The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 26, 1911, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Ti TeetDegtal &e_southwick Co tore Open From 0 a, m to # p. m, Datly TRY THIS NEW YORK SMART SET WILL BE Inia ine Gilasinedl Gabcee Waeeeaoe 6 t4:.smmareaneia dae The Seamy Side of Paris Fashion World Is the Slaying of Young Girls—Body and Soull ON HUBBY Macaroni May Appeal to Him in © This New Form One package of macaront broken in small pieces and thrown Into bolling salte water; boll until tender, stirring so it will not stick to the bottom of the kettle, Then turn into colander or sleve and turn cold water on it until perfectly cold, m let it drain well, It will the and white and every pi will be separate, pot stuck togethe Have a skiliet with plenty of hot fat (half lard, half bu r) and fry REPRESENTED AT RACE CONGRESS © ’ eh With. Each | Length of Garden Hose, a Heavy Brass Spray Nozzle A number of offers of help * have come in for the Maroul # a nice brown, Mix one cup of grat i wo | ed yellow che one oxg well beat ‘ = cotton-¢ b Law n jen, one-fourth cup of catsup, one ber hose ....... ; jcup of tomatoes, small onion, walt Spe F | a Jand pepper, This will be thick, but 0 fe ea neaeadeal soak: ara }must be thinned with milk until it yt im 1 rut | Spri n k le rs jin a# thick as molasses, If pre ber hose - Shed saaee conten and. Womhenes vs eee + $450 and $6.50 | o upiey cing Bae: may be add new Pave. 'ci » “Busy” kind ; re ove y When the macaront ts nicely av are $1.00. Spe 5 browned pour this mixture over it} $4.50 . ag jand again fry it until crisp and 25 extra heavy Para | Acoma rubber hose ......85.00 | Garden \ edt A glided adhd Pading Seid 0 feet extra } ivy Para | ed \* WH we pone call at The ® —* . $11 00 i m |@ Star office for bundle for Jobn * re ++ - } ° > |® Maront’s family? * h length of hose is | Trowels j guaranteed | Regularly 50¢ family. Some were misled by * wrens, setteen The oom & Lawn Mowers | ieegutariy 15 rect one in 1711 North 46th * | * * * * * ao = _ | Regularly 10¢ MIDINETTES TRIPPING GAILY DOWN THE PLACE VENDOME, PARIS PUREE EEE EE Oe PARIS, June 26.—There is an-)marrying, which all too often com-jface or form, she may hope to be Spec priced ...$3.00 Story to be told about the | pels them to continue their work fo/come a mannequin, who is nothing| TODAY'S JOKE IN BLACK AND The “Rainier,” 14-inch size Garden fashion world. That which/help an underpaid husband, there|more or leas than a living model, bia Ss th : 1 $3.15 i | Americans hear so much of tells of|are two roads, one leading to an|who goes about the race courses.| --< ne paeape A ey: erage, Ses siessant of beautiful gowns, jearly death, the other to @ life of| the boulevards ang the restaurants | £ The “Aloha,” ball-bearing, | (wonderful creations, they are|shame. If a midinette is possessed! wearing the latest creations of |” | 16-inch size Specially | ealled, and of fadutous sums which of more than ordinary beauty of | fashion | 1 ‘$6. 50 | Wealthy American women pay for St sees a pe "4 ont costumes. | This story is of the seamy side, the hidden side of the Paris world iter SU “silks and satins. It is the life of y, or the life of shame, be- m which the midinettes, or stresses, of Paris dressmak:- | Wik. Gyntha Grey pf 2d establishments must choose. The “Occident,” ball bear- ing, 5-blade, 16-inch size |of the New York smart set, is the only wonran who will make an ad- Specially priced ...$9.90 J | dress at the universal race congress, which meets in London early in |July, She is vice president of the American Peace and po hg Spray Pumps E |leagu | . — —_ a Made of heavy block tin iter, se siseranly, paid. 2a UNCOMFORTABLE COMPANIONS ARE StkenenaenennnanenweeeeeeeeNl | Sociatly priced... BOE +“ ud 1 4 seasons. Many of them are THE WORST KINDS OF “KILL-JOYS le CRIME CATCHING LIKE MEASLES * Regularly 85c. to work In crowded garret BY CYNTHIA GREY \* Justice Foster of the New York court of general sessions * ys ps ‘Tooms, dirty, dark and unventilated. “How do you Ifke my hat?" inquired the young wife # bas discovered that crime goes in waves. He says: “The thing * Regularly 75c. ee Te ‘sit on stools with no backs “Umph! It's pretty, but what made you get one with a straight Ril, }® t as epidemic as measles * Mest of them are young girls, bare-}brim?" asked Aunt Selina. Her niece's face fell a little at the impli i |* Here ts a letter from a little Seattle boy which verifies Jus * in their teens. Many of them/cation that she would have done better to buy another kind of hat, but | #® tice Poster's assertion * Garden each year of consumption,|she opened another bundle and displayed a soft shirtwaint } * Dear Miss Grey: There ts a lot of boys in this world who # = = | eased by thelr occupation. It is “What made you get a waist of that material?” exclaimed Aunt {wo net alike, and there are some who try to be good and get their # " 86 Uncommon sight to see one of| Selina, “it can't be starched | }® lessons, but their mind is weakened by the boys who call them ® Weed ers them topple over dead in the crowd- “That is why [ got it,” replied her niece. “I do not like the suitt | Why do you weep? In your) names, and then they get in with the others, and it spreads just #® Gineninelinniaes @4 Workshop starched waists.” Aunt Selina granted | ¢rems out of style?” ® like a disease. | have fought that baitle ever since I started # ts: Bhe is called “midinette” be- At supper Aunt Selina was handed « beautiful ple which nad | Worse than that. My basband!| @ to school, and It is not ended yet. | suppose as long as the world & Regularly 10c. Special ehuse it is at midi, or midday,| been prepmred especially in her honor; it was eaten in silence |has decided we will have to go|# Koes round It will keep up. A BOY.” * si BE - Special 5 that she is seen strolling along the “How do you like my ple, auntie?” through the season with a 1910 ain) # + Street eating her bite of a noonday “Oh, it's all right; I was just saying to your mother theother day | ship.” halhaMaMcdatihaMiclicteMeleMetaMalatateMatadtaMaheMaiatataMetale i weal wo she walks. That is usually|that I never ate such ples in my life as Sallie makes. She certainly | -o = ~ enim THE MacDOUGALL & SOUTHWICK CO. few fried potatoes or a piece of |ia a fine housekeeper. Now her kitchen— j ! ad . and yet as she and her “Come and see my kitchen,” invited the niece, “It is my especial} , oS eee workers stroll along, smiling | pride. | Or singing, one finds it hard to “Yes,” agreed Aunt Selina, “It dows very well, but Sallie has wach} @ that her lot in life is the|a large kitchen, ber table has a white marble top and her utenatls ene described would delight you. You ought to go and see her and get some pointers.” SPECI This ‘But that is easily explained. The And so it was all the time Aunt Selina was in the house. She, Week midinettes of today will not | could not be sald to find fault openly, but by implication she criticised Shrinking from the notoriety occasioned by her separation from A perfect-working Steel Ciad Oral Utility Brosh. for painting and varnishing; sheds no hair te Ee MUHL—219 Pike St. happy ones of next year. je ery thing in the house, everything her niece did, everything she wore | William Kerting in Chicago and Kerting’s $25,000 alfenation sult against pass quickly, as the ravages| Not once did she express unqualified approval of anything that was} W. C. Cunningham, a milliopatre, Marjorie Hamilton Kerting, the “Cab time, disease and overwork at-| said, done or purchased. When she went home she told ber husband] endar Girl.” who has posed for many calendar manufacturers, says she | that she was sure her visit would do her niece good because she had/ will not return to Chicago, but will make her home in Denver. re is but one way offered so many Valuable suggestions I'm done with posing and marriage,” sho says Sieninar and schedule eubfect te th to make a dolar « day honestly. “A few more visits and | will make a big improvement in that . ° . PRones—funeet, Main 8998: Ind TER eS is to sew from earliest | house,” she told her husband Mra. Fred Trumbull of South Bend, Ind., explained to the police | ~ until near midnight. Usually “Aunt Selina may be good and wise,” said the niece, “but she is | Judge of that town that she “got drunk” because she was tired of seeing they average 60 cents a day/as comfortable as a tack in your shoe.” her husband come home Intoxicated, and she hoped thus to shame him Wroughout the year. Outside of! Do you know any Aunt Seiinas? out of it. The plan dido't work, however, for hubby, she said, beat _ ~ ae her and threw her out of the room. The judge let the wife go. He fined Pred $22 and sent him to jail for « couple of months Ce oe rvi Ol Mra. Mary Armer of Hillsboro, N. M. bas made herself rich and famous by raising Angora goats. She has sold several specimens for | $4,000 each FURNITURE co SECONT> AVE ERE TWEEN PIKE & PINE The stork would be much more popular with society if he would sacrifice speed for grace. What is a bank for? And what are the people in it for? To take in money, lend it out, grow rich—and either ignore . Cynthia Grey’s Letters Dear Miss Grey: (1) Ca you kindly tell me what to have for} tell me what the main facts are in| dinner? (2) How to entertain? (3) procuring “a good husband”? How to decorate the table fn an in- (2) How many hours should alexpensive way? [healthy girl of 17 sleep? SAL. | AN ANXIOUS ON | A-—There are no set rules, It} A—It will be pleasant to make |has been said “Any woman can get |!t a “funny affair.” Serve tomato jany man she wants.” If this is|oup, fried bacon and eggs, cab- ltrue, the reason she does not is be-|bage, turnips, potato salad, corn cause the woman (or man, for that/bread, rice pudding, plain cake, | manner) in love is seldom ruled by | coffee. judgment, The false idea that one| Get some thin wooden plates for |«hould be blind to the faults of the | places, bread, cake and butter, and }ioved one Is responsible for many |{f posalble wooden spoons for the lof the “faflure marriages.” Better |Soup. Butter trays—su as are to know the faults, and to use your|ased in groceries, will be fine for love to help conquer them. Use|the salad. You can make some See the man with|chop sticks to use instead of brothers, and| knives and forks, This will create This store holds special sales only when real reasens for special sales exist. or utterly fail to see the real opportunities that constantly The Pre-Inventory Sale, which opened this morning, means to you exactly what it pre- tends—an opportunity to secure dependable furniture at decidedly worth-while savings. come to a bank for helping along the prosperity of its indi- vidual depositors and of the community? All odd pieces and short lines must be cleared out before stock-taking. All goods are accumulations of the last six months—bright, new, desirable and heavily underpriced. The Scandinavian American Bank, at least, is not for that. It never was. And in recent years it has been steadily perfecting its methods, and developing new lines of useful- ness, until today it is in a position to extend to its depositors Take advantage of this clearance. It affords you a splendid opportunity to test the sincerity and truthfulness of this store’s representations. not merely a complete banking service, but the fullest co Don’t wait! Early comers have pick of the entire offering. There are hundreds of operation of which a big, strong, conservative institution like articles not included in this ad, this is capable. Suppose you are a young, struggling business man and have your account here, If you have capacity, and energy, | | Every article carries a price REDUCTIONS OF | tag showing the regular sale [common sense. his mother, sisters, Your phone or mail orders for his 4 1 and honesty, we soon get to know it. In such cases we are lwith some one he does not like,|#0 much fun that you will not feel | goods offered in this sale wit | price and the clearance sale 1 sie 1 y . cred 1 , land see how he trents them. Don't|called upon to “entertain the | be honored promptly at adver- ONE-THIRD TO | price in plain figures. glad to extend to you a good banking credit and to recom- | Go the seeking, and don’t be too iay-| guests." If the bride and groom | tised prices. ONE-HALF A Small Deposit Will Hold Goods Library Tables | Dining Tables mend you for a good commercial credit. Thus aided, it will be nobody's fault but your own if you don’t find your share of the room that is said to be so plenty at the top, Jish with your affection would wear wooden shoes It would | (2) Different temperaments re-|prove another feature of fun | quire different hours. old say Jing is: “Bight hours for a woman; sae nine for a fool,” but many a wor or on In who ts not a fool requires the ning heaps In a recipe Arms; Round Dear Miss Grey: given in a former issue of The stars sulphide sodium was mentioned Th O t have tried several druggists, and ; em ul ave not been able to get it. Is : ets because he’ |pulphite sodium the same thing? “Hpe girl who frets beonnse her ‘A READER. [arms are thin should partake of a A.—There are druggists in town| nourishing diet, even though she who carry it, No, sulphite sodium|may want to maintain a slim fig- is not the same. : ure, She also should rub into he: — arms every night the particular fat- Dear Miss Grey: Will you kindly|teper she finds most effective— toll me the name of the young lady|oream skimmed from milk, almond who made the high jump at the/ojh or the special brand of cold Queen Anne school? What score’| cream she buys. (2) What will remove tan? She should put into her evening (2) What paper prints all the) frocks sleeves made of filmy fabric, sporting news?) A STRANGHR. | which will veil the arms to the el A.—Ruth Shaw. Score, 4 feet 5)pow just suffictently to disguise inches the fact that the arms are lean (2) A cornmeal pack ts good. without hiding their pretty color. (3) The Star, of course. If the color needs to be improved, omuttierens the arms may be treated with cold Dear Miss Grey: Can you tell)cream and powder before the me how the Hillman case ended?| dance, but every vestige of the cos- Did the court grant him & neW/ metic must be rubbed away before trial? If so, when is It to take/the dresaJs put on. place? SUBSCRIBER, The process of rubbing should be A.—The lower court refused his| undertaken at least three-quarters appeal. He will make appeal tojof an hour before pafty time, It the circuit court of appeals in Sep-|{g a good plan for the girl whose Ala Home of the A , Scandicavien Americas Sank Suppose you have a Savings Account here, and when it has grown to important size, you'd like to so invest it that it will earn a higher rate of interest and still be safe. We shall be glad to show you exactly what the bank puts its money in, and to help you to make selections from our own investments. For instance, if you buy mortgages from us at par and ac- crued interest, you get precisely the same security that the bank gets and have a good, safe 7 per cent investment. So through every phase of banking. We have the re- sources and the disposition to take adequate care of the re quirements of the individual and the corporation; the banker and the bank; the merchant, manufacturer, shipper; the man with exchange to buy or items to collect. Some sixty Dining Tables are included in There are more than 100 Tables in this of-} the Pre-Inventory sale. All odd lots and fering—all well made, handsomely designed } discontinued patterns, but every one a splen- itifully finished. Price reductions} did value. Savings range from a quarter to range from a quarter to a half—for instance; } a half—for instance: ; rly English Table ......$ 4.00) $60.00 8-foot Early English Table .$35.00 Early English Table ......8 6.00 } $50.00 8-foot Early English Table .830.00 Early English Table +». 8 9.75} $47.50 8-foot Early English Table .$25.00 50 Early English Table ......$10.00 } $37.50 6-foot Early English Table .820.00 $26.00 Early English Table ......$15.00 } $40.50 6-foot Golden Oak Table ...$25.00 $30.00 Early English Table ......$17.50 } $35.00 8-foot Golden Oak Table ... $20.00 And here let us add that Small Accounts are still just as welcome as in our own smallest days; and the man, wom- an, boy or girl, who is honest and thrifty, is at all times wel- come to the very hest service we can render. Banking by mail . is a feature. Savings Accounts opened from $1.00 upwards. Scandinavian American Bank RESOURCES $10,000,000 and be . : tember. arms are too thin and inclined to|fN ~~. Gaaeis A. CHILBERG, |. E. CHILBERG, T. B. MINAHAN, |. F. LANE, carl t her | kid i President. 1 Vice-President Vice-President, gr Siear' Miss Grey! 1 would tthe tol goves aomve. time belare chie arta EATTLE’S POPULAR HOME- -FURNISHERS have a few friends to my fifth wed-|for the party, to warm the arma and ding anniversary (wooden), Will leave them of a delicate color, ALASKA BUILDING, SEATTLE, U.S. A.

Other pages from this issue: