The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 29, 1909, Page 11

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ty ie BGDK| A PRETTY 2 ne — > Are Made Happy and Are Given a Home While Their Mothers Earn a Living. Vanilla Custa ra Serve ned av Chocolate P j together pot t A you a bachelor or a bachelor maid? Got a grouch on or the Put on your bat and skip over ¢| 60 the day nursery conducted In the imary rooms of the First Presby 1 church at the corner of Seventh av You'll © tired or cross or You will look into the * of laughing children forget hing but » glad and to be kind. See t ever makes your eyes shine re ats them?" was asked lit twoy ald = Janice Yeth s id And it must be so. Sh the angels in her eyes as sh: the skies to the Just Lovable Babies. they aught that em from and the starshine got ped through Bat aren't angels, these ger healthy little tads, with thelr red cheeks and chubby legs, They are just the “realest” youngsters you ever saw. They laugh ang cry and of sugar. tare "| “tattle” just like you did wherf feo egxs ant «| you were a kiddo. a of milk, tw r them cresy old th the «rat e Bak brisk oven. 8 owing sauce ef suger. together the whi add K. p make your nursery. He's so utch” the nurse can hardly understand him, but he has a better time than agybody Having a Good Time. Dreased in bright plaid “romp- he marches around there like a bandmaster, with tis tittle pouter pigeon stomach. The rubber was tha mixtur allowing © prepared two le Which all the peel « Been remove ers B have sauce in separat Wmall carrots because they! Mayor than the larger toned. But what did he care? He wasn't caring for looks, Besides he was having such a good time he didn't even know about it Then there are two fine looking lyoungsters In Buster Brown suite. | Thetr father must be proud of them when he comes home from work at night. They look like twins, bat the younger One said they weren't, they were brothers. There's a sad side to this story, too. | “Where's your papa?” a little fellow Too Mean to Live. “He's dead. He was too mean to live,” enme the startling answer, and you almost shiver at the keen, sinister expression of a child of mx “If you had him in your house orange color of the outer part or grind in a meat chop- pat two cups of the minced inte three cups of boiling | ook until the carrot is Dress through a strainer | colander, using all the} which the vegetable wa. liquid should equal one pint of bot milk, two level tablespoons | smooth with two} * of butter. Cook geason with salt and M the soup is not thin More hot milk to make} fonsistency. was asked YESTERDAY. THIS IS THE LAST WEEK OF THE BIG LAND SALE OF 10-Acre Tracts at Birmingham T $50 PER ACRE Terms of $2.00 per Month After that all of our land will be held for higher pricee—nearly doubie. Some folks don't know this land is on this side of the Sound with railroad and street care and is worth five times the price of lands on the other side of Sound. As soon as Everett & Bellingham car line ts built across this land, it will bring ten times present prices. The sawmill will soon be up and running there. giving cheap lumber. Men with brains buy land on the Sound; fools laugh at them; fools work for others all their lite, ike the ox. The LAST BIG LAND SALE OF 2,000 ACRES WILL BE CONTINUED AT BIRMINGHAM TOMORROW AND SUNDAY Oct. 30and 31 2 BOAT VEN d, leaves Plor 6 at urns at 7 p.m. As air is closed, from now » will carry full Imit of pqo- op those free excdr-t 5,000 acres have bebe } last 96 apy 9} ddcéys pri new houses going fp. We ‘have ik at Dig Waeemtorabbleinds bff) ‘8, no men. R. R, ap@,street cars| rin through this Jaxid, ‘as It fs omy) 11 miles from FE tt. Oet on t; no tlekets needed; or come c. D. Hiliman's ffices in Times Block for free maps and guides of all this country EIGHT FRESH WATER LAKES FULL OF TROUT AND BLACK BASS ON LAND. 15 MILES OF WALK TO BE LAID, MEN WANTED NOW. “lpn MARY.” DAY NURSERY BABIES HAVE ton at the waist had come unbut-| | | “Bradb THE STAR CYNTHIA GREYS LETTERS Tell me the yellow toma A.B and STORY TO TELL Dear Miss Grey best way to preserve toes A-—Peel the every pound add a pound of granu lated = sugar Set aside ove oleht In the morning drain off the syrup and boll twenty minutes wkimming Put — the tomatoes tn the syrup and simmer and tomatoes to frequently seven pounds of sugar added just before the syrup t taken from the fire adds much to the flavor y 1 have a col of Irth crochet m in the family for collar in ten inehe ffs an inch and « *« wide, What is ERTRUDE h about § Dear Miss lar and cuff which has yoars. T wide and half to thre their value ne A.—They are ore, if very fine, The value greater than it would be ngers, since the set has nin your family so long NORA, Dear Miss Grey: What will make One of the Babies Found in the | my plum jelly thick’ M. K Day Nursery. A.—Add heated sugar and bring | jelly and sugar to 6 bofl, Bot! quick iy for five minutes; pour into} glasses and stand in the sun to fell. | you'd think he was mean, too. You wouldn't have him there but jifty or two. He'd get mad at the dinner table and throw his ple plate on the floor. De you remember it’ », not clear,” he said | for babies. A FRIEND. Somebody had told him. What al \—The mother’s card with her pity. name and addresa should be inclos Whose children are these at the ed in an envelope with a smaller day nursery? card bearing the baby's name and Most of them telong to mothers | tho date of its birth | cannot give who must go out each day to work} you a list of names, but | suggest Dear Miss Grey: FP and | how to write and address }announce the birth of a chi would also Iike a lst of new #0 minutes, then rem apread on ‘platters In the ut til the syrup has botled thick Pack the tomatoos in ja } fill the jars with the syrup, Seal} immediately. Lemon julee in the} proportion of three lem to} ATTRACTIVE EVENING HAT AND WRAP for a living, Some of them work in| that you write down the nam offices and some of them do hard| relatives of the present and p day labor generations and select the one tha Others--God help them—are| you Uke best } women who have an deserted by 2 thetr husbands was one—|} Dear Miss Grey: What is a good & slip of a girl—-whose husband left | recipe for grape julce? ' her when the baby was three day A.-Stem six quarte of & dy The nursery in maintained by the chureh and is primarily for work | put them on to cook with of water, When the boilin, }ia reached, remove from fi point e and ing mothers A kind , ter y wodly lot over out of the knee Of one leg of hin ndergarten, | strain Return = juice Eipear & goodly lot over | vn pers and it was hanging to his | U%der the direction of Miss Vaughn, | bring again to @ boll, bot a ankle, His belt had slipped down | oe" for two hours in the after | while balling hot i around his knees and one side but-| "00" Parents who can afford it —— Cream of Carrot. pay & nominal tuition, but other Dear Mise Greys Can you tell ebildren are admitted tree. For ten cents a day a mother may } leave her child at the nursery in A FRIEND. | care of the nurse, Miss Carson. 4 cannot give business mt ' } me where I can find some person who makes Ince on & Princess loom ? A Some mothers have several children | dresses in this column. to be cared for and a charge of ten as a is cents ts made for the first one and five cents each for any number over that. The children bring their |own lunches. Here ts good news for dis couraged mothers who must go out }to work. “Tell them that I want| freed boards must be scrubbed | }& whole lot of children,” said the! with sind or salt instead of soap! jnurse. “It ts just as easy to take in order to be kept-in good condl- |care of a good many as a few, and | tion . jit is more interesting for the chil-| wees | dren.” | The deat dyster is a large | a a. ae | chamots akin soaked in cold water, | Pneumonia, Coughs, Sore Throat, | then dry jand all Lung Trouble, Leary’s © he finest urta All druggists. TODAY’S STYLES TODAY $18.00 to $4 | clothesiare leaders in introducing exclusive fashion features, The workmanship entailed:ini their mak ip much mer The worn FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1909. used ¢ reds and ¢ Beaver hats in the same color ar with thene | ,pdecorated with feathers and broad |i gold or ailver embroidered bands. wraps, has FASHIONS In street sults, while many of the Feoate neem to be short | yet many which are long, and these }last will certainly majority of fashionable women A natural successor to the feather | boa, which, while still worn, is not leo popular as it used to be, is the Buttons are large and decorative, It can be used on | but should be used only where they ruiture and will leave a} look as if they are needed to fasten | something. 0.00, | marabout neckplece. ury System Clothing The Elegance of Perfection BUY ON CREDIT In addition to the above inducements, n and a litt for the ¢ account YOU RIGHT. there are if 39 we offer our liberal credit system to youin the le ata onven I'ry it. 1332-34 Second Ave. 209 Union © | ing is ‘beyond | Comipatison or “eriticism only e&perts' are employed buying. Pay a little dow |... Being cut. over patterns Milt are as cor- time, without extra charge rect in proportion as your own frame, give ience or interest on your | you.as perfect a fit as merchant tailoring WE TREAT | STORE OPEN UNTIL 10:00 P. M. SATURDAY ° ® Eastern Outfitting Co., In Eastern Uuthitting Co., Inc. = |“Seattle’s Reliable Credit House’’ at New fabrics for handsome even: | and afternoon dress wraps have more body than ot late most garments are been | olors for these | bisque and other yel jows, amaranth, indigo and Chines blue, yellow pinks. and are appeal to th | ‘ | kivery piece of fabric contained in these _ In “BRADBYRY SYSTEM CLOTH- if] superior garments is thoroughly tested be- ING" you get all the distinctive features of If) fore it is put into them the tailor-made clothes at ready-made | | In style they are not only up-to-the-min- prices, and a pleasing feature is the moder- | | ute, but the designers of these excellent ateness of them, Suits and Overcoats from | FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Furniture Dry Goods Kore Opens at MO Dally and Closes at 610 Basement Safesroom Women’s High-Grade Tan Russia Button Shoes Special $1.90 Pair Women’s Button Shoes of high- grade tan Russia leather, in pleas- ing last, with brown cloth top, || Goodyear welt sole and Cuban Women’s and Misses’ All-Linen Handkerchiefs SPECIALS Women’s good quality Handkerchiefs, all pure } i linen, with 1-4-inch hem, in regulation size. 7 | Special 2C | Men’s good quality, all pure Irish linen Hem- | stitched Handkerchiefs; regulation size. 10 H Special C i} Special, 12 1-2c Each An excellent assortment of pretty patterns in | Women’s Embroidered Linen Collars, of good qual- ity, in all sizes from 12 to 15. Choice of any] | in the collection at the special price of 12 1-2c each. | Interesting Values in Trskensd Hats at $4.95 The assortment includes Hats | of moire, corded silk, velvet, felt, and beaver cloth in a wide variety of popular shapes, prettily trimmed with birds, coque feathers, long uncurled ostrich quills and fancy wings— many show effective touches of gold and jet in the trimming. Excellent values at $4.95 | i Me. 8 Ae | LADIES’ HOME | e LADIES’ HOME | | JOURNAL | re eric ‘ JOURNAL | PATTERNS e son STYLE BOOKS | FOR NOVEMBER tneerporatins | FREE $3.50 to $6.00 Values in Fall and Winter Styles in SAMPLE SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN OUR PRICE Your Every Choice Shoe, Me the Regardless ntire of Regular Large a Price, Stock, $2.50, $2.50. The Styles Include Patents, Gunmetal Calf, Velour, Vici Kid and Box Calf, in Button or Lace. All Prevailing Styles. NEW YORK SAMPLE SHOE CO., 211 BURKE BLDG. Corner Second and Marion TAKE ELEVATOR Open Saturday Evenings Every Pair No Higher $2.50 SSS

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