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ECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN READERS OF THE STAR) yis SECOND IN CHAMPIONSHIP ; —— runner up in; re Barlow was pe national woman's patio, wed was won by Miss Bi golf cham Campdell, of North nd, on the links of the Cricket club, Philadelphia Paying Upon her home course, Partlow had an advantage, but ig vas not sufficient to overcome the splendid play of the visitor, ‘pho fs one of the greatest golfers the game bas produced —-—--— ba MRS. RONALD H. BARLOW. —e jeolor, If not hot enough, add more cayenne or white pepper. Ma nearly four quarts catehup. A well corked, seal with melted wax, 34 cup grated horse-|to make airtight, when contents of cup sugar, 1-2 cup salt, bottle are cold. Do the same with of et go — 1] preserve jars, Skin and chop fine, chop the peppers | Virginia Chow-Chow. P@amis all together well. This} Chop very fine 18 onions, 3 heads Dame ko cooking. May be kept in/of cabbage, 18 red and green pep or bottles. | pers, 1-2 peck of ripe tomatoes and —_—_ | 14 peek of green tomatoes. Add {1 pint of salt and let it stand over night. Drain it well next day. Add 1 pound of brown sugar, 1 teacup of grated horseradish, 1 tablespoon of mustard seed, the sane of black pepper, 1 ounce of celery seed and an ounce of tameric, Put all in a kettle and cover with good vine gar. Boll three or four minutes, stirring it often. Then put in jars. Sweet Pickle Pears. Ten pounds of pears, not quite ripe, wipe them and remove the blossom end, then cook them in | bolling water until tender. Remove fruit, and strain the water; take 1 quart of this water, add to it 1 quart of vinegar, five pounds of sugar and half cup of mixed whole spice, cloves, allspice, mace and stick cinnamon. Put on to boll for half an hour, then add the pears and when well scalded pack in glass jars. Boll the syrup down be retained. the | until there is enough to cover the agen = {he | fruit; pour it over and seal at once. are placed in r, dis | < peppers through Chili Sauce. Present a very! Select 18 large, ripe tomatoes, ce when put up) 5 good sized onions and 2 red pep and sealed, the same! pers; chop fine and add 2 table spoons salt, 1 tablespoon each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice, | ground, one-eighth of an ounce of mace, broken fnto bits, Mix all thoroughly, then add 1 pound of | brown sugar and 3 1-2 cups of vin jesar and half an ounce of ginger. Put Into a granite kettle. Cook tl thick as catchup, stirring often, but jdo not strain; put away In tightly corked bottles or jars. PRESERVES AND PICKLES. Cold Catchup. peck ripe tomatoes, 2 {it from one morning unti! § Replace the old brine ‘few, allowing it also to re ions 24 hours, and again on the third im fresh water and scalding point. A pint of milk the boiling the onions In hot vinegar | pickles be pound of as may be! in thin the vine the white- in pick 2 tablespoons salt, 1 eup ewer. Cock until the tomatoes . ‘eoler of raisins; when cool Aablespoons cinnamon, 2 of | A grated nutmeg. Will keep @ winter in jars. Tomato Catchup. pounds ri tomatoes, | with skins on, pat in a por.| Children are more Mable to con idieis bettie, 24d 1-4 teaspoon soda; sider the care of their eyes than bon to skim off the scum | their parents, for they have been fees. When well cooked, | trained in school not to read facing ‘allowing ali the pulp to go | 4 glare, not to read in a dull Nght, but no seeds. Make «| and to have the light fall over the good 34 cup of mixed left shoulder whenever it can be fn a bag), 1 quart vin- | managed. Pound sugar, 1-4 teaspoon| Reading while lying down need @ pebper, 2 tablespoons salt; | not necessarily be harmful, When ru to strained tomatoes andthe book is supported steadily at ely until thick enough | the same angle with the eyes tha: Adé more seasoning if} the reader maintains when sitting. This ts fine and @ good! there ia no eye strain and no injury Those who once taste the exquisite flavor and de- liciousness of rardelli’s CocoA | Ghi will always drink _it—not from hab- it, but from choice. It makes the ideal beverage for The seeds in the co- coa pag (the cocoa beans) are embedded in a soft pinky white pulp which is of a sweetish acid taste, "The beans and pulp are scooped out of the pods and then the beans are cured and dried by sun and Don’t ask merely for cocoa—— ash jor | Ghirardelh;’s, Trom CQ@D Frult Pudding. Put 1 pint of apples or peaches siteed (or any kind of frutt) into a buttered baking dish Mix 1 heaping cup flour, 2 level teaspoons baking powder, 24 cup sugar, 1 ong, 1 cup milk and 3 tablespoons melted butter. Beat hard, pour over the fruit and bake. Serve with sauce and it is delicious. Dried Mushrooms. Wipe the mushrooms clean and tf they are the large variety, 1 off the skin. Dry them and » in t r bags. When using them in eravy or sauces, simmer them in the bauce for a abort time, and they will swell to nearly their original size. Breakfast Gems. Take a pint of sour milk, a cup of graham and a cup of wheat flour, 1 egg and 1-2 teaspoon of salt, also & tablespoon of sugar makes them nicer, I think. Beat the egg first a then stir everything well to gether, Rutter your tins and have them hot when you put the mixture in, Hake in @ hot oven Sea Foam Rolls. Scald a pint of sweet milk and add 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt and butter the size of an ee. When lukewarm add 13 @ yeast cake dissolved and 3 cups of Nour. Lot it rise for 3 hours, then add four to knead, Let rise again and then shape into rolie by rolling each one into an oblong and brush with butter and fold over, Let rise till very ght and bake in a hot oven, if wanted for tea at 6, mix NEW WAY TO at 10.20 a m, and shape them at 4.00 p. m. Cottage Pudding. One cup of sugar, a scant cup of milk, 1 egg, 2 full teaspoons of} yeast_powder or 2 even teaspoons of cream tartar, 1 teaspoon of soda, a tablespoon of butter heaping, an lemon for flavoring or what you like, Put about an inch of cake at} bottom of pan, then a layer of allo-| ed apples, thin sliced. Put in one} Inch thick of the apples, then put the rest of the dough on top so as) to corer the apples up, then put one} layer on top. Sugar and nutmeg! on beth layers. Be aure it is baked through. It is fine with hot or cold | sauce, but best of all with whipped | cream. One can use peaches, Dropped Fish Balls. One-half pint of raw fish, 1 heap ing pint of pared potatoes (let the potatoes be under medium size), 2 eaes, butter the size of an exe and a little pepper. Cut the fish in half-inch slices across the grain) Jand measure it lightly, «Put the potatoes into the boiler and the fish on top of them, then cover with }bolling water and boil half an hour jorsunti! tender. Drain off all the ter and mash fish and potatoes together until fine and light jadd the butter, pepper and t | well beaten. Have a deep kettle of |bolling fat. Dip a tablespoon tr and take up @ spoonful of th mixture, having care to get ft tnt as good shape ax possible. Drop tn to the botling fat and cook until utes. Be careful not to crowd the} balls and also that the fat ts hot enough. The spoon should be dipped in the fat every time you take a spoon of the mixture, These balls are delicious. ————— Dear Miss Grey: Please gt | cleaned? What is the best soap} for baby’s skin? How should a} baby’s scalp be treated to make the hair grow MBS. C. H. A—(1) For six cups, mix three large teaspoontuls cocoa with two teaspoonfujs sugar and one scant) teaspoonfd) corn starch, Put in a sauce pan six cups milk, or half {milk and half water. When this} | has re |a little on the mixture, and stir) well, then pour all Into pan, bot! ap once and serve, with or without | a spoonful of whipped cream. (2) seratch or ordinary silver polish will brighten nickel, Hot soapsuds and ammonia keep it tn good con dition (a) m off and is replaced by slightly coarser hair. , Its growth is best! aided by keeping the scalp clean, | |the hair well brushed and the head not too warmly covered Pure castile, well rinsed off. Doar Miss Grey: Is it proper for) } of 16 to allow a boy of 16 to | home with her? Is it right for her to accept candy or flowers from him if her mother has not met him? INQUISITIVE. | A--If there is no harm in this acquaintanceship there can be no good reason why the young man [should not meet your mother, It | would be better for all concerned, Please tell me ed noodles. | ALICE. Beat an ege slightly, add a aspoon salt and flour enough a stiff dough. Knead, and roll as smoothly as possible in two | thin sheets, On one sheet put here | and there little dabs of spinach which have been cooked with salt lpork. Place the other sheet over |the first one, cut In squares and |pinch together with the fingers | Drop into your veal or chicken soup |and cook until done. Finely minced chicken giblets are used sometimes instead of spinach. | Dear Mise G how to make f Dear Miss Grey: Do you think] this is right? My father is engag-| ed to my husband's mother. Will you express your opinion about it? Don't you think one marriage in the family is enough? | DAUGHTER AND SON. | A.—If they love each other I see Ino reason in the world why they \should not marry. Haven't they the same right to happiness that you have? brown, which should be two min-|} SYNTHIA GREYS: Any cleanser that does not | ff d THE STAR—TUESDAY, d TRIM THE soni, An odd conceit is the gown in the iMustration. It fs made of the new rough cashmere and is trimmed with self-colored em@roidery on the yoke, lower sleeves and waist. The cord in the same snade, and the pleated flounce on the. skirt, the bodice decoration and the bottom yoke are all edged with the cord The hat is more fancifully trimmed than is usual this season, | and {fs intended only for dressy wear, It is a picture hat of velvet draped with satin and trimm with an algret and slik roves. FURNITURE DRY GOODS NOVEMBER 2, 1909 A little boy was asked how he| wanted his hard botled eggs bolled “Give ‘om to me * he sald A peal of laughter was evoked by this remark. One aw ov day 6yearold Syl-| vester can yack from the grocery with a large head of cabbage. “But I told you to bring me @ cake of compressed yeast,” chided his mother. “I know,” sald Arthur, “but ther 1s more nourishment tn a cabbagi Needless to say this provoked a great deal of merriment ae BE Maggie, aged 4, saw @ chicken scratching for worms, “That is just the when something sald, We think Maggie has the sense of humor, worms also. ay I scratch | bites me," she | aving and possibly Mamma was hulling strawberries. This attracted the attention of Ros- 608, our youngest “Why do you throw them away?” asked the child “Because they are useless,” swered mamma, with a smile, (OnE rs ornaments are made of heavy silk| There are two different length short skirts to be worn—one which just clears the ground, and, it must be admitted, is a dust catcher; and the other, which is at least three inches from the ground and cannot fail to be thoroughly clean and comfortable to the wearer. | ‘The neatest way to keep photo- graphs and to keep them out of FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes Dally at 5:30 “Then you must be useless,” twittered the tot, “for they all say you threw yourself away when you warried papa.” . . A small girl of & was observed | one day taking a phonograph into the hennery “What are you going bel?” asked her mot * “Lam setting a hen,” re little one “And why the phonograph? the parent, much puzzled “Oh, I am setting her to music,” retorted Mirabel. . to do, Mira . Father was attempting to tell Nellie how fortunate he was in his youth. “IT was born with a silver spoon in my mouth,” he said “That's funny,” eaid Nell, with a roguish twinkle in her eye. “You seom to prefer eating with a knife.” “e @ Our T-yearold Lucey had the | jaw. After a visit by the she said: “One thing ts certain— this ailment is not hereditary.” All who knew her mother’s con versational ability were convulsed by this quaint concelt SS al the way, yet available, is to soak |i] them off ther cards and to paste them in a scrapbook bought for |} the purpose. This should have gray leaves to furnish background for the pictares. On one page paste all the pictures you have of a certain person. Pho- |i tographs of a child might be ar- ranged according to age, and the |ff age written neatly under each pic- ture. A girl thinks ft is flirting if she catches a young man looking at |i} her. ~~ FURNITURE | yY GooDs Exclusive Seattle Agents for The Hastings Line of Extension Tables This store is the exclusive Seattle sales-agency for the famous Hastings line of Extension Tables. just received covers a wide variety of new patterns in Early English, fumed and waxed golden oak; also in mahogany, dull or polished finish. A large shipment’ Inseparably associated with Hastings Tables is the Tyden Lock, with which all Hastings Tables are fitted, and which ab- solutely prevents spreading of pedestal. Another important feature in connection with Hastings Tables is that the tops are fitted with steel pins and sockets, loose. preventing them from working The Hastings Table illus- trated to right is of quartered oak, finished waxed golden; top measures 44 inches when closed. Shown in two lengths, priced as follows: 6-ft. length, $23.00 8-ft. length, $26.00 hed the botling potnt pour |f] Ostermoor Mattresses Baby's first hair soon comes | |i Great Sale of Knabe Pianos A few slightly used Knabe Pianos at a sacrifice. CHICKERING & SONS AT A GREAT SACRIFICE, Sohmers included in this 5 Can last but two or three days, as these goods will be bought at sight. 1.0t often you get an opportunity like this. Cline Piano Co. 1406 FIRST AV, ° | Frede —Third Floor Incorporated \ Navy Yar ® Mall Paget Soun: B. Ke Schedul Leave Seatile—@:55 (except Sun) Gay), *8:30, 10:00, *11:30 a, m, 140, 2.00, 4:00, *@115 p. m. Thursday and Saturday only 11:30 m. Leave 8G, 10:15, 6:00 p.m *Hoats stop at Pleasant Beach. Phones: Ind, 738. p | Bremerton for Seattle 11:15 a. m., Be4B, Ge05, | EVERETT AN halt ¢ rick & Nelson Kitchen Cabinets Time of 8 est ute day. Fare, 500 round trip, Children between ages 6 to 12 are 1 Main 3101, 2993. D. EDMONDS m., 13 t at 9:16 4 and 7:16 p.m Gay, leave ptt at 9:45 a. m, p.m. and 7:16 p,m. Single fa Snohomish $1.00. Round trip $1 Bteamer Telegraph, Phones—Sunset, Main k- the best |j] FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Blore Closes Daily at 6:50 Basement Salesroom ° Charming One-Piece Serge Dresses to Be Sold at $6.35 This offering is the result of a special purchase made at an unusu- ally low figure. The Dresses are in the popular Moyen Age style, with full-plaited — skirts. Among them are plain-tai lored models, made with crush collar of self-mate- rial and fastening down side with jet buttons—also pretty trimmed effects, having waist and sleeves tucked and finished with rows of soutache or silk moire, and round yoke of cream net. The color-assortment in- olive-green, old- Copenhagen, navy and gray; also black. cludes rose, Specially priced at - acl Important Embroidery Specials At 10c and 19c Yard 800 YARDS 10-INCH EMBROIDERY EDG- ING, in an excellent assortment of pretty patterns, specially priced at 10¢ Yard. 500 YARDS 18-INCH EMBROIDERY FLOUNCING, Swiss and Nainsook, including a good range of styles in openwork English eyelet effects, specially priced at 19¢ Yard. Frederick & Nelson 20 Men Wanted To Work at Birmingham BIG WAGES. If there are any idle men in Seattle we want them. We are selling over $20,000 worth of G-acre tracts dally and the 12,000 acres can’t last much longer. AT THE REQUEST OF SEVERAL HUNDRED PEOPLE WE WILL CONTINUE THE BIG LAND SALE OF 5 or 10-Acre Tracts at Birmingham AT $50 PER ACRE ON TERMS OF $2.00 PER MONTH, FOR ANOTHER WEEK Excursion Every Day Rain or Shine FREE Nice big warm cabin on boat, so don’t mind the rain or cold. We land on our own propety at our new dock. YESTERDAY WAS A BIG DAY —WE SOLD OVER $45,000 WORTH OF LAND—OVER $20,000 WORTH TO ED- MONDS PEOPLE ALONE. Remember, sale will continue for one week more, after which all our land will be held for higher prices—nearly double. Some folks don’t know this land is on this side of the Sound with railroad and street cars and Is worth five times the price of lands on the other side of the Sound As soon as Everett & Bellingham car line is bullt 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 life, like the Ox. THE LAST BIG LAND SALE OF 2,000 ACRES WILL BE CON» TINUED AT BIRMINGHAM Tomorrow, Wed., Nov. 3rd Big FREE BOAT tickets needed, leav 10 a. m.; returns at 7 p. m. 6,000 acres have been sold the last 90 days; dozens of new houses going up. We have work at big wages for all kinds of men. R. R. and street cars run through this land, as it only 11 miles from Everett. Get on boat; 90 tickets needed; or come to OQ, b Hillman’s offices in Times Block for free maps and guides of all this country, 8 FRESH WATER LAKES FULL OF TROUT AND BLACK BASS ON LAND. 16 MILES OF WALK TO BE LAID, MEN WANTED NOW. US, no $600 worth of berries raised on one acre of this land at Bir- mirgham or Earlington or Pa- clfie City,