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“PTINTED NEWS’ _ BENZOATE SODA TRIED TO MAKE THE RICAN INSTITL TE OF ATHY STANO FOR GAME, AND HOW THEY GAUGHT AT '! a a eiaHiINGTON, D. ‘ time past ft he " who hav ee we advocate preservative te f methods earn Ne | go the newspare’ name, posins © in the © standpoint scheme was < coued tn tne OUTIOOK ws turers who Pan rlebt and jeg Pentoale of hab their « tu methods oF i is for ander a a scion from a tortally lows belteve opriety soda are good by of creating dear the high mal As the Promotion of Pub th, and purport ng to by a lic ed 80 ‘ agency by some the manufacturing group ‘pensoate of soda y recently sub rons she ° x for publica a! by a physician which, of a charitable ap fidren suffering . ysis, was a thin. ute Siccacs of the use of Jef soda In preserved foods § of course, declined the 7 ago Washington bad of how far they p attempting to mislead r the press. On trustees of the American is of Homeopathy met in r They adjourned that s most of them left the night a man of emi appearance call of newspaper offt others the Washington ce of @ morning press associa Tn bis hand he carried a num YOU LIKE. TAINTE k to write | ‘TO MAKE D FOOD ber of copies of a statement and on one of them appeared the “o, k." of Dr. J. Ritehey Horner of Cleveland, secretary of the board, He con veyed the Idea that he was Dr, Hor her, and On the strength of this a dispatch was sent out, which be- wan Characterizing the action of the American Institute of Homeopathy recently In condemning the use of ben#oate of soda as a preservative as having been too ‘hasty, the trus tees of the association, which met here today, adopted a rosolutton recommending that the Institute at its next annual meeting reconatder ite step.” At the oftice of a Washington hewapaper the same party showed up, and as a result of his visit an article appeared the next morning stating that the trustees “took a {hand in the benzoate of soda con troversy by unanimously adopting @ resolution asking the next annual meeung oO the institute to recon ider the action of the nattonal gath- ering in Detroit last June conderm- ing the use of benzoate as a pre servative.” | As& a matter of fact, a resolution asking the inastitate to reopen the question for further consideration } Was presented to the board, but in | stead of being adopted “unanimous |!y" or any other way, as was repre- sented by the party conveying the information to the press, it was re | ferred to the committee on resolu- | tions, a point of order having been made against .. by Dr. J. B. Grege Curtis of Washington, that the tru» tees had met to consider other mat tera, and that the benzoate of soda controversy had no place in their deliberations, by the stenographer who reported the meeting, Dr. W. O, Forbes of Hot Springs, Ark. and Dr, Curtis. Dr. Horner denied over the long distance telephone that he had vis ited the newspaper offices or given anyone the right to use his name as authority for a statement that the board had “adopted” the resolution, which, he said, was referred to the | committee on resolutions. De, Curtis is the chairman of the committee designated by the Insti tute to present the condemnatory resolutions to President Taft. He has done so, and will see President Taft about them on the latter's re turn to the city. YNTHIA GRE ORRESPONDE Z i Grey recently met ag man | very much, but i another town. Could } first? Can anything make me taller? 1 am five feet tall. v. HL ng man should write do no harm for you & picture postal with as a gentle hint Willing to keep up the Dut if he does not the matter right Rog can make you taller ex- ature {tself. You probably a little taller, since you Any way. don't wor- it, for of the world’s Tost beautiful been little women. Grey: wit! you please aimple decorations for fa November, and for supper? * DOLLY. cut Mowers bring a hich , F suggest palma, plants. A With pretty greens with many candies oe woke ‘ Mi 7 t @ background for | Wy during the cere supper would be . Sandwiches, coffee, and cake. “K. LD.” would like games appropriate and girls of 16 to play. ‘Sek if kissing cames ure C are old, but ever § mind kissing games are |. They breed too much My between boys and girls. Grey: How shall I if for pickled onions? JAR Boll in the vinegar, cloves, a Mies Grey: Will you kindly the distance is from Mount Rainier, and also mountains? " MISS N. R. H Mistance from Seattie to fs about 65 miles; as ‘ged to the Olymple . PH would be about 60 ® but to £0 to the Olympic Wia Port Crescent last, add brown sugar, & gallon of vinegar. the Henp to wr, Relery seed and mace to} as | be obliged to travel, is miles. | ‘SMART HAT AND DRESS "FOR HIGH SCHOOL GIRL 47 IAL | ) yee Tricorn hats simply trimmed are | the prettiest hats school girls can | wear. And the one-plece dress with princess bodice and pleated skirt, trimmed to suit the taste, is the most practical and comfortable | dress of the present fashion. One can jump into a dress of this kind and be dressed fn less than half the time it takes to put on a shirt waist and skirt. On this account It’s safe to say it will be popular with the | high school girl wis How can I get! dy Long Lege’? is overrun with them SUBSCRIBER fan't help you. f don't know fome reader wii! t mer Miss Grey: 1 want ¢ redding it, as | ” ae teaan, How shall “at ~The groom is my friend 110 bis hor hall I ‘Hote? Z » send am unable by mail! ard, not » , to the fb COE SCENT 1 KING pOWDE! | | Meat loaf or chopped veal beef is made much more motst if three or four tablespoonfuls of cream are added at the last just be- fore baking. The odor that clings so often to utensil in which. fish or onfons have been cooked, may be dispelled by placing the dish in a hot oven for 10 or 16 minutes after washing and drying. Soap purchased at the stores Is usually newly made, and therefore soft. It is much better to purchase 4 large quantity at a time and lay it away to harden and ripen, which will make it last much longer. Save small pleces of soap that are left ov place In a@ saucepan with warm wa melted. Pour in a jar and use when cold to make suds with may be kept in good con- fler becoming wet or water- soaked by rubbing a little vaseline into the leather, This should be |done before the shoe is dry, to pre | vent the leather from hardening. dition ¢ This was confirmed | or} r and boll until it} CHICAGO, Oct. 25.—As a ransom for two kidnaped children, stolen by the Black Hand tn St. Louis, Pietro Viviano, a rich Italian, paid the plotters the woetght of the children in gold | Capt. Schoppe, of the St. Louts police force, who came here to ran down the plotters, declares he ts | posttive $25,000 wae given to the Black Hand before little Tommy and | Grace Viviano, the ransomed chi! | dren, were released. Tommy ts 4 yoars old and Grace his little cousin, fe aged 2 Their combined weight ts less than the welght af the gold, which, if plied upon the scales, would make 84 pounds. When they were stolen from thetr MARY GOK se Cinnamon olla are excellent when served with coffee. Take enough dough to make a common stzed loaf of bread and oithe it out or pound it until It is thin; then sprinkle cinnamon & cupful of sugar over it spread on three-quarters of « fal of butter. Roll as you would for roll jelly cakes and cut cross wise into pleces about half an ifieh thick. Let rise until light and bake in about the same temperature you would use for bread. “Hooster hash” is made by cho ping fine any left over cold meat | first removing the fat, gristle and bone. Add one cupful of mashed potato to every two cupfuls of meat Season with pepper, salt and a little herb. Set a frying pan on the stove | with a cupful of beef gravy or clear soup. Add the meat and potato, stirring until the mixture has be }come a stiff mass. Serve on a hot |platter and garnish with smal! slices of lemon. Should any of the hash remain from one day to the other, it may be molded into rolls or croquets, with the addition of a little flour, and fried in boiling | lard, New Use for Stale Cake. Cut into small squares, then with tiny round cutter cat, not quite through, a piece from the center and fill with li. Replace the plece taken out, and frost the top and sides. Nice for dessert or chil dren's parties. Mutton Chops Stewed in Milk. Free the chops from fat and put into a saucepan, cover with milk and an onfon cut fine and simmer | slowly 2 hours. Season with pepper and sait and thicken with a little flour, Eggless Chocolate Cake, One cup sugar, two tablespoons butter or lard, 1 cup sour milk, 1 |teaspoon soda, 2 tablespoc | teaspoon cloves, | tle salt. Molasses Doughnuts. One cup molasses, 1 cup cold wa lter, 2 teaspoons soda, 1 tablespoon vinegar, salt, ginger, all kinds of apices Doughnuts Without Eggs. Put on stove one good sized po ltato. When done mash and add |1% cups sugar, 1% cups sour milk, 1 tablespoon lard or butter, % cup teaspoon soda, Fry in granulated meal, 1 1 teaspoon lemon, nutmeg. hot lard. | Dolly Varden Cake, | Have ready 1 cup chopped rats ing, 1 teaspoon each cloves, cassla Jand nutmeg, 1 tablespoon molasses. | Stand aside until needed. Beat to a cream 2 cups sugar with 2-3 cup butter, add slowly 1 cup sweet milk, yolks of 3 eggs, beaten light, 2 cups flour, % teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon cream tartar, 1 teaspoon lemon vanilla extract, Add whites of 2 exes beaten stiff. Dt vide batter in two parta, bake two white layers. To other half add molasses and fruit mentioned above. Bake in same sized tins. Take one white of egg, beat a lit tle, then add sugar, 1 tablespoon, |to stick cakes together Salad Dressing. eggs, 1 tablespoon starch, 1 tablespoon salt, 2 table |spoons sugar, 2-3 teaspoon mus tard, 1 cup milk, 1 cup vinegar, but ter size of an egg. Cook in dow ble boiler till thick, Put in Jelly tumblers and keep in cool place. It will keep quite a while. More mus tard may be added Sf liked, Three corn PAID KIDNAPERS THESE BABIES’ WEIGHT IN GOLD THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1909, TOMMY AND GRACE A8 THEY! LOOKEO WHEN KIDNAPERS| TURNED THEM LOOSE IN CHI CAGO AFTER SEVEN WEEKS’ CAPTIVITY. homes tn August, thetr mothers ask- | led 100,000 mothers all over the United States to help find them. It to thin appeal that Mrs. Anna Venzeg, who found them here shivering in the street, knew they were the lost bey and girl. The children, who are co’ son and daughter of two br of the mame name, Pietro Viv in Bt. Lowte. The photograph of $25,000 worth} of babies was taken just after they | |were put in charge of @ police ma-| tron at the Chicago av, station. Thetr return shows that the| money was pald to the Black Hand, | an charged by the police | It te the firet time in the history of crime in thie great city that suc by a ransom was demanded and pald,| sttitinsiniiitinianaiaamiaani my HATS SPARE NO TREE | Ml, Oct wvsal Ittle city, with tte! but tta mil was due sins, are EVANSTON 26, fs a beautifal beautiful shade trees, jlinery is even more beautiful The town council has formaliy | decided this, The result Wher follage interferes with the hoadl gear of the fair Evanstonians, th f ge must go. The “jefe policio,” police ch has appointed a treetrimming squad, with dix cretionary powers and a pruning! hook Complaints had been coming in| that pendulous arboreal growths) { | over the & disastrous low-bridge effect upon the headgear of the maida and matrons. Hence an order that any foliage hanging within eight feet of the sidewalk should be ruthless ly snipped off. This permits of a fivefoot woman wearing a three foot hat If she wants to—and most joften she wants to, | | PPOSOSeSeSeesereeseoooe # MAINLY ABOUT WOMEN Pesooeoe A Woman's Best Age. After all has been sald pro and con, the fact remains that when one apeaks of the attractiveness of really means the at of woman Not so long ago woman was con. sidered most attractive between | the ages of 16 and 20. Many hero-| ines of classical children But the modern man prefers something more sophisticated than 16. Almost all young women are more or less attractive, for unfor tunate indeed ts the woman who \has no charm or fresh, rosy cheeks and glossy hair between the ages| of 16 and 18 For the average woman whd lives to enjoy life and to make oth ers happy, 23 is the ideal age. She is in the firat flush of having just} arrived. The full beauty of her womanhood has been realized fron |the slim promises of her girlhood THE RED ROOM, So many hotels, public places and even private families are decorating their principal rooms in red that it is becoming noticeable, From the} | standard of the artist and the train-| led decorator, this is poor judgment, | because, says the London Glob Jred is the most Irritating and un |watisfying color that could be used in decorating a blg room, In a room | where there {s red paper, red cur-| tains, red carpet, and even red up-| holstery, there is nothing restful | No person can take comfort {n such | a room, The color ts bad for the} jeyes. It irritates the optic nerve, yrbe the light and contributes to general air of nervousness that every where jab | the exists THE SERVANT'S CHARACTER, A lady once gave the following when quéstioned as to the character ofPher former servant: | "Mary haa| been in my house two years—minus one year and ¢leven months; she has been very frugal—in work; mindful of herself; prompt—in excuses; friendly—to men; faithful—to her lovers; and honest—when everything has vanished,"—Lippincott’s Magn zine. sidewalks had been having |f : e | ° fiction are mere} FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Kiore ¢ Furniture Goods (410 Dally and Clones at Entrance on either Madison = Basement Salesroom as well as Entrance on either Madison or Spring Street, as well as through store from Second venue through store from Second Avenue - " | Discontinued Patterns in Nottingham Lace Curtains ——-Remarkably Strong Values —— We have received from one of the leading Lace Curtain factories of this country, whose product we handle extensively, another large shipment ot “dropped” or discontinued patterns in Nottingham Lace Curtains. These patterns are just as desirable from our point of view as the ones re- tained, but out of the hundreds produced by the manufacturer each sea- son, many have to be dropped. The offering is an extensive one, compris- ing many styles, and generous quantities in each style. For convenient selection these Curtains have been group- ed as follows: —Hasement Salesroom Lot 1, at $1.75 Pair Eleven patterns in white, ivory and Arabian Curtains, in- cluding Cable and Nottingham Nets in strong weaves and ex- cellent designs, ranging from heavy fish-net styles to fine Brussels lace effects. Most of these are three yards in length. Lot 2, at $1.50 Pair Lot 3, at $1.25 Pair In this lot are sixteen patterns of Nottingham Ten patterns are shown at this price, in and Cable-Net Curtains, in white, ivory and Arabian, 2% to 3 yards long, in durable weaves and very at- tractive designs. Tailored Suits at $14.75 and $18.75 ——New Arrivals —— Nottingham Net Curtains, 2%, 3 and 3% yards long; white and ecru only. One-Piece Dresses at $15.85 ——New Arrivals —— Women’s Tailored Suits of good qual- The garments comprised in the collec- $ ; : : ion ¢ i ice are sually attractive ity wide-wale cheviots and tweeds, in tan, tion at this price are unw ually at gray, green and brown novelty mixtures. values. The materials are taffeta, mess line, Venetian, cashmere and serge—the The coats are semi-fitting, double-breast- colors include wistaria, light-gray, pea- ed style, 42 inches long, with tailored cock, tan, catawba, navy and old-rose; also black. tucked, and braided, yoke and collar of pockets, coat collar and revers; the skirts A i + eta ® ne style has waist prettily are in cluster-plaited effects. Price $14.75. One style has waist { , Women’s Tailored Suits of good qual- embroidered net, tucked belt and cluster- ity cheviot, made with 42-inch coats in 7%- , ‘ 5 : sy y Sparen tate WHS she plaited skirt ; others are in Princess effect, fitting effect, lined with good grade satin; plain tailored or elaborately braided in the skirts are in cluster-plaited panel These y and gray. silk soutache, with full plaited skirts, are shown in catawba, Price, $18.75. —Hasement Salearoom style. some having panel back and front. Price $15.85. —Basement Salesroom Lace and Embroidery Values Valenciennes Edges and Insertions, French and German patterns, in various widths; 6-yard piece, 30c. Women’s Shoes and Slippers At Close-Out Prices Tan Russia Calf last, with brown cloth top, stré welt sole and military heel; clearance price, $2.15 pair. new model ght tip, Goodyear Button Shoes on Linen-finished Torchon Edges and Insertions, 14% to 3% inches wide; 4c yard. 18-inch Corset Cover Embroidery, good quality crossbar material, in several styles; 25c yard. Patent L having kid quarter, turned sole and military heel; clearance price, $1.00 pair. ther House Slippers, two-strap style, 18-inch Swiss and Nainsook Embroidery Flouncing, good selection of patterns in small open-work designs; 29¢ yard. Embroidery Galloons, 2% to 3% inches wide ; 25¢ yard. Two-strap Kid House Slippers, plain toe, turned 72-inch Net Waisting in pretty shades of old-rose and pru- sole and low heel; clearance price, $1.00 pair. nelle; 25¢ yard. Kid Boudoir Slippers in pink, red, tan and blac clearance price, $1.00 pair. Heavy quality Chiffon Cloth, 45 inches wide, shown in black, white, apricot and maize ; 50c yard. Silk-embroidered Net trimming widths; 25c and 37c yard. 3ands in assorted colors; popular Women’s Felt Juliets in gray, black and ma of —Basement Salesroom. Venise Bands, in varied assortment and widths; 8c, 14c and 2lc yard. patterns | roon, are shown at $1 00, $1 .25 and $1.50 pair. B | | Black Velvet Ribbons with satin back, in widths from No. 1 to No. 40, priced as follows: No. 1, 6c yard; No. 1%, 7c; No. 2, 8c; No. 3, 10c; No. 5, 12c; No. 7, 15c; No. 9, 20c; No. 12, 25c; No. 16, 30c; No. 22, 35c; No. 40, 45c yard. Black Velvet and Fancy Ribbons at Interesting Prices Fancy Ribbons, five inches wide, in an excellent assortment of patterns,|} including dainty Persian effects; suitable for fancy work; 23c yard. Rasement Sales Introducing a New Line of Inexpensive Couch Covers and Portieres The factory from which these Couch Covers and Portieres were purchased is situated where water- power is both plentiful and cheap—an advantage which is reflected in the following very interesting val- ues! —Basement Salesroom. Tapestry Portieres in-red, green and brown, with Heavy Tapestry Couch Covers in Kashgar pat- 3-inch tapestry bands; $2.95 pair. tern, 60 inches wide, with fringe all around’ $ : each. his » Tape » Portieres fringed top and bot- Two-tone Tapestry Portieres fringe spiradon Heavy, hard-finished Tapestry Couch Covers, 60 inches wide, in good Oriental designs; $3.50 and $3.95 each. tom, in color-combinations of red and-green and brown-and-green; three qualities, at $2.00, $2.50 and $2.95 pair. - , a 4 Extra heavy, hard-finished Tapestry Couch Coy ers, 70 inches wide, in Oriental designs and color ings; $4.95. » Solid-color Fringed Portieres in shades of red, green and: brown; $2.50 and $2.95 pair. FREDERICK & NELSON INCORPORATED