The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 10, 1912, Page 5

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as Water ‘Dissolves Sugar it Takes for a la Tablet to ‘on the Food and Relief. SENT FREE. : wait betwee the fore baw ie * feeling of relief it “4 stomach. and quickly Aah Rong ta that tired ‘stomach. It goes the work of digestine the there and in no uM ‘on the ae ovaxe forming, t ‘the coating on and you are that you even of the chief recom: ‘Stuart's Dyspepsia ay don’t take for- the purpose for them. It ts just as ‘extra stomach or two = needed help. ly overload your E THE RTE —WEEMEDAY, JANUARY 10, 1912 Dress for Little Miss Is Built Like the Gowns of Grown-ups always || | i | 01 ETHEATRE| jonday. Jan. 15.) ‘Actor, | ox ram rurap! ‘and Saturday $2.00 and 3150 # i alters, | S@e to $1 THEATRE | Phones 42. iL Week. ‘Thureday 26 conta ‘Ww man Milton Royte. Bie, The, $1.00. | Week, ; “The Barrier.” | Upress| C. Acte—e oe _Matinee Daily. | know absolutely nothing whatever! ES THEATRE | ‘Twice wightiy. || | | | J} jean soon learn to play. lare recommended to any person or Made after groWmap lines is thejof Eve. dress ts narrow, alen- eunsing froc®- of a small daughter! der and sng fitting. The material ——— ennai iis batiste and fp veg nad lace and e | rnc embroidery are used for ming. Music Taught Free: The skirt has broader perpendic- Home Instruction ‘ w tucks, and two bands of the Special Offer to Readers) «utpure run up and down. This in- sertion encircles the skirt above of The Star two deep tucks. These also run round and round, In order to advertise ‘and intro- ELLEN ‘STONE. ~ GOES duce their home study music lewsons in every locality, the International pyar OF Inatitate of Muaie of New York wil! give free to our readers a complete course of instruction for either| ‘fag Organ, Violin, Mandolin, Gut-| rf, Banjo, Cello, Brass Instruments | be ‘Sight Singing. In return they simply ask that you recommend their Inatitute to your friends ae you learn to play. You may not know one note from | another, yet, by their wonderfully simple and thorough method, you eee The yoke of this frock is kimono shaped and it has kimono sleeves. The yoke \s formed by bortzoutal is vo tucks and the twofold inser. If you are; an advanced player you will receive special instruction The lessons ere sent weekly. They are so simple and easy that they little child who can read English.) Photographs and drawings make everything plain. Under the Inst tute’s free tuition offer you will be asked to pay only a very small amount (averaging 14 cents a week) | | to cover postage and the necessary sheet music. No one should overlook this won- erful offer. Tell yout friends about it—show this article to them. The International Institute has successfaliy taught others and tan/ successfully teach you, even If you : about music. erything clear. Write today for the free booklet,) | which explains everything. It will convince you and cost you nothing./ary, writer and lecturer, js going | Address your letter or postal card| back to the land of the Turk, to {to International Institute of Music,| again attempt the Christianization 98 Fift , Dept. 251M, Newlof the sultan’s people. Misa York, Stone's experience as a foreign The lessons make ev MISS ELLEN M. STONE SAVANNAH, Ga., Jan. 10.—Mine} Ellen Mary Stone, famous mission- ns, See EOLAR BUTIRELY WITH FES AND ORDI- x. | fulnoas of the hi ih.” and well minh | “Out of t Mauth. the eves w i is the 84 stroug and’ | for good an 4 brow “Laugh and the world| Weep and you w Rot sugh i | about ua bee | Mation of trownn and wrin mie betty teoth a hen yor beat. ware in an phe bien veola ; £ Bridgework’ aore’t! Fight’ sind irene a8 there in | Bt Wien they are, but} they are not. - That (od Battlinena ot #008 fast of your future y B fait price, tut that the fefocts, nor stem te 0 fiaignation whe he few monttn hence mn of sttentinn freaventiy din i boon 1008 teeth oath m thm HO chance with A ney pod ‘They serviceable and #ladly refer you ay, alone, who pie ery oft he « Min, Eien’ t | tried it ‘de, jude, missionary dates from Oct. 6, 1878, when she went to Bulgaria, Nearly @ score of years waa spent the She is completely recuperated from her terrible experience ten years ago, and is very hopeful for the fu- ture of Christian missions in Tur- key. About Sept. 1, 1901, Miss Stone and a companion were captured by sake pre mil fey. If faked. thet’ brigands on a mountain road in Ma- way and far exceeded their|cedonia and taken to a retreat of or to at tena! the bandits, who demanded a ran- Ment S2| nom of $110,000, forts to raise that sum in America resulted in DENTISTRY commendation of those We have treated like three thousand Portland and Seattle « are confident that near ¥ single one will say, if aaked, that ho have mething in our! and w ff not ev- ally and unque loose Pyorrhea | Alvoclas ‘Teeth, Where mridgework | Ketting $65,000, which, after a bar. Is Impossibie. | gaining of six months, was paid If only your front teeth are left,| and Miss Stone was released. f 90> | entipdigeenn PROFS, FREED & AUSTIN SCHOOL OF BOXING, WREPTLING AND PRYSICAL CULTURB o: com » . with perfect teeth, whilst beidgework would be impossible even if you bad clght or ten front h to te to. If |sas and Mas Mrs. Wiley you have two back h on each say rm, we apply all that are missing with serviceable, Mfelike Alveo This could not powalbly And w beautiful, lar tooth. no by the bridge route wework ix pousibin, there is no ween the two. A very @ of our work im take Ing out beldgework put in by _sup- medly high-clase dentints and re placing it with the utiful and ar- Ustic Alveolar teeth. And, unlike bridgework in another reap it in| practically No poring or| ) nothing to be! prices being 161; pokuwpUM suABYE 29¢ stone also haw one round for sharpening gauges, It in one of the ben fastest keon cere fn Every shap i, every home is f unusually responsive, you the biggest dividends faring our Clean-Up Sale. are only waked to ‘pay. ® amat} fraction of the actual worth of hundreds of articles, useful mer- with would you | ing Pyorrhen (loose teeth), a| Aixeane Sven up by other dentists aa) is another of our special 1.00 hana ard a 260, © h Coftes Pot. Boe wet of 8 vent pocket W and wha of the very highest class. Aly Dentistry, { you cannot rk to show a ry best of ref ‘nom in th 2c can or Watiace nd Metal F 0 Zinn Safe Ae or boc Stan rt id 26e brase top jar h ALVEOLAR DENTAL CO. DENTISTS, Portland—Abington Bldg., 106% 3d Bt | Heattle—Haight Bidg., 24 and Pine. TORMS TO RELIABLE PRLOPLE. Yours Spinning’s Bargain Store 1415-17 Fourth Avenue. e YOUNG ANDJUNSETTLED Dear Mise Grey: I a4 a «ir atay In one place for long. ye) fact they are the only true friends with one man over a year, Hole marry him, Now, 1 don’t thidk I woman upon myself, for you to, Shall I marry, or ts the AY unsettled, or to be your disposition to marry a man ve you meet a man who possesses the real qualities that an earnest girl can respect as well as love—and In the meantime, I advise you to t you will have to do regularly. Texret at those wasted years, I never blame a girl who honestly says she Mkes the company of She is certainly unfortunate in not having men better than women. met congenial women, but it does and likes nothing but the flattery her mental ealfber is more on the plane with that of mon. you should have women friends.. make just as good friends as the o think I can help you If “A Star Reader” will send the articles spoken of to The Star of- fice, 1307-11 Seventh av, Cynthia Grey will see that some needy one kets them. SER ERER EEE EH H A CHANCE TO HELP * A little mother, signing ber # * Be self Mre, L. M. C, 7629 Sunm- nyside av,, writes that she has recently lost her baby, and * that she ix #0 lonesome, She # anks that some of our readers & send her some magazines or ® books to read, as she cannot * get out, and would like to “lose * herself in reading.” 1 know # she wil! not have to ask twice. # CYNTHIA GREY, * i hid ae Tila tl AN ANIMAL PARTY Cynthia Grey has so many re quests for suggestions for chil- @ren’s parties that she is going to tell about » dandy party that the ae themselves can help pre) eeeeeeeteeestaee Pest, decorate the fnvitations with pictures of animals or write them on animal post cords, The rooms can be made to look like a menagerie by piratng up ple-| tures of different animals and .ue4 ing stuffed ones. in the corabrs, peeping through the stairways or: from under the tables, A fewtire ones help out wonderfully ~ The lee cream can be had molded in animal shapes, and the littlean imal cakes can be made at bome. Candles can also be had io animal shapes Now, for the games. Pio nathes or pictures of animals to the backs of the ItUe guests and start a con-| versation about represent. All the animals they the chiliren take part tn this, talking and asbing/ questions about them, bat naver| mentioning the names of the ones on their neighbors’ back«. The to guesa the animal on his back gets the pirse. Here ta another: Pin the names or pletures of animals at the top of & blank sheet of paper, and hand} to each child for the bent ond, with «a pencil, A prize ts offered drawing. This te a drawing game without & prite that makes a lot of fun for t Hittle ones Have one draw the head of an animal and fold it under. Hand the paper to another, who draws the body of any animal he wishes. It is then handed to the third, who draws the legs of some anima! he has in mind, cach one folding it ander. revults In the head of a cat, the body of a cow and the lege of o stork. 18 NEW YEAR LEGAL? Dear Miss Grey: Is New Yoar's legal holiday, and does Thanks | giving always come on the last Thursday of November or does the! president appoint it? INQUIRER. A-—Janvary first fs a legal boll) day in all the states, including the District of Columbia, except Kan- husetts. In Maine it is a bank holiday only legally. Thanksgiving always falis en the) last Thursday of November, but it has become customary for the president to make the proclama tion. I have no mother to advise me, Pauline, | would not advise you to marry just because you are pported, or because you have no mother, or with It won't be long until you look back with When you meet the right ones they _It sometimes} Backs Marketing Club if 19, and can't content myself to fond of the company of men. In think I have, I have been going much older than I and wants me to ould take the duties of a married a would like ore plenty of time? AULINE. ry much older than yourself, When YOU LOVE HIM-—marry that man. ake up some studying or work that not always mean that she is silly of men-—sometimes tt meams that But, Pauline, pposite sox, Write me again if you |REAMUR AND FAHREN- HEIT | Dear Misa Grey; We have an ar | rument diow many degrees Fahrenheit is —20 degrees ae A READER, A-lt would be —13 degrees Fahrenheit. One Reaumur degree equals nalne-fourths degree Fahren- helt, and the sero degree of Reav- *| mar is the freezing point Fabren- | hett. SNOWBALL PARTY Dear Miss Grey: (1) I am a! girl of 18, and I want to give a party to a few young friends. Our house te not very targe, and 1 Would ike you to suggest some ® | Pretty way to decorate, suitable for thin kind of weather, Also what to serve for a light tunch, (2) Is tt proper for me to go Hern gm with a boy? I have been joing with a boy who said he loved me, bat I find he goes with other) \girl. How can I find out if he loves me? SNOWBALL. A.--(1) Use cotton and some sil- | Ver powder (© decorate, and make |® regular snow scene, with cotton |anowbalis suspended from the cell jing. You might have a snowball game with the cotton balls. Serve nut sandwiches, chocolat crisp cracker with melted cheese on top, and fruita. } (2) 1 would have eald it was all right to go coasting with this friend had you not told me how silly you Thave beon acting. Each of you| phase a perfect right to have as many friends as you wish. You are making yourself old before your UUme by playing at love. HIS REMAINS Stranger—Do you know where | Mr. Brown lives tn this street? Mra. Brown—Mr, Brown's dead, sir, but Pm his remains. WHO SHOULD APOLO- GIZE) Dear Miss Grey: quarrel! with a young m |time ago, which I think w as much his fault as min I was mostly to blame. fast | perhaps will call up or write a note, or do! }you think I should make up first?) j BASHFUL. A.—The one who was at fault, or ‘mostly to blame,” should be honor able enough to apologize. BEST IN THE COUNTRY Dear Mien Grey: T am 16, and going stone 4 young man who fs a | you think if he cares to make up he |», to Cut High Cost of Living MRS. HARVE Tho wife of the noted government food expert has formed a marketing club, with a two-fold idea—to reduce the cost of food by eliminating prof- YY W. WILEY its of useless middlemen, and to pro- vide inspection of foods purchased by members, as to purity, full weight and methods of production. This photograph was taken at the time of Mrs, Wiley’s marriage, last year. vz NEWS OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN READERS sw thought a lot of, but papa does not tke it He likes the young man,| but don't want me to go with him,| Mamma don't care. Now, if it wasn’t for her I would have to stay right in the house and have no fun at all Ho is 19, and we both have the best reputations in the country. He says when we are of age we will marry How can I tell if he means it? TRIXIE, A.—Thore tn no way you can tell, | Trixie, for by the time you ate of ago you may want nome one else, and he may, too. Your father is rfeetly right In not wanting a) 16-yearold girl, who thinks she can have no fon except with a certain} young man, to be out with him. The thing you are calling love is merely emotion, and a few years | trom now you will wonder how you | ever felt that way, Take Miss Grey's word for this, and settle | down to your #tadies, so that whe the right me does come, your hus | band won't be ashamed of you for having neglected your advantages Dear Mins Grey: 1 want to tell/ you that I admire you, and always will, for the answer to “Mother” under the heading “God Pity th Girl.” I only wish It were possible for me to write a personal jetter to “Mother,” They certainly must be a lot of busybodies to treat a wirt like that, " WB. G. THE RACE QUESTION Dear Miss Grey: I am an old Woman, and have seen a lot of the world, and I want to tell you that I like your sensible anewers, I would like to say a few words for the foolish girl, and more thay foolish mother who wil! allow her) girl to marry a negro. He evident- ly has more sense than the girl and her mother, hence his fear of her becoming diseatisfied after, mar riage. 1 talked once with a col- ored woman of fine intellect--« singer—who moved with the best of her people. in speaking of a Pretty blonde, she said: “She ts married to one of our colored gon- tlemen, but we never notice her, for we know she must have occu-| pled a very inferior position among her own people We cannot re) spect her or her husband.” She! went on to say that she thought the races should not intermarry, and | that when they did they were ostra ized from both races | it MPATHY. Is there any-| grape stain ut injuring Dear Miss Grey thing that will take from a nofa pillow with the colors? If so, p we tell me A READER A—Methylated spirit and a pure | soap will do it. \ | IS IT WRONG THIS WAY?) Dear Miss Grey: WIM] you please | tell me do you think there is any harm in boys putting thelr arma| around the girls to keep them from | ping off when they are riding| on the joy wheel at the park? The| boys are nice and don't act silly, | and I and my chum always go in| & crowd when wo are with boys, | Sometimes they take ua to the moving picture shows and to the | chutes, We will try to do just as| you say. . YOUR TRUE FRIENDS. | A.--L_am glad to get a letter like this, There is no harm, giris, in the boys putting their arms around | you for protection if you we thrown in sudden danger, and you would be foolish and prudish to ob- ject. But you knowingly go into this, and it would not be called a joy wheel were it not for the fact that the joy is supposed to come | from the boys putting their arms around the girls. To say the least) Mt makes you very conspicuous. You wouldn't like that, 1 am sure. For young people to go In crowds to the picture shows, if they go to the best, is all right, but I would try to form the habit of going once in a while to see a real fine actor or actress, or to hear a very top —someone who has ac: complished something in life rather than to too many cheap) shows. I would try, too, girls, to! show the young people @ good time in my home sometimes instead of going out. It will be a change and make them see how dear a home can be. START NOW Learn Millinery. Complete Course Taught. Thorough and Practical Price Right MODEL MILLINERY 627 People’s Bank Bldg. Ask for Booklet showing why we 6% on Savings You can pay in or withdraw any amount at any time. ‘WASHINGTON SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION $10 BECOND AV. Batablished 22 Years. Herman Chapin, Pres. Wm. Thaanun co Ps Raymond R. Fr Dividend 6% Has just been declared for the six months by this company. We have never patd less than 6 per cent for same period atic plan of Savings t and the most profit- ny may become a member paying 0c a share per month you may carry 60 shares. and our office for par- Call at tloulara. Puget Sound Savings and Loan Co. Central Building Andrew Chilberg, President BK. B, Burwell, Vice President R. Campbell, Secretary ASTHMA SUFFERERS Send for Free Sample of ARNOLD'S ASTHMA CURE The Never-Failing Remedy 333-334 Arcade Stylish Suits arid Coats One-Fourth Off and $1 Down Every Ladies’ and Misses’ Suit or Coat ts included in this sale, from a stock that ts only high grade in quality and correct in style, We cannot afford to sacrifice an enviable increasing busl- ness by questionable chandise or methods, Come in and see. SETTLES THE BALANCE No interest or extra charges what- ever are assessed. Our perfectly organ: ized 92 stores allow us the privilege of selling on credit at cash prices and offer liberal reductions, too, TACOMA STORE, 1125 C ST. or Housefurnishings for Our Great STOCK-ADJUSTING SALE We are now closing out our surplus Carpet stock in prepartion for the coming spring season. All short lines, odd rolls and discon- tinued patterns, some with borders to match, also a few stair and ball patterns. This i* our regular January stock adjusting sale of Floor Coverings, Draperies, Beddings and Linens If you need any- thing In these lines it will pay you well to do your buying now. The following are just a few ot the many splendid carpet values we offer for this sale. Come and see them. BODY BRUSSELS CARPETS— VELVET CARPETS, grades, in many good patterns and col- vrs, suitable for all rooms and halls; a low price, durable car- pet. Sewed, lined and laid. $1.45 value, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS PET, four grades, tn good Splendid patterns and colors, suitable for any room in the house, some with border and stalr to match. This durable Moor covering should go rapidly at the prices mentioned below. Sewed, lined and laid. $1.65 vatue, ee yard 1.25 1.85 valu per yard 1.35 WILTON CARPETS in good pat- terns, sultable for all purposes, some with borders, Sewed, lin- ed and laid. $2.50 value, is per yard $175 WILTON VELVET CARPETS In rich Oriental colors and designs, some in small allover effects, sultable for all rooms, Made, lined and laid. $1.95 and $2 values, $1 35 " AXMINSTER CARPETS, four pat- grades, in many exclusive pat- terns and colors. Sewed, lined terns. Made, Mned and laid. $1.75 value, per yard $1.50 vaiue, 35 per yard . Seattle’s Largest Housefurnishing Store Buy Now Pay Later All the, Cred't You Wan) PIKE 81. AND FIFTH AV, New Arrivals in Lingerie Waists Ladies’ Lingerie Waists, of the new spring models, are now being shown in French lawn, batiste and Marquisette; some are trimmed in Cluny lace and em- broldered effects, others with Valen- clennes insertion, and several new and clever effects in plaited styles—high and low necks. A very clever assortment in Women’s and Misses’ Tailored Waists in Irish linen, in all the latest and most popular | styles, are also displayed, You are invited to take advantage of our very liberal credit terms in making your purchases here. The prices are the same as for cash, SS|EASTERN | & sand Co., Inc. ——="“Seattle’s

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