The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 15, 1911, Page 5

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eee tee ee ee ee followin next day by # scrubbing with soft soap. ® the nite with a fine © * vinegar It have and would some cast hem, 1 have a baby git MOTHER Mother” will editorial depart st will re. Grey dren Dear Miss Grey--Will you iRndty Pag OTHER MRR A.—Two-thirds cup of butter, twothird? cup boiling water, one | pint molasses, one teaspoonful soda, | fone tablespoontfl gin spoonful eimaamon. spoonful salt, flour for a drop bat ter. Melt butter tn 1 wish youland add other ingredients sifted to. | me how te keep| gether, Drop from spoon on but what Kind of dirt toltored tie some diwtance apart ck jin slow oven. Hy varying the flour dirt, not too | this may also be-used for loaf cake rocks in the also ta the} botto: we in which |® the pot {s p the paim|* NOTICE TO GRANDMA very wet, but be sure the drainage/® Send in- for your bundles fs good thy improve # Grandmother. There are two give it & pint of milk once a w * nice ones here for you. and to wash the palm with olive) ® aE Pour on all at once. a keke eee eee eet eeeeeeeeeee a * a * * + * * * Ret eee ee eee tee black al yt have am invi Dear Mis to given in be fs to be graduated (> What clean a Dear Mise Grey progressive reception! {| use to successfully a girl friend who| suede bag? Tam in tenor} (2) ance as to what to wear and what! peand electric irom? to take her, or whether to take any A.—(1) Hot cornmeal IGNORANT clean the bag nleely id for any} (2) { have called up the princt ening dress. beautiful you might her her dressing ¢ bie, ment, cushion, 5 her room. If she f= a bookworm Something in that bt woold be Acceptable, or a subscription to a magazine know she Hikes. Al woman was ready (o marry my ex girl neve: too many belt or} husband shirtwaist or other little a@|me « cessories to her toilet. clothes, She got band, and in me her leftoff clothes Vv. D. om we many things | no {information something for|¢o the General Ei or an orna | nectady, New York it ectrie Co. Sche Dear Miwa Grey: My w annulled in 1% bas pins. of my her leftoft hus- bundle RAR eee ee eeeree * ® 12-Year Old Daughter Made * Happy by Star Readers @ Ob! If you could have seen # her face as she left the office % With her arms weighted down # with the generous bundles of ® Belpful things The Star read. Wers so kindly sent, it would # have done your heart good. clothes, and I really hate to feel Hike Woods" wife again by at Woods’ wife's worn-out clothes. What caa I de? Shall [ get an fn junction? RACHEL C WOODS. A—tIt is the only way to stop It BOIL BABY'S— Bol its drinking water Boft its cups and spoons Boil its aursing bottles ipples. Boll {te bath cloths and t Boll its anderciothing and dresses | This boiling cess is a lit [trouble and some small but it is less expensive than * € + « * * * * * * * * * * Rerteteerereeeee Dear Miss Grey—Will you ae aning of the follow Maud Muller: “Of s of pen or tongue the saddest these is it might have been ROSEBUD. A—Tha correct quotation is from “Maud Muller,” a poem written by Tennyson, and reads, “Of all sad Words of iongue or pen, the saddest are these, ‘It might have been, ” Meaning the saddest is the good that might have been ours had we SfAsped the opportunity im time. of doe ‘Try ft siek baby Today's Joke in Black and White. Dear Miss y-—-WIl you please Beto in The Star a sure cure for and nits, as my little boy has them" A SUBSCRIBER A—Anoint the head with equal parts of kerosene and sweet oil, Eat and Get Thin old phrase C8. 442 Parme aad give bie Far this moder ing duck troms time: “Oh, dear! You needn't so proud of your white drawers got them , and mine have got lace on them. If It’s Correst, Cheasty Has it Cheasty’s Clearance Sale Benjamin’s Clothes Every Sack Suit in the Store For Men and Young Men And Vests and final all Overcoats, ncoats, : ney Trousers reduced Separate for SALE PRICES Regular. $18.00 Men's Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $20.00 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $22.50 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $25.00 Men's Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $27.50 Men's Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $30.00 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $32.50 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $35.00 Men's Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats 37.50 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $40.00 Men's Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $42.50 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $45.00 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats $50.00 Men’s Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats Sale Price. $13.50 $15.00 $16.85 $18.75 $20.60 $22.50 $24.35 $26.25 $28.10 $30.00 $31.85 $33.75 $37.50 This includes all plain blues and blacks. kvery garment is Spring and Summer 1911 model. No Charge for Alterations Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Avenue at Spring Street if Cheasty Has It, It's Correct a ant | Rive me a reeipe for molases cake? one tow one-half tea Reet eee eee * * * n Where can L bay a Thremo should pai firms fn the efty and ean obtain If you will write you may obtain marriage Another and every year she sends | worn-out | exchange she sends Tam free | have worn good} looking } ana | 8" tor's visite and jess trouble than a thorough | Remeve | mb dipped in| | } bolting water Hake! | This Is Artist De Alton Valent Emotional Aliment, BLONDE” AND “BRUNETTE WANT -TO KNOW WHEN KISSING BOYS IS PER MISSIBLE. Dear -Miss Grey: (1) Which the more popular—a city country girl? (2) Is tt right to ab low kissing before one is engaged? (3) How old should a girt be be fore she goes to parties with boys? }(4) Lam 13. How long should my dresses be, and bow should I fix my hair? (5) Ifa Loy, who drinks, aske to call on a girl, how can she | get cut of It? (6) Should girls of 13 and 14 go to dances?+-Hi 1 Brunette. or a ine's Picturesque Diagnosis of the “Boy on the Brain.” A ‘t) ft in not the tact she ts a country or a city which counts. The girl who sweet, wholesome, natural, ie liel girl is the ¢ ular th er she halls ntry or the city, (2) No. nteen or 18 and many people 18 year-old girl too » to par tes without an “ Hair braided down back and dresney little below the km (h)) Simply refuse him, and tell hipp} why, if abe wishes to help him} break off @ habit which will humih inte and bring utter misery to al}| tainly not m affairs. that girl is @ oung to nan F AVORITE RECIPES OF | This dessert was introduced in | London 15 * ago by Mme. Mel- ba, the opera singer. Is there any more depressing feeling in the world than to be told you are perfectly well after having made up your mind that you're very ili and ought to be ed? % for the first] be | == I've London Black and Rte i Ps Uta VeN WINS , SIZ 7 Bs iC NY “1 will show you children how you can stand 16 boys and § girls in 28 rows, and have a boy at the beginning and end of each row ALICE OF | STORY IS Alice of Wonderland has just been getting married. She and her || husband returned from their honey noon trip a day or two ago. She is ||now Mrs, F d MeCormick, wife || of an artist of growing repute. | || was Miss Josephind Newell, Her father ix Peter Newell, author and iHustrator || When Me. Ne | Carroll's fam | land” and ||Glass and There,” he 11. was ilustrating Alice in Wonder Through the Looking | What Alice Found utilized his charming little daughter, now bigger but still} charming, as the model for his drawings, which became fami}iar to thousands of readers. | PTeeeECT eT Te eer T * AT THE THEATRES. ||\® Moore—Albert Ch ir * “The Coster” Friday night }|* Grand—Vaudeville and Photo- *® plays. * Seattle—' Through * ley.” * Lois—Keating & Flood Muse , in “The Policemen’s Death Val Orpheum—Vandevillo. Majestic—Vandeville, Pantages—Vaudevinie. TOTTORI MARRIED See eee ee eee et SOME SEATTLE CHEFS | By Chef Henry Seeder, of the Savoy | Hotel. | caches a la Melba for four or five persons) jpleces of canned peaches (or freah I season); press one basket of strawberries through sieve, or fruit press; mix with equal weight of ougar. Line «@ glass dish with short or pound cake: an ea: of cake lay a spooaful of lee cream | auid on top of it the peaches: over all’ pour the prepared strawberry pulp and serve quickly (proportion | Take $} plece HENRY SEEBER Chef of the Savoy Hotel How eae i Stood 24 Children in 28 a with two girls in between,” said | Aunt Jane to the boys and girls at | Willie's and Ouve’s party. First she made the dots and| crosses, each dot to show where a girl should stand and each cross ‘for the boy, Then’ she drew the lines through the dots and crosses just like the picture shows you. When | the lines were counted, there were} 28, and only 24 dots and crosses, for sotte of the boys and girls | would be standing in as many as five different rows Thise rows, ax you see, do not stand one after ther, like a regt ment of soldiers, but. they are straight rows Just the same. You will notice that all of the girls would be standing in an almost leirele, surrounded by the boys STORK AGAIN ON } ITS WAY TO QUEEN Again the stork Is hovering over the royal palace of Spain, according to an official announcement. Sinee Alfonso married Princess Ena of | Battenburg, five years ago, suck visits have been frequent » stork brought an heir ne, named Alfonso, May to the royal apart 1908. A year later daughter, Princess La ja. June 21} var it arrived with an in ch did not survive. | Prince Jaime, | ments, June 23, jit left « Beatrice, ot last fant wh The Women’s Industrial will meet thie evening at its headquarters, Liberty butid * Third and Union, at 8 o'clock. | will be an address by P. K. | Moore of the American Federation jof Labor on the subject, “Why Labor Leaders Are Kidnapped.” | league | BLANK BOOKS TRICK & MURRAY Office and Factory | that would allow xt it took another won, »@¥ 1 stiynys mates. lp a a After With. Cynllun Grey The Brute and the Selfish Mother “When | am dead,” announced the Selfish Mother can do ae they like, While I amy alive | need thetr pect to have it Didn't | bring them her » Brute looked at the Selfish Mother long and. earnestly the curator of @ museum trying to place some strange specimen. ‘Since, as say, you brought them here, he replied ‘you should not make it too hard for them Hard to serve met Their own mother will have plenty of time to marry after F am De you chanee to hay asked the Brute joned, polished-by-hand, brass-riveted guarantee that you w noon? “What?” shrieked the Because, if you ha quire one at once. It is er ehtldr children and ex my service Hke you at last 1 am old; they go! slowly growing ‘a good, kiln ill die any Selfish Mother not mtinued the Brute, “you should ac to reise false in the hearts of your yed for br I believe 20 of a strong race t child to ba paratively youthful age of 60. But Ive no guarante rll live to be 80. You have no guarantee that you will not Hut don’t you think children should make their parents happy rtainly, if the pw happy in a reasonable way, It / neble for any y t to expect to fill the life of a child. It in t all the laws of nature Hut think of all the ehild.” 1 have mt noted the manifestation of your love. dryly. “As to self-sacrifice, tf the that fw in ehfld and the pleasure of serving {t does not compensate riftee, you are unworthy of your motherhood But do you think children ought to enat off their parents Who said anything about casting offf You ha place in the Itves r children, but {t is only one place. You cannot satisfy the instinet that calls for husband and family, and you can reap only minery from the effort to do so The Selfish Mother turned purple and the ‘There are many places in the &ffections of people to fill chem, just an different bi the structure of ah You had ax well expect to fit in o building with # block of one shape as to expect to fill every in the lives of your ehild Believe me, what you need to do learn the one place that you can fill, and fill that acceptably, You can never do that by trying to crowd inte a place where you do not belong. “But, whimpered the Selfish Mother, “I know lots of « tyated just with their mother You know nothing of the kind fections have b atrophied by tion who nee, but their ilves are incompl and bar fied to give the world a lot of lives of that kind change your demands or get that guar ath, and the Brute we years older than your old suppose you will live life of her own at the ebild #0 x to bi your ne com love and self-sacrifice a parent gives to a said the heart for you for any Brute, love your your your ye Brute and it are went on takes a number J to fit tx very Interstice place * requi lidren who Ye ay know a few whose af making a brave om. if you are well avd good ntee of an early death. pre © sat If not ature of the oven after| has been tn for In thin way the ju temp a roast Should date ve ab th and wrap ewspapers complete 4 crack at each remove the nds of each tn} which will prove a] a silencer rub h wa eltied ish d iakly with whiting over wh ter haw b poured. ‘The chalk when dried Is used as pc which does the work nicely. It will not scratch the silver Mend clothes before they a to the laundry, so that when they are returned clean and nicely fold ed, there ne to disar r purpos nee ting EVES CURED |Why & Remain in Without the ® .- Drink Slavery? lente Tell of Almost Mira of Cataracts ate a Ma and ait | In only three days, the vic-} jtim of liquor appetite can be | FREE—with no more craving for intoxicants whatever —with physical condition improved, brain clearer, nerves steadier. prepa r nedy thet has t to stem Treatment Destroys All Desire For Liquor It drives every trace of alcoholic poisoning—the cause of all drink craving—from the system. It cures the chronic, as well as the habitual} and occasional drunkard. It cures the nervous drinker who has to drink to keep from becoming more | nervous tooth gagpen-| TALKS ON TEETH By the REGAL DENTISTS TOOTH € CARPENTERS How many of you who may read) this have at gome time or another the vietim of a bee And it cures without hypodermic |injections! Harmless vegetable} medicines, adminis internally by r move which the drinking man ts con- stantly battling. The thought of drink becomes repulsive to him! A Seattle Shipping Clerk Says: s long as I live, I will never want to drink again Since taking the Neal treat ment for the Mquor habit, four months ago, | have been in better health than for many years,” ter?” There are some lucky people who get into the good hands of dentists who, along with their goodness, gen- tleness and sympathy of skill of a high degree But the pereentage is of these “tooth carpenters hunt pund to see how many teeth they can saw off, to make room for a “bridge,” and generally they find plenty. What matter if the teeth ary sound? Away they go—each tooth worth thousands of dollars, once gone, gone forever. You nobody to blame but yourself if make a free without are possessed small. Most] begin to you don’t at least let us examination of your teeth, any obligation to spend a penny We are teeth savers, and set a high value on nature's teeth When they are missing, we thers in their place that are ™ natural as it 1s possible make. A written guarantee with all work, REGAL DENTAL OFFICES 1408 Third Aves a We W We Gor. Union hshad This man had been |drunkard for 20 ye Jof others throughout west, who were just as con | firmed drinkers as he, have been cured of the liquor habit at the Ne institute of Seattle—one of 1 than half a hundred Neal institutes in the United States, Canada and Australla, Write, phone or call for complete information about The Neal 3-day drink-habit treatment, — including booklet, references and indorse ments of prominent men who ha Mnvestigated tt. All will be mail to you In a plain, sealed envelope. a periodical rs. Dozens wil the North as to East Howell and 16th Ave., Seattle Phones: East 4381; Imd., Cedar 431 tore Open From 0 4 p.m. Dally Timp SECOND AVENUE AND Pike Staect Now York Connection) JAMES McCREERY & CO., THIRTY FOURTH #TRET Very Low Prices On Laundry and House Needs Serub with Spe i Brush Stretcher urtain of white 1 tationary 1} ciall ining rl | sag; re { cial P | | t ‘qmt Water hea gulacly $1.7 Electric Irons and 6 Buck Sensible As 10-quart andle pecial $1.28 Gas Mantles orted Special kinds upright ¢ aper heets y roll- 1 to for Tubs tron 2undry "Mar zed iror Toilet thousand fit price 3 pk | Waldorf Full two | Goslin Tisste ; Specially 49e si ec size 79% size er Laundry Bask Germ 1 an hand mac $1.35. Spe 85¢ Spe Te Wire Clothes Lines 100 f cable Clothes Wringers feet o ) rubber rings; per itary dozen Quart size, dozen a rubber a and d year spiral t size $1.15 Tumblers lass, with rim and blo.k tin Specially priced, WEE incl or Mop Stick handle with pric v0th P Specially covers di ; ve THE MacDOUGALL & SOUTHWICK co. ttractive pattern, made of hardwood, in the golden or weathered saddle seat, legs well back securely fastened to seat avy T bolts; reguint price Special , shaped Fine Samnple Chairs, i Princess Dresser Made en finish, straig with large ova! eled French price $17.00 of solid oak at in the gold- front style, of bev- regular $11.75; mirror plate ; Special A comfortable liv- ing room Rocker, made of solid oak, in the golden finish, well braced and very strongly made; reg- ular price $6.50. Spe- cial . -. $3.95 Seattle's Largest Housefurnishing Store. Buy Now Pay Later All the Credit You Want PIKE ST. AND FIFTH AV. | Low Round Trip Rates | To All Eastern Points via Canadian Pacific Railway Six hundred miles unsurpassed scenery through the Canadian | Roeky Mountains and National Dar | For tnformation, dates and rates, call or write 4 E. E. PENN, H. W. EDWARDS, G. A. P. D, Cc. TL A. ° T18 Second Av., Seattle.

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