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DRESSMIAKING AND GIRLS gow TO MAKE YOUR WINTER HAT FOR $1.41 widths of brim vary as much as do the crowns Nos, 1 and 3 have inch brim and require a 3% inch fold to cover them; No, 3 has a tapering. brim, 4 fnches wide in front and sloping to 3% Inches in the back, and fold of 4 inches is needed. These measurements ab low the inch required for turn- ing in at edges and fastening to base of crown Begin by draping crown of hat. Place the silk wth the center against the center of the crown of hat, and “pat” it into shape. Re member that you depend on your ehtet trimming for the manner tn which you drape your crown. Fasten the tufted spaces by tnvis- ible stitches and pin to the base of crown. In No, Ll you flatton the crown to give it the broad effect; in No. 3 the draping must be higher on the left side than ft is on the right, and in No. 3 form the Tam o Shanter, catching it here and there, Use a litde crinoline if you more service-| desire it to hold its shape. can wear (t with any! Next fofn bias pleces until you A fair quailty of messa-| have sufficient length for the outer 7 No, 7. ‘ ‘ - seventh and last arti ‘This Ia the : riee telling “How on Your Wardrobe for $2 BY CYNTHIA GREY bat we are going Co make ts as the “Mushroom,” It ts and you, an amateur mil have no fear in attempt make it, I am showing you ape to develop it from the quantity of materials. The trimmed with a fold of Per silk and finished at Joosely draped bow; the draped crown at the side with a ends, and the third bas o Shanter crown effect rose and leaves of of them will look with your tallormade aot _ Tre of these hats are of the trimming. Any one of gan be developed from 14 I advise your ‘The crowns inchen wide, solls for 79/brim, and stretch and pin it to yard. Cheaper cloth will| shape, then join. When ptoperly the wear and tear of @ adjusted, stitch to the make your hat, first get aj brim and tacking there thape, which costs 25) lower brim, proceed in the same | manner, and finish entire brim by slip-stitching edge the base of the) blind stitches. five inches for} eet s square from'hat. For Nos. 1 and 2 the same @imensions obtained. quantity of trimming materials is SB equare 27x27 needed. Get some Persian silk at give you exact 49 cents per yard. Your hat, as inches wide, and you require % of vary so mech. Use your own a yard. For hat No, 1, cut erial and gacge the amount in half, lengthwise; join to a strip }of messaline cut from material re folds fro: the re/ maining, and fold around crown fn the material to cover) draped lines, leaving sufficient at inner brim. The|one end to finish center of bow. soar: Men and Women Know most of the sicknesses of life come from inactive bowels and unhealthy condition of the organs of digestion If your itive system is not working right, your food does not nourish blood and weakness follow; if your bowels are inactive ite matter poisons the whole system and serious sickness is to follow. To take promptly EECHANI’S PILLS ito save yourself trouble and expense. Gentle, but quick; safe, thorough, they enable the bowels to carry away waste matter ly and tone up the whole digestive system. They will ‘injure the most delicate. They help you to get your bowels your digestive organs in that condition when they can good care of themselves and of you. Beecham's Pills Do Good Naturally Beccham’s Pills are specially suitable. See instructions with sech bom Sold Everywhere in boxes, 10c. and 25c. rink Habit Mastered In Three Days Institute Gives Bond Guaranteeing Perfect Cure or Treatment Will Be Free Me Neal Cure for the drink; fs safe, quick and sure One to 26 hours the The treatment also has a remark able tonic ct, the patient being greatly improved both mentally and physically. At the end of three In al medi taken internally pout the! days he has no more desire hypodermic injections re-| tite or craving for intoxicants wh every trace of holie pot-| ever. In fact, liquor is abhorrent to (the cause of al! liquor crav-| him. He has gained a perfect mas b from the system | tery over it Rt. Rev. Monsignor Flavin Says: “T sent one of my people to the Des Moines Nea! Institute to be IT am pleased to was cured perfectly. The patient as Me with great f. niness that he no longer had the least in eee to drink, and that all desire, appetite or craving for drink had me Skea away, it is a grand, good work and a great benefit to maa M. FLAVIN, Pastor St, Ambrose Church, Des Moines, lowa.” s iB Find ont all about the Nea won, including testimonia Hee 488, The Neal Institute Static. Phones: East | cure, Call, phone or write for full in- references and copy of guaranteed East Howell Street and Sixteenth Ave- 4381; Ind. 431. the vegetables uM CAN CARRY ptorket Basket U 25¢ Wevrtiake Market : ._.. The Temnle of Economy. WE'RE HERE TO STAY izaz, Buy oF Sel Real Estate. Business Chances. Seo FOR SCHOOL WHO WORK | | aide of | ) | crown by | crown. | blind stitches, folding over at the) quarter-inch In facing} through ft and fasten with bow, to edge with|1% yards mossaline, at 790 . You are now ready to trim your) % ¥ It comes 27) complete. U | width of your. silk GIRLS NO. 7 How to Make Your Own Clothes and Have a Complete Outfit for $25. Make bow with the of Persian and line it monnaline Drape and flatten it into shape with blind stitehes, laying it half on crown and half on brim To arrange trimming for hat No. 2, also cut fold longthwise, have It four Inches wide, and turn In half an inch top and bottom, Attach as facing~ which should extend half inch at top and bottom—a trip of mossaline five inchea wide. To make rosette, cut a strip of the Persian three and one-half inches wide—you can use it on the straight’; fold and shape by gath ering {t at bottom. Finish with sixinch ends of the Persian, lined with the remaining scraps of meoa- saline Por hat No. 8 you require three- eightha of a yard of silk of a con trasting shade, This also comes 27 inches wide, and you oan buy It at 49 cents per yard. I should ad vise your using some shade which harmonizes with your suit, as you wear it more often with this gar ment For band, cut a bias strip of the allk five inches wide, and face it with the messaline, Drape it in straight lines around the crown, To make the rose, cut a strip the full three inches wide, and divide tt Into five parts, two seven inches each, two four ine! ach and one five incl y the larger pleces for outside petals of the rose. To make petals, alip stitch a fine wire and hem on wrong strips, Gather them at bot tom and face with messaline, Bulld your rose on an old calyx which you take from some faded flower Rose, when finished, should be 16 inches In ctreumference. You are now ready to line your hat. Paste a small aquare of some old silk at the top of the Inner crown; then cut a atrip 19 Inches long an five inches wide, and slip- atiteh ft into the head sice of your hat, holding it outwardly so that titches come on the inside of the Next hem other edge with hem, run ribbon and your hat is finished. Any of these hata will cost: 1 buckram shape . d of silk, at 49c . Total ase eeneveces sat Now, girlie, all of our outfit ts If you have followed all you now have a ward robe that has oc you $15. With m additional $10 you can easily outfit yourself with shoes, glove comb, ete, and you will find your instructions, aaa Dear Miss Grey I have been writing to a lady friend for about a | year, and I may have led her to be | is poor and so is mine. | be | save } Ips lieve that I was going to ask her to marry. I have called on her and taken her to church. Her health I like hor as a friend but I never intend to mar ry. Would tt be right for me to tell her so? rR A—It is advisable for you to tell her as tactfully as possibly that you do not intend to marry. Do so in the course of a ge sation, as if had no especial in- terest or relation to her Dear Mias Grey I am & young married man. Both myself and n wife are working. Would you ad vise me to get a fiat where there are all modern conveniencés, or get furalahed rooms, or Ket an empty house and furnish 1t? We would like to get the place that would suit my pocketbook. WORRIED, A.—The cheapest way for you to live would be to rent furnished housekeeping rooms, and it might best for you to economize in that way for a time, until you have n0ugh to relieve your wife | from the necessity of working. To allow a wife to be a wageea permanently destroys all hap he life and eventually will jen, if it does not take away alto er, the wife's respect and love for her husband If you expect to live permanently, I sugge rangements eventually you can make a emali cash payment towards buying a cottage, the monthly rent to be applied upon the balance. You bota will find new happiness a led interest in life if you are ounded by things are your own, even if you be unpretentious the city ing ar whereby I taffeta care to by “save putting Do not try silk petticoat a it fully away and wearing it only on state occasions. It will wear out almost as quickly hanging in a bureay drawer, as it will when you have it on, It 1s impossible to pre vent the cracking and splitting of even the best silk, so you may as well make the most of your silk petticoat Potatoes should be peeled as thin as possible, The economical wife bolls ‘em with the skins on. Turn must be peeled thicker, taking the line that appears just Inside the skin. Carrots, par nips and salsify should be Sweet potatoes and beets are boiled in their skins. Don't throw will make die cakes, tea cakes, Don't keep canned the cans after being cause the alr renders as a guide craped bre and provisions opened them t ay milk I i, grid pastry in be ub sweet light wholesome. be made to look as glossy as fine damask if troned in the following way: After the HMnon has been washed, boiled and rinsed, wring as dry as possible, roll in a dry sheet, and leave for an hour, Then tron until thoroughly dry. one} } tions means eral conver} ! | Several timos at the theatre in the evening nily L have seen jCoatumes that suggested the tople |for this talk, ‘This does not apply | to the beautifully dreased women in | decotiete gowns who can come in | closed automobiles, protected from the weather, It does apply, howe er, to the girla who “wanted to dress up" and then asked them selves frantically at the last mip jute, “What shall I wear? : | This attempt at finery in many |inatances leads to : d tollet consisting of a flimsy mus | lin or silk dress, a raincoat, a scart |for the head and thick-soled street shoes, The wearer probably has to | walk several blocks and then hang by a strap In a crowded street car, and by the time she reaches her destination clearly shows what she {has been through by her disheveled | appearance. It la Bad Form, There ts nothing in worse “form” thah to wear light partified attire }in a street car, Don't attempt eve ning dress unless you have every thing that goes with it—aslippers, Might gloves, evening coat, searf or | suitable ha id unless you go In a closed conveyance. Remember, |too, that your escort should be in | full evening dress also, For most | women in ordinary ciroumstances |compliance with all these condi “never. For all of us who have to con sider economy, a plain, well-fitting {tatlored sult of good material is the best answer to the question, | "How to be suitably dressed for all occasions? Choose a plain, dark ree | matertal-—broadcioth is the moat jdressy-—-have it made in conserve tive style, without a particle of trimming on it except perhaps a velvet collar, If the coat is semi fitting, in length reaching to the ends of the finger tips when arme are down, the skirt plain with a few a = |NEW CORSET MODEL CONFINES HIPS ONLY | | | | | | The apparently uncorseted figure j made its appearance tn Paris some tim o, and has recently seen on our own shores, Bome « these figures really are uncorseted |but the majority of them wear the new corsets, which are said to be the proper thing by Dame Fashion & Ca., corseticres. These corsets are merely hip con finers. They extend only a few inches above the waist, where they are held close to the figure by elas-| tie, The skirt extension is cut on corset Hnes, with boned gorings. A brassiere should be worn to confine the body a little more than does the ordinary loose, frivolons garment worn by the average woman | This evolution in stays i1s evi dently been brought about by the vogue for the high waist line and the mandarin bodice. But whatever the real cause, the wise women who adopt the fashion are going to be both healthier and more comfort able. Soap Jelly. What becomes of the fragments of soap which are left in every kitchen? Some housekeepers put them in a shaker which is “swash ed” around in the dishpan making the water soapy. If there are more scraps than answer this purpose they are made into soap felly which Is very useful. Do not mix the kitchen and tollet soaps, but keep them tn different Jars. a good plan to keep a jar or dish in which to throw the small pleces. When you have enough, cut the pleces into small shavings and put them in a saucepan with a little wa ter. Boil down until all the soap is dissolved to a thick jelly When this is cold put it into a glass jar and set aside until it is wanted Jelly made from the kitchen p will be useful in washing fabrics to | which the bar soap should not be di lrectly applied, while the jelly made from the fine tollet soap 1s excel lent for & shampoo. _ Ayer's Hair Vigor | Even quite cheap table linen may Stainless Dance at Dreamiand tonight. “~ THE STAR—SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1910. GOOD DRESS FOR ALL OCCA BY CYNTHIA Grey, It ts} =} iS) lONS side plaita, and extra material for jremodeling the sleeves is pur chased, you have made an invest j mont that will be good for several years, By having a dressmaker make the skirt, and a tailor mai he cout only, one can gain the pet of an expensive tailor-made i at the cost of a ready-made dno, | Get a Good Hat, Don't try to economize too much On-hate, In this climate it is em} Wential to have two, A hat which has been worn every day in the rain and the fog brella drippings, is not ornamental for formal wear, The hat iw the} most Important thing In a woman's outfit, Often a woman's whole ap pearance ts stylish, or dowdy, just according to the hat she wears. Select a shape in good style, with aa little trimming on {t as possible, for your everyday hat. For your “beat hat,” there is nothing bett this season than one of the large, black velvet shapes. Do not buy ostrich plumes unless you can af ford good ones, though it pays to }remember that, summer and win- ter, they are always in good style, and can be dyed or cleaned each season, The large silk flowers so much used this season make an effective trimming for the large hat catching the um What to Wear, Our well-dressed girl, when she gon to the theatre in the eventng., wears a tallormade ult, light, dressy waist of lace, silk, or chit fon, white gloves, and the “best hat.” For le formal wear, she changes the hat and gloves and substitutes a shirt waist for the more elaborate one. The details of @ toilette are all-important. Care should be taken that the finger nails are properly manicured, and that the gloves and shoes are ap propriate and in immaculate con- dition. | | | PEAR COMPOTE FOR MEATS.| | Peel and core three good sized | pears and cut them in pieces. Put | them (mn & saucepan with one table | spoon of red currant jelly, one cup of grape juice, one tablespoon leugar and cook slowly wntll ten der. Strain the fruit from ‘the liquor, return the liquor to the fire land boll until it's thick. Then pour }it over the pears and use as @ gar nish for the meat POTATO ROLLS. Prepare mashed potatoes, and while still warm form into rolle about three inches long and an jinch in diameter. Roll them in jbeaten egg and cracker crumbs, place on a buttered pan and bake in the oven until nicely browned; then remove the rolls to the plat- \ter on which they are to be served. Remove carefully to avoid break- }ins | { i | “STEWED TOMATOES WITH ONIONS. |* Boll 1 quart of to }iarge onipns until onions are }dender, Add a tablespoon of but- |r, pepper and salt to taste and a \falf cup of fine cracker or bread jerumbs. Serve hot Os ators and 2 VEGETABLE ROAST. The following i a » which has been used for years by a family | which «ives special ation to | eee eee ee wivs ot} DR. EDWIN J. BROWN lentil or bean pulp, 1 cup strained} 713 First Ave. exes, 2 cups one bait cup Over L. W. Suter’s Jewelry browned flour, salt (Celery salt pre-| ferred), and % cup cream, Boll] Store the beans and run them through a| iis colander; mix them with the to-| avout ten yoara ago the Washing matoes, the be a and fon State Dental Board and the flour; form in put 12 &) washington State Dental buttered pan and bake until broWM.| ,gopted the code etht | Serve with slices « with | 5 Stenaail ree tomato sauce ne, purpose of this » 7 on | FOR new, moderm turnished roome at ra Dental i tow prices, calt at The Viratous, #04 vir- |{P9 soclety, would furnish money and cinta ot, near Westiake eve [drive them out of this state. : —| Dental Board's Unitmtted Power Discovery of the Age Consumption can be cured by TUBERCLECIDE Forms of Tuberculosis Yield to Tuberclecide See Tuberclecide Co Rooms 308-9 Crary Blk. Union, Near Fifth. All At Fountains & Elsewhere Ask for “HORLICK’S” | The Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ag At restaurants, hotels, and fountains, | Delicious, invigorating and sustaining, Keep it on your sideboard at home, Don't travel without it. A quick lunch prepared in # minute, Take no Imitation. it say BORLICK’ In No Combine or Trust LINDEBERG GOES } nated ON COOK’S BAIL Jafet Lindeberg, the millionatre Alaska mine owner, and Ole 8. Lar son, auditor of the Scandinavian American bank, yesterday went on & surity ball bond f rank San #, the cook accused of grand larceny for stealing several pisces of gold from the steamship North western, Sanders was employed by Lindeberg last summer. The bond was fixed at $1,000. | “MY FAULT,” SAYS WOMAN HIT BY AUTO When Mrs. J. H. Day, wife of Rev, J. H. Day of Youngstown, was run down by an auto driven by C. F. Huber, a salesman, last night, she explained that it was partly her own fault. It was on this representation that Huber was released shortly after his arrest. Mrs, Day was not seriously injured. TODAY’S AMERICAN WOMAN J. W. ELLMS. t the head of a movement in Cincinnati to form food distribut ing centers, by which five or six families co-operate in buying sup plies at wholesale, and direct from the producer, if possible, One woman acts as diyector of each group, buying the foodstuffs and distributing to the others. All ex- pense of retailing is thus elimi Hundreds of families have already joined the league. State Dental War a Good Thing for the People | A ntal Boa the ribed Roard h nforcing {ts arbitrar Inquisition which influences thetr which the State appointment, Board are mem etetion’ Code of Ethics The societies’ code which dentists were compelled to subseribe and awear 1908 provides that in relat rk are Ishonor from those rules,” “t orable to guarantee and “that It Is dis vertiae in fused rej etles. My Code of Pthtes think a dentist who @ tee his work ts disho I the law and commo: a @ guarantes. T think it dishonorable and disrepu table to allow a combine to tell me what feos I shall charge people for their dental work, because {t puts the expert dentist on a level with the dental cobbler, wt ius has er been devel nius in dentistry charges for dental work one-half, or 50 per cent of what Combine Dentist charges. All gold alloy tint ld crown, nh yearn ago, to day my dental practice is the larg oat in the United States, outside of New York city, Large business and small profit for superior work ranteed, has given my offices utation and success do not npete with cheap advertising ntal Parlors, Call and have your h oxamined free qnd get my co for high-class work, then have your work done by any dentist you wish to go to. Remember, my of- fices aro in the Union block, at 118 First ave oyer L. W. 'Suter’s jewelry ato’ I keep open even- nes until § and Sundays unti) 4 for people who werk, Be sure and come o the right Brown WPWIN J, BROWN, D. D. &, 713 First Avenue, Between Columbia and Cherry Streets, Success or Failure? Wellman’s super-oceanic trip ended in a fiasco because he encountered an unfavorable atmosphere. KENNEWICK HIGHLANDS Is the solution. No such conditions prevail there. Get Started Right On the Highlands, where favorable atmosphere has been proven. Make us prove i Northern Pacific Irrigation Co. OWNERS. O. N. MARSOLAIS, Sales Manager, 846-Central Bldg. 109 Cherry St. KINDNESS To Humanity We grow hair and cure skin and scalp disease; your head is not too bald for us. Lady’s or gentle- man’s scalp treatment, 50 cents each, or twelve treat- ments for $5.00; or, if you have lost all hope, it’s the pride of our business to grow your hair before you pay us one cent, on con- tract, Store open 8 a. m. to 8 p.m. Saturdays, till 9 p. m. The A. P. Rige’s Hair Grower & Cure Co. Inc. 1216 Third Avé. Our Easy Payment Plan Will Keep You... Better Dressed You may not believe this until you try it, but it is so neverthe- less. Until you let us explain our system to you personally, it hard convenient will be for you to believe and that higher than require, Just drop in when you by our store and let tell you more about this easy way of buying. how it no our prices are cash stores are us Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Av., Near Union St. “Seattle's Reliable Credit House’ ALL the vegetables : ta. CARRY market Basket Wevrtiake Market . The Temnle of Economy. WE’RE HERE TO STAY