The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 10, 1912, 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)

THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1912. Gold Medal, London, 1911 Lergett Sale HIGH GRADE Tha in World SHH HSH SHH SHOES SSHOH OOOH EHO OHH OH OOH HOE OSS : 4 THERE'S A TRICK IN PINNING ON A VEIL BECOMINGLY. DO YOU ¢ 4 KNOW IT. DAILY STAR FASHION EXPERT TELLS HOW. ° HS OSOSOSEOO OS SEE SHEESH OO OHHH ESE HOSOEOO OOH OHOS As @ Women Thinks to yourself than to other peo- ple Yourself One Question: 5 Would it have been used by her late Bes Queen Victoria, for 45 years, if it} - were not exceptionally good ? } - A quarter-pound box will introduce you ta revelation in tea delight. “Her Majesty’s Blend” $1 Ib. 25c. 14 Ib. ta Seabed Ade. Tight Phas. | Good things are ii coming this way Maybe it's rlew ripe; but it isn’t cherry reel von George Lind-| wrg, dispenser at} \ Hau ‘a Choe hop, gives to Hut they're ind theyre old. Try them Cream Root Beer two ounce aix table poems) root beer syrup in a stem |elnss; early fill |with carbonated | water (plain soda water) and finish jwite a con er cial cream float. George Lindberg . = Pistachio Nut Sundae Fill a 7-ounce glass with vanilla jee eream, over which pour 1 ounce | (eight teaspoons) pistachio flavor ing, and top with whipped cream | Sprinkle with pistachio nuts, and finish with a Marachino cherry Give Ants Paregoric It you are troubled with ants, ‘either large or small,” a few drops in mall basin of water will attract all the anta on nises, Use a shallow basin ou will = be surprised ot the number your “ant trap” will catch. tre ee * The gulf between the high- est pitch of happiness and the lowest of misery is mostly measured by things im- aginary. depth * + Many a man thinks his heart broken when only his pride prained | ek Raa a Stk i * Strange that candor seldom meet. NOTICE TO READERS * All letters cannot be an ®& * swered in the p: and many ® |* are without name or address, * A stamped, self esved en- | velope always brings 4 prompt & * reply CYNTHIA GREY. & helhalalielial hhh Removal Notice Vittucci Importing Co. (Incorporated) es NOTICE TO READERS *& Questions sent to The Star ® physician will be taken care of # by bim. - ee ee ee = courtesy and * * * * * vi hen momndte 0 WW dg tae “ on waratanmenn drugs they mb the due to the drugs n moving the headach more laxau contain hout Headache and a Stomach Trouble aps nin derangeme wel, ‘The Jache powders these powders | pain wi Wh t Headacher diet to f ten the stomach o} not cured by The relief caused by = msieatanitinnant we ee eth oa pay “nKe ar one I less and chew your food more DO NOT TAKE HBADACHE 2RS, They are polson. POW re BY MAYBELLE MORTIMER =; bare throat look whiter, but Are you devoted to the collariess| also be much more becoming | Rowna? your face, if you are, | am sure you have Divide your veil in half and throw often been unhappy at the ugly ap-|one edge over the rim of your hat pearance of your throat after you) Then take the very bottonr edge bad put on your veil. and pin tightly straight about your There is a way of putting on a throat at the back of your hair. Ml which will not only make your|Then bring up the ends and pin =. Letters to Cynthia Grey | Dear Mive Grey—The approach of Potlatch woek is causing me xiety, Many girts, of 10, they are old enough to Bo out alone. Is this safe for th ANXIOUS MOTHER A.—Most emphatically it fs not, and every mother or father abould either accompany the young people, or #ee that some responsible older person does. it is hard to tell children they*are in danger, but it Is a crime not afeguard them. This is what the city is trying to do in establishing women are doing much for the young girls, especially in protecting the girl, or boy, whose misdemeanor bas put its victim within their jurisdiction These youthful culprits are not treated by the women police as bad, but every protection posal. ble is thrown around the misied boy or girl, The number of women) on the force will be Increased Potlatch week, and parents may asaist| |them by keeping an oversight over (he children under their care. ih Several mothers have written me in regard to keeping the children | off of the streets, and I want to say right here that the city of Seattle! ‘has « curfew law providing that every child under 16 shall be at home, lor on the way by 9 o'clock in the winter, unless accompanied by a re laponsible person, and 10 o’elock tn summer, It is the privilege of every icitizen, man or woman, to personally enforce thia law, by sending the wit to them on the back of your hat By fastening your veils in this manner, you make a little bag over your f which does away with that strained appearance of your features when your veil is put on in the old way Try it. You will certainly be pleaned with the effect A TALENTED TOT se men you know on their « %| manhood, and I lose if you do not * DON'T BE A GARBAGE CAN & succeed ating an impression * * at feast one of them. ee ee | - — Boston Takes Walks Dear Miss Grey: I am a young woman of 21, and writing to yon! The Public Recreation league of about the same old question, “How | Boston has planned for public walk to meet 1 young men,” I am/ing trips, These will be conducted rday and will give tho own TRAVEL ON THE “MILWAUKEE” Seattle and Grays Harbor regarding fares and train service, call on or address CITY TICKET OFFICE Second and Cherry, Seattle our new loeatii 309 Occidental Ave. Where we will be glad to wel- our old friends and neigh- bors We fairly neat looking, ean tell a chick-|each 8 en from a hawk, bake a light cake,|taking them an opportunity to se gh to k Het some of the forest reserves when @ man wants to talk, But| slong shore though I am ilding a good busl-| hess position, and though the men} l¢ in contact with seem to like} and respect me, none of them show! & preference for me. I am sick and tired of being the receptacle of «tl my men friends’ troubles, I don't want to play the role of sister them any longer, But want to have the leading part of sweethe How can 1 make the stage ma ot life give It tome? LONESOME A.—You are responsible to a «ree for this “non-preference. Your first step {s to stop being a garbage can for your men friends’| troubles. You are alding them in| being weak, and are creating a «ray, toneless atmosphere for your-| self, Certainly you should Ih and help trouble, bat not ¢ specialize on supplying NG ¢ T thi Pickled Cherries Heat a pint and a half of vinegar, into which you have od half a cupful of brown a table spoonful of wh and a dozen biades of mace, until {t be Pour over cherries, and let stand 24 hours; pour liquid off, re heat, and cover fruit again. Do| three days, then bottle hot me stir Bug day as receiv: Vittucci Importing Co. (Ingorporated) r Wholesale 309 Occidental Ave, Our _telephon: and Elliott 277 Grocers, Seattle. Hott 276 are Ei cial for This Week| ; Per 54-inch White | b We make Buttons, Sponge Dress Goods and Cloth. We do Accordion and Knife Plaiting. BE AN ACTOR! Engagements secured promis- ing pupils, Special Short Course. We sell Silk and Satin Lining, Ladies’ and Men’s Suiting, J} chia ho oa , Doing Wherever Used. $ Dyaide, Oregon centers page the Story wan the same ainly, We know Suiphurro; ’ Supplies. st our prices for we save you 20-to 25 per cent. SHAMEK BROS. 227-235 Lumber Exchange Seneca and Second Av., Formerly in the Arcade Bldg. ft bas done we roriaa of good. Rheumati telling yo For Wash. lady who severe came had “boost to every friend shi aved at can be when her are as p patients Everyone and Making Friends Through Wide Territory. only t of the CINE IS BANISHING MUCH SUFFERING, PAIN Population Centers Know Remarkable Rem- edy and Are Grateful for Good It Is ordered as goitr he could not button a « neck not a trace of it find « so effectively on gottre, to this time it has been difficult, to produce & growth around by if not real forms Sulphur an elsewh tiem’s «re with mam | the torrit By BP. Ww. sTRANG. Dave just the great comprisir tom, Rantern Oren Idaho ind return them. A cashier i diseases have are py grateful for Sulphurro, and don't mind a #0, inatanee. I jearned that the re, . stom- been Oaksdate, dear fa affectionately inder of the town, ‘old, had been freed ‘heumatiam of made her years, and she is one of the beat for Sulphurro that you ever saw. She ts telling its merits nd om reco’ ‘ oot, after for cots, and ie jerested In Sulph: At Pullman I found an espe- toward Sul- the biggest acemed meh of the city more Lewiston one business firm half a dozen bottles Sulphurro for dietribution amoag the employes, atance ecurred at 3 Sulphurre was in strong spring medicine At Ellensbar: ren impoaaibie, eure for » glad to take Sulph: representative around to remarkab and medy the the ‘The: ft t# pleasing t goltre seem ulphy rro Khewmatiam’s Great Foe. Tro, oft similar in- orth Yakima demand I found the em- ree ft shirt is now will aot for w AU to yield n the Inland Empire, ie proving rhein. at. enemy 4 ®omen all through ory yours who had Jeading been lieved of severe cases of rheumn- lady who theatre 1 talked re- telling her friends how quickly Julphurro cured her rheumatism. The editor of one of known newspapers in grateful to Sulphurro for endin mi! ur a’ Alen ing of & eontas phurre 0 Seattle t© Suiphurr for from the Candin T fina p t FO Is indeed yr it dy en Liquid ¢ urro) had Juughter, that quickly that at lL . eno eritl Of the prediction. I arn judge Hy by what Io: ms Fro brings th 8nd happiness into thousands Inland Empire Emin ary One OF the thet Vinited east of Mountains aiready kn« FTO, and wan of res sb and copie the A ta stand bet the blood earetull lot whi gent for w of wining the le » not the book! of pro larly severe n a fend kiny muitit 6. Idaho, I the beat his suffer~ found of Sul- After returning 1 heard of « particu- rippled by rt had got bean lv when I saw b her fa res ant Both fathe been added to the phurro enthusiasts. jphurro Drives Out Polsons. are te phurre cure® by and h ace $1.00 in yet ane umatl able t ff rheumasiam in Minneapolis, cured by Sulphur For years (his so cramped Minneapolis and K in Seattle rahe was rejoicing had by Sulphurro ¢ could write her. coming nd ¥ t nghter have of sul~ 0. under- tier that Sul- driving gut of yater the poisons ms which produce dises ompantes h bottle of Sulphurro the bought gine, are sending to th Stewart Sulphur Co., 7 Street, Seattle tor a ft Just one more word about the delightful and health iphurro bath wherever you drug Dozens of people who are inter in the simple Sulphurro treatment t autores. common but you hear mene officer. eke eee eee, . * i@ POOR FOOD FOR * H GOOD MONEY * « eee eeeeheeeeeee Dear Mise Grey: Will you please inform me if there ie such of- fice as food inspector in this city, and, if so, if he or she would have! y authority in my case? | It seems almost impossible to Ket fo fresh exe served one in the ree taurants in this city, The exes they serve—if you will excuse my calling & spade a 5 e Tot. ten. My last experience eo day. 1 was charged 40 conts for ham and eggs, and both exes were absolutely rotten. Of course, 1 could not eat them—nor the ham, either—simply ate the potatoes and drank the coffee, paid my hard- earned 40 cents and got out. Ie it fair for a poor man to be subject to such injustice? A READER. A—The food and inspection lab- oratory is in the Arcade Annex Every man, woman and child who has auch food served them owes it to the city to report to the inspect or. If you do not, do not blame any one but yourself for being cheated RRR * # THE YOUNG HOUSEWIFE * * * Raa Dear Miss Grey: I am writing in bopes you can help me. | am a young wife and mother, and very. very bappy. But, ob, Cynthia, I don't know how to keep house, and my work gots bebind In spite of my efforts to keep up. My husband never seems to no- tee the house isn’t clean, and if I say anything, he just laughs and kisses me, and says: “Never mind, you'll learn.” But-1 don’t seem By the time my breakfast dishes are washed, the baby bathed boy dressed and the rooms swept, I don’t seem to have time for any- thing else. If you could only give a ayatem for housework, | know it would help many. A SLOUCH. A.—Yours is the problem of ev- ery yo untrained wife. Can't you have a little girl come in for a few cents each day and wash the dishes until baby is older? Teach the baby to be content and am itself. You can do this if you are persistent. Take time to sit down and arrange the work, and you will do it more easily, and, above all, have @ place ing, and always the \ kk ehhh hh * * * SHOWS AND BEAUS : * RRR te Dear Miss Grey: Tam a young girl and going with a young man, who thinks a great deal of me. Do you think it is wrong for me, when he is not able to come to see me,! lto go to the show with some other young man? I live in a navy yard town, and there are many of the boys who want me to go with them, | Please give me your advic INA. A—Certainly not, but be open) labout it and let him know, Ho ‘should not object to your having the company of other respectable young men, |" put if you are engaged, you) ‘should be very careful of your ac) \tions with other “M, L. V. Send stamped, self- addressed envelope for reply. CYNTHIA GREY. reporting to an officer, or handing the child over to an The city streets is not the place for children at night. TOR HREE EARS HORS * ® GRANDPA THINKS * * MAN MORE BEAUTIFUL #& THAN WOMAN * Settee Dear Mise Grey: 1 see “Uni K." is still at the hardtack and coffee. Uncle is evidently a an! which accounts for his idealist! opinion of women. The Bible tells wa that God “finished bis work on) the sixth day,” and still uncle says that God created male and fomaic and instructed them to continue along the same lines, that He (ac cording to the Bible) finished. Uncle, wherein do you find wo- man so supertor to man in this propagating institution? Hae it not always, and among all classes of; people, been intuitively agreed upon that man bas the sole right to chooee? It fs not the woman that must take the Initiative, but the man, Do we not find this law enforced through the whole of the animal kingdom? Which is the most beau tifully decorated, the male bird or the femal The male always, Why decorate him if he and his office is not superior? As for propagating. It is plain the Creator did not tn- tend her for primodictator, Inso- | far as man represents the initiitive, he must be considered the superior. GRANDPA. RRR * * * Ree Dear Miss Grey: I am 15. Do you think I am too old to play with dolls? One night when my girl friend was at my house to stay all night, we stood on the stairway and listened to a couple spoon, Was it wrong? If @ teacher is reported, can she lose her job for hitting the ¢hildren on the hand with a ruler? A COUPLE OF KIDS. A—Play with dolls as long an you wish. I wouldn't take a for- tune for the old headless body of my girthood's biggest doll, It is always underhanded to listen to a private conversation, I am sure you did it for fun, but that does not make it right ’ A teacher may striké a cbild on the hand, but not on the face or head, EAVES-DROPPERS RRR os * * DIVORCE AND MARRIAGE * * * we hak Dear Misa Grey: Will you please tell me if a woman Is free to marry | again without a divorce, after ber nd has been sent to the pen to 20 years? I would like your alvice about this. SUBSCRIBER A.—-His incarceration ts grounds, for divorcee, but the divorce must be secured and six months expire between it and marriage. ee ee ee * * * UNLAWFUL BUSINESS * Te ee Dear Miss Grey: Since my father left the city I have had to attend to unfinished business. He told me I could indorse his checks. Is that lawful? HASTY. A—If he has legally given you the power of attorney, you can law fully sign’ his checks; otherwise not if you wish more information wend stamped, self-addressed volope. Not many little girls of 5 years! arq as accomplished as Baby Doris, whose whole name is Doris Hayes Baker. She lives with her mama et the Joseph apartments, Ninth and Stewart, when she Isn't on the road drawing her $40 a week. This little tot will not be & years of age until the 8th of August, but she can “too and step { ite: highly entertaining things in an en tertaining way, and play the cornet. She has been across the continent four times, Almost as many as she is old, Her first trip was when she was 6 weeks old, and even at that early age she was trying to “toe” it with her pink tootsie-wootsies, and no doubt she recited also. Last evening she gave a success. ful exhibition of her talents at the Good Luck theatre, 25th and Jack son, Restores White Dress > When washing a white dress that has become yellow, put « few drops | of turpentine into the water and then lay the dress on the grass to) dry; it should be washed on # sun-| ny day and dried in the sunshine, | says the Commoner. For the wash | silk, put a teaspoonful of wood" al cohol to every pint of water when | rinsing, and iron when damp with | a moderately hot iron, remembering that silk scorches very easily Cynthia’s Answers to Many Questions ‘The battle of New Orleans took| place January 8, 1815. ‘Tho presidential election will be held on Tuesday, November 5, GF | The chief office of carbohydrates) in food is to furnish energy and maintain heat. Hard water may be softened by boiling or the addition of a little) blearbonate of soda. The wealth of the United States is $130,000,000,000. Great Britain and Ireland, $80,000,000,000, Of the 12 greatest seaports, New York heads the list, then comes London, Antwerp and Hamburg, Liverpool ranks eighth, Water freezes at a temperature of 32 deg. F., and bolls at 212 deg. F. In high altitudes water boils at a lower temperature, The qualifications for president and vice president are: No person except a natural born citizen shall bo eligible to these offices, and they must have reached the age of 36 years, ingly continued trouble. Second Avenue Between Spring and Seneca PANTON & LONDON Patterns © on Messasine Fleer, “THE INVITING STORE” THE GOLDEN POTLATCH SALE Is the logical place to buy ev Jubilee. The immense thron, store during the first days of verything you need for the great Potlatch Celebration and gs that have surged through the aisles of this bright, busy this event are not an incident of passing notice, but one that speaks in unmistakable tones of the rapidly increasing popularity of this house, combined with THE GRAND ARRAY OF BARGAINS offered by the Panton-London store every day of the week. Patrons have been lavish in their appreciation of this firm’s policy of giving your dollar an opportunity to exercise its fullest purchasing power, the maximum in value at a minimum price always. Come to the Potlatch Sale tomorrow for genuine bar- gains in all departments. -atent Styles im White Hats And Misses. 37d Floor, grand display of re- markable Bargains in Dresses on Second Floor. 75c Black Panama 39c of Black Panama. In good taste as well as a very serviceable fabric, Priced as a Bargain “Whizzer” for this Potlatch Sale, a yard t quality An elegan' See the New White Bags So much the rage and It will do your heart to see the elegant values we are offering along Then for summer Potlatch wear, good this line, there are rich designs th and ed Bags with self folding tops or clasps with shoulder cords, Worth up to $1.75 each, 69 Potlatch Sale price C in embroidery work the cham- pagne colored A SYNDICATED BARGAIN IN Ladies’ New Foulard - and Lingerie Dresses A New York maker of high class Dresses, in his extremity for cash went to our resident buyer to close out bis entire stock of Ready- made Dresses in Silks and Lingeries, Our representative, knowing the quantity would be entirely too much for any one of his clients, succeeded in getting the merchandise manager of one of his houses from St. Paul on to New York to look the goods over, and after making an offer on the entire lot wired us to know if we could use half of them, thus syndicating a big purchase and securing for two of us what one otherwise would have been obliged to have taken to secure this wonderful bargain. These Dresses are worth from $10.00 to $18.00 at WHOLESALE, but in order to make a quick turn we will place the entire shipment on sale Thursday 6 98 morning at the very little price of only . . a) As stated in the headline, there are both Foulard and Lingerie Dresses in this shipment. READ THE DESCRIPTIONS BELOW. $6.98 for Handsome Foulard Dresses Worth $10.00 to $18.00 at Wholesale. Made on very graceful and becoming lines, of the much favored Foulard Silks, in na cerise, brown and lavender. The allover net waists are silk lined and trimmed in silk piping to match the skirts, Patent leather belts are included. $6.98 for Fashionable Dresses Worth as Stated Above, $10.00 to $18.00 Wholesale. Designs of really remarkable beauty. Every woman loves a bar gain, {t has been said, and we know our lady patrons will enjoy these delightfully new and becoming Dresses, Made of allover embroidery daintily trimmed in Cluny and shadow laces and inser- tions, with belts of messaline silk. A hint to the wise should be suf- ficient. We predict there will be scores of our lady friends on hand at the opening of the doors Thursday morning at 9 o'clock to snap up these bargains. | Parasols and Umbrellas at Potlatch Sale When attending tho festivities next week you will no doubt need protection from the sun's rays, under one of our stunning novelties in Parasols or under one of our splendid Umbrellas. The assortments in both lines are replete with the market's best offerings. Call in and see our special Bargains in Ladies’ 26-inch Umbrellas, special 49 for this sale at c MISSES’ PARASOLS A splendid variety of styles and colors to choose front, We are especially strong on the popular priced lines in the following ibe 25¢ 35c 59c

Other pages from this issue: