The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 21, 1912, Page 5

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ee a a a a a a a 2 1 AM NOT “LOVESICK IN THE LEAST” * Dear Miss Grey mpany with 1 was I do. 5 Now, one evening when he came out, my brother went to the door and turned him down, I don't know what my brother said to him, He told my chum that she should tell me [ wouldn't see him again, and he said I suld have told him things myself instead of having my 1 will be 17 in Decemt a fine young gentioman of 19. with him five times. My r. I have been keeping and there's very few like mother likes him as well Mi Know and Do. fowrth nad last « wile Pather Vanghn only 8 before we Socimtinin nde of] brother do it, I cannot understand this, and my brother won't tell me hee | erred and| What he said. I called him up once since, and he talked friendly, but hed to deftly sm. Ho taiks| he won't come out to the house unless my brother apologizes to him, ha creature of » imast-) He thinks I told my brother to say what he did tien a4 Pas . Mise Grey, I like this young man and would Ike to renew our! Sieg trom friendship, When 1 think about what happened, it makes my heart | erties o " burn like fire, I cannot prevent it, Every time I hear his name men- than hiinself to sus tioned, it Just aches. (1 am not lovesick in the least.) I don't know N NATURE why I do it yeelf, I'm not thinking of getting married, and won't | ivin are t for a long t Now, wh at on thin earth would you advise me to do? BLUE BYE | what your broth: | and deny it if it in} your heart burns at th mention of his name find owt what an ordinary young man he ts, an imagine yourself in love, for the love that lasts brings only pe A er said not tru would be Ask and i the young man In a # you had alghtforward way to do with it aay tha’ hi you don't | sre jae [PRR EERE #)do before getting married a whom jhis w ou \* *| La | By savages EE SEES HER MISTAKE * A--If you have proof that you m Ba : lei ®ihave made strenuous efforts to} ro init eee eee wk ee ee ee ew find your wife, and have heard| Bie parents at niet! Dear Miss Grey: Will you help| nothing of her, she is considered ad had he been adopted by|me solve this problem? | am aj legally dead, and you can marry Trad heard ever young gir! about 23 years old. When | Without divorce proceedings, 1 was 15, my widewed moth | or married a man I did not like and who did not like me, I will con-| fess that | was by no means an angel, and in later years he has] forbidden me to come to his house) to see my own mother, who haa/ been {ll. I go there when he is not b abo Cynthia’s Answers to Many Questions os fault of PYeult nor the fault of any . his fault nor the fau For instruction in obtaining pat- Ware and Indian have hu ent, write the patent office, Waeh ee op ete me gy 3 - at home, but this is so sneaky and| ington, D. C Wy fern capltatio’ |deceltful. I am beginning to see} eared , and working man or/my mistake and trying to do my| Peroxide of hydrogen will not APOE of | art betier, but { don't know just uiaeee ce tee re 4 how to handle him, and I don't ence of the race people | think elther he or mother has very| promote the growth of hair, will bleach it, but ; Sere ane an much longer to tive, and if [| In Oregon and Washington a note plier, Giucation end °n-/ should ket married, I do uot want| is outlawed six years from the last ‘what desire and whatienmity between the two families. | interest patd: an open debt, from entitied to, namely ereate, but in ds re Is Ro particular need to cl fature (it without Tell me how I can win his re spect and friendship, ff not his love, so L can make peace | ANXIOUS READER, | the last transaction, To correctly pronounce a word some one has mispronounced, when Acknowledge to him, face to/'8 company, is the height of rude- human vature, but inhuman will Ae pe cae mrong, and he| 0 on Mecintion will change it) “'™ be Very spt to Sraive you. =| im order to collect, in this state, |@ debt contracted tn another state, jit will be necessary to get judg jment in the state in which it was }contracted, and transfer it to the | court here WOULD IT MAKE IT TRUE nature and human righ tal fre In placing the flag at half-mast it should first be raised to the top of the pole, and then lowered to position, and preliminary to lower- ing from halfmast, it should be raised to the top the buman witt ot Bome peop | while profit fetainers who view the working Good and True cng teelowein ethene he world’s most famous and most japproved family remedy is BEECHAMS PILLS po a thele ownership © Of life, which belongs to the ATURE AND CHARACTER. Want you, my reader, to forget! he inoment about the re-| eminence, pronounced profound » vide't it make mad to btewd, diplomatic business | have a low-browed manager call you! ‘aad Saptale of industry: and t/a wildcat? | Tevea! 0 shagey.| 5 ‘ Tueinashda nerer beet | “Sure. It would make me wild.” | eld everywhere Im bones 10¢.. 280 Wage sinves who. by 6 of pa . \* - Beir etonomie Lives and otk et teehee eee eee ° * Rave been glued to pi * *| Morel or hot ali the days of their # é ok Wes, Would their human nature and #* “MY HUSBAND'S MOTHER” #| er have been moulded * *) eavironment? Wow ' id it Pee PPP Pee ee ease Se ol Dear Miss Grey My busband’s| it mature Would be « Cur This semitallored suit is an own, because of its clever little dress-up touches. The tunto ts slashed to show aw underskirt of biue Amd this material ts and white striped a0 used slender lines, an effective patter 4 part of the collar. Variety of style is given the ceat in loose fronts, held by a soft silk sash. The baek ts fitted in long, The scheme of blee and white ia pret- tily carried ont on coat and skirt with the small white porcelain buttons looped with white cord. The coat is heavily stitched by machine, this stiteh- ing forming, as in many Paris garments this season, THE STAR—SATURDAY; SEPTEMBER 21, 1912. broadcloth. 2 on the material. MONUMENT TO WOMEN OF WAR A nation-wide m novement to per petuate the memory of the women of the civil war has been started} by the Grand Army of the Repubile, recently in encampment at Los Ao xeles The mothers’ monument” prob- ably will be erected as the central figure of a large scription from the public park, th | money to be raised largely by sub- older donors and) penny gifts” from the school chil thelr character r lives at our house, and as | dren. WH revolutionize hu h an I try to like the old wom- Chicago is makin: ‘and character by possessing|an, | can't. Now, my husband and | the memorial. person of their rights to a life mie with the life of being, by affording to th fo the ine: . I quarrel over her staying at the house, and last night was the cll max. He deliberately told me that if 1 insisted on his mother leaving, ejhe would leave with her. Now, Miss Grey, bas a single son bel that could care for ber, but it hap op-| pene be us that she had to bel come to. Tell me what to do, Mise Grey, as I'm very anxious. PESTERED, | tady just as Prominent Seattle Physician Takes Neal Treatment. Used Drug for Years A prominent Seattle physi- cian whose name and address Will, under Social led for the refit to exploiters and Mind will the race iy free and corapetent a neh Sante A of juntice,| and wpderstand a | een d A—Treat the old Hille children be at achooi| YOU would Hike to be treated if you 28 Met Diayfield instead of in the! were old and homeless. She is Sep and factors. Then will) your husband's mother and she has mary toll and w Tate and the mother in-|S!¥en you a husband, and if you Sethe suze slave or the siave|love him, you will be willing to Venaheat ghe is today.| hear with her for that alone. Make ist Vaughan, #ocialiam has Tut the faw that every| her feel at home and welcome, even Should have t right {if she does not appreciate it. Aad enjoy the tv re ‘| NOTICE TO READERS jog) ® All Tetters cannot be an- ® o¢| ® Swered in the paper, and many ® * are without name or address. ®| * A stamped, self-addressed en- #| & velope always brings a prompt #| > in good faith interested, recent- ly completed the Neal Treat ment for drug addictions, and makes the following state-| through ment: | “I had been addicted to the) | . Whose economic bu If is indeed the ful Gf the jaw of " i a strong bid for | CHAMELEON GOWNS ARE PREDICTED Dr, Giacomo Ciamictan, of Bo-| logna, in an address to the Righth |International Congress of Applied Chemistry, being he | city, predicts that chameleon gowns | will soon be the fad 1 in New York He says “Photographic substences, which often assume very inte the light and = ret ness to thelr prim well attract the faablon colors in urn in the dark- itive colors, may attention of " The dress of a woman so will be furnished to any one) prepared would change color ac cording to the intensity of the light colors would forming automatic | Passing from darkness to light, the brighten, thus con ally to the en vironment, the last word of fashion for the future.” 66 CASCARETS” BEST Mood will to man” if woria.|® Feply. CYNTHIA GREY, %| Use of morphine for six years) FOR THE BOWELS wir He ees, oes baw * and was taking ten grains fein or canto | Bua NEPEREMEEEPEREEEM odermically daily when I aa who fear] (te te te tte te te te tt te tet te sar entered the Neal Institute. I) No headache, bad taste, sour * , } fr enwrant, men lowe hope and) y PROPOSED; THEN # had taken several other cures,"| oe or — tongue In want. women tore taith| ® SLIGHTED * suffering a great deal thereby, | 7 earene- overworked and underted,.| ™ i ‘ y / * an eine fails. say me 00 tte te te te te te tee tee tote but was unable to rid my self) 1 1 more necessary that you Diague bf consumption ¥ and want. brings 4d prostitution. erty caused ; Workern 1 Becca they do not get ‘ @ Hike hum: b tion of the we Wealth to thee inhuman nats f ome Conduct, « of the habit. Within two weeks | after entering the Neal Insti- | tute I was eating well, sleeping ell a re etter thar |uny other attentions, We were very| Wf!) and feeling better han I | much in love with each other, and| had felt for years, and, best of j ou pwere together a great deal. We had all, T had no further & great many quarrels, but never a very serious one, One day we Dear Miss Grey: nsible about You are very advising peuple in ditficulties, so I am coming to you I was keeping company with a oung man for over a year without proven | na the ab ¥ pets, and man mon craving The re|or desire for morphine. uinan| together, and he declared his abe | most remarkable effect of the } aceu-| fot me. rs | Inhuman nature wilt Fev I saw him two days afterward and| treatment is the fact that there Stem, 'MFACtOr Where is ix now ab.| Me did not recognize me, and never! is little or no suffering attach- has since. I don't know what haa| : abd wanna Mins, T belitiie no| cauped this, as he is a very senaible the withdrawal of the letriende wisn It known inet] YOURS man. Should I make any While at the Institute I 4N economic science and| MOVE, Or leave it for fate? W T han’ religion in an hoth through school, and I think 1} had ample opportunity to ob- ed to drug fe written Hie tact tony he neon aci(fe#| never feel the same toward any On€| serve the effe f - be kn s he effect of the treat tol. te ‘4 known and t wry K " © any erve Weal am in error, my|@lse HEART BROKEN. |). aie gad i ry shown and| A.—The young man may love you,| "ent upon both alcohol and not ¢ all liken for which morphine addictees, and have jno hesitancy in saying that it is junquestionably the best that has yet been discovered.” | but think it unwise to marey if you | Guarrel, «However, that does not excuse his rudeness, and you would ted for! best do nothing in the matter year ple have We make the positive asser KKK hh hhh tie * he det bit Ceca he could rave: sir") % LEGALLY DEAD {tion that the above sapeceses | vonut with | hi oC * se i a a Nea ure muttered defeat” Ani? |x #|the sentiment of all Neal Cure Truth deniea and re:|* 4 * XARA KAA HS HHH ® | paticnts, nu wiity ot| Dear Miss Grey; My wife went pron iM and truth, away and lett me eight years ago,| Call, write or phone The | WMoravt, In nevorthelon the| With two Httle girls, und 1 have! Neal Institute, 1735 16th Ave., tried to find, her and can’t, and I want you to tell me what Js best to Wash. Phone East oN ee Seattle, (9381. abe V baby Union Block, keep your Bow Liver and Stom- ach clean, pure and fresh than’ ft is to keep the sewers and drainage of a large city free from obstriie:), tion, Are you keeping Cascarets—or me! sagoway every fe | cathartic pills or castor ofl? is important. Cascarets and regulate the | the sour, undigested and ferme ling food and foul gases; take immediately clean inside with y forcing a pas- y days with an Tith. c clea: stomach, remdy: hi excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system waste matter and poison in the In-|!ng $1.50 for them. testines and bowel No odds bow badly and upset you! trimmed with plain blue gingham dress, feel, a Cascare straighten you © They work while cent box from keep your the children—-the! need a good, gent 1 the constipated 1s. et «tonight will mut by morning. you sleep. A 10+ your druggist will head sweet and your liver and bowels! side this pinafore is bound with} regular for months. clear, stomach Don't forget ir little insides te cleansing, too. Newest fh plu rips. aterial, Plumes dye cleaned and cu MODEL M auch boas, made of any = shade, ILLINERY Bank Ni The Tome | Dressmaker | MAKING THE LONG SLEEVE The long g leove in being built into all the new fall dresses, And strangely enough the sleeve is al-| ways the knotty problem in the au ateur's work After accurately cutting the sleeves, basting is of the utmost im por Firm basting may be more trouble to take out, but it in-| sures better fitting | Take short stitches always. Gath-| er the fulness where the marks in-| dicate, and when both seams are} basted Iny the sleeve flat on the table. If cut and basted correctly, t inner seam will turn to the under| part of the sleeve from elbo to} wrist, while the seam from shoulder to elbow will be exactly on the edge. | Now, if this line rans the length of the sleeve, the look crooked, when worn persona don't know of this and thi the seam should be seen the length when the sleeve ts laid flat upon the table } Sewing in the sleeve is important. | To sew it in correctly draw on the arm, getting the elbow at the right whole point. Pin the top of the sleeve to! the sh It should then be moved either above or below the noteh on the pattern until the fit is correct. WASHINGTON ATE THESE Martha Washington's recipe for preserving pears has been brought | to light among unpublished colonial | papers in the possession of Mrs, Ar villa MeDonough of Philadelphia. | It follows | The pears should be very fresh./ Wash and put them into boiling lye! for a minute. Remove and put) them into cold water. Next put the| fruit into a prepared syrup of sugar and water. Use half a pound of sugar for every nd of fruit; water to dissolve. Now cook for a quarter of an hour, Remove and| put on plates to cool. Boll syrup down to one-half its original quan: | tity. Put syrup and pears into jars and add brandy, Seal while hot NO CHANGE IN With the exception a com promise setilement on the basis of a balf-cent increase at the Seatth ol Cedar Lumber Manufacturing Co jlent afternoon The foreword of ‘he ~ (itted style of wrap iejthere is no change today in the on in this pretty French coat, which is built of/#trike siteation at the Ballard vw Kouvte-taced ratine. A very smart touch is added to| shingle mills. The strikers are de it by the use of contrasting colors, The outside Is a| manding an increase of one cent in creamy buff. The inside, which shows in the deep|the other tills, where the equip shawl collar and turned-back cuff, is a charming) ™ent ie not modern. This is the shade of blue. A double line of pearl buttons on the | 4usy season for shingles, some of front of the wrap emphasizes the close-to-the-figure |the mille having worked both day style. bs jand night during the past month The big collar is really a trimming, as ft extends | The mill owners, prea: say chat downward in long revers to the waist line. The coat | they will not yield pees ged pape with three large buttons, al- CANDIDATES FILE : THEIR EXPENSES | ; - | More than 50 candidates, success- ful and otherwise, at the recent pri- | martes, filed their affidavits of ex- TALKS BY THE STAR DOCTOR] 222222 jit was the last day for filing, the SHHSHHSHSHHSHHHH SHOES HSH HHOH OOO ® iin tements, The affidavits show * PUBLIC HAS A RIGHT TO EXPECT MUCH @/ 22! the ish men in the von-parti % FROM SCHOOL INSPECTION judicial contest generally had; the least expense, The expenses of | SOCCOCHH OHO OOOE Medical inspection tn the public the Bull Moose candidates were al-| ©2000 OOO OOO © © O/80 Kenerally smaller than those of) schools is becoming a general prac tice in cities of any considerable the standpat party candidates. size, And ite popularity is growing yearly. Does it pay? Are the children getting the resulte? Is disease and contagion on the decrease? Are parents seeing that their rights in the matter are secured? The schools belong to the child and to the parent— the PUBLIC, in other words, Parents as a group have a right to dewand— That epidemics will be more than twice as far apart as they were be fore there was medical inspection in the schools, That i will not be necessary to ~~ SOME DRESSES close the schools on account of con-| 0 ew: ea " tagion “7 us " * steadily de| “U” Gets Fish With That there will be a creasing number of deaf, hunch- “High Brow” Name The University of Washington! backs and cripples. That lack of ventilation will grad-| soological departme acu eas partment is today en ually bo remedied with proper ven-|Tiched by one of the only two speck mens known of the “acrotus Wil-| | tilation That each generation will §rOW | jouchbi,” a rare fish measuring six| stronger than its predecessor. lfeet long. It has a very large head, Each parent has a right to be-\nas no scales or backbone, and is |Meve that his child will have fewer ogee Bs, | of a brown color. It was caught at jcolds aud sore throats, that he will | fi nich nce fish trane and: Prot j de able to go through school with-| Kincaid of the university identified lout fearing smallpox or losing time it. The first of ite kind was ead !tured in 1887 |om account of contagion Inspection should decrease the amount of whooping cough, searlet fever and other children’s disease materially Service Tomorrow in New Baptist Church First service in the recently com pleted First Baptist church at Har-| vard ay. and Seneca will be held tomorrow morping, with the new | pastor, Rev. Carter Helm, officiat jing. The new church was built at) }a cost of $160,000. It is built in the form of a cross and has a seating | capacity of 1,350. The new pastor FOR LITTLE TOTS is a well known minister who re cently held a pulpit at Oklahom Want “ Dry” Coppers NE WESTMINSTER. B.C. Sept. 21 ‘This town is going to have “dry” coppers, at least during Chief Brashaw's term, so far as he can possibly bring that about. Ap- plicants for police jobs must sign } the teetotalers’ pledge, he says.| A ‘There are two vacancies now, : Seattle railway men yesterday were hosts to delegates to the an- nual convention of the National As: sociation of Railway Agents, which completed its sessions in Vancou- ver, B. C., Thursday. BALLARD STRIKE | | This proof | what you suffer most. RHEUMATISM Don’t Invite Torture by Negy lecting Nature's Warnings —Try My Drafts, Coupon Brings Them to Try FREE let that Rheumatiom gate inch, Sign and mail my and you'll get by returs Don't another coupon por t, prepaid, a regular Dollar pade { D inf le t ef they bring you, : 0 one dollar, If not, t t you nothing, Send this € nod make us prove these & claims, Do it toda This $1 Coupon FREE Good tor a regular $1.00 pair of Magic Foot fte to be nent Free to try plained above) to Name . Addre LADIES’ SUITS Strictly Man Tailored $25.00 to $32.50 Ladies’ Ready-Tailored Suit Shop 238-39-10 Lumber Exchange St. Paul Stove Repair i Plumbing Co. CENTRAL WET WASH Phoue Queen 4 nne 1834 Auto Service—Best of Work for be. 2%e for additional pound. ough dry 4c per dozen. 4 Ninth Ave. N. Celebrated Chinese Heri» alist Offers Treatment of Native Herbs Abso- lutely Free. To one man or woman in each low ecality will be given, free, a proof treatment of Lee K. Chin's wonders ful Chinese Roots, Barks and Herbs: treatment, which im offered without one cent of cost, has been used in China for over four thousand years and has cured more men and women than any known treatment now in existences To prove what this wonderful treat | ment will do, the doctor is offering: a free treatment so that the skep tical may see and the doubters be convinced. A cured patient is a doctor's best advertisement. other No matter how many | treatments you have tried; no mat ter how many other doctors haver failed, Lee K. Chin stands ready to prove to you at his own expense that his remedies will do the work Sit down NOW and write Lee KL Chin, 340 Hall Safe Building, Sam Francisco, telling him in your own words just how you feel and from He will them send you a treatment prepared to meet the requirements of your case, and which wijl convince you that you are not in the incurable state; but can and will be cured. Thin treatment will be sent to you im a plain wrapper with the postage paid. Don't put this matter off until to morrow just because there isn’t paper or pencil handy. Look one up now and write immediately: This is YOUR opportunity to get well, Don't waste it. 50 CENTS! | «If mother can sew it will be very frock is worn over a highnecked jghsy to make a number of little! walst with long sleeves of white J tant ate lawn, akes one yard and a hal frocks for Mary that will be pretty) or checked gingham and one yard and inexpensive. {and three-quarters of plain at 10) One of the prettiest little school! cents a yard it frocks I have seen this fall one| The little plaited frock ta of blue| / and pink striped percale trimmed jmother told me she had made for! ‘it, PINK stiped percale trimmed | |50 cents, although stores are ask-| oniid of seven two yards of percale | It was made of/at eight’ cents a yard and a halt | blue and white striped gingham,/ yard 6f plain goods will make ae | {Front and back are the same and they are cnt like a children’s pina fore, Over the top of the shoulder | there is a little band that holds | them together, All around the out Delicate Children | plain blue. A gore of the plain) Talk with your doctor about blue is set in under each arm and) A. ’s non-alcoholic pa- lengthens the di acrous the front | Ayer Sarsaj land back. ‘The sleeves arc of the ill, Ask him if he prescribes laid, with blue cuff. A ecerd o! Fine can be put around the waist or iit for pale, delicate children. not, as one wishes, | Ask him if he recommends it when the blood is thin and im- Blag bone buttons or covered od | iT re placed at the shou ton molds are placed | ak whe tan patene are GoArEes ders and in the bottom corners) pure, rey front and back, with a cord of blue | to simulate buttonholes, ‘This little weak and unsteady SEPTEMBER 22ND. VICTOR L. SOCIALIST CONGRESSMAN BERGER L. Berger Member Milwaukee School Board Dreamland, Sunday 8 P. M. Doors Open 7 P. M. ADMISSION 10c. RESERVED SEATS, 25c-50c

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