The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1909, Page 9

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OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN READERS OF THE STAR i Pudding. Line cus firmly against : the fore the the or pe er the top| Set aside to} nd serve with shaved mapte} | makes a tasty and meat dish of moderate | the necks of two into pieces and deen well salt Cook a finely #m two tablespoonfuls watt! it is a golden) pat in the met! til they are well iy the contents of 8 ae of tomatoes which have st and when they are a bit of bay leaf and @f kitebea bouquet and simmer unti Peal exe out of the meat Pibe meat, take out th 4 wntil very tender. @ border of rice. The and bay leaf may med Cod in Potato Case. mesh six good-| add one eas, &| much originality fn its trimmings | * gait and pepper to taste | punti] light. Pick and scald Doneless salt cod. | again. Now press) ry. Put one large table- | ier fn a frying pan aod) abi flour. Mix and of milk. Stir til it ‘add pepper to taste ‘pudding mold and line saad sidex with the potato. peed to the cream and (ill Cover the top with po- nice brown. It : AN ATTRACTIVE HOME DRESS FOR AFTERNOON Prettiest among the models in present day fashions the simple princess dresa. One can display and embellishments. The one tn the sketch fs made of dull bine cashmere, stitched with dark biue silk thread, and trimmed with dark biue velvet covered but- tons and tiny cravat. The little round yoke, lower sleeves and jabot are made of coarse meshed ecru lace. Nebraska has a woman pure food inspector, Mra. Harriet MacMurphy, whose duty is to Inspect all grocery stores, bakeries, hotels, drug stores, ANOTHER A WHY WOMEN MARRY Mrs. Leonia Browne Is Al- ; most Radical in Her Views on Marriage. “When a woman falls head over! heels and irrevocably in love with | & man," said Mra, Leonia W. Browne, lawyer, “she is going to marry him, by gractous, money or ho money. And she's right, ‘I believe that a larger percent- age of women in the past married for homes and support than do at the present time. “Marrying for a home and sup port is no more commendable than aceepting & home and support with. out the mockery of the marriage tie, and children are a curse in elther case. Should Be Independent. “Women should be Just as inde. pen, just as free and just as self-supporting as men. in no other way self respecting they are, but it Verted self respect “If all women were independent ly rich, rich enough to be aple to live without work, they would be Ukely to dabble tn love, as well as in all other things, for amuse- ment. Work, and work alone, good hard work, along some ‘Gree ten i for some purpose, can give a sound, healthy mind. To be self | *8pporting, with an opportunity to work, is a blessing. “To be indepe { they is may think & aadly per. dent, her judgment hor her love more worth while. Ac Opportunity to hustle in some chosen field Is God's ing. and women, kept busy with good, wholesome work, there would be leas morbid love making, more real true marriages and less oceasion | for divorce. more sound, can they be absolutely | | dently rich would | makes it more likely that she will hot make a woman more indepen-| greateat bless. | It all the worid, both. men | STAR—TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1909. } SOOOOSeSeSeseerereeooee® MAINLY ABOUT 3 3 3 I$ 3 NSWER TO ‘ aeons t te Sunday Thoughts. The great secret of eloquence ts to be in curnent | What we see depends not so much }on what is before our exes as on | what t# behind them. | No man ts made only for himself jand his own private affairs, but to | #erve, profit and benefit others. Whatever roal happiness there is to be found in the world t# reserved for the good conscience The one secret of Ife ts to de t's duty aright rn from the past to | profit by the present, and from the | present to live better for the future The chief secret of comfort lies in not suffering trifles to vex us | and fn prudently cultivating our un dergrowth of small pleasures, sin very few great ones, alas! are let on long leases. It ts & great deal better to live a holy life than to talk about ft, Light | \? non to call attention to their shin ing. They just shine. Don't Be Lazy, Many girls when they leave school are inclined to lead rather a MRS. LEONIA BROWNE lazy and sedentary life. trine, If you choose, | must ehartily Indorse tt. “A happy marriage ta the «best thing there is. But I can’t see that & woman's profession need keep her from marriage, nor make her home less happy If she do not give and such girls should be encouraged to take up some kind of outdoor game or exercise. Such games as tennis, hockey and badminton—if played in moderation-—are excellent for growing girla, and help to houses don’t ring bells and firo ean-| This is very bad for the figure, | develop the | the muscles I ing in quite the bent jelse for giving supplenoas | grace, figure and strengthen | exer: | and | | Wedding Cake Dreams. Dreaming on wedding cake is an ancient oustom, as originally lcondueted, was a relatively simple | ceremonial, Now we have changed all that, and the latest fashion, am told, involves a game of chance that lasts for a whole week The names of six actual or not impossible suitors are written on as |many slips of paper, and there ts added a slip which is left blank; 4 slip for each night in the week, with the blank for the seventh, to indicate the chance of one’s being jan old, or “bachelor,” maid. These slips are shaken up and in an envelope. Then the recent wed \ding guest tucks the little box of cake under her pillow and goes to uleep. In the morning, no matter what her dreams may have been, she draws a slip from the envelope and | discards it, And so on till only one }ia left, and this the fateful one. However, the rules of the game |provide that if the result is not| satisfactory, one may go to another | |wedding, bring home more cake and try again All this is intoresting es a game of chance, but It seems rather me chanleal lof putting the cake under the pil ‘low for three nights, and assum ing that the one you dream of for two of those three nights is to be ‘your husband is best Most of the wounds of the sensi tive girl are self-inflicted, only un- |fortunately she doesn't know ft | When she gaing this knowledge ber euffering and her tears will soon conse. it up when she marries. Tt but marry her equal, and the only hap- bY marriages are between equals, ‘Ob, I've got lots of sentiment,” laughed tty Mra. Lawyer browne Of course, if one must choose between the man and her profession, a happy marriage ts better than the practice of law, with a million in it. “If your buasl-| ness interferes with fain’, cut out Blore Closes FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Special Prices on Dally The old custom, however, |} FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes Dally at 6.90 | BasementSa esroomn| | Popular Lines of | Inexpensive Floor Coverings WILTON RUGS— 9x12; $29.00, 8-3x10-6; $26.00. 6x9; $19.00. 36x63; $4.50 and $5.00. 27x54, $2.50 and $3.00. 18x36; $1.75. WILTON HALL RUNNERS— 3x9; $9.00, 3x12; $12.00. 3x15; $15.00. AXMINSTER RUGS— 9x12; $17.85, 8-3x10-6; $16.75 BODY BRUSSELS RUGS—9x12; $22.50. SEAMLESS VELVET RUGS—9x12; $21.00, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS RUGS—-9x12; $9.25 LINOLEUM— Printed Linoleum ; 35¢, 40¢ and 45¢ square yard. c Inlaid Linoleum ; 75c, $1.00 and $1.15 square yard. (10c square yard extra for laying.) COCOA DOOR MATS— 14x24; 45c¢ and 65c. 16x27; Wc. $1.20, 22x36; $1.40 RUBBER DOOR M ATS—17x31; $1.50, OIL-CLOTH STOVE MATS—4-6x4-6; $1,00. Long Silk Kimonos, Special, $3.75 Kimonos of heavy silks, pretty Oriental, con- ventional and floral designs in attractive combina- tion colorings of old-blue, heliotrope, light-blue, tan and dull-green. Made long and full, with shirrings across shoulder; kimono sleeve and front are trimmed with satin ribbon bands to match pre- vailing color in material. Special, $3.75. 20x33; If 18x30; 75¢. i bake gerved in the dish it was) or jete. Mrs. MacMurphy has just fin out. lished inspecting the stores in | Beatrice, Neb. and says that she| finds their sanitary condition “per- Ml it the Taft doc-|the business.’ ~ Oak Dressers and Chiffoniers if tablespoons butter, three flour, one cup milk, teaspoon salt; make into ismuee and cool, Add to the of tour exes well | with Dover ess the weill-beaten tes in greas- eit Is 90 enon to fill a fall of bread 1 | ; 1 | 2 eggs, 1 pint of of chopped raisins [pat in all kinds of spice. Sponge. can of grated ptne- 1 cup of sugar wntit Molve a half package of cup of water, and add epple. Beat % pint heavy fand stir Into the cooled Hon ice to cool thoroughly. plain cream, if liked, or $500.00 reward for risen food made with Cres cent Egg Phos phar Baking Powder contain- ing alum, lime, cream of tartar {rochelle salts) ‘or any other in- Jurious sub- stances. feet.” Miss Alice Blech, social secretary to the president's wife, has the most desirable and the moat strenuous office for a woman im Kovernment service. FASHIONS Sapphire blue and deep green corduroy make lovely two-piece costumes for young girls. Black gauze ribben striped with velvet forms a huge bow on & broad-brimmed velvet hat. Transparent fabrics and nets come at ail prices for use as drap- eries on silk and satin dresses. fashionable three-piece costumes. A butterfly bow of rainbow gauze [ribbon trims a velvet hat, which ia otherwise plain except for a {folded band. When fashioning yokes in frocks, remember that all yokes need not ;be round. You may depart from j the usual shape to bring out the geod points of your features and by a counteracting yoke effect. It is once more fashionable for ttle girls to have their hair tied with extremely large bows of black satin ribbon. Cocoas in tins look pretty much alike; but in the cup , there is no mistaking the su- periority of irardelli’s COCOA > om t ask merely 0toa—ask for ‘ardel]j’s. Cocoa Fact No. 30 The cocoa bean in its natural state con- tains a large petcent- age of oil, which is highly nutritious but is too rich for many. This ia pressed out and is known as co- coa butter, a val- uable commercial product. Broadcloth handsomely braided | is among the favorite materials for | be interested in somebody, and he} to submerge the unattractive lines REMEMBER Women of Seattle, remember There's a nice contest on no conteat. Who can get up the best T! Boxes at the Alhambra and seats at the Orpheum during Th women who can get up the best Star's Thanksgiving Dinner Edit Its worth your while CYNTHIA GREYS LETTERS Dear Miss Grey: 1 do not know any nice boys, but I am 16 and | would like to have a boy to love jme, Advise me. CAG A—Wait a couple of years. I prophesy that by that time you will will be Interested in you. You are only « little girl now, and don't be in a hurry to be @ young lady. Dear Miss Grey: Please give me a verse suitable to write on my card to inclose with a handkerchief for a birthday gift. What are suitable Christmas gifts for young men, barring books? 1 would like a recipe for a new and inexpensive candy. MISS THOUGHTFULNESS. A—) As something to own and treasure Accept this amall token from me; A trifle it ts, but no measure Of my whole regard for thee. (2) Silver-backed clothes brush, pretty neektle, scarf pin with birth- stone setting, kid gloves, or sub- seription to a magazine. If he is & mnoker, a nice pipe. (3) Put two teaspoons butter into a kettle and place over fire. When BY CYNTHIA GREY. Ask your husband and the boys if they would not like a good, sav- lory stew tonight. I'll wager they | tall say “Yes.” And what's more appetizing than a good, old-fash foned Irish stew? | Cut into pieces a pound of meat! cut from the neck of beef or mut jton. Simmer for several hours, land an hour before it is done sea son and add two onions and two carrots cut Into dice. In a@ half hour add two potatoes and two stalks of celery chopped. Put the meat when done on center of a | platter and pour the vegetables around it Serve with baked or mashed potatoes. Hungarian govlash is a variation. Wash thoroughly lamb kidneys and cut in thin pieces. Put two tablespoons of butter into a saucepan and when hot add pleces of kidne Shake and cook fast for ten minutes Add four table | spoonfuls of stock gravy, two tablespoonfula of chopped mush jrooms, salt and pepper to taste | Cover and cook slowly for 15 min lutes. Mix together the yolks of jtwo egas and three-fourths of a cupful of milk; add to the contents of the saucepan and stir until sauce begins to thicken Then take up and serve at once. Sprin i kle a little chopped parsley over it | Beef stew with dumplings is a | most nourishing as well ax a most linviting dish. Get a soup bone |weighing about five pounds, and have the buteher remove the meat from the bone. Cut meat into two inch cubes and dredge with sea soned flour. Cut some of the suet into fine pleces and try out in a skillet. Add the meat and stir con wtantly, When browned, put it into a stew pan, add remaining suet and bone, cover with boiling water and cook slowly for three hours. Add carrot, turnip, potatees and onion diced the last hour, Remove bone} and fat, add the dumpling dough! in spoonfuls, pepper, cover the stew | | 0d or the butter is melted add one and) The remaining win The Star. It's the menu are consequently o low prices. hankegiving dinner menu? the Grand theatres and four ankagiving week awalt the three menus and send them in to The ‘og by Thursday of this week DRESSER, SPE- CIAL $10.95—Golden oak Dresser with ser- yentine-shape top 17x40 Fctes and beveled plate mirror 18x24. Has four drawers, the two top ones shaped to match top of case, Illustrated to right. lene half cops sugar and a ball jmilk, and stir until auger ie dt jsolved. Boll 12 minutes, remove from fire, add one-third cup shred. |ded cocoanut and a half teaspoon vanilla. Beat the mixture unti) | creamy and it begins to sugar! slightly; then pour into a buttered | plate. When nearly cool, mark in| squares, Nut meata may be used instead of cocoanut. French | Dear Miss Greyr How can I re move finger prints from the walnat jease of my plano? MRS. M. G A—To a half bucket of warm water add a half cup of kerosene! and make a suds of white soap. Wash the plano with this mixture, | | uning a clean soft linen cloth. Wipe ldry and polish with a soft chamota skin. |. Dear Miss Grey: How soon te fruit cake ready te eat after It Is baked? Is it necessary to put brandy in it? My cakes are light, but they are full of holes. What) }{a wrong? A. M. C, A.—Any time, but these cakes taste better after a fow weeka. No. You probably use too much bak- ing powder or soda. Mend linen before sending It to} the wash. It ia much more easily | done than when it is starched and ready for use. DRESSER, SPECIAL $13.50 — Golden oak Dresser, having serpen- tine-shaped top uring 18)4x42 and upper ers to corre- spond with top, Has two large straight-front drawers, and pattern French plate mirror, 22x28 inches, Il- trated to right pan tightly and cook just 20 min utes without removing cover once. The dumplings are made by mixing | & teaspoce of salt, a tabiespoon of baking powder and 4@ little melted butter to one pint of Nour, and mix ing with milk into a rather stiff batter. A cook who is famous among her neighbors says a shoulder piece of eet, boned, with the bone reserved for the soup kettle, 1s a good invest ment She says “Make a good stuffing and fill up the spaces once occupled by the You make a roast pleasing to the eye and to the palate. Not so much meat fs ten, for the stuffing helps out; and by the same reasoning vege tables go further as well.” This is economy worth while, for with this meat the lowest point in price is reached One of the best dishes ever made and one that goes rurth fa rute baga boiled with about two pounds of beef brisket, Cut the rutabaga into thin slices. Koil it with the beef about one hour or one and one half hours with enough water to keep it from burning. Thicken with a tablespoon flour, This makes a fine diah | A meat loaf that is fit for a king is made with one pound of round steak, chopped, and mixed with sing made with one loaf of Mix an egg and « oning to taste I've given you a cheap meat dish | for each day of the week except day, and as the Sunday dinner xpected to be the best in the week, we might be a litt ava gant and have a good baked chicken pie-which every housewife in the United States knows how to make Or a leg of fresh pork, stuffed and baked for four or five hours in a very moderate oven, will give tur. key a close call as to flavor, with very little waste. In these days of stvingent economy {t Is the leaks through wastefal planning which ff aggregate into even more expensive | living. | meas- inches, two draw- shaped beveled bone Frederick ment of Oak Dressers and Chiffoniers that arrived with defective mirrors and quantity of a ship- ffered at especially —Third Floor DRESSER, SPE- CIAL $10.45—Oak Dresser in golden finish, with serpen- tine-shape top; has oval beveled French plate mirror 18x24 inches, Llustrated to left. Parisiana Corsets: $1.00 Models These are excellent Corsets for stout figures, having low bust and long skirt, and reducing straps which are designed to produce the straight-front effect. Material is strong coutil, and garments are fitted with three pairs of hose supporters. Price, $1.00. Interesting Values in We'l-Made Aprons SPECIAL 39c—All-Over Aprons of Amoskeag checked gingham, made in Hubbard style, with or without sleeves. 25c—-Tea Aprons of crossbar dimity or plain lawn, cut round and trimmed with ruffle of dainty embroidery or plain hemstitched ruffle; have broad: sash to tie. ”“ - Seasonable Millinery Section Values WHITE FUR TURBANS, finished with head; $3.75. LARGE VELVET SHAPES in rolled-brim ef- fects; gray, Copenhagen, pale-blue, green and } navy; $1.75. MEDIUM-SIZE BLACK FELT SHAPES; 69e. LONG, POINTED WHITE WINGS; 35c pair. WELL-MADE WINGS in brown, navy, gray- and-white, and gray-and-Copenhagen; 5c. oem Frederick & Nelson INCORPORATED The Raven orescription service You WILL SAVE MONEY lecribing Is most efficiently supple CHIFFONTER, ff SPECIAL $9.35 A well-proportioned Chif fonier of golden oak, with three full-length drawers, two smaller drawers and a cupboard or hat-box 17x32 inches and bevel ed plate mirror, 12x18. Illustrated to left & Nelson The top is Incorporated means that the doctor’s ekill In pre By having your den- tal work done while the dental war is on, The dental combine two dollars n I make a dol- jar, and you save a dollar on your dental work, Remember, I am not competi: with ‘cheap dentists but doing best work for half the price charged by, the society combine den- tists, who have for years been usin their dental law to drive me out ol business because I charge reason- Hj able, guarantee my work, and adver- | Use, all of which is against their rul nd ethics mented by the druggist’s skill in compounding, RAVEN DRUG ¢O, 1416 Second Av. H. L. KLEIN THE SHOEMAKER, + if you can't get boots or # shoes to fit you, get them made ff to measure at : 217 JAMES STREET. - | | unton lrondale Route .:\" THE FAST STEAMSHIP HYAK | Work. (Seattle, Irondale, Port Townsend! Route) | Schedule effective November 17, 196 in. full tomorrow, TWO DAILY TRIPS TO) THE LOWER SOUND Tickets on sale at Steamship Of. fice or offices of the Western Steel Block, — b rry. Open evenings until 9, lays until 6, for people who Wednesday » to be published | | Pianos at half price; easy payments, without interest. Cline Piano Co. 1406 First Ave. Three round fips dally, Leave Se-| atte at 2m. and 6 p. m/ Sunday, i ttle at 7:30 a. m., | hi. ant a.m, day pm and P Single fare to) ——$_—_— oe Snohomish LY 00. Round telp $1 49 J | Do you want to buy a home? See Steam Telegraph, Colman doe , fe Phones--Sunscts Main 2004: Ind. 734. The Star'e classifing reat” estate MEALS SERVED, columns,

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