The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 12, 1911, Page 5

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EES WEEE: BeEes git i ali What's the use of a fashionable} shirtwaist hats pulled down over “eeiffure this year’ one eye and one ear just because STAR—WEDMESDAY, APRIL 12, 1911. Hynthion Grey fter Supper= Talks. On “ Back” inning Him he Fluffy Girl hall I wa » win him what do t « « pink nail and he will never fargive that bs me him and the Plffy Girl fell to » curls tumbled around her sald, “and it after you married him day will come when it r the day is in I've honey,” she might not make any come n lots of t did not matter * in the for the wom « of Hittle . i with the best that ot good to spend your ds the little neglects of daily life. To be happy eration and kindness, A man who is angry with you be him to do right will never giv either, and take it is not worth winning. Why, girlie, the right man will love the very thing in made this man fill out with you. You won't have to bother about winning him, etther; your swee and goodness will do that. Be Neve me, no man ts worth winning, if winning him means humoring him in his faults; and that is just what it does comfortable, whether he is in the right or the wrong ask to be upheld in wrong Do you think he is « really?” ‘Of course I do, and so will you on your pret ress and ¢ duce you to a man who will you nuse from you w you me, he you that tness mean, Only cowards coward?” asked the Fluffy Girl. “Do you soon, Now ng with me. you. dry your eyes, put 1 am going to intro Riced Potatoes. The only way to test a {the rest of the women do the same our tiny hats the! thing—and because they DO look we're not bald-! J pretty! E e fact that the’ ‘This one * fringe of hair about the “whieh shows ‘Abd when we doff ‘ tatless, switchiess and milan, ment of « hats our! quite bé mple colf-| fonabdk ply turned-up fares look about as m olf-|in evidence on thix modish fares as cocoanuts ¢ tion, and the crown fs large But we sm a¢ wear ourthigh will row of seats firat until Dear Miss Grey you, enter the Madly print a recipe for orange) remains marmalade? HOUSEWIFE. | seated A: This choice recipe is by the (te Maria Parloa: Take equal of sour oranges and su . Grate the yellow rind from, party of ten girls. Pte of the oranges. Cut all of the a cheap breakfast and im halves, take out the pulp| breakfast anf free it from seeds. Drain off, A: Oranges and sliced bananas the juice possibie, mix it with | mixed and served in glasses; and sugar, let it come to a boll, and simmer it for 15 min-jand served in individual Add to it the pulp and/ garnished with parsiey; creamed rind, and boll 15 minutes| potatoes; tiny bot rolls, or triar » Seal in jelly jars. gles of toast; pancakes ss — syrup, or waffles and he Am about to meet a first cousim| late or cocoa garnished ted his wife for the first time. [s/ ped cream or marshma’ H proper to embrace the lady, as! - = aS relative? Lam a single} Dear Miss Grey: What will clean M. RR discolorations of bathroom bowls? JA: No. She would doubtless be! HOUSEWIFE Minch astonished and shocked| A: Use muriatic acid; apply Were you to greet her with more| with amal! mop. Do not touch actd than a cordial handshake. with hands. When checking a lady's wraps! Dear Miss Grey: How old does ft the theatre, is it proper to dola girl have to be in this state ‘We before or alter being shown to! when she ts of age M. J Seate—that is, is it necessary! A: Eighteen years old. the gentleman to escort the| — to the seats and then return checkroom for the purpos: or can he properly do/ Checking immediately on en-| her thé theatre? Also advise if) when there is a sure case Proper for the lay to pre-| STAR READER. the gentleman to the seats. | A.: I know of no wa: H.W. - £ Check wraps before finding| Dear Miss Grey: WIN low shoes The woman follows the man| for boys and young men be in sea the aisle, and the man steps| son Easter Sunday? GW. M and allo the woman to| A.—Sure standing she T am a little girl in grade. I want to ha Dear Miss Grey: Can you please give me any information if there is any place so a woman can get divorcee without any money, PRINCE AND AMERICAN WIFE _ _ HARVEST FAME AND DOLLARS TOGETHER © PAOL HOB ON PRINCE AND PRINCESS TROUBETSKOY Amelia Riv fer her beaut #0 when she w n in Virginia, and famous in that sta the world with her novels; 5 ne Quick and the Dea ussian wolt about the streets of Paris by a silken Martled the Frenchmen Then she divorced her first husband, John Armstrong Ch r 894 married Prince Troubetskoy, who ha He czar of Russia did not know bis business #0 in per and one must judge from thi Woman with the wierd imagination must be delighted ted Russian husband. He told the little white on, too one \die it’s a toadstool. Cynthia Grey’s Letters | omelet cooked tm iron gem pans | ons, | Boil, mash and season * man is to marry him; if you Boll, me ie live it’s a mushroom, if you Pye i A kn yagh th The new polo coats with a shawl coll Metropolitan Life Insurance (0 OF NEW YORK JOHN R. HEG INSURANCE SUPERINTENDENT’S REPORT The New York Insurance Department has had the Company under examination, pursuant to law, for about After this examination the Superintendent of Insurance said: fifteen months. THOROUGHNESS.—“It is it that no C y of this character under the supervision of any Tanmenne Deput ment in the United States has ever been so thoroughly examined by such a Department.” PAYMENT OF CLAIMS.—“The claims received aver- aged from 600 to 800 each working day; the percent of rejections is small, being in 1909 less than one-half of one per cent.” CAREFUL INVESTMENTS.—“On an investment of $100,000,000 in real estate mortgages this Company now holds through foreclosure but one piece of realty.” amount in any one year. pating—that is, the money is not collected on promise of insured by reduction of premium. succeeded #0 well in the} Of art, and the prince startled the world by publicly declaring | that the Vir-| with her| OLD POLICIES.—A bonus has been declared to Industrial policy-holders amounting to nearly SIX MILLIONS OF DOLLARS — in 1911 on Whole Life and Increasing Life and lowment policies issued prior to 1007, which bonuses give reduction of premiums varying, according to period of per- sistence, from EIGHT TO ONE HUNDRED PER CENT. The Company added not one dollar to surplus at the end of 1910 out of income from Industrial policies. “No summary of this examination of the M Life Insurance Company would be complete which omitted © reference to certain agencies for social service which it has inaugurated and is now conducting.” “CAMPAIGN AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS.—Among the activities of this Company begtn since the Armstrong investigation is its participation in the nation-wide crusade against tuberculosis. As to policy-holders, its work has thus ~ far been confined to the dissemination ofthe literature of prevention and instruction; a work which its great Agency force and close contact with the industrial classes makes easy, as well as effective. As a matter of mere business economics, the Company’s activities in this direction entitle it to the approval of the Department.” j } The largest amount of insurance in force of any Company in $313,988,334.00 . 2585,246,250.36 Mr. Rooms 304-5-6-7 White Building why he is unworthy | coming, | | jp end did not kill | [hats go to the other extreme and | | NS: w riot of most wonderful huge I A |roses in exquisite shade look jing a# though they had been flung ee | Ot | making him | ORDINARY DEPARTMENT In 1910 the Company wrote a larger amount of Ordinary business in the United States and Canada than any other company, by TWENTY MILLIONS! In 1910 the Company placed Ordinary Insurance up to the Limit of the Law | and was obliged to hold back hundreds of thousands of dollars of insurance by reason of the New York statute limiting | MORAL: Get in early this year and avoid the rush at the end. Best plans; cheapest rates; all policies non-partici- INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT WELFARE WORK FOR POLICY-HOLDERS Extracts from the Report of the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York. LARGEST COMPANY IN THE WORLD In 1910 the Company made the largest gain in insurance in force of any Company in the world. Chas. C. Thompson, Supt. TODAY’S BIRD STORY FOR CHILDREN How the Woodpecker Does His Odd Carpentering Jobs The woodpeck h ul woodworker that with his bil) That's wh something the grubs and ¢ in dead woe a tattoo and then Lis ri that und by beating| ening, he can ell whether or ects in t Of all the bird tradesmen, skilifal than t the the houxe of twigs, as and he builds it in & way that tt is a difficult matter for a boy to rob it. Of co vea bird. carpenter of t haphazard The feather toque ts a happy me tween th immer toque of winter | Beattie Automobile School, | Broadway. 210 dium hat and the fur Striped velvet and satin |is seen tn many ' | side: ack and white jaatin stripe is always there | velvet stripe jereen, brown, red and purple comb: Easter Theatre Offering To LADY READERS Of THE STAR Watch This Space SATURDAY | the comes in Plat little pump bows of Ir bows of black ve still bead jabots While many French thall Mowers hats aming, the big EMAN, President INDUSTRIAL POLICIES AT COST.—“On this basis this Company, from all of its departments, added to its surplus in 1909, after setting aside in that year as a liability its dividends and bonuses for 1910, about $800,000; in other words, the volume of its business being considered, seems to have furnished insurance substantially at cost.” PROGRESSIVE MANAGEMENT.—The Department Report shows during the last five years: Reduction in the ratio of expense to premium income. . Reduction in the ratio of lapse to issue. Reduction of cancellations in first year of insurance. . 7.13% 10.36% 8.92% repayment in dividends, but is left in the pockets of the NEW POLICIES.—The benefits on policies issued sine January 1, 1907, are over TWENTY PER CENT. GREATER than the benefits promised by policies issued previousty. In the last eighteen years it has declared TWENTY-FIVE MILLIONS OF DOLLARS in voluntary bonuses over and above all requirements of policies. “NURSING SYSTEM.— About two years ago this Company inaugurated a system whereby trained nurses would, upon request, be sent to the homes of sick or bedridden policy-holders in its Industrial Department. . . . While this service has been but Tecently established, and ile, therefore, the examiners are in some doubt as to ultimate effectiveness either from the standpoint of saving the lives of policy-holders or minimizing unhealthy condi- tions, no one can make a personal investigation into what has already been done without being profoundly impressed with, not only the economic, but, more, the beneficent value of the work. Numerous cases where lives have been saved are already on record. Many instances showing improve- ment in home conditions due to the visits of the nurses are known.” the world—$2,215,851,388, covering 11,288,054 policies, Paid to Policy-holders and Held for Their Security, -_ 2 « $605,391,613 4th Av. and Union St., Seattle, Wash. 5 WME Dowgall Ze Southwick Co Store Open From 8:90 « m. to 6 p. m. Dally Pree Steeer | SECOND AveNUE ANt w York Connection) JAMES MeCKEERY rHiery-roUKTH ae J 25¢ Never Such Quality 3efore in Ties at..... t } can't be 1 for nths! 1 bette nec They are all made in the fifty-cer length (47 and 48 inches) double stitched. The s reversible Silk Crepes uriety of « Just Inside the Fr lepart I Quantity i Easter Rabbits Are Now | On Our Sale Square HE br on his back, wh sever yliow, fi candies), has Hit ¢ 960008 cocesees uy wn Bung th the basket sits been re ced in price t Lie ie tbe and Se Vist Floor Sale Square | | | L_ & SOUTHWICK CO. Dentistry All Operations Painless — end Optometrist — Devotes hig entire time ING GLASSES / or TNS BLES MEADE MUSE LL TRO AMUSEMENTS TEETH Pu MOORE THEATRE FREE CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION « Sunday Ma Full Set of Teeth . $3.50 and Up 22k Gold Crowns .®: Bridgework $ Gold Fillings $1.00 Up Sliver Fillings (the best). 50¢ Up Porcelain Crowns (best). $3.50 Up MES Terms to Suit All work done by expert dental operators. Lady attendant. iLOIS THEATRE Te 4, Ind. 4336 Daphae Paliard Company in “HELLO BILL The Best Dentistry that you can obtain in the city and at the cheap. eet possible prices. We Do Exactly as We Advertise All Work Guaranteed 15 Years Laboring People’s Dentists Electro Dental ‘Parlors Cor. First Ave. and Pike Opposite Public Market VEST IC er. gol! VAUDEVILLE SYMAIEG 5 THE SALAMBOS | Working Electrte —AT THE— One of . F Wonders. }ANGELES CAFE| == = PANTAGES THEATRE Latest Moving Pictures New Every Day lic» REGULAR DINNER Served from 11 a, m, to 8 p. m., including coffee, tea, milk, beer or wine, 25c Vocal and Instrumental Music Afternoons and Evenings. Why Cook at Home? 0 a 8 7 All Star Acts WORLD'S GREATEST MOVING PICTURE, “The Fall of Troy.” CLASS “A” THEATRE 3rd at Pike 5 Days, Starting Apr. 15 Bekins dust proof, all padded ins own home, Get Bok East 414. MADISON Cedar 414, At 12th Vans are wate as safe “Buy or Sell Real Estate: Business Chances. Classified Page.

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