The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 3, 1909, Page 9

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SeSeoeeeeeoe t MAINLY ABOUT : WOMEN PeSedeoee oo Are You a Violet Girl? So many girls Te ire Did Not Like ~e Where Home Was “ging Built and Had It Phanged Suddenly. what ta that odor whieh hed around hem nowadays, I'v not a poaitive }perfume, only just the most re fined sweetness imaginable, It in {¥iolet, simply violet, but violet in everything, perfume, sachets, per fumed flannels for tacking in dress is 8 laings, tooth wash, hair tonics, bath who aret wit | Mbleta, everything uth of iterty : etol This la the given by a apes whe «|ehemist for the woman who would be not only as fair as the rose, but j radiate an odor equally sweet, And tn spite of the fd for stronger and more powerful perfumes, girla of refinement still nothing bat rt | Vlolot | Perfume of any sort should never «| be od profusely. There should be jJuat @ suspicion of the odor cling ing about the garments, and thin jis only obtained by the use of sachets placed re gowns are hung or places where underclothes jare kept. | tr of thelr sex 3 (ity United Frew) Pemcago, ti, Aus § se padilt Puttorson the Pia whims, has just Te incident urring tart p hia ie now DT bought a lare at Libert ie a ‘and landscaper Jeying out his he flee the house were 9 ipontract let, and w use day, after work on th ee well started, Pat fe drive out to his down the main road of Libertyville, P ° pease fining on 6 i the main road tn Roe with the plens of th Testaadecaper, who had order 8 wh wut if You Wish to Be Graceful. If you wish to be graceful, firat learn how to stand. Watoh a crowd ae of Women together, and notice how * nt my | badly most of them stand aad fen't where T want my) ich to one alde or the other and ea nee eer on neag | Bet tired In a fow minutes, because vote tt apa the weight Is thrown on a few |muacios, which cannot bear the , [strain for long y} Stand straight, with the welght of the body set equally on both feet Keep your head up and your shoul ders braced, and you will be sur prised how much longer you can stand without fatigue Secondly, learn how to rise grace fully from a chair, how to ait so jthat the lower part of the spine reste against the chair back. You jean then rise quite easily by plant ling the feet firmly on the ground jand bending the body slightly for ward with a gentle sway of the hips. PRETTY DRESS Arohitect did as the foundation (ak wae fe-started on whioh, to the average aM far inferior to the on wihe architect and lands aper it, But on the new Went up, and now ie om the Bow places of the im Focation cost thou dollara in general re of detail, ote, but Pat was matistied, and that was considered ap & ar MORI: MONEY. sub foremen and F by the city pe ithe elty counci! last night them an increase in wages, to 10 per cent of the at scale. The sub-foremon are $4.40 per day, and the line ITT FALED TO BPHESS SYMPATHY ly denying the have beon made by itt, manager of the Motor Car company, ing down in his au- ind killing Rafello Sego; ; & year ago, he had expenses and help- Miss Katie Sego, deceased man, yer [that far from giving the iy ald, Leavitt had ‘ word or was sorry the ac with They | FOR HOME WEAR SOeeroreoe rs : 2 e There is one simple thing that The baby is often fretful and oro ty. give it a drink of water fi o'clock at night. during the day, feed it anyway, | The reason for keeping to hours is this: If you let the baby sleep on over two hours, It will be so hungry when it does awake that {t | wil scream, and then take ite milk }too fast, and will also want more than the regular allowance, and so wet tndigestion. Then, too, advantage Is, if the baby ts during the day it will be nourished enough to sleep through the night {if you let it sleep long, unbroken lengths during the day, it will oo | the habit of sleeping in the day and waking at night—which te an un necessary and uncomfortable state! of affairs. If you find the baby apits up milk | after feeding, {¢ indicates that It has had too much, or that tt is too rich, | so be careful to regulate the food ing accordingly. Of course cow's milk is too rich for young babies unless diluted one-half water. As| the baby geta older dilute it one | third water untal the child gets to/ jbe about elght months old, when | you can give the milk without the | water, it the baby seems hungry be-| tween the foedings, give it a drink | of water; if it still seems hungry, | A delictous baked omelet is made by botling together one minute one! tablespoon butter rubbed smooth with one tablespoon flour, 4 tee spoon salt, and 2 cups bolling milk, | | which should be added slowly to 7) woll-beaten oggs and baked in but- tered pan 20 minutes, Serve at once. To make bashed brown potatoes, boll medium-aized potatoes in ket tle without cover. When cold, and chop fine. Put « half cup and butter in heavy Lahleg | pan; | | when hot, put the potatoes {n, salt warm weather, and that is to give THE STAR oS ale teen 4 ne 1 MATA hae BY JOSEPHINE HILL. many young mothers neglect In drink of wa and it is only b @ it is thire if the baby is a bottiefed baby, it is particularly important to (not loe water) between each milk feeding. ite it is most important to adhere to an iron clad the baby every two hours during the day—up to 10 If the baby is asleep at the reguiar feeding time, Get the milk warm, and then rouse up the baby enough to put the bottle in its mouth, the bottle of milk without apparently waking. Often it will take it Indicates that the milk is not strong onough for the baby, #0 use loom water, Bo most careful to wash out the baby’s mouth before feeding—also after feeding. The simplest way to do this le to have pieces of old cot ton cloth cut small and kept in a box on the baby's table. Put a pleoe of this eloth on your finger, and swab out the baby’s mouth, es pectatly rubbing off the tongue, oth. erwise there will form milk crusts in the baby’s mouth, which are very unbealthy in every way, Be sure to keep the baby’s liver active, otherwise it will be uncom fortable, unhappy, restless and fretful. So it is Important to in tude that responsibility in the jays routine, During the summer monthe the baby will likely look droopy and seem languid, so make it comfortable with cool water, plen ty of outdoor air, and if possible, take It to the country, If the liver Inclined to be too active, give botled milk once or twice a day to check It. Also you can give corn starch, rice Nour or arrow root, full directions as to quantity and prep- aration come on each box EOE ST IN mixtare tn buttered dixh, and when cool add one beaten egg and bake in rather quick oven. Laconia’s Hard Sauce, much butter, about 1 tablespoonful boiling water, Stir with a knife until smooth, extract and set away to harden. Baimon Balad. Fiake salmon, add half can small 44 @ little vanilla | roll TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1909. ’ WHAT WOMEN REALLY WANT What women want today thoy have always wanted they will want, so far as as Jong ae hi human fe something to take vf. From the waehwe with | her halfdosen bables always under foot and in the way, to the cele brated professor of geology, the} dream ia the same hing to take of. Learning doe quench the instinet nor wealth atroy It, nor tndeper it, A woman at t one of the learned pre cently explained her eee saying she Was Investing in a little farm, upon which she intended to bring up a little adopted boy and ail, ding, With Infinite pathos “The part | will have to play will be father's and not the mother's benause of my work, but it will be worth while, anyway.” No political duties or Interests are going to change thie tnstinet Conditions have changed women's ooeupations; neesssarily she has changed her methods to meet the }noed, but she la atill the caretaker, jail finding her hand her chief labor in lovking out jfor others, in protecting the rising eneration, It will the very last Instinct to yield, if r it door, to jnew and strange f The ad |justment to economies is unavold able, Women are demanding new rights because new conditions ren der their work fullle or difficult | without them, but wherever and }whenever women are able to get beyond the actual needs of the body, the necessities of life, they will provide next for thelr happi ness, and their happiness Hen ab ways in something to take care of Harper's Weekly MID-SOMM ER = ONS White buckskin or canvas shoes with wide giit buckles are smart with summer frocks what what we can an nature fal care nan in brown are nat #o popu earlier in the season Huttons are stin worn, but are emalier in size than they have been A greens are popular shades jade, green being an especial fa vorite, Dog collars of velvet are pretty embroidered in Uny buds and flow colors. “ei in your new lace waist or yoke baste small squares of thin ma terial under each place where you wish to make them, Cut away the earplue material after working the buttonholes, and they will be found chief happiness |} ora or a spray of foliage in natural |} | Colored Wash Goods When ready to work buttonholos to be firm and strong. Try tacking cheesecloth on the pantry window ecreen frame. This edmite alr that ts sifted free from | omoke and soot before it comes Into the pantry. Did you ever try cleaning the at tho same time saves your hands Put @ few clean marbles in your kettle of jolly while It ts cooking. They respond to the heat and will around, thus keeping the | Mautd stirring, which prevents | scorching Never was the vogue so great \for harmony of the whole cos FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. | Noon ¢ urday and Auguat | Btore Closes at 5:30 n Bat Dry Goods Furniture | During July After-Inventory Offerings of Undermuslins Quantities of beautiful Undermuslins that have become slightly soiled from display use on tables and in windows are now offered at un- usually low prices, to close out, Included are dainty Two- and | Three-Piece Combinations, beauti- Af fully trimmed with lace and em- gA\ broidery; Long White Skirts ex- i quisitely finished with fine laces / and embroideries; also Gowns, Ais Corset Covers and Drawers in a F ifr wide range of effective styles. The variety of the offerings pre- cludes the giving of descriptions and prices here, but the values in every case are very attractive. Timely Special Offerings in Women’s White Footwear at $2.45 Women's high-grade White Oxfords and Ankle-strap Slippers in kid, buck, cravenette and canvas, a few numbers of which are described herewith, are priced unusually low at $2.45. ) —Viret Floor in toe and welt sole; $2.45, White Ankle-strap Pumps, bon tie, plain toe, Goodyear welt sole and | plain toe, Goodyear welt sole and Cuban Cuban heel; $2.45. heel; $2.45 i Pe White Buck Two-I Goodyear welt sole; White Calf Ankle-strap Pumps, pla White Cravenette Blucher Oxfords, rib Cravenette Ties, fancy tip and White Canvas Blucher Oxfords, plain toe, 2.45, | turned sole and Cuban heel; $2.45 lole $2.45 Sed Exceptional Values in Carpet-Size Domestic Rugs ; —Third Floor, —— White Wash Goods Specials Madras Waisting, fine grade, in a good as- sortment of patterns, Special 25c¢ yard—28-inch Mercerized Madras Waisting, very fine quality, in a Specials Special 15¢ yard—French Plisse Crepe, 20 inches wide, in several desirable color- ings; effective for waists and dresses Special 23¢ yard—Printed Cotton Foulard in black and several shades of blue, with varied conventional designs in white; 27 wide range of pleasing designs. inches wide. Special 35¢ yard—27-inch French Cotton i d—32-inch Novelty S 1 . tet : Special 29¢ yar 2-inch Novelty Soisette Crepe, a very effective material for waists in dainty stripe effects; gray, tan, Nile blue nud itresnea, and biscuit with stripe of contrasting color. Special 25¢ yard—42-inch Cambric, soft finish, a fine grade for underwear, Special 10c yard—30-inch India Linon, ex- cellent quality, in medium weight, 42-inch Imported Convent Cloth, a soft finished fabric, very desirable for under- Special 25¢ yard—Satin Rep, 27 inches wide, a medium-weight material in tan, blue and white with colored satin stripe Special 35¢ yard — 32-inch French Pereale in blue or black stripe ef Imported and , then turn when Drown. trees and mix with cream salad |tume, and the most stylish women ff fects on white ground; excellent for shirts Women no longer use any kind of & castoff shirt waist and skirt for) morning wear at home. The neat |” housewife feels it as tmportant to! |be as becomingly dressed and at- | tractive in the morning as later In the day. | ‘The dainty tittle dregs tn the jeketch is made of chambray of a deep rose color in » and trimmed with bands of white pique and crochet buttons, The sleeves are of tucked white lawn and the Httle frill at the neck and wrists of sheer white embroidered edging. | Small Scale Love, Dr. Pierce Underhill delivered a lecture on divorcee recently in a faghionable Indianapolis church. “Eatravagance,” he began, “ts one of the big causes of divorce. My cousin, a bank clerk, married a pretty girl and took her home to a nice little flat, But she frown- ed and bit her lip. | “Oh, Jack, she sald, ‘I can't live in a tiny flat like this!’ ‘You don't love me when you any that, darling,’ sald my cousin. “Oh, yes, I do, sald abe; ‘but not on auch @ small seale,’” lst Av., Seattle ' REDUCED TO $30 D.VORIS, 1105 3rd Av. ain 705, Ind. 594 in WHITE SEWING MACHINES Machines to Rent brown on other inde. 4 let brown. Turn out 90 | ind serve. Those are the) real hashed brown potatoes, | Turn gas | tuce, — | Everybody Hikes hash, and here te! a new way to serve it, Remove) seeds and drop green peppers into | botling water for five minutes. Fil them with hash, sprinkle cracker crumbs on top, and bake half an hour. Keep pan moist with hot water In which ia a little seasoning. Smothered Fish. Use cold botled or baked freeb fish, Remove the bones and sbred it. Make a pint of cream sauce, as) follows; Pat | tablespoon of butter | {ia saucepan. on melted add 9) |tablespoons of flour and let cook, | | stirring to prevent browning. When | | perfectly smooth pour in slowly 1 pint of awegt milk, Lat boll for 2} | minutes. en done pour it onto 2 well beaten exus. Put a layer of fish in the dish In which {t I# to be) served. rinkle with salt, pepper and grated nutmeg. Cover with) layer of sauce. Add anotherot fish, and #0 on, as before until the dish fs fall. Cover the top with fine | bread crambe molstened with melt jed butter, Bake 20 minutes In hot | oven, | | Boiled Creamed Macaroni, | Wash and break macaron! Into! linch pleces, cook in botling water | until solt, drain and rinse, then put) lagain into bolling water with noine | ‘milk and thicken with flour. Add | some butter and seasoning; then) serve, New England Deviled Clams. Put 2 tablespoons of butter into) & saucepan and fry In ft a chopped lonion, Add 1 cup of canned toma: | |toes, a pineh of powdered mace and) |nalt and paprika to taste. Cook for! minutes, add a tablespoon of flour, | ltake from the fire and add 2 egge alightly beaten, Add 8 dozen pre pared clams, chopped fine, “Mix| thoroughly, fill buttered clam shells, jeover with crumbs, dot with butter | jand bake browa, | Lemon Pudding. Fill a dish with white bread! crumbs, then place in a bowl with | peel from one lemon, elther finely chopped oF grated, add the juice of lone lemon and from % cup to 1 9 l\eugar, Salt to taste, Pour on |pint of botling milk, Now place with fat pancake turner, and let | dreesing Serve on leaves of let- Ghi Always pure ana wholesome. Made from the best beans the earth yields. Don’t ask merely for cocoa—ask for Ghirardelh’s. pear with gown, hat, shoos and accessories of the same hue, To-day the art of making good co- coa is still a secret. You may never learn the secret but you can al- ways get the co- coa—ask for rardelli's COCOA There are nine or ten epee cies of cocoa trees, the best being the Theabroma Cacao, a name bestowed by Linnaeus, (the father botany) and meaning “ of the goda,"* Cocoa trees grow over a wide tropical area, principally on the American continent and shirt-waists. —First Floor, wear; 12-yard piece, special $2.65. —First Floor. High-grade fancy satin and satin-taffeta Ribbons, from four to seven inches wide, in Persian and Dresden designs, suitable for sashes, hair bows, girdles and fancy work, Special 27c¢ yard. Short Lengths of Plain and Fancy Ribbons are offered at attractive special prices First Floor. | The More Inexpensive Lines of Dry Goods are Shown in the | Basement Salesroom HOME JOURNAL PATTERNS FOR AUGUST Eat Mapleine Ice Cream —It’s Delicious Mapteine t# the Nav hew flavor— better than maple. Steamers 0:08, #8180, 4:00, Thureday 110 p.m. MARTIN & 00. GLOV {207 Second Ay, Opp. Savoy Motel, 4 Bids, ‘Boats The Home of “PRRFRCTO"-beat glove in this olty for $1.00 a pair, = Do you want to buy a home? Seo The Star's classified real estate columns, Frederick & Nelson Incorporated y Fast Mall Live for P. nD, Behedule tn Wit "he ao Wp m Saturday and Sunday onty| 0, TES p.m, Pleasant Bench, om | LADIES’ HOME JOURNAL | STYLE BOOKS 8 Navy ‘4 Battleships, — f ‘Athion. stand Taland Fiver. Monday, June 14, 1900, he, fen ttne °C 8 SM. B. Kennedy, tatees steamer on th® coast, in Olack type my Matra Boats on Snuday. Time Table Subject to Change With. for Senttio—y.19 | Sut Not 10:5, Lins ® | FARE, S00 ROUND TRIP, || Children between ages 6 to 14 halt | tare Ind 20; Main $101, 3903. EVERETT AND EDMONDS. MEALS SERVED fix round tripe dally, Leave Seattle atta mim, 206 pm 6 pom and pm it a eg »* ved i i =, m iin Single to Snel 00 sl Slownd'reip alae ® a ett and Tole UE AGRE, GRR PHeek wane, more City of face

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