The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1909, Page 9

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fessional « ae oursell you take long your material, | nape bad, and} o amount} fer will make it Hence, T call tt n” at home and “Mrs poor y to do garment on a flat Prub pulverized fuller it. the a dry sponge, and ly every inch of the put the garments box or drawer, and ‘or four days. Thea gut of doors and 2 well until the pow murely disappeared “LS.” and “A Read how to take black Hight material ed ‘ator running when getting Js almost impossible to wal dry cleaners pow . to take om of white cotton be done with alcohol asks how to take or from white cotton goods Wants to know how tomato stains from ihe It the goods have Washed since stained, fe wiains over 2 bow! and ex water through. Repeat are entirely gone. wil take the black “A Housewife's” red at snd will also clean “OC v? Bedford cord coat pene must always be very ‘ fire when using gas i i. G.” would like to dye ‘tat dive, but it cannot Rt might be dyed back, @ beaver hat I would risk of spoiling ft. are very fashionable and, trimmed with velvet ribben and = the red hat would be and could be worn any color. a Grey: How can I re A READER. manent cure is known . and that is dangerous \Grey: Where can I on the latest Ideas WORTH KNOWING The best hardwood floors for ev- ery-day usage are those which are | elther waxed or ofled. A floor that | is shellacked, as a gerat many hardwood floors are, does not wear | well. It shows the marks of boot nails and is easily scratched. Un- jess It is carefully covered with rugs, it le as much of a nuisance as) carpeting. The waxed floor is really | the ideal floor for all rooms ex cept the kitchen. The ordinary olled floor ts best for the kitchen, where there is so much bard usage, | It does not show boot marks and | ing? MONTANA. | @oaler for a good | Is with that sub ii ¢ ROW tight fitting only the sedson is! ruching to} Of the flounced | the novelties of the will figure generously ing of fall and winter of the moment are mach as those of 50 ings of sable blackness are figure conspicuously on in Jet barrettes are being Particularly effective beads. be the huge turban-shaped terial are studded or with jet. tleeve for tallor mades ¢, With no apparent suits are in plain | bine and brown shades seal Senn / uinbrellas have re sticks of un taolre te a material Mich seen this fall undoubtedly in fall and win-/ Bee they combine excefent- With the favorite can be easily washed. It will often | remain, under ordinary conditions, | « very clean and neatJlooking for half |» a year or more, without ronewing | «# the off; and it should be rubbed im | # to the floor until the pores are filled | with it. In time it becomes oxidi= | w ed, so that a permanently glosey|# seen eeeee A fire extinguisher, which may be easily made at home aad kept In a bottle, ready for use, consists of | three pounds of salt and one and a half pounds of salammoniac dis solved im a gallon of water. Wet umbrell their handles to dry. This allows| * the water to run out of them, in| # stead of into the part where the|® ribs and the silk meet, thus caus-|# ing the metal to rast and the silk) * to rot. \* woe ~ For earache, bathe the car in a} ® strong decoction of camomile flow-| ® era, then drop a few Grops of warm sweet oll into the ear, and keep it there with a little cotton wool and a strip of flannel warmed aud tied | around the bead. A thin coating made of three parts lard, melted with one part resin, and applied to stoves and | «rates, will prevent them rusting when not in use, | eee eeeee When packing pictures, a plece of cork placed at the corners of the frames between each two will pre vent them getting rubbed and avotd | any fear of breakage. To lean bronze ornaments, take | one drachm of sweet ofl, one ounce | cohol and one ownce and a half} Apply quickly with a soft | , but do not rub. | HOW TO SERVE POTATOES. There are rules about all things, even potatoes. Certain ways of serving potatoes are proper at one time and not at another, and the skillful cook never | makes mistake in this, as in the other small but innumerable rules of good serving | Potato chips, for instance, or| French fried potatoes, should never be served at a formal dinner. Nor would we care for mashed po- | tatoes for breakfast For dinner, then, potatoes may be | MW OOSES END BACKACHE = AND MAKE KIDNEYS ACT FINE sof folks here ure need er trouble. Will take several Diuretic all misery Fheumatism, pa " fofiamed or swollen eve BerVow headache, irritabs Pat WOrn-out, sick fect is of overwe a kidneys will vanis! oe. smarting uation — (espec at ’ Bhd All bladder misery end Ae tee prevaration goes at ee 1 kidneys, nary system, and Ite healing, cleansing Influence Mrectly up- And glands affected, the cure before you At, Moment you suspect any kid ney urinary @isorder, or feel coming, begin taking | harmless medicine, with the wledge that there is tio other| at any price, made any where else in the world, which will eff so thorough and prompt a e as a fiftycent treatment of 6 Diuretic, which any druggist | ean suppl Your banker or or rheumatism this kn rem physician, pharmacist, any mercantile agency will tell you that Pape, Thompson & Pape, of Cincinnati, is a large and responstlle medicine concern, thor ougbly worthy of your confidence. Ouly curative results can come | from taking Pape's Diuretic, and a| thy kidneys, bladder and} y organs-~and you feel fine. Accept only Pape's Diuretic-- ifty-cent treatwnent—from any drug anywhere In the world. There are hats and hate, turned | ily and trimmed very simply-—but up sad turned down, trimmed heav-| the crown must be high and it must | somewhere. mashed, boiled whole, if they are new potatoes, served In cream, whole, and with roast beef they may be browned underneath the meat. The following may be served at both breakfast and luncheon: Pota- to chips, potato cakes and potatoes baked, creamed, French fried, lyon- njsise, Boston block and “aa gratin.” For breakfast particularly there are home-fried potatoes and hashed brown. For lancheon there are escatloped potatoes, potato croquetios and po- (ato puff, as well as other more or jess fancy ways of preparing them. eee ee ee * * AT A GIRLS’ * * PARTY. At a little birthday party given recently where girls about 12 were present, the feature af the afternoon was the Greaxing of clotheapin dolls. Rach little guest was pro- vided with a large, smooth clotheapia, a palr of sctasors, & few pins, and short, equal lengths of colored baby rib- bon, From a rainbow hued pile of tissue paper, the girls ploked the colors they bap pened to fancy Fifteen minutes was lowed in which to dress the clothespins. Costumes ranged from moyen age frocks to bathing sults, but the prize went to a Red Riding Hood dressed in a sweeping cape. Then the scissors were put aside, and paste bottles were @istributed. With the rem. pants of the paper, the party constructed artificial flowers, uring their fingers only to tear thelr forma, er emplor- ing forms suggested by their seraps. This proved a real test of imagination and ingenulty. # The prizes in each contest # were fine dolls arrayed in & elaborate tissue paper robes. * * SEDER Re When the kitchen table needs to 08 covered, tack a piece of Hnoleum lover the top. Hot dishes will not jure ft, and it will Jast many times longer than olicloth. One Dollar brings into your home a Victor \% from Sherman, Clay & Co. Order one today! — The Victor makes the world’s greatest bands parade before you as you sit In your easy chair— SSeS ee eee eeeeeeeteeeeeeeeeeeeaee have @ feather of some kind on it 'BLUE CHEVIOT TAILOR SUIT Every woman is well gowned in The model shown y here is of navy blue cheviot. ‘The a tallor suit. skirt t* plain at the top with a plaited flounce reaching to within two inches of the ground. The long coat fs severely tailored. The flat coat collar ts of wine-colored vel | vet iMA Chocolate Frosted Pie. One-half cup of wogar, % enp of butter, 4% of milk, 1 ee, 1 cup of flour, 1 heaping teaspoon of baking powder, % of vanttia, Bake an two jaye Milling.—-One cup of toltk tm dou bie boller, 1 ome, 1-1 cup of eager, 1 tablespoon of flour, When age, su gar and flour are well beaten, add to hot milk and cook until # thick one, Flavor with % tea_pean ef or- ange extract Frosting. One heaping tenapoon of cocoa. Turn on boiling Weter sut- ficient to make a thick paste, then 04 confectioners sugar and well- ing water, until of the right oon- Lemon Pie Without Con Starch. Juice and grated rind of one lem- on, one cup sugar, one ese, % cop milk, one rolled commen eracker, pinch of malt. crusts Uae any sauce you care to make. Apple Pudding. One pint flour, 1 teaspoon cream of tartar, % teaspoon soda, & tabte- xpoons sugar, 1 eg, 2 tablespoons butter, milk enough to rol, about % cup. Roll and spread with chopped Japple Cut in slices and bake, Serve with sauce. soeoeo 3 ° H 3 Have you ever met the type of} girl for whom other girfw lovers) weom to have an extraordinary | fuscination? She in generally bright, | pretty and full of fun, but has never | had a lever of her very own. You may have seen her in the company | of an engaged couple, directing all, her conversation towards the man, / and engaging his entire attention | for the time with her lively wit, so | that he seems almost to forget the | other girl by his side. She will be- have in the same manner to every | engaged man she meets. To do her | justice, she really means wo harm, | but there just seems to be mome- thing within her which compels her to net In this way Girl poachers do more barm than | they can ever realize. Naturally an engaged girl does pot like to see her/| lover paying marked attention to/ another girl, nor does it tend to} make her happy to find herself on) eccasion vtterly ignored Yor the sake of some one else. So unless the “poacher” has a passion for breaking bearte and causing endless lovers’ quarrels and estrangements, it would be wise for her to curb her “poaching ten- dencies.” ee rocecergoee INLY ABOUT The Hatgin Fad. Every season one sees some little dress fad crop up. | But some dress fads are quite | worth while, and should be thought- ifally considered |, Hatpins have really become a fad A girl is apt to number her hat pins now by the dozen. But the) carefully chosen hatpin has de-| cided trimming vaine, ana it pays) | to indulge tn this fad tf we go about lit warily and select batping that |will be a beauty spot in the hat not for the day merely, but for all time. ) It fe nearly always a safe gamble to invest in black and white com- binations, for invariably they ap pear before the season is well ad | vanced. Sousa’s, Pryor's, U. 8. Marine Band, Royal Marine Gand of Italy, the Garde Republicaine of Paris. The Victor makes the world’s greatest singers sing for you Tetrazzini, Gadeki, Catve, Scotti, Sembrich—and hundreds of others. Pianos, Pianos and Talking Machines for cash or on casy payments. Nineteen in your home—Caruso, Melba, Investigate our credit stores om the service. } Pacific Co Near Union St., THE VICTOR Is bound to get into every home. How long will you keep it out of yours? The charming the refreshing music, the delightful fun, entertainment, of which you never tire—all these you owe to yourself and your family. We sell to $250.00. Cash or credit. VICTORS at $10.00 and up Ask us for particulars. Prices not advanced when purchasing on easy terms. Seattle, | taking foolish ob ® When the cocoa tree is in blossom and the pods com- ‘mence to grow, its appear- ance is beautiful. The flowers which grow in tufts are small and have five yellow petals on a rose col- ered calyx. KNABE The Wortd’s Best Piano Cline Piano Co. SEATTLE Lady Wellington Lump Now $5.50 Per Ton at Bunkers Wf your dealer does not have H, phone Latimer-Wallace Co., Independent 5040; Sunset Main 8040, General office, 401 Hinckley Bik. HALL’S SAFE & LOCK CO.'S SAFES Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co. MANUFACTURERS 212 OCCIDENTAL AVENUB. Are you wise to the COAL situa tion? Do you understand the conditions that exist In the coal market? Heard of the Roslyn mine explo sion? Heard of the Gem mine fir Heard of the Ladysmith disaster? Don't you know there will be no foreign coal in the market this sea son? The foregoing all SPELLS 3,000 tons per day SHORT of the usual supply. NOW WHAT? You can buy Renton NOW g to wait? J. W. BULLOCK Phones 87 Go- Ne, olin Shoe Polish 7 Newest, Dat the Best This Shoe Polish is manufac- tured in Seattic, at our own fac- tory Vee the lish which positively not crack the Jeather. §) Ask your shoo polisher for Neg olin | Factory, 2229 Second Ave IMPORTANT NOTICE runks and grips repaired is ‘Mendington's Hane Repair k DIAMONDS Diamonds are a good investment We sell them on weekly payment | plan, Sterling Jewelry Co. Room 117. 705 First Avenue. From the time the beans mature on the trees, to the time the aromatic brown cocéa is put in tins retains its natural purity and full flavor. Don’t ask merely for cocoa —ask for Ghirardelli’s, Work in Comfort You Can Do Thies if You Have A GAS RANGE and GAS WATER HEATER No home is complete without GAS, SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. Telephones: Main 6767; Ind. 67. Henry Bidg, 1314 4th, Near Union. 2 er sates = A Seatenion. Massage and Cooling Room jaded = Reo . ~ ‘Treatment. —TOURIST BATHS— = Mato and Ocetdental. |American Cafe Fourth and Pike, on the Boulevard. TOOTHSOME MORSELS here abound—steaks, chops, veal cutlets, entrees to your liking—in fact just what you like. Did you ever notice tho’, that there's steak and steak--same at the butcher shop, but largely depend- ent on the knack of broiling? Well, we have the knack. Try for yourself and either blame or | pratse us—we think it will be praise. } Music Every Evening from 6:30 | to 12:30, Including Sunday. A Sunday dinner at Do you know that when Thompson's Cafe is worth you go to ’s Bak- having, for he gives good ery, 2nd Penge ge or food for the mone and Marion St. y. Second St., for your bread and jcakes you'll be satisfied. Tamale Grotto And Factory, 1425 4th Av. Open trom 110 a. m. to 1 a. ma Noonday Combinatien— 200. Ze and Be, THE BOULEVARD 4th & Pike CHIC Spring St. Nothing lke 1 Im Seatite. Eas | The Newport CAFE & GRILL FIRST AND MADISON. lo we Nav Le day) *2:80, e Senttle 8:90, Hoe, 4200, S015 pp Thursday yave Been 10:15, 2 Dp. ™. utes Ktop PYM AT pemnens wnd Sat ie in be “Where They Lunch” The Best Cooking. Our prices are tow. 1 am a sucker born. You area sucker 2 If you don't try my Hig Chicken Dinner Sunday--Grace ON A NE and avoid lor Delivered at your place of business without extra cost; 10 and Ring up A 26i5 or Prompt delivery One trial, the rest Main office 2W YORK Box of inter ons. Main 1830 assured. ene test. Goodbye to 219 Marton street. r Mail 1 Ye Ath fect 1:30, Tait Ove Tin SERVED duiy. leave ig pom. 6 p Bverett Tam, P:1t am. 216 Pom, 6p mand 76 pte Single Fate to Snohomish $1.00, Kour d © i a Tate hones, Sune

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