Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
i P a JOF S a Wor Ma VOTING |8 TOO HEAVY A BURDEN FOR WOMAN — *. awe . \ 3 Pasbands ems to be little oppos 1 Dasdand’s part to his w Jucated S OF MARLBOROUGH “DOMESTIC FELICITY depends largely ox mutual interest if husband and wife in business, soci and domestic affairs. ita conduct a home properly, she Why shouldn't she continue to work after mar i share the load. More husbands and wives in p Will mean less divorce and more domestic hay Swoman is ab an generally m Pa business © tase? Wiv desiness part MRS, AGNE MULLIGAN, Real Eatate Operator “LIFE WITHOUT LOVE Would not be worth living. It ie the most beautiful thing in the wortd. I cannot remember the time | was fat in love. By loving a person I mean simply the enjoyment of ir preserice, the delight in their conversation, the willingness to particularly to give them.” MRS. PHILIP VAN VALKEN = igre and to receive favors ——— Cabbage Soup. One cup of chopped cabbage bol! ed im salt and water until done. Add milk, pepper, butter. Roll a crack er fine and put in just before remov ing from fire. Braised Fowl, | An old tow! may be used for this dish. Half a pound of salt pork lery, onions and car & quart of stock (or re of butter, on pepper and salt wa er), an ow ounce of flour. Truss a full-crown fowl! as for roast ing. Place in a stewpan a few slices rot. On these pnt the fow! with slices of the salt pork on its breast Season with whole pepper and salt. Add the stock water; the a butt | pan cl {simmer till the bird cloves or some Put r the tents (An lold fowl will ire three hours stewing.) Remove the fowl! when tender, place on a baking dish, | dredge thickly with flour and brown jin the oven. Strain the gravy, thicken it and pour it around the | bird after the latter has been plac jon a dish. Coffee Pie. One and one-half cups cold coffee, lar light wraps for early fall | one-half cup of milk, yolks of three will be the black satin scarfs, | eggs, two tablespoonfuls cornstarch with contrasting material and| four tablespoonfuls sugar and one , three e yards long 4 30} tablespoonful lemon juice. Co wide—very soft and grace-} ti) it thicke in double boi These wraps are charming and | pour In freshly baked crusts. B ing to slender figures. }the whites of eggs with two table hite pongee is the material of| spoonfuls of sugar, flavor, spread hat, and it is faced and trim-| over top and brown in oven With the black satin. As black almost cove algre Chili Sauce. ” Eighteen ripe tomatoes, pee neni land chopped fine. Eighteen ta Lingerie and cniffon costumes in| #poonfuls salt, five onions (not larg tk and white @ P ones), one teas 1 black fp . ng|one_nutmeg ( whole), four They are h-|ecups vine teaspoonful each of to give en sis cinnamon, allspice e and gin and colors both, as| ger, three green pepr one bunch wn will be made of celery chopped fine; boil 1% hours. { the other, in equal Do not put in all of pepper seeds unless you want it real hot eee per ARABIAN | ihe" | Bie. AND GIRLo Sossse5sse23002 555503355352 5352352355;5523) HE STORY OF THE SECOND BEGGAR Dam a prince and have always renowned for my learning the many languages I unde One da I was sent by m to a distant country t te some valuable papers took fright he read and bolted When I regained S friend My Something in threw me senses the horse had vanished Mfose and walked a short dis ce when to m astonishment 1 t before me an fron plate mtly fastened to the ground the conter was a heavy iron ring some difficulty I raised this discovered an iron s' down hI has with great curlos . I found myself in a large, well led palace A very fair and mly lady welcomed me eagerly asked for news of the outside “You are the first man,” she “whom | n for 16 . My fath of the By Isles, ha 1 me a hus , but on the y night I was Wed him a genie snatched me ¥ and brought me here. Every * the ¢ comes to see hand if | should want him r I touch this talisman and appears. it six days before Mext arrival, so 1 invite you to here as my guest.” Within a very few days 1 had desperately in love with the | Sess and was begging her to with me. But, although she Me, the fear of the genie held back. This roused my anger, Striding to the talisman, I} Genie Snatched Me Away and &t it until I had destroyed Brought Me Here. y. Straightway the]. —_—____ - the palace shook and|to me and sald I offer you two At the urgent prayer of|your choice, one of you must } Dtincess 1 fied through the|the other. oT the survivor | wil Cf, up the | 4 the upp far, howe Ing noise ar a grant life and Mberty.” Of course neither of us would consent, There ipon the monater in a rage drew hi word and plunged it into my be stairs and re air, I had not when I heard a 4 #natched up i carried back to|loved's heart Now I, too, begsed what change. |for death, but the cruel gente onl pus, her gar-| dat me and said No, I her lovely hair other. To the survisor I wil 4d with blood, her lovely eyes |\give you your choice of bein of tears Towering over her |changed into a dog, a monkey or a the terr ; who turned | bird le genie stad 10d "i nd At a , I k ' 1 m th wi to n la f i 7 w , f | w iid m for| . " 3 ‘ Jor I aod Pa h What wa t n 7 a 1 rtat witt fork, if y PS be y “gyn ne Fh pce t an b w ms ata time, y 10 i ite ; breach of 1 ne who . . b - ined wa me who showed : iway when @ ¢ Sennanien | off and ti " y D M Grey Will yo res ao tom me ‘ i me how to dry prur 1 Th ke t w z ol mark bona . . Soke vw io ae ary and | 1 a crew of Hore at © ter canning 18% 1 motormen to throw bean. I hay 1 with 4 . ne : uceess th - yea l le t lragged Pa k from t trouble than tt I a T — bo him ual | w nl to the mele and snap the beans, To} ¥!th t . Fy ove ee =f 7 ly }livan that they got back onto the ear and rode he platform to lachaté ¢ ers en b Tr . drain off the brine, acald| water two or ree tim ju Pe if fre | damage j Ib B. THOMAS | STR. LA TOUCHE am sorry that I am unable to tell] . | }you how to dry prunes. Can some Dear Miss Grey—I have been go. . ng with a young Indy several] With ~ age rte months, but have never apent an . nd 2,000 rape fevening at her home. Is it my place Le Touche. teilt by the |to ank her if I may spend an even ce Sng Bow jing at her home with her or her Ap mesa ace to ask me WORRIED. A : “4 - A—tt is a woman's privilege to) sonny io, iceman ane invite @ man to call, and it in| sole? i " vistenet ta also proper for bim ask iin Somnetae Yoona, 14, antes |mission. Since you have Mice 5 i Yaus scalnond at tm spending evenings together, it! \is\ia Stoamatip & alae. seems strange that you have not|* ok ee <a called at her home, either at her jinvitation or upon your own re G. N. PROVED IT TO |quest. I suggest that you ask to INSPECTOR PERLEY jeall. It is queer that her parenta should allow their daughter to go (My United Press) mut regularly with « young man| LEAVENWORTH, Aug. 26.—~ of™alt pork, a sliced onion, a car-|/ WANT TO “MAKE UP” | | | offic ere CYNTHIA GREYS who has not t ved in their home. av up me. JUST LIKE A MAN?! 16 hours a day was given A. W. | Perley, state inspector of tracks and safety appliances, yester- day The Great Northern freight Perley was riding on tied up six miles from Leavenworth at 1 o'clock yesterday morning, be hit for lof great concern to you [ticularly #o if an "1 ng, or if those that are lloose or diseased. They pla 1 lan important part in keeping the Want to ourself as albedy h ny that they deserve to man? If you do you must do more |co and she have atten than put on men’s clothes to escape | tio thin e detection Bs » discovery of Our The woman who would be a man|Method, by which we are able to must pad her waist so that it falls|restore mipsing teeth without par. aight down to the hips, like a/tial plates, there was only one way man’s. Her shoulders must beland that was with a partial plate, padded sqyarely, to hide the slope|about the w makeshift that can which <¢ sguishes a woman's|be res \ ul plate ha form av fe so that it fits She should wear large men’s | firmly the teeth that are shoes and pad the toes with cotton. |left, and a great many people who Because women usually wear|are cursed w them wear them high heels, they are accustomed to|in their pockets as much of the witfking on the toes and the |time as they do in their mouth the foot only, She must le |The natural sbrin the gum put down her whole foot and ause them to wobble arour the step mincingly mouth Y the partial plate Hof hair should be cut off on the|a# a mear of restoring missing dges, to enable the man’s wig to| teeth ts a fail fit closely. She must bronze her} We can reall the teeth omplexion. To look as if she had| Which you lost through dis recently shaved she must smear|ease or ixnorant dentistry, ¢ gray pigment on her upper lip and| n rub it off. This es a Bug gestion of shadow fa t was done would last, but we are able to refer to many people |here in Seattle who will tell you jthat the a tell the artifiel — LN 611) (he naliiral teeth Lovely scarfs are fashioned from| Our. patients know that dental| }the Persian bordered chiffons and|operations are not so painful after marquisettes, combined with mara-| all bou We give a written guarantee with all work | In embroidered gowns flower de-| REGAL DENTAL OFFICES, signs predominate, but such effects! 4405 Third Ave., Cor. Union St. as wheat and corn stalks are seen,| ot known. Jabots are worn again this on, They a smaller th worn last year. The handsomest are made of linen, trimmed with Irish at lace | for early fall tailor are sald to incline toward | English worsteds of man-| Hop sackings, chev-| | Materials modes coarse 1ish weaves rte and diagonals will also be t belts are rather wide The newe | with round or broad oval bucklé The an test novelty is made of black patent leather, trimmed with] lh satlie tat qoute Oat ane pene. our steadily increasing vol nh II) ume of business Pierrot collars to supplement the|{) We take no chances here, low neck and protect the throat on/f) tye ne meet be the oceasion are in great demand sec Elizabeth Murray, member} of the British army reserve ¢ . { now in America rning all about American army hospitals and | Mis nurses. To be a member of the corps, one’s ancestry must be irre proachable, health perfect, and ex perfect. Her families of cs amination standing: associates are the Proof cause the crew had worked 16 hours, and there the train stayed waiting for the relief train, known among \road men as the “dog catcher.” Perley wanted Leavenworth and to bed, so he | By THE REGAL DENTISTS Concerning the Teeth though of edibles, especially MEATS “PALACE MARKET THI TAR.-FRIDAY PECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN| SEATILE ELECTRIC and conclusive impre © that the railroads are living to the law prohibiting train in from working longer than AUGUST to get to the ties in the dead of night but two teeth left » hard mat © people that me, and after PALACE MARKET Everybody nowadays ts riving to secure the purest in Drop in once. Second and Ves'er Both Phones 5 we 7 RELIGIOUS FAST 26, 1910 Still Another WOULD CUT OUT ALI Factory DOC MATTHEWS mm tnd GRADE CROSSINGS — NOT HOME YET rr KILLS ANOTHER Fall Showing of Boys’ Suits That Boy of Yours Will Need A New Suit for School Wear Right now is the time to buy it and right here is the place to You'll find on the second floor of make your selection, because The Largest Stock of oys’ Clothes in Seattle our store We have occasion to take ¢ ur pr t! of Fall Suits and Coats for the “little yw and en an any b ck we have shown during nearly quarter of a 1 busir 1 this cit You are invited to ir t them BOYS’ SCHOOL SUITS—Made BOYS’ SCHOOL SUITS — Of trousers with a ned throug orgies ve. $4.00 | ages 710 17 $5.00 SAILOR BLOUSE SUITS—In all popt lors and fabrics; ages two pairs of knickerbockers with wl seo? SS 00 $3.50 to $12.50 BUSTER BROWN AND RUSSIAN STYLE SU BOYS’ KERSEY ALL - WOOL SUITS — Made for rough wear ar ¢ ITS—In a wide range ; oe oe $3.50 to $10.00 We are also showing an exte ' Coats, with both the auto and the conyerti lars, as well a Sweaters and Wool ybably be Blouses, in which yor J. Redelsheimer & Co. TWO ENTRANCES Columbia Street and First Avenue TODAY'S STYLES TODAY TwoDollars 162.00 Exobonas $2.00 VICTORIA AND RETURN | Saturday and Sunday, | August 27 and 28 GOOD ON ONE OR BOTH DAYS Bradbury System Clothes for Style The right kind of style, though; not freaky extremes : e e the kind that makes you look dressed-up always. Con ervatively tailored garments that convey a distinction e e in-dre Of course, a liberal amount of the other neces dary features are always to be found in these dependable 1 Let us show you the new patterns and fabrics "Prices $15 to $40 Pay for Them as You Get Paid Don't overlook It costs you nothing extra will keep you and see how Leaves Pier A at 9 a.m Ss. S. Arrives Victoria 1:15 p.m. Four ri hours in Victoria Princess Charlotte leaves Victoria at 5 p. m.,, returning, and arrives Seattle before 9:30 p.m, Daylight Both Ways The Princess Steamships have few rivals in the worl this convenience when buying—use it It is a dignified method of better dressed. Open an ac easy it to dres buying that elther in speed or service count with u is on “easy Victoria natural site in occupies what is probably the prettiest yayments.” 1 Store Open Until 10 P. M. Saturday outfitting LeCredit House’ America and has received the compliments of the world’s great travelers. It is unique among North American communities. Canadian Pacific, 609 First Avenue. Canadian Pacific Pier, Foot of Washington Street. A. B. CALDER, General Agent.