The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 1, 1915, Page 14

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CHILDREN’S DAY At the Bon Marché’s October Sales Girls? Coats’ and Dresses At $4.95 Why, they are worth ever so much more, one glance at them will tell you that. a Se Better bring daughter down town Satur- &y day—for her Autumn outfit, when values like 4 S \" y DNR ah: are obtainable at Seattle's Big Store. 7 ‘\wer’Clever New Dresses $4.95 Y For Little Tots—for Girls and for the Older Girls ! A dozen new styles are here in wool chal- lies, wool serges, nicely tailored and trimmed with silk plaids. Velvet Dresses in the plain tailored styles with belt—nice little Dresses of velvet and plaid combined; some nice corduroys with satin trimming, and many other attractive styles, at $4.95, Better Values in Girls’ Coats at $4.95 and More of Them Than We've Ever Been Able to Show You Before—All Sizes From 1 to 14 Years The loose back style Coats are preferred by many, and the stitched belts are just as good. plain plush trimmed. girlish styles. Children’s rain capes of dark gray rubber with invisible stripe cotton Tined shirred hood, sizes 6, 8, 12, 14 and 16, at $1.00. —Second Floor. 300 Lovely New Ostrich Trimmed Hats Take Any One of $3. 95 Them Saturday at Isn’t It Nice to Be Able to Bay an Ostrich Trimmed Hat for Less Than | the Feathers Would Have Cost You a Short Time Ago? MANY ATTRACTIVE STYLES WITH OSTRICH PLUME OR OSTRICH BAND TRIMMINGS. Who ever heard of a sale of Ostrich Trimmed Hats at $3.95 in an October? Here is one, and a good one, at the Bon Marche Saturday, with 300 Hats, smartly trimmed with ostrich feathers and ostrich bands, going at $3.95, Some of them have velvet flowers and metallic bands, as well as ostrich is a goodly range of the deep, rich tints of Autumn, with a speck of brighter colorings here and there. —Second Floor South. SATURDAY SPECIAL IN CHILDREN’S HEADWEAR Misses’ and Children’s Trimmed Hats, $1.45 Each | We've no end of pretty Hats for the little ones on Saturday, Children’s Day, and} for only $1.45. We have lots of droopingbrim effects, and for those who prefer, the small sailors, felts, velvets and corduroys are among them. Bands of ribbon, ers and fancy braids are the trimmings—in navy, brown, green, red and black —Second Floor. Men’s T rousers for ‘ 95 ’re $2.50, $3.00 ven $3.50 = Alll Banched Together for This October | Sale Event for Men Buy Trousers If You Want to Economize —and Buy Them Now While This $1.95 Sale Is Going On For an extra pair of Trousers wil! often double the life of a suit—and no matter whether you want good street pants for outdoor work or dressier trousers (with cuffs, maybe) and belt loops, and all that sort of thing You find them here at $1.95 instead of their regular $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 prices. OCTOBER SALE OF BOYS’ SUITS $3.95 Boys’ $5.00 and $6.50 School And Some of Them Have Two Pairs of Trousers Lots of tailored effects, or handsomely trimmed—all in becoming Suits, Sizes 6 to 17 Years sale of Boys’ Suits—real $5.00 and $6.50 values, special at $3.95 A pleasing assortment of materials to select from—gray and brown mixtures, in diagonals and herringbone weaves, stripes anc checks. They’re the Norfolk Bulgarian belted pockets and buttonhole straps at knees; trousers all full lined, taped seams. style, with with ~—Upper Main Floor. ECONOMIES FOR MORNING SHOPPERS NO TELEPHONE ORDERS CAN BE 5c Bleached Cheese Cloth, 36 Ins, Wide 4C Yd. 5,000 yards of Sanitary Ch Bleached Gauze, 35 inches wide. Not over 20 yards to each. —Lower Main Floor, 36 Inches Wide” OC Yd, ACCEPTED FOR MORNING SPECIALS 6 Full Size Dinner 25¢ Plates for Pure white semi-porcelain Dinner Plates, full size, with embonsed border design. At this price none delivered. (Factory Seconds.) —Lower Main Floor. 29c Ea. 40c Heavy Cocoa Firm soft finish Long Cloth, full bolts of per- Door Mats for fect goods. Not over 12 yards to each. 9 a. m. Extra heavy Cocoa Door Mats, just what you oi Lower Main Floor, | Want at this time of the year for your porch | —Third Floor. 75c White China 50c Yd. Silk, 36-Inch gp hoor Prgms 10c Ea. Desk Pads, of nice quality imitation leather 25c¢ Package of Absorbent Cotton Hospital Absorbent Cotton, nice soft quality put up in sanitary packages; pound to each package —Lower Main Floor. Worsted Dress Goods, in the popular black white shepherd check, inches wide yard, 9 a. m. to 12 —-Upper Main | $1.25 Cotton Blankets, Size 66x80 Inches, at 200 pair of Cotton Blankets, pink and blue borders. 17c 85c Pr. one Not over two pair to $1.50 All Silk Crepe de Chine $1.10 Yd. Heavy quality lustrous all-slik Crepe de Chine, 40 inches wide, In white, black and a full line of colora ~——Upper Main Floor, Mixpert Attendants in the Chi s Rarber Shop—Childrea’s Hate 250 Home-made Cat, price —Third Floor. Al. Jolaon's j Butter Scotch popular 180 Songs } Wafers; TH B at 100 9 copy— strictly fresh and stews Anes | special for BON Sheltering | Saturday, 200 pound. Union St—Second Ave.—Pike St.—Seattle, Tel, El!iott 4100 Lower Main Floor. One style is of Bedford Cord with standing collar and novelty patch pockets, | and there | small flow- | Good quality and low price is the keynote of this Saturday | patch } Little Lots on Sale at Little Prices From 9 A. M. to 12} size of Pade, 13x18 inches; blotter included, from | — -IPmly were onlna: | Pale 96 icnaey Bee soak supper Main Floor, | Wide; splendid silk for waist, dresses’ and under - f ‘| wear. 9 m. to 12 —Upper Main Floor. in Hight tan with | Lower Main Floor. | War Cabinet Sits in Seattle; Mapping Woman's Home Missionary. Society Working to Make Better Americans in Every Corner of, the World Where Fly the Stars and Stripes. ail No, reader, these two little Japanese tote are not about to be murdered, They are nerving themsetves against the puff of the flash- photographer vainly coaxed them for five minutes to ith is pictured the ult, They are pupils in the Ja: Episcopal church, In the basement of the Ja 5. and Washington st. A score of them, who otherwise playing on the streets, menaced by immorality and automob! there daily, and, under the direction of Miss Theresa Willlam many useful things, They go about the Job of getting onto American ways just as serl- ously as do their fathers and mothers, The kindergarten is an adjunct to the missionary society's Cath erine P. Blaine home for down-and-out gir! tth ave. out of employment are taken in, home and helped to find a job. While waiting for the job, are taught cooking and , and the Bible, together with the fact that all of sewing, and E From this home women workers visit at the homes of Seattle's foreigners, and hetp them. They meet immigrants at the door of the detention home and teach them how to wear American clothes, how to clamber over diffi. cult American words, and how to dodge the pitfalis in this great Ame’ lean city. | Americans of them. Th Posec na by this society, which is in convention here this week, A war cabinet is sitting In; Today {t numbers more than Seattle this week! 200,000 girla and women of the | It has grim business ahead. (Methodist church, most of them With deadly earnestness It is mapping out a year’s campaign for its standi rmy of more than 200,000 sol And it has issued a call for 800,000 volunteers! It is engaged in a war which It has waged relentlessly for 30 years and which promises to go on for many times 30 years. It la battling for two causes— American patriotism and Chris- busy with their own houschold af fairs, and lending their time and energies to the at personal sacrifice. ve workers In the tleld the deaconesses, who aro literally regarded as angels by many grateful foreigners The Woman's Home Missionary society asserts that {t really ts « FOREIGN missionary soctety, and argues in this vein “Consider the rivers of na- | } | | tianity, And its enemies a | thonalities flowing In upon uel numerous: Crime, want, ignor- johemians, East In- arce, heathenism, Mormoniam, Indians, Scandina- all ot forces which it vians, Russians, Austrians, believes oppose its ideale, Polish, Turk Finnish, Flem- The battlefield ts from Alaska to| Ish, Spanish, & h, Chinese, Porto Rico; from Maine to San Francisco ané Honolulu; from Can eae to Florida. | This isn't a big news “story |The cabinet has been here since Wednesday morning, and all Seattle | knows about it—only, ae usual, the Japanese, Koreans, Portuguese —besides Germans, English and Scotch, “A real foreign mission work ls to evangelize these foreign- Speaking peoples here and to send them back to be leaders lereat bulk of the hurrying throng) among thelr own nation [bas given it scant notice | ieee * Its seastons in the First They are trying to increase the } The Woman's Hor | society. | The society ts bitter In tte stand agninat Mormoniam, It has declared | © Missionary | si’. itself in a p jon of “uncompro- | Misstonary societion have always) mining he been vaguely ausociated with Can. in the nam womanhood, destroys the sanctity of the home and debases the con ception of God.” And, to q pamphiets, it is working’ to stamp out Mormonism by ton and Thibet and the heathen oe, in our minds, Forelgn mis nary societies were organizations for which the preacher always dunned you when he knew that 50 cents was the smallest change you had in your pocket schools and mission stations in | Of the scope of home missionary! Utah, thus u rmining the power societies, we had not the slightest|of Mormonism by teaching truth as it is in Jesus Christ.” We supposed tt had something to| It also endeavors to influence do with the heathen Chinee tn this! public opinion and legislative ac country We rather scoffed at the'tion thru personal appeals, pet |J earnestness with which our w tions and the circulation of- anti folk went about the business o' ing home missionaries But we scoff no more. Mormon Mterature. PROPOSE GHANGE We hum | bly take off our hats to the Wom an'*# Home Missionary soctety, for we know now what It all mags IN CONSTITUTION see ‘ Far up in the cold wastes of/, Changes in the constitution and ‘| by-laws of the Woman's Home if |northern Alaska this society has parpberne y ype ew, A gion fety were dis missions and schools, and is teach repc tted by a committee ing, nursing, feeding and clothing Ce hundreds of needy Eskimos and In.|Hended by Mrs. C. W. Bickley — } Io’ \ during the Friday morning session diana. Far out in the middie of the Pa.|0f,the board of managers, For the afternoon session, Rev cifio—on the Hawaflan {sland t self-sacrificing ae eats oe ok W. H.W. Rees was to extend greet save little children from (288 from the general deaconess fon and want, and ‘e|board, Miss E, Jean Oram was to moulding them {into potentially good |" chools Shots From \ Cummings Resting by the Wayside.” The evening program 1s devoted to young people's anniversary cltizens Far back into the mountain fast nessses of Kentucky, where dwell the “po’ mountain white,” notorious for their outlawry, and a hundred t the surgeon within 12 toes, to say nothing of portions of extremities, exposure. Shipwrecked been alded by us, Aleut | ‘reme feet metropolises, these angels of mercy and love are constantly at work Its emissaries are the first to ex tend a hand of welcome to the frightened immigrants at Ellis ts land, and to give a cheery word and a comfortable home to orphan girls struggling with poverty and tempta tion. and frozen by scientists have as well as stranded native Indians. Corresponding stories were told | by Mias Clara Cook, teacher of sew | It 1s making good Americans! |ing at the Unalaska mission, Mrs, | Hi par R. H. Young, of Long Beach, Cal Thirty-one years ago a good a of the Eskimo Indian woman stood on a street corner in bureau, Miss Inez Walthal, director New Orleans, Thousands of black | of the Sinuk mission, who said that eople surged past her. She studied the greatest blessings brought to them, sadly and thoughtfully, She|the Eskimo homes are the gospel looked into the faces of thousands Soap, sewing machines and others |] of negro girls and wome dread) Miss Mabel G. Anderson, of the | there purit 1 strength, but bit-|Catherine J, Blaine home, Seattle, ter suffering told of how J women are ‘The woman—wife of Bishop Hart-|duped into com over here by zell, of the M. B. church—took an|men representing themselves as interest in their lot. She saw t sober, industrious workm who, str ing in want and Ignorance the little women h and with a number of friends she turn out to be wont to work ng them. ‘That| who compel their wives to support was the inn of the Woman's | them Home Missionary society . ‘ SINK TORPEDO BOAT The socte was formally or-| CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct ganized in ‘Trinity church, Cincin-|Turkish shore batteries sank a tor jnati, July 6, 1880, and at once it}pedo boat in the Dardanelles Wed ibegan spreading, nesday, Out Big Campaign/ The October Sale of Women’s Gloves The October Sale of Boxed Hosiery Now Progressing | oe ak nsicmmre Ladies’ “$ ; 0 4 are? FREDEn a Patterns — = They figure that If they don’t get hold of the foreigners and make! |f GOOD Americans of them, somebody else will get them and make BAD) sort of work le going on ali over the United States and her! | Methodist Epinc cai church, and—|membership to 1,000,000, and It | why yes, of course, we knew you'd| looks aa if they were going to do| if |euess It, ite name ts it! maintenance of | the | years behind civilization, the Meth he story of the heroic work odist missionaries are teaching the one by the missionaries on the gospel of better bread and. better (lonely outposts of civilization was | babies, ¢ 1 nes and abandon-|told Thursday afternoon and even aatd? teade and. thoonshtve Ing by the missionaries themselves Thru the congested nesro centers|, Mrs. J. H. Parsons, head of the of the Southern cities and. the Jesse Lee home, on the Aleuttan wretched sluma of the Northern|!#lands, said that in the hospital a week | Basement Saloereill Girls’ “Sample” Coats Exceptionally Low-Priced IXTY COATS in the offer- ing—all this season’s styles. They were bought at a concession and are offered at savings in proportion. Zibeline, Boucle, Corduroy, fancy Mixtures and Plush are the materials, tailored into smart models with serviceable Children’s Unings. Sleepin Sizes, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, ping 14 and 15 years. Garments Special 39c N attractively low price A on these practical Sleeping Garments, for children between the ages Unusually low-priced at $1.50, $2.00, $2.95, $3.95, $5.00 and $6.75. —Basement Sa of 2 and 7 pere 04° — Good Values in Coats at fut covering ant’ tm 10,00, $12.50 and $15.00 ming of mercerized finish- ing braid. Plain white and stripe patterns, special 39¢. —flasement UTUMN’S new styles, mate- rials and colors are featured in the Basement Top in wide variety #alenroom, 5 Salesroom’s of Coats. displays Wide-wale and two-tone Cor- duroys, Plushes, Chinchillas and Mixtures lead in popularity, and may be had in the new subdued hades of brown, green, gray and Copenhagen, as well as black-aad” fancy mixtures. Belted, plain flare and military styles are equally smart and _ have trimmings of plush, velvet and fur. Sizes 15 years to 44 bust measurement. Three moderate prices— $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00. Motoring Coats, $6.50 These practical and useful Coats are 7-length, carefully tailored from serviceable tweeds in gray and tan mixtures, Full- belted style, with two pockets and two-in-one collar. Sizes 36 to 44. Price $6.50. Basement Salesroom. Children’s Trimmed Hats $1.45 to $3.95 Hats are cleverly fashioned ’ Boys’ Norfolk Suits, $3.95 feed extra pair of trous ers that accompanies these Sults adds greatly to their length of service, and the gray and brown mix tures from which they are tailored were especially se lected for ¢urability. Sizes 6 to 18 years, $3, Boys’ Sweaters in gray, bine, maroon and cardinal, sizes HESE 26 to 34, The to $2.50, ‘ ae : Boys’ Doubletexture Rain from plush and velvets in styles Coats in sizes 4 to 16 specially becomir iIdis sour. SGOn, HAE 15 esp 5 ecoming to the childish match, 50¢, face, and are prettily trimmed with Boys’ Overcoats in siz 3 ¢ An ster dl $3.00, ribbon and flowers in the new styles. $3.50 and $4.00, Basement Salesroom. Priced from $1.45 to $3.95. Women’s Trimmed Hats, $3.95 Unusually good values are offered in an assortment 150 Trimmed Hats. They are in jaunty turban and larger effects, and the trimmings include fancy feathers, flowers and fur ornaments. Price $3.95. Untrimmed Hats, $2.95 Very good style and value in Untrimmed Velvet and Plush Hats at this price lapes are in small and large effects, and all are very lig reight with blocked or flexible brim. Price $2.95. ~-Basement Saiesroom, Outing F ieiinsl Gowns Special 75c Sturdy School Shoes Low-Priced GREAT mothers many pattle have come to look regularly to the Basement Salesroom to supply their chil- dren’s needs in school footwear for this Section specializes service-giving shoes moderate prices on good, at very N sale Saturday, five new styles in warm, cozy Outing Flannel Gowns. The outing flannel is of a very good quality, made up in round-yoke styles and si trimmed with mercerized finishi ng braids. Choice of plain white, blue and white stripes, white with figured yoke and plain blue. Special, Saturday, T5e. Misses’ and Children's Gun. EXTRA-SIZE GOWNS, SPECIAL $1.00— metal Calf Button Shoes, cut extra full and.long and made of a good grade of made to stand the strain of outing flannel. Square yoke s yle in stripes and plain school wear, sizes 6 to 8%, white, trimmed with mercerized lishing braid $1.15; 9 to 11%, $1.35; 12 to — Basegrent Salesroom 2%, $1.65 patr, nitinaineiantiananiiias Boys’ and Youths’ Gun-metal Calf Button and Lace Shoes om oeasuive we“ | India-Shape Umbrellas sa creed wate $1.00 ton Shoes and Gun-metal wo N’S Ten-rib India-shape Umbrellas with Calf Button and Lace Shoes, made with Goodyear welt black waterproof covering and wood handles sole, sizes 10 to 1314, in various styles, finished with cord and tassel. At- pair 1 to 2, $3.00 pair; tractively low-priced at $1.00. to 5%, ~ pair, —Rasement Salesroom, of 2

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