milk for 25c If Purchased With Other Groceries, Not Including Sugar. Not Over Four Cans to a Customer Washington Corn Flakes, | Fine Ory Onions, S SEAE MOE can het viit ny éoverececcese 25c | per pound eR RS PP Ic | Spiderieg Tea, 500° araae, Del Monte Tomato linge aeune 39c i ‘ wc gle roel —Fourth Floor. Skirts Cut Free and fom DUE rent Styles to Choose From— ain Floor, Eastern Cove Fourth Floor. Union 8t.—Second Ave.—Pike 6t.—Seattle. Tel. Elliott 4100 Coffee, Freshly Roasted, a Good Blend, Special 19¢ a Pound. Fourth Floor. ise Dougiases, tn the slums, She preaches | incomplete lines (that is why we're willingto take about half the former | some | jly, “that what we want is Justice not vengeance fof his lungs {Give him air! jare all turned to the door of thisigave him sight, and Boys’ Shirts with military style collar, made of | fine quality madras, percale and chambray, tn | ip |(laughter and nudgings) that door jrage with a commanding gesture. inhed. 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 Read the Story Here; See It on Screen at the Alhambra men ig Amerion, fear (table and took out a code ft t/ and then with the ald of the others deciphered the mesmage, The plain English of it wae this | Strikers won't fight Your, adopted son Tommy has spelled our plans, Ple call him off quick. ‘| “Kehr,” said Barclay, “is blood thirstily anxious to teach the! t | he wilderness te be wtrikers a lomon. It seems to me eocued fron Miles that this is a matter for Her to! settle, Stiliiter—can you make Her call this strike off and bring| about a state of amity in Bitu men? Stilliter simply reached for telegraph blank and wrote “Kehr, Bitumen, Pa. ine to rich aad poor atthe Am sending Her temont she sues fe and signed it Barclay “What will you do about Tom my?” he asked After a moment's reflection Bar clay wrote « telegram to Tommy ‘Come home at once; must see you on Important business” Sensi sedis unk oaumaeas These telegrams dinpatched, danger of becoming “the Sturtevant and Semmes took their te the tenement heme of to the maney kings of New sat on for a time in silence, Bar CHAPTER XIX. jelay was the first to break it (Copyright, 1915, by The Star Co.) | “you will have no trouble tn per Tommy was in an awkward po suading her to go?” sition, In fall sympathy with his) “She dislikes me, but «he does! pathy with dynamiting and mur) her 1 don't understand her aver. | der sion to me. She know# that I am} It seems to me,” he began quiet with her heart and soul for the} common good Have we ; to work with me. But I repel! A loud chorus of mockery her,” | drowned his voice. Harclay smiled grimly But Carson sbouted at the top You have never made any ve him air,” and great effort to please the ladies,” when he had secured a fort Of he sald silence he went on: “Brother! “A mistake of youth, of which| Barclay i# all right,” he shouted:|/1 begin to repent in middle age “he thinks the same as we do, only It's my eyes, 1 suppose. They he don't think it the same way! made me hypersensitive. I am the kind of man who ought to marry Carson got a laugh, and Tommy and have children.” was given air Stilliter sat gazing off into Brothers “your backs epace thru the thick lenses which | Barclay, a troubled smile on his lips, sat and he sald, hall, Mine ten't He had suceeeded in exciting watched Stilliter’s face. thetr curtosity | “You must have some one tn Tommy continued mind he suggested presently | “While you were so loudly ap-| Stilliter gave a kind of guilty uding my opening remarks start “And suppose I have?" “And,” said Tommy, raising bis he said sternly; “but don’t tell me because his business here was fin-/I had mycelf in absolute control.”| iabed, and second, because be knew “This is frightful!” that I recognized him, in «plte of | «imply his false mustache Well, you) “Oh, don’t worry,” sald Stilliter | could have caught him if you hadn't) “the great work shall be ac been so buey making noises at me. complished first But it seems He was a Pinkerton man. only right to tell you what my in-| Tommy checked an outburst of tentions are—after the work is fin- Has any one #0 great a ‘His business was to find out if) ciatm on Her as I?" we are going to attack the mock “You repel her. You have sald/ ade or not. He thinks we are. Hut (t* | we are not!” “I have willed her to ike me! we? Who told yout” ete, ete “It's for you to decide,” | Tommy, | | | silence. cried | I'm just saying what my uitimate “Don't you think,” said Barclay, Again by exciting curiosity he poor child ought to be turned f had secured attention. to live—to love and to be happy?”| I saw,” sald Tommy, “a large 1 do not,” exclaimed Stilliter,| wooden box. On the box was print-|“for the good of the human race,| ed Rotary Air Pump. But on the’! do not.” | box under these words had once He rome and started slowly for) been printed the name Goss and the door. Goss. That convey# no meaning to| “Wait a minute,” said Barclay, lyou? Goss and Goss is a firm and he interposed himself netheord which does business on Broadway. Stilliter and the door; “have nition and cannon. Brothers, the| will attempt nothing against her, the platform at the freight station) til her work is done?” is a machine gun.” | “You have my word of honor,” There was a long and ominous) said Stilliiter, but the dog did not look his master in the eye. continued Meanwhile, Tommy had been in. Tommy cheerfully, watched ajvited to live with the Gunadorfs, man Watering his front lawn with/and had carried his belongings to a hose? It's easy for the man with! thetr hou jthe hoge to hit every blade of grass| Similar mansions in Bitumen jon his front lawn. It's just as/ housed a dozen people. Tommy was easy as it is for the man with the/jucky to have a whole room, how machine gun to hit every man in alever amall, to himself. There was crowd | also in the back yard a well with a “Attack that stockade? ‘That's! bucket, and here, if a man really just what old man Kehr wants you| wanted a bath and was willing to |to do. He will mow you down like|get up so early that nobody would grass, and the public will say it's| see him, he could get one. |your own fault.” As leader of the disconte “Have you ever, | Not only did the large crate con-|Gunsdorf ran an open house. There tain a machine gun, but smaller) was always talk and something to jeases which Tommy had not ob-|drink in the front room downstairs served, marked “Picks and Shov From the very first, Mrs. Guns. els,” contained high-power rifles|dorf had done her best to make jand ammunition. But for that|/Tommy comfortable. Not a tidy jnight, at least, old man Kehr's|woman by nature, she put her |deadly preparations for giving the house in order for his Denefit, and |strikers what he considered a well |kept it so. From the looking glass jae served «nd salutary lesson were/in the kitchen, at which you comb- in vain, ed your hair before meals, she | Dawn broke scrubbed the « fly-specks She | “They're not coming,” said the} bought a new comb with a full |Pinkerton man. “They must have|complement of teeth to hang on |listened to Mr. Barelay after all./the chain, she washed the roller But it looked, so help me, a# if}towel, and, for the first time in they Were going to tear him to|her life, took an interest in cook pleces first, and try to rush 8) ing, seeking instruction from netgh afterward.” {bors who had reputations in that “Any man with brains,” satd/line, But she managed for a time Kehr, “is a menace when he's on|to confine her amorous feelings to. the wrong side of a question. We|ward Tommy to deeds and atten must get rid of Mr. Thomas Bar-| tions clay. Give me that code book and] It was a shirtsleeve house. Di \a telegraph blank.” rectly you | you came in, you our | | After some labor and a grim yikes, gaint |coat on one of many hooks in the jsmile at the finished product, old| hall, and if you had been much on man Kehr dispatched the follow-| your feet, you sat with them on the | jing cypher to Gordon Barclay table after removing your shoes. | | Suckers won't bite, Your mut-| Mrs. Gunedorf was always com-| jtering carburetor Tommy has/ing and going. She would appear, | tickled Aphrodite. Please pound| silent as a ghost, listen for a while j his whiskers quick.” to what the men had to say, and Now then," he said to Mr. Pink-|as silently vanish. Sometimes she jerton man, “rush that!” shoved in her oar.” And she had | The Triumvirate and Prof. stili-|@ gift of hitting the nail on the! ter were together when Kehr's| head. But shewpoke always with | cyphergram was handed to Har.| 4 kind of restrained, feline ferocity, | |clay, and altho they imagined that (Continued Tomorrow) |!t# contents were important they rs couldn't help laughing at its word.| HELD AS POLITE BURGLAR ing. | TACOMA, Sept The police} Suckers won't bite. Your mut-| here believe they e finally round-| tering carburetor Tommy has|ed up the polite burglar who visited | tickled Aphrodite. Please pound/several homes In Tacoma recently | his whiskers quick. and always proved courteous to the} Something about that blessed|women whom he robbed, J. L. Stev- son of mine,” said Barclay, He'ens, arrested last night, is the sus. opened a drawer in his writing pecty Carefully in New York amart sectety leave, while Barclay and Stilliter|# audience, he was not at all In sym what 1 tell her—only I don't tell/f] And she is willing! if opened and that door closed.” | The smile faded slowly from|if Once more heads turned toward) Barclay's mouth xf the door. | “I do suppose that you have,” voice for the first time, “a man/that our plans are to be wrecked | went out |because you have turned amorous | “He went out tn a hurry, Hein your middle age.” Ht) went out for two reasons. First.) “I thought,” sald Stilliter, “that|ff said Barclay, i} “The hell we're not! Why aren't It is the one thing I cannot suc-| cessfully will her to do. . iH “pnt I wish you'd let me! intentions are.” i} jtell you what I saw on the plat-| {form at the freight station.” “that when her work {a done, It deals in uniforms, rifles, ammu-|your word of honor that soul Rotary Alr Pump which I saw on/that she will be safe with you, un. | Mail rat ee oe Orders Filled A Special Purchase of NOVELTY GIFT CHINA On Sale Friday at Two Low Prices N the Table Square (First Floor), for Friday’s selling, an unusually interesting assortment of useful and decorative Fancy China Pieces in a broad range of shapes and decorations, very attrac- tive values as follows: At 25c Each Ring Trees Covered Boxes Salts and Peppers Pin Trays Small Vases Sugar Bowls Creamers Bowls Toothpick Holders Stamp Boxes Hair Receivers Cold Cream Boxes Match Stands Bon-bons Olive Dishes Ash Trays At 50c Each Cracked Ice Bowls T Covered Boxes Toast and Tea Sets Hair Receivers Jewel Stands I pin Holders Bon-bon Dishes Mayonnaise Dishes Mustard Jare Manicure Sets Nut Bowls Butter Tubs Spoon Trays Whipped Cream Sets Comb and Brush Trays Syrup Jugs Sugar and Cream Sets and numerous other novelties suitable for gifts and prizes. —Tadie Square, First Floor New Seco Silk Gowns, $1.95 HESE fashioned in a dainty Gowns are pretty Empire pictured, with three large tucks over shoulder and ribbon-run lace insertion trimming They model, as come in: Lavender Light-Blue Copenhagen White -—they are delightfully soft and silky in texture and pack into a very small space, making them ideal for travel wear. Excellent value, $1.95. —Second Floor. ‘FREDEWICK @- NELSON) cluster color Cotton when rainy Now is a good time to provide for this protection. COCOA MATS, sizes 14x24, 16x27, 18x30 and 20x33 inches, priced at 664, 85e, $1.00 and $1.25 respect ively. COCOA MATS, M. B, quality, sizes 14x24, 16x27, 20x33, 22m 26, 24x39, 26x41, 28x45 and 30x49, priced at 9c, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 | and $4.00 respectively. 5 —Second Round Stoves Comforter Cotton Special 10c Roll J! [ 900 of these ight - ounce Rolly Comforter Cots n to sell Friday at 10¢ roll P8ine Section, rat Floor. White Cotton Dress Crepes Special 10c Yard yard, HIRTY - SIX - INCH Dress Crepes of good quality in fancy-wo tripe cords, also several styles in lace @fe fect; soft, sheer gag closely - woven. § hundred yards in Pri cial Friday selling, at I A broken assortment of Printed Voiles and Lage Voiles, also several odd pieces of fancy stripe Line Foulards and solide Gaberdines, on sale Friday at as reduced price, the 10. Ie. —Firet Floor, | Cocoa Door Mats GOOD Cocoa Mat at the” entrance to your home will save housework and wear and tear on your floor coverings weather sets in. L. B. quality, Basement Salesroom NEW ARRIVALS IN SUITS To Sell at $15.00 A NEW shipment of Autumn Suits to sell at § of the Basement Salesroom’s and wearing satisfaction in Suits at this price. The styles are copies of the most suc- q cessful models in higher-priced lines, and j 4 ts the materials and workmanship are of a ¥ -¥ very high order for such low-priced suits. Many novelty effects are included as Poplins, Gaberdines, Serges leading in the fabrics. Suits ing*are pictured and described: At left, Suit of black poplin, with half-belted coat topped with fur collar and lined with satin has two side plaits. The plain skirt buttons. Price $15.00. Three-Piece Wearever Aluminum Set Special $1.60 A illustrated, this Set con- sists of one 1-quart Shal- low Lipped Saucepan, a 1%- quart Lipped Saucepan and a 3-quart Covered Saucepan; all of solid, seamless Wearever aluminum. Special $1.60. This Week’s Demonstration of Wearever expert information regarding the proper care of aluminum utensils Aluminum affords and Yeaches their great possibili- ties for increased economy and better results in the kitchen baking of hot Friday's demonstration feature will be the cakes on a griddle without grease. Housewares Section, well as the more plainly tailored models, Diagonals and Furs and braids in military effect—Autumn’s two outstanding trimming ideas—are used with pleasing effect on many of the Typical values from this new shdw- Skirt has inverted side plaits Price $15.00. Oo os $15.00, brings more evidence ability to provide unusual measure of style ‘At right, Suit of brown poplin, with trimming of brown fur and self-covered —Basement Salesroom “Sure Seal” Fruit Jars Reduced to 75c Dozen EACHES and other large fruits may De canned whole in thes@ large-mouth “Sure - Seal Jars. They have 20 rough edges to cut they hands, Quart size, 1 duced to Zhe dozen. Rasement Sasesroom