The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 11, 1911, Page 5

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Dear Miss « When two) monial ageney, and all are happy| boys are walk and meet} and have healthy children. I have] a girl only knows, | been fo ly intr 4 to a num hd they ir bats? (2) | ber of girls, but I can honestly wa - is the for Febru-| those whom I have met through ° ANXIOUS, | agency have proven to have just —(1) Y Amethyst good a character and make a A wive The La ~ ¢ Mis When a young] Reader” ts on ad, 1 think ilies a youns » go to a} and should be encouraged instead fe y p tell me! Of being discouraged ie pss the W REO. A READER, | 1o The yo an, but a better | way would > the young man| Dear Miss Grey: Answer to a evoans tnd Tequest that appeared In your col oak the ) umn of April 6th by Montana a, Why do my} Reader geet ye turn soft?| Mrs. 0, 8 FowlerChumos (the golly ~~ fully phrenologist)—her address at pres) T pat P SEW, | ent ts Hotel Ashland, care N. D.| Hardy, Ashland, Ore: Her Se +) The vinega was not . . o: | The ¥ : » wan too} attle home is $12 Fulton st MRS. C. OLSON pare cider vincws sour. Will you please | Dear Miss Grey— tell me the value of a nickel made tn 1866 with the inseription “In God We Trust”? I know of ono dated Wil often disappe if Irritated.) is79 with the same inscription permanent. EX-| which was sold for $1,700. orn cures are put AN INQUIRER, | -- A t give “coin value ea will remove T cannot give “coin values Kerosene applied Dear Miss Grey: What will re- move warts? BOTHERED, ‘A—if not tampered with, warts Simple bome warts. twice a day bas proved successful. much by anawering the following Dear Miss Grey--Oblige me very Castor ofl, applied patiently once &/ questions: (1) My cheeks are fay for 2 month, bas also repoved | fabby and too full, what will re warts, and left no sear | duce them? (2) How ean I make Persistent warts are often treated) my lips thin? (3) What is the Best with salicylic acid, one dram of | exercise for broadening the shoul which is mixed with one ounce of | der INQUISITIVE JANE. eellodion, and applied with a tiny (1 and 2) I can only suggest camelbair brush. systematic massag (3) Rowing — and dumb bells. Please tell me how to make putty te fill in cracks of floor. A 4—(1) Dissolve glue in water, ‘end add as much very fine sawdust ‘x required. Or mix 10 parts ry Dear Miss Grey—-Wil you please answer the following questions on jor before Wednesday, April 13, it possible: (1) Where ts Fred Heub-| parts slaked lime, 5 parta|Co.? (2) Is it considered proper to a dance? AE 5 i ool oll varuish, and color with | bave ® box of candy at umber. a. HL A.—(1) Address a letter care of Kindly publish the theatre and {t will be forward. ed. (2) Certainly, WASHINGTON LIKES THE NEW MRS. DAY Dear Miss Grey 8 process of polishing brass A. F. “A—Polish solid brass with whit and ammonia. Clean brass lacquer with sweet of] and whiting. 4) ii t position for years—and were highly respected In the @ommunity where we lived. I am/ acquainted with fourteen | ‘emples who met through a matri- nh a f for Beauty Seekers WONDERFUL COMPLEXION aa ghting wrinkles, hollow and “crows’ feet” is to many & hopeless task. But fre applications of the following ream jelly makes the! simple and easy: Stir one almozoin and two teaspoon: | ycerine into one-half pint cold and let stand over night. Mas with this excellent cream Will remove all dirt from the Clear the skin and in a short make your complexion smooth, jahlooking and unwrinkled. It is 4 ly fine for treating black- freckles, enlarged pores and of the skin. QUICK-DRYING SHAMPOO— Worry even if your hair ts looks stringy and is hard to do make look nice. Here ia.a for ali this. Shampoo your every two weeks with a tea- of canthrox dissolved in a of hot water, afterwards rinsing clear water. The rich, cleans Jather will rid your scalp of all and dandruff and make it so and finffy that you will for- Your hair troubles. Your hair in just a few minutes with streaky, dull or brit- it does when you shampoo : jahial g $ Lissitl sabastlie WASHINGTON, D. C., April 7.— Mrs. Rufus Day, Jr. whose hus band {s secretary to bis father, the welcome to the younger social set here. Mrs. Day was a Canton, 0., girl, where she was a neighbor and close friend of the late Mrs. McKinley iG THE HAIR NICB—A ped, dependable remedy for dan- ‘ Htehing scalp, failing hair and the hair soft and fluffy any danger of discoloring hair can be prepared by dissolv- fan Ounce of quinzoin in one-half MH aleohol, then adding one-half cold water. Applied twice a mee and rubbed gently into the ®, this tonic will prove ideal for Hing and keeping the hair and fn a perfectly healthy condi- Boulllon cups have almost entire-| ly superseded the soup plate for purees as well as for any lighter) form of soup. pene gas J | ii) To renovate black kid gloves, | mix together equal quantities of! white of egg, black ink, and milk or cream. hands and apply the compound to} the rubbed parts with a bit of soft flannel, Kid shoes may be treated in the same way. igthen Weak eyes and rid swat ‘of that dull, overworked look,| ‘To clean leather uge good sweet ih each eye twice dally a few| cream, dip a plece of cheese cloth Bf ® reliable tonic made by| into the cream and rub the leather Solving an ounce of crystos in @| well with it. It cleanses the leather Of water. This tonic will prove} and the fat of the cream is an ex Sothing and strengthening, | cellent food for it. Then polish by 42 & short time make dull, in-| dipping a plece of cheese cloth Weak eyes clear, strong andj into the white of an egg which has —Advt. ‘been whipped as for frosting. Lady Wellington Coal Everybody ts interested in saving money, but everyone doesn't know how. Start with the coal bill; cut it down! How, you ask? Purchase LADY WELLINGTON COAL, the fuel that lasts longer, gives more heat, And is absolutely free from Waste. Prices are lowest. At bunkers: Lump, $5.50—Nut, $4.00—Furnace, $3.75 WEAK, WATERY EYES— Distributers for Superior Issaquah Coal Prices at Bunkers: Lump, $4.50—Nut, $3.50 PACIFIC COAL AND OIL COMPANY O. M. LATIMER, Mgr. OFFICE ‘ CATONA BUNKERS HINKLEY BLK. |'3 NORTHLSKE AVE. Ff JHONES 5040 North 465 Green 652 4 WEST SEATTL= PRICES PHCN” WEST I Ki der, formerly with the Lois Stock |*tthorities on matters sartorial supreme justice, has had a rousing | Mrs. Morris declared that, though she is an adv ee the Interpolation of a boy baby Put the gloves on the| THE STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 11, MME. PAQUIN As the originator of numberioss exquisitely beautiful gowns, Mme. Paquin ts famous in all corners of the globe as one of the greatest In her dressmaking shop, In Paris, Mme, Paquin designs gowns for European royalty and American mult! millionaires. BIRD STORIES FOR BOYS "AND GIRLS _Birds Have Trades and Professions, Just Like Folks—Yes They Have, and The Star is Going to Tell You Some- thing About the Bird Carpenters and Masons and the Rest of the Bird Tradesmen. We are apt to think of birds as} rather idle feathered folk, who 1 or not sweeper. And there are some birds | speak of them as “tradesmen.” that are really skilled workmen—| Tor wouldn't be surprising to find out/trades and professions. that they have labor unions, be they have—who knows? of carpenters. a = ~ “Why should a 200-pound blo similar to that worn by a brune “Why should the willowy Titia ments of the petite and dasky gipsy? “Because fashion ts more autocratic than a czar, and more spected than a pope.”—Ms. Allen G. Wood, New York club woman. =e nguiar as & grenadier? “The conditions under which nearly all the self-supporting women of large cities do their work are a crime and a disgrace to the country | make and {ts legislators. The tragedy of the New York factory fire may repeated in a thousand places.” man's Trade Union league ae hae, who was recently nominated for mayor ticket, has r Morris, on a citizens’ Mrs, Robert La Conner, Wash., e {8 not @ politician. oy @ Se Miss Belle Kinney, 10 statues as memorials of the women of the Confederacy statues are to cost $10,000 each, and ot every Confederate state with t eption of South Carolina The queen of the Belgians has promised to become the godmother lof the seventh girl born in any Belgian family. Sc ed Anyhow, whether they are unioo there are good trades rrow The Star wil! print the j}so skilled, so industrious that {t| first of a series of stories about bird { This stoty May-| will be about @ red-headed family} 1 array herself in a gown exactly beauty deck herself in the gar Miss Mary EB. Dreter, president Wo-| ‘used the nomination. of equal suffrag the woman seutptor, has the contract to make These re to be placed in the capital ne time ago the] WONDERFUL MOVING MOORE THEATRE |king nndertook to be the godfather of the seventh boy baby; but the} queen has stipulated that the seven girls must follow cach other with. | } 1911 Synthion Grey-s After Supper>: Talks. The Pest of Inquisitiveness matron had Just moved into her new hi in the new neigh The house was pretty, the scener inspiring, and the was happy. Then the neighbors began to call, and the matron’s troubles commenced, “My,” said the first neighbor, “what a pretty carpet! Must bi cost a lot. What did you say you pald for it? What? That's too }much; you were cheated. Did i say your husband was a lawyer? Does he get any practice? This is a poor town for lawyers, Well, I |hope you get on; I must be going As the first neighbor's ample back disappeared around the corner, the second neighbor rang the doorbell “Bo glad to meet you,” sald the second neighbor, “and I hope you stay in the neighborhood. Two or three pedple moved into this house, but they always get behind with their rent, or something. I hope you will stay. You bave bought the house? How nice; I hope you have paid for it? Did you say you had? Then your bus must be doing well, How many children have you? It's fine to #; I hope your? don’t drink. I heard you were a Christian Scientist? No? Are {you a Baptist? Methodist? What, then? Do you go to church regu ‘larly? borhood. And the second neighbor departed to spread what she bad found out 1 am glad; we don't like to have godless people in the neigh Ry the t the third and the fourth called, the history of the new family was pretty thoroughly known to everybody for blocks around, and Was a subject of discussion at every tea or social in the com munity “What shall I do about it?” said the matron, “I haven't any more privacy in my life. My neighbors are dear, good people, and t realize their rudeness. What shall 1 do? 1 do not want to burt Do, my dear woman? Refuse to reply to personal questions, and to help the inquialtive to come to a realization of their rudene Probabi@Qmany of the questions we sked careles#ly, and with no understanding of their rudeness, because everybody bad replied to * an you a right to question you about your personal affair you jet them know it politety and firmly, the better ® will be for all parties coneemed, and the fewer heartaches you will have. e 7. Cotton volle and marquivette in] ‘ colors and with stripes lead in,new | Sueketshops egal? Now we fabrics offered for apring wear, |[™#Y Play poker in the middie of |the street on Sunday. ps the difference between cleanliness and uncleantiness ts the difference between visible and in | visible dirt Consumption For those who persist in their] | liking for white lace vells there are} new ones heavily woven in bird de- Dear Miss Grey: I refer to your lead a life that ts all frolic and) men among the common birds—/| signs. wre ") geswer in Saturday's Star, “If you song. But this ts not true. Birds | carpenters, and masons, and fisher-|- aha - Would be happy and ‘normal,’ shun sing, of course, but they work, too, | men, and butchers. They even hase ae fatrimonial agency.” ‘and work hard. In fact most birds|policomen—presumably not union-| _,J!ttle necktie bows aro a meat T met my wife through a matri have trades—trades that they work|(zed——who keep busy chasing}? ration that ma placed PQ “qmonial agency and married her, and at busily all their Hives. thieves and murderers, (For thare/4* outer or inner ot th were happy with our life until Oh, yes they do! pn the little | are thieves and worse among birds, }*!ere | God took her from us. We were English sparrow, about the only|too.) And lastly, there are sone} a | foth happy and “normal.” My Wife some city ebildren ever| birds who are “professionals’-=| Shantungs are quite banished | was & practical, homeloving wom ort of a trade, though | birds of such fine feathers and of}from the ‘fashionable world of who loved her husband and doesn't do bis work|such aristocratie ways that they | dre foulards have taken thelr above all. I have held a » is a sort of @ street| would be insulted ff we were to} place in popular favor. | ‘Actress Tells: How | Eee at Youth Is Preserved || OPENING OF THE ENUMCLAW | LINE OF THE CHICAGO, MIL- leading act-| WAUKEE & PUGET SOUND bas| RAILWAY. oro-| Commencing Sunday, 1911, through ager trains will One of America’s resses—who for thirty years | stood in the front rank of her April 2, fe and who still plays yor girls’ parte In a manner to cause | be run betw Seattle and Enum our fathers to say, "She doesn’t look | Cltw via Moncton op the followt rd ule: Leave Bnumelaw dally ja day older than when { first saw | * |her’—recently told. an interviewer |7:45 & m., Moncton 8:50 a. m., ar how she retained her beauty rive Seattle 10:20 0. m Leave | Seattle daily 6:05 p. m., arrive 1 never use paint, powder or oth er cosmetic, except on the stage attribute my complexion today the use of mayatone, the onty thing | i know that preserves a woman's Te | complexion in its natural daintiness I buy an original package of maya tone from my druggist and dissolve it in eight ounces of witch hazel to solution with which to mas-| {| Moncton 7:40 p. m, arrive Enum- to {claw 8°60 p. m. These are the only through passenger trains without change between Seattle and Enum |claw vo BLANK BOOKS TRICK & MURRAY 814 Third Ave. be | on the age mo years than ! to tell, but you see my skin ie not coarse nor saggy ot| Mayatone keeps my face free from | j Pimples, blote ‘hes and blemishes and | tm the “| prevents the growth of ¢ y ha eoefat DIABETES that annoys so many, women. ent of treatment is not harsh—indeed, 8 I-fane, there ts rapid relief of a! absolutely harmiess, and I we a vise any woman pot satiafie Exeelient + | her complexion to try mayat enging Arvauiens | certainly does wonders for | Write tet Beata” 06-48 Pine st ~ AMUSEMENTS 1 have bee Without ts even in New York. Tie 5 Dougall &— soulhwick Co Open ¥ | StCOND AVENUE AND Pike SteeeT |New York Connection: JAMES MeCKERRY & CO. THINTY FOURTH THREE 4:90» m. Dally. Easter Rabbits Are Now on Our Sale Square | | them than et un | of them, to pe | | The brown Bunny with the 1 $1.00 ¢ ecler olle | basket on his back, who sits | are ¢ seven Inches high, and $ low, for candies, hae m | a reduced tn price 10 | Hand-pa to dai c Easter F The 19¢ nize will be 1Se | Easter § | The big 5%c ones 450 | 106 89¢ Mechanical Fur Rabbits for Blotters of various sizes x " 450 | shapes, almost all with 1 Real Chicks and Ducklings, painted chicks and tied w ribbons of colors to match, each stuffed in Japan, regularly 15¢, | 106. ir one in an ‘ velope for mailing at | 5 - 260 and 50 Cotton Chicks, 18¢ dozen Viest Floor, Sale Sauure. | nai i em vamuiiaill Assortments Could Hardly Be Finer---of Tailored Suits From $35 to $50 a has been a fortunate week for us—and you. For shipments of Tailored Suits which we feared wouldn't come before Easter are here Adding them to the ones of which we have al- ready told you, makes the present showing by far the most complete we've been present you for choice. If you come tomor- row, therefore, you be at no disadvantage from hav- ing waited able to Very tailored navy blue serges and navy blue worst- eds predomina but it’s hard to tell, now, what comes next. We have many blacks —we have fine sortments of grays and browns, both solid colors and mixtures— we have good showings of tans, and we have All sizes for misses and little women, in addition to other sizes up to 46 At $35, $40, $45 and $50 Tonight and An Week Matinee Tomorrow The Oliver Typewriter Company is now lo- cated in its new and more commodious quarters at 418 Union street, and is better prepared than ever to maintain its reputa- tion for prompt and efficient service = The Oliver Typewriter Company 418 Union Street Sunset, Main 1003 Independent 2917 PICTURE vm Prices rend s Biggest Musical Comedy Hit “MADAME SHERRY” The existing competition between eee hte the makers of moving pictures {s beginning to bear elaborate frutt The latest cinematographic master- | piece, entitled, “The Fall of Troy, comes as the greatest in the world. In the of this film no Jess than ure employed, The or product 2.500 pe «inal negative cost in excess of $30,000.. The management of the Class theatre has made ar S THEATRE its exhibition from 19th. rangements for April 15th to the LOI x samen ephonem, Main 1904, Ind. 4934 Daphne Pollard Company in BILL TW Sun. Pricer, | Wea., sat — Today's Styles Today Apparel for Easter on C e redit Your new apparel should be selected tomorrow from our extensive assortment of unique styles, sterling quali- ties and moderate prices. Above all, convenient credit terms will be arranged for you if you cannot pay cash. EASTERN Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Ave., Near Union **Seattle's Reliable Credit House’’ East 414, e MADISON Cedar 414, | | n At 12th ies intnpcg clk sans Wie ean an sate de th —————— ee ee sae rower Chiy and Marble “IN OLD BDAM" Ohio Cut Rate Dentists —one | WHEL adn sat MASES TIC v7ren : Fillings 50c Up | ran SALADS at ainie ™ - ot Working Electric Wonders. One of ‘Those Big Ones. % PANTAGES ‘THEATRE equaled Vaudeville. by crowning it with a r told or Porcelain Ci #10 SKTS OF THETH 85, a ogular re WORLD’S GREATEST _ MOVING PICTURE, “The Fall of Troy.” CLASS “A” THEATRE 3rd at Pike 5 Days, Starting Apr. 15 ARANTEE, Stands b eo high quatity and superior workmanship of all our work hotter work i# mot to be had at A SPROIALTY. xaminationa ree, Ohio Dentists Buy or Sell Real Estate. ‘Business Chances. Sea Classified Page. 2097-2009 SECOND A/aNUE The Golden Eagle EASTER MILLINERY Diagonally Across From Moore Theatre Only Four More Shopping Days for EASTER HATS SHAPES FLOWERS RIBBONS TRIMMED HATS ALL AT SPECIAL PRICES STOCKINGS 25c Lisle Stockings for 15¢ 4c Lisle Stockings for 20¢

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