The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 31, 1911, Page 5

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3 ' } rated Probably Sherman @ Clay t wiay we have two/can give you the jet ofa Mr - t woman, the other | Casey, whe does such © (aA . ' jcopyriaht will help. Write to the AC © TO MEARTBROKEN [Copyright Department, Washing WIFE ton, D.C, for Information, (4) Se r n, May 28, 1911, | lect a good composer | I Let an old mar } ay that it} Dear Miss Grey—Please print al a way to remove gum from a dress . a niso how to clean a tarnished meah ~ eeds to be tanght | purse. STAR READER. | ‘ L think I woult,| A--Try aleohet on the gum.| . nce, slip away| Wash the purse in warm water in| ; ¥ Ie might} #hich # little ammonia hag been | . » let him know | dropped. | . eady to live } : ana Wiese to Anawer to Mra. J. L. C. | would exercise all the| Dear Misa Grey—In answer to’ A : 1. It she} Mra J. LC, who wants some “ " to give h to assiet fn caring for her two Tittle | = OLD MAN, | gitla and help with the hous } {wil be glad to get the pla } think Tecan fill the place to her| : ative sattstuction. Address E.R 7 i, Box 255, Renton, Wash > yi | he Dear Miss Groy—(1) I walk af nl great deal and of late my ankles! STAR ‘ continually tara, Can you give | v ‘ a remedy? (2) Does " rn | - @ would beat|the face? (3) Will massage with | b t oe working the f ere shape a poorly formed | panions? T (4) To what age is it e any “cause © to Wear sailor sults’ } tha s man in beat K BS . A (1) Try thie exercise Stand s s she “loves him still noted and straight, gradually | N wor ya don't love! rise to the tips of your toes, then | i Y ve the man you| slowly lower the bh to the floor. | wa “ a you mm 4 eral time at each prac | bir ow, but a sort 2) It seems to injure sor eo ww “g m is es th spon nie ' This new, pretty and mod made of wt chiffi ing a . hink how muct the appeara : eg f Jampnens ‘* tay's work 904 | Cee kbee aaa aa eaee MAY ha 1 nothing to fear ¢ j * * dread * at oh «| BY ETHEL HALLETT now, Do not waste : + nani a anc ' him. He evidently | * *| é has ou and will even: | * fe. They nd | tua 1 anyway. and it * doles th mont @une Al * tow ard wow at ' and save vo8 * things Ask any em e t* x a bag he on % labor what ts his first require * pe A who will beat a woman in| * ment, and wilt ed py sa: OF cirtlentien jon to business and * hing A WOMAN FRIEND OF WOMEN 4 pede a ae vd nd | in ~ Des (2) Wht you! * These are the two things that * that otaa please a recipe for can-|* the cl learns through his #/} nd aw a : % school life and his * als ny (2) Wil you adv * « orge H. Martia * me abe < away my furs for aarti op . ving 1 the ee eee ee ee eee eel on SUBSCRIBE ' A—The cold ores carey ig | PLANT ONION IN FLOWER i ed palm best fo narb and gaoseberries. POT FOR SEASONING Have your cans and fruit perfectly Tf an onion is planted tn a flowe clean, put in as much fruit as the its tres green shoots . " tes THE SHOPPERS’ PHILOSOPHY jar will b then pour in water sish seasoning when wanted “ ’ wamtil the te overflowmng, °o¢ saves the and the necessity of | BY GEORGIA BOWEN GOVIER o@ the top tightly and set ina dark | cutting up a whole onton The pla a »baceo is good, and | shoots cag be cut fine and a the odof not more difficult to get| salad to give the desired soupeon rid than that of moth balls of onton favor Dear Miss Grey: Have we hearq| ADORESSES FOR MRS. M. * - " Mrs. Carl Frits 34 hay. N all we are going to about that na Sire, Jordan, A 128,.W em? Ix there a word . od How can I get @ song rf ns? (3) How can I pr is being stolen while getting 2 put to music? (4)| In separating the How shall { get music to sult my|the yolks of egss song? BLOCK HEAD. [times break the yolk into the A—We hope not; but have no| white, im which ease the whites do| more information to date. (2)! pot beat light. Dip a clean: cloth nto Warm Ww wring dry, to the yolk which has been droppe Into the white with the cloth, it will cling to the cloth M.A.GOTTSTE! FURNITURE CO SECOND AVE BETWEEN PIKE & PIME AN INDUCEMENT It's an inducement to you to know a store that always sells the best goods at the lowest prices, always gives the best and most courteous service and stands ready always to extend such credit terms as best suit you. Such a store is the M. A. Gottstein Furniture Company. You're welcome to all we have to offer. There are a great many compani that offer to write the music, but most of them are “fakes.” If you employ one be sure it Is incorpo Maidens three, so debonair Can you tell me where, O where | You are hastening with such speed, | Whither ‘tis your pathway leads? Ia it to a club or tea }You are tripping merrily, Dressed up in your gowns so tight, Fluffs and feathers that are right “"Tis to neither place we go, rious sir, if you must know But the daily papers say This will be a bargain day. “Waists are now four ninety-cight That were five up to this date; Lingerie is all marked down And the dearest "broidered gown | Making Beds Is An Art. A great many persons do not |know how to make a comfortable bed. This is an art to which too little attention is paid. That the sheet covering the mattress may be smooth and drawn so tight that arkable value in Dining Chairs, designed as shown Of selected quartered oak, finished golden, They have ex- tra strong o- seat, hand-shaped claw feet and upholstering in best black leather one sufficiently wide to turn under the mattress on each side from 10 to 12 inches at least, and at head and foot still more, is required This should be pinned securely with safety ping on the under side of the mattress, making @ mm well-fitting cover, The upper she }should be so long that 18 or 2 | inches may be carried under at the | foot, so that it cannot pull out | Other bed clothing should, of | course, vary with the demands of the season. It should never be op- | pressive or burdensome, but the ea warmth needed should REFRIGERATORS Every family should have ice in the house in hot weather—it is necessary for health and comfort. The CENTURY refrigerators will keep your foodstuffs sweet and clean at the smallest ice ex- pense. All sizes here, for small, medium and large families. $1 $1 Weekly Now SEATTLE’S POPULAR HOME-FURNISHERS be attained with the least possible weight. Sold in sets of six only. wrinkling and rumpling are im possible, is the first ensential. To accomplish this, a long sheet, and) WEDNESDAY, ) WI be sold at sacrifice, |itken hose at +r | Velvet bags, a dollar ten need price; |}That are worth as much again. | D one can resist a sale. | Spite of dangers they entail {Our fine clothes won't ‘m | much After snch a bargain rush, stabbed, Tho’ we're Glad are we to ‘seape with | }"'Course we're not In | For these articles of dress, | Still "twould be a henious si these bargains [Not to take YESTERUAY'S PUZZLE MAY | forMoot i ink Ho t aie Ker | EGGS BY C. F. LANGWORTHY Expert in Charge of Nutrition Experiments, United States Department of Agriculture. Exes resemble tn composition such animal fe r They are loss concentrated, that re n chee but are more conc ated than o pb and tn abo slories of energ pia nid fat and ash, and found that in re t th ‘ with ® & iver ' an meat a v milk @ 4 with a view H hould « . a 1 “ 1 nished with anging th gts ‘Supper>= Talks. The Cheerful Idiot on Advice. Tob nter of my desk, and hereafter I b a € a fa pea The be a Hore ad . wh I have a supe t jes, I 1 i Then she 1 always nid the Ct Fé n ©, “to Masten} t« people. When you meet a diffieu! ‘ou call on Ke e| ppose yc e n yur opinion better than |} a A the Ch Bore, spitefully I wuy an « to je opi on most subje replied wf adv dd th Cheerful Idiot esstul life. 8 od at any one thing and t your opinion concerning It upon anyone. will sit in throngs at your gate to be told Bow you did tt And if your mightiness meets with a difficulty that ts too much for at then n I shall seek ont the most successful person In the line where E have met my Waterloo, and shall humbly ask him to show me my way and I shall not choose hi se he is my friend or relative, but Ibecause he tx posted on the subject.” The Cheerful Idiot took bis sign Whistling merrily OBSERVATIONS OF A BACHELOR GIRL Keeping a man's and went off down the street love fwn't nearly as Important a consideration as keeping his respect and admiration. The woman who overlooks these | Will find the kind of a love she has without them fsn’t worthy of the | name eS ke Many a man who has fed his soul on the philosophy that “there's Jno use running after the car you've already caught,” has discovered |after the pavement hit him that he was only holding on to the back sunt to} ™ ‘ oe “We'll be mauled and pushed and Puffs offtorn and feathers grabbed; battered in the strife dire distress n in. SOLVED; HOW EVERY MAN GOT HIS HAT Did you succeed in solving cor rectly the puzzle in Children’s Corner? It easy as it looked, was it? took the artist a long time t too, but here it is cating how the yest square n erday’s wasn't as And it 0 do it, with lines indi be cut into four equal parts, each part con taining a man and a hat. To prev from be: well befor ing smoked son: putting on the f nt the bottom of kettles p them tre | Makes the Complexion 1] Soft and Vetvoty | | “My first advice to any }seeking a charming comple: to taboo the powder box,” sa Martyn, a noted authority on culture enlarges them, making coars dy, blotehy complexions “The very best complexion fier I have ever used—and | |auperior to powder—ts a sim expensive lotion made by ing 4 oun pint hot water, then adding t woman xion is ys Mae beauty “Powder clogs up the pores, e, mud beaut! it ie far nple, in dissoly « of spurmax in one-half wo tea A woman gets all the attention from a that inspires kindness and courtesy and within him . . . man ahe If men and women were more careful to stand on absolutely level | ground before they were married, they wouldn't find the path afterward #0 steep and rocky Don't for h about the “innate divinity” idea, No matter how godlike may appear, he is always man ntensely b If It's Correct, Light C Clothes for Hot Days and young men as comfort Cheasty Has It hionable ner apparel for men r r styles as who demand pro well Smart Ne Prost Styles | Summer Weight T a | derwear Summer Suits | ee — from Benjamin ike Alfred ate line, good lines Oc and up we agents for Dr tesides Po New | °* smart arc Dei Dr. Jac ger’s sanitary woolens, and the famous Duofold Under wear “Veristrong” iery Benjamin & ing at just in from York, shows what the dressers of the great metrop olis are wearing in the mat ter of Summer Clothes Light-weight grays and browns, homespuns, the ever popular blue serges, and ex novelty weaves quality materials, tailored, perfect , in this line at lusive | mel’s linen mesh, Men's Hos an exceptional 25¢ val . in a large assortment of summer shades and styles. clusive “ a Silk and lisle hosiery, 50c Splendid beautifully fitting models $18 Soft linen collars in plain | white and stripe ¢ with es to match, 50c up. Summer shirts, all leading | makes, $1.50 up. STRAW HATS ‘The Renowned Dunlap and Other Fine Makes fects, Other grades up $25, $30 and $35: All Prices. be ’ spoonfuls glycerine, This lotion C H b d h it rub off easily, as powder does, It Second Avenue at Spring Street makes the skin soft and velvety, > - paving it clear and youthful look f Cheasty Has It, It’s Correct ing. been discovered to equal thi for correcting a shiny, oily, complexion, Kvery woman other preparation has so far 8 lotion sallow should have a bottle of this wonderful lo- tion on her dressing table. “—Advt. Buy or Sell Real Estate. Business Chances. See Classified Page. | | | ! | New York Connection Store Ope 5:20 sm ” SECOND AVENUE AND Pike Srecct JAMES McCREREY & CO . Dally | The June Sale of Undermuslins | The June Sale of Embroideries | The June Sale of White Fabrics and Linens Open Tomorrow! *Doweal Se fouw icK Co THIRTY POURCH #TRERT THE MacDOUGALL & SOUTHWICK co. NO NEED 10 POSTPONE | YOUR EASTERN TRIP ANY LONGER Real Bargains in Summer Excursion Travel for Tourists Special Fares From Puget Sound, Grays Harbor, Southwestern Washington and Oregon Over the OREGON-WASHINGTON RAILROAD & NAVIGATION CO. “Line of Shasta Limited” and Union Pacific. To All Points East There are many cool summer resorts in the East, where you can find rest and recreation, to- wit: The Thousand Islands, Niagara Falls, the Adirondacks, Atlantic City, ete. They're not so far from the large cities but that you can take a run in for @ change of program. A few of the low fares we are offering from Seattle, Tacoma, Begining May 16, these tick- | ets wit be placed on sale, for a | period of five months, at speci- fled dates. Going transit limit, 15 days; final return limit does not expire until Oct. 81, 1911 Choose your own itinerary eastward, Stop-overs granted at Salt Lake, Denver, Omaha, st.| Portland, Grays Harbor and : cs eal 1 | Puget Sound points to— Louts, Chicago, Washington, New | omer. a York or any place eise—going | Washington .. and returning. | Chicago ..... Many important conventions to | Detroit .. be held in the East this summer. Minneapolis . If you're going, we would appre- | Omaha . clate the privilege of taking you. | Montreal Travel over the OW. R. & N. | St. Louis . and affMlated lines ts the safest | New York ... on record, No fatalities charged | Atlantic City . against us in 1910. | Boston .... For detailed information and routings, write for our Sum- mer Excursion folder or call and let’s talk it over. O.-W. R. & N., “Line of Shasta Limited,” O. S. L. and Union Pacific Passenger Station O.-W. Station, Jackson St. at Fourth and Fifth Aves. Phones Main 7378; Ind. 2623 L. E. GILBERT D. T. A., Seattle W. D. SKINNER General Freight and Passenger Agent Seattle, Washington 100,000 Are Coming Through. Are You? City Ticket Office 716 Second Ave. Phones Main 932; Ind. 1995 E. E, ELLIS, General Agent Buy a Potlatch Button | Low Round Trp Rates| To All Eastern Points via Canadian Pacific Railway Six hundred miles unsurpassed scenery through the Canadian Rocky Mountains and National Park. For information, dates and rates, call or write &. E. PENN, H. W. EDWARDS, G. A. PD, c.T. A. 718 Second Av., Seattle. e J

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