The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1912, Page 5

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Off at Home| with the poor complex ve “1 have to touch up tam sallow and a fenly my makeup saves ter of fact, more ey good looks than with cosmetics — fg inexcusable, Ogee lle of ordinary x have become oe | colide in the wax oe na ‘absdrbent powers. “<. ‘the faded or discolored to flake off in minute, ptidle particles, so y, as to cause no ‘at all, In thin way + ( le actually re ali fino Itnes, ‘moth patches or A new com clear, smooth, skin auch as jt lotion can pro- mercolized wax, store, ts suf- “ie applied like cold : ue vi Hi i f ia E E : i i i ig - a i CONSISTING OF HOUSEHOLD, Ketler3 SOU Nothe SHE ANSWERS THE ANNOUNCEMENT MY DBAR DAUGHTER; Your letter this morning made wie very happy, and I sat down! and dreamed a little of that time when I found that you were com: into my life, 1 am #0 glad, doar, that you are to have the great You brought to me, I know that when your first born ts put in your) arms you will realise there is no bliss conceivable ike that of clasplig, your own child to your breast, A friend sont me that beautiful prose poom of Robert Ingersoll when I wad expecting you. It has always hung near my bed. sure you remember tho firat paragraph: “Bora of love and hope, of ecetacy and pain, of tears and Joy-—dowered with wealth of two united hearte—held in hay arme, with fips upon tife’s drifted fount, blue veined and fair, where perfect peace finds perfect form—iooking with wondrous, wide, startled eyes at common things of light and day.” : ‘This ie what you were to me, my girl, and | am°aure it is your first born will be to you. Tt made me very proud on the night of your marriage whon du said you were more blessed than most girls because I had tmparted to you a full knowledge of all the great secrets of nature in a way that) made you understand the sacredness and beauty of married | iow, when you find that the very crown of womanhood has been placed upon you, and that you soon to become a mother, it makes me very glad to know that there ts nothing but joy in your heart. When this ts so there is no room for that ally self-consciousness which often goes by the name of modesty. about the birth of a child. The woman who realizes the greatness of Nature's plan starts to work it out immediately with intelligence and sympathy by beginning to train her child from the moment she is cog: nizant of ite existence. hich will be your piness that | j You must begin now to devote yourself to this, great work. Use these months before your baby comes as ing place where you may prepare not orly yourself, You wt understand what that gives to woman the power to portray every human emotion.” So says Lillian Albertson, known in private life as Mra. A. J. Levy, who plays tho leading role in the new play “The Talker.” “Prior to my lvaving the stage to be married more than four years ago,” she says, “I had played a number of emotional parts. But my work never satiafied mo.” Critics who have seen her since her return to the stage say her work In emotional parts in “Tho Talker” la now without a flaw. She is now the mother of what she calle “the cutest little two-year-old boy tm the world.” — LILLIAN ALBERTSON = el ‘There is nothing more to it than ‘sigue Grant tania ae way to IRON BEDS AND | FURNITURE, TO THE MERCY OF THE PUBLIC AT COST AND LESS, CO) BUT SACRIFICE OUR STOCK TO MEET THE CREDITORS’ DE- BARGAINS— > juarter-sawed oak, polish- $1.90. Sale oiteale price $4.50. Sale price— All steel, guaranteed for 10 years ; regular price $47.50. Sale price— $27.50 ‘THERE ARE MORE JUST AS GOOD ~~ Quarter-sawed oak, finished den; regular price $21.00. le price— Hardwood, finished gold- en; regular price $1.90. Sale Center Tables 14-inch ts, 5 fillers, fi aed veM. or white; — price $12.50. Sale "$6.90 18x18; regular price $1.25, Sale price— 601-603 Pike St Corner of Sixth Av. and Pike St. THE STAR—TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1912. There ts nothing vulgar], Cynthia Grey’s Letters A GIRL PAL Dear Mina Grey: 1 know a number of young men, with whom I am quite friendly. They seem to like me, but they don’t always bother to take me home from a play or entertainment, but pay my fare and put me on the car, When we meet, most of them say: “Hello, Mise Ruth,” but don't always trouble to tip their hats. Sometimes I go with two or three to dances out of town, and if | am in # restaurant alone, they have a habit of dropping in to chat They know I don't object to wmoke, #o don't always axk my permission, In fact, they trpat me more like a boy pal than a girl, and somehow I Itke it, tq have boys make love to me, and I like men better than women, 1 Sp not rough or loud, and never wear mannixh clothes, and have sense egough to behave myself, 1 bave been doing this for three yearn, Tho girls call me a flirt and don't ke me. nan any disrespect in treating me this w The girls criticise me #4, and I have no mothe 1 do want to do what is right, Don't ou think @ nice, womanly girl pal 1g good for a man? Do these boys bink me a flirt, or loose morally, or do they like me because I am a vod, Jolly girl, alone in the world. They are gentlemen, not men und town IT A.~I think these men have a great deal more reapect for you than the boys who are always wanting to get @ girl off in a corner to “spoon” for the girls they go with, If you were in # position to meet broad | vez NEWS OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN READERS svv| a minded women, Ruth, you would find you like them as well as you} do the men. Hat tipping has come to mean absolutely nothing, for “,tman tips his bat to a woman who, he knows, does not deserve the courtesy, Ws readily as to other women, While there is no real harm ia your action, we cannot defy public opinion, and because you are @ womanly girl, | would say not to allow the boys to smoke with you {n public places, nor would I go with several out of town to dances where they would have to pay hotel bills, Girls who have been raised in colleges, or college towns, understand exactly how you feel in the matter, and know that you are away above the girl who "moons" around for the sake of a beau. It ia Inte when you get out of a and if you have but a few steps from your ear to your home, it #h for & man who has to work next day to feel he must take you to the very door. Cireumstances govern all these things, but I advise you to be careful about appearances in public places, on account 1 bate | It’s Best to Rememb that every organ of the wonderful human body ts dependent upon every other, If your liver goes wrong your blood will be impure; if your bowels are inactive your stomach and digestion will show it. And one trouble leads to another. have become the most famous and the most approved family remedy in the world. They are known for their wonderful apd unrivaled power to cause regular, natural action of the liver and bowels. They are gentle, safe but sure. Beecham’s Pills benefit every organ of the body-~brighten the eye, clear the brain, tone the nerves and increase vigor—because they Remove the First Cause of Trouble Money to Loan on Seattle Real Estate & loan « amt I $10.25 item of expense. in name proportion. ¥. off your loan in full at after one year. ASHINGTON SAVINGH & LOAN ASROCIATION #10 Gecond Ave, Eatablighed 22 Years. Paes 58) Ladies’ Suits 7. Steam Cleaned ond for $1.64. of Quilts, Blankets and Portier Very Keasonavie Prices nion Dye Works, In: Chusay Cleaners and Dyers Office, 1025 Pike St. Piamt, 142% 10th Av. nest Ind. 619%; Mata 61° u ean pay any time of tho unpleasantness it may cause you, eee eee FROM “THE FOOT Dear Miva Grey: sake of our children? A.—Not you to the Humane of the family. No man have done. eeneees geese etete » » + * o » » * * » * » * WHAT IS HER DUTY? | Dear Mias Grey—What would you do if you were in my place? 4 single girl and living, and I have my mother to care for, I am doing all I can to! make thi pleasant and happy for her, has some money but! don't know what to do with it, and | fs not satisfied with me. 1| have done all I can nnd don't think ean do any more. Awaiting your answer. BESSIE. janie, if you have doue all ean to help your mother, and Mefaction ts lott destitute if you marry, or thing happens to you, so be very that you have done your best. IF HE DOESN'T “WATCH OUT” Dear Miss Grey—I am a young man of 23. Is it wrong for me to pay any attention to a girl about! 16? I think lote of her. I have gone with her older sister, but ike the younger far the better. He: parents think lots of me. R. A-—My advice to you is to keep the parents thinking “lots” of you. the way to do that is to let the alone, Parents as @ rule like to see the older girls marry before ‘We younger, and since you have paid attention to the older girl, can't you see that you will make ber angry, or burt her feelings it se, and will in all proba- bility not be able to see the younger i? Then, the girl is too THE LAW AND THE IN- STALLMENT PLAN Dear Miss Grey—-We have bought @ lot from a well known real estate firm and have built a small house, We have failed to make our pay- ments, for my husband has not had work half the time. hy paid a fourth of the price and kept the interest paid up, but the company has given me to understand that unless we make up the back pay- ments fn the spring we lose our property. Is there no way to save our home, or mast we lose to en- rich others? Have we no right wnder the law? DISTRACTED MOTHER A.— Yes, you have rights, but you do not know the law. One should be ve of a contract before he signs it. Now tf you had paid a lttle—even a doliar—at the time each payment came due, you would have saved your property. I do not know your contract, but since they accepted your interest you ought to have a show. Go at once to your city attorney and ask his advice. You can depend on what he says. Take the contract with you, THE RANCH GIRLS AGAIN Dear Miss Grey—-We are the girls who wrote you about keeping house for ranchers. We thought maybe you don’t understand. We are only 18, but wo are both old for our age and both want to go on the same ranch. We don’t think the work will be too much for us. We have finished school and have mn working for a year, and we m't think peeling potatoes bad ith two to do it, ANXIOUS. A.—1 am glad to hear from you ain, girls, The ranchers were about to swamp me for that other letter. They seemed to resent the good apfetite I gave them, and of which a city man would be proud. then, they didn’t know that thin had lived & ranch. Now it I know you are not silly girls who have never been away from ome, I will tell you to go to the . W. C. A, and put in your appil- gation, as they never offer any but pectable places, and you will be io taking a position from Neither the country nor the safe them. I have had home trouble with my wife. She thinks she should be bons, so, to let her know who really was boss, | gave her a thrashing. Since then she doesn't seem to care for me. Do gg oo whe stays with me just for the there love | am sure I have lost? THE HEAD OF THE FAMILY, aa long a6 you think you are the head of the family You deserve just what you arp getting, and 1 hope would the brutes. Why your wife stays at all is beyond my com pte nae Til wager you are afraid to come up to Cynthia rey's office and tell her face to face of this terrible thing you If you ever expect to regain the lost love, begin right now to get some of the self-bigness out of your system. lam) working for a/ Reka eae tthe * OF THE FAMILY” ” * iy I can win back the society. would act ‘ou are away below 4 you have—neither bo de tn tn Benda Rin hn Benin nin nad » » » = » = rs a » * » * » elty has a corner on good people, and I want you to be careful, so you can enjoy your ranch life. Dear Miss Grey: Will you please ltell me if it is the custom to pay the minister for christening a baby? If #0, how much? MOTHER. A--In the majority of churches there is no set price, but usually one gives the minister something, I would advise to give within your means. “Ignorant, high ideas of married life. Ask at the Wbrary for the best books on the subject and interest your Nancee in them. A GIRL IN GREAT DANGER “Troubled,” I beg of you to save yourself while there is time. You say you drifted along, but are coming to your senses now. This young man has absolutely no re- spect for you or he would not have insulted you as he did. The fasci- nation he has for you ts as that of & snake for a bird. If you have not] 6: strength to drop him and stand on your own character, go to your mother and tell her what ho has done. The fact that abe iikes him ia no excuse for you to submit to bis insults, You have done wrong, as you say, but you are so young and so ignorant of things that ev- ery girl should know that you do not realize to what depths this man will drag you if you do not throw off this hypnotism be has thrown ver you. soon as you-can. Any day between 4 and 4:30 o'clock. CYNTHIA GREY. TAKE A CHANCE Please, Mister, won't you be my hus- bas: band? And I'm nearly two times sixteen— 1 won't say I've not been® kissed. I am tired of being “missed,” I can brew a pot of coffee, Clear as amber—steaming hot, That is fragrant and refreshing— Pray tell me, when {s coffee not? 1 can brot! a nice thick sirloin, 1 can make a salad, too; If you ever ate my muffins, 1 would be the girl for you; T can darn with silk or cotton— T can darn the ice-man, too— And at buttons I'm a wonder, They're so snug you'd think they grew, And I know my Walter Pater, T can chat of Bernard Shaw; Do a bit of French embroidery, IT can pain 4 1 can draw. I am fond of shows and music, Haynes’ chocolates I adore; Never smoked a mild Egyptian, As for cocktalls—they're a bore. I am tall and not too slender, Byes are gray and hair is brown, Lightly frosted; but when thought- ful Iam told I wear a frown. Truly, with these arts and graces— All my faults I've tried to hide, You might take a chance, Good Fe! lo This Shampoo Stops ~ Hair From Falling “Alkali shampoos will cause hair to grow dull and lifeless, split at ends and fall out.” says Mrs. Mae until hurtful soaps or discontinued there Hef. A very fine shamooo mix ture can be made by dissolving « teaspoonful canthrox in a cup of hot wator. This should bo poured on the head slowly and rubbed up well and it will create an abundance of white, creamy lather. “After a canthrox shampoo the hair dries evenly and quickly, while the scalp is left clean, pilant and healthy. It is not necessary to shampoo every week when cat throx is emploved. because ita ef fects are auick and lasting. Con tinued using canthrox insures a clean, healthy scalp and an abund- ance of rich. glossy, attractive hair easy to do up and of an evennoss in color.” —Advt, pa you are right in your th Come to me, dear, as} firs — TT WE INVITE EVERY THIN MAN AND WOMAN HERE EVERY PERSON IN SEATTLE AND VICINITY TO GET FAT AT OUR EXPENSE Don't be “The Skeleton at the Fenst"—Sargel People lump and Vopuiar ‘This is am invitation that no ti man or woman can afford to ignore. We'll tell you why. We are going to sive you @ wonderful discovery that 00d. wi long face Cigoet the foods you oat teat lsay that I em looking better thaw hy Ry et they have ever seen me before, under weight, |fathér and mother are so pleased that makes | think I have «ot to look so well weigh #0 heavy ‘for me’™ makes Puay, Feevisl stro and am better thai ontaant oa Set Sar cheska, which te something never sa: OTe. “ily ‘old friends who have been used to seeing me thin, corpuscies in the whi every thin man or wom- an ao badly needs, How can we this? We will tell you. Selence hae Siscovered a remarkably concentrat= ed treatment which increases cell growth, the very substance of which our bodies are made—a treatment that makes Indigestion and other | an. mtomach troubles fee pnd an if by qoagic and makes an olf dyspeptic or a sufferer from weak nerves or lack of vitality feel like a 2-year-old. This new treatment, which boon to every thin pet Don't forget name— ” Nothing like it has before. It is a to put ot Tlesh ‘and age very work, as I was 80 in| to Sargol, I look like « ined 2 asymmetrical you can feel want a body gtk ie pro" etme, Tere cre wiheverr woael ana ane gre with rat concent rated tablet this prec- demonst weight at day. But you say you Weil, here you are. ‘You may know some of Rs, or know somebody who em. We will send you thelr full “I have made a faithful trial of the | dress If. wish, Browghe wisn 176 pounds, ter, T neve euinea, Foust ¢ my at's hi ined fi meoly at : Berge tor t only weighed about ‘This coupon entitles any thin person to the concentrated Fiesh Rullder (provided rou ried ft), t is enclosed to cover postage, packing, Read our advertise- oc in stampa in a letter va wil of Sargol, >, and t printed above, then this coupot the full $00 package will be sent ‘ou by return of post. Addr The Sargol Company, 2772M, Her: Bldg.’ ton, “N. an m, N.Y. rite your name and ‘address plainly, COUPON TO YOUR LETTER. Men’s and Young Men’s New Spring Models in THE BRADBURY SYSTEM| CLOTHING This year's Suits are exceptionally at- tractive in patterns, fabrics and color- ings, and show thelr superiority over all other hand-tallored -to-wear clothing in style, quality, fit and finish. Those weariag BRADBURY SYSTEM Clothing have the satisfaction of feel- ing well and properly attired. We have a complete line in all sizes in a splendid assortment of materials, ¥ taking ad- vantage of our tiberal credit you have an opportunity to purchase the best of the newest in Men's Sults in the latest Spring models. it only requires a small firet payment and the remainder will be charged to your account, and zou may pay t 1. ance in weekly or monthly pay menta. cheviots, serges and worsteds; also a ff vartety of woolen mixtures. Priced From $30.00 to $40.00 sen EASTERN | =| 4} Outhtting Co., Inc. ===“ Seattle’s Reliable Credit House? STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

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