The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 27, 1912, Page 5

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Middieman's Profit Piano at the Malf _ Third * * * * * Dear Misa Grey: My troubles is I want children, yet know | never for a child I want to take one to raise freater love children, He loves them, until we have $300 or know he is right | that craving for a child to call my o ehild and not have one A.—-The human mind ts a q jeontend with, We want with tr Piano Offer of itt $400 more the Natior oe excitement in mus Eee plano a into fast two days by the PIANO MFRS., ave, Who are saving thou Gollars to Seattle's fath es by the ut Jeman’s prices and Cf oreese pianos on the iy terms ever dream fe the news from the at 23 Third A near k below the Orphe from the Centra moving jehildless home. It has become jlay the blame of sterility on the | while scientists know that just sex. You think you are to blame [him at least e ebild; he lets you jafford to adopt a child, Now, an ad * wi the severe how people with ehtidr times better than others. n get along |e RAHA RHA RA R instruments for just) ® * what ts usually}@ “FLASHY” AND USES SLANG® retail stores for)® ao ; ik The OOF @ eee RR EEE NEE RR EEE is ineptring and) the national] pear Misa ( Please tell us Seneot® Stock of the very Piano Mfra, are instruments that|what to de We became acquaint ot ‘American-made pianos, protect the buyers with an irom-jeq with a young engine He je the neighborhood of ff bound guarantee for ten years liatke te us 6 c time, using @ Geeend dollars going out 823 Third Ave, near Marion, Is) great deal of a he also dresses wagons hour after hour to not only the place to get a brand/yery flashy. Should we keep com Seattle homes righter new, best.grade plano, but ft ts the! with him or not? piace where you can save enough} BAND B on the prieé to buy all your winter) A.A man who dresses “flashy jothing for yourself and yourland uses slang is not always bad children, stock the home with alllite may pot know any better; but the winter fue! supply and a lot of/evidently you are too young to try other little things which you can/to reform him, and would betr> as do with the good money you can/sociate with those from whom you save there. je learn something of benefit magnificent about one-half charged by t b John rattle to see this t s hand by at ng and pany are very fortunate ae this bis par IAL PIANO MFRS, a cabling iret tw the b ma on factories, wh * Fier MUCH PROFIT does the floor merchant make? knows except the merchant he dare not tell! e has to |ete eee ew eee ethene * . \* AN ADOPTED CHILD *! * ALMOST RUINED ® e *| eee eee eee eee ane Dear Miss Grey: In response to Childiess Woman's” request for ladvice, 1 would Ike to give my own experience | Adopted at the age of 1 year by Christian gentile folk 1 never the truth till my suspicions, outsiders’ remarks, | | were verified by my foster parents IThen the “bottom” dropped out. | That I shovid be ¢ ved by lthose I toved and respected was tn leoncetva I left home at 13, and jin the 12 gray, miserable, dragaing lyears up to the present time, it | would be, hard ribe the } thing” ttat L An it dividualis lier and worse, an utter leitizen. [can only add | Mother's Pension Law. | But you can figure that some to pay the Seattle or the landiords of Second Get a thousand a month for every single show window. y $60 a month That's why we garments for wor [ the price you've beer landlord Av 4 ake ailare as & I for a i. T. lene a eeeen eee eee * ° \* OLD FRIENDS * * le | weet eee eee eee eee Dear Miss Greg 1 am old lenough to knqw what Is right and |what is wrong, but really | don’t know about this, } By chance I saw the name of & very dear childhood friend, and as} I} am now married, I don't want \to make any trouble on either side. | 1 don't know whether be is married | or not, and I would like to let him know that J live here in the same place, He knows a girl friend of mine that lived In the same town he did. Would it be well for me to write to him and ask about her? He would know my signautre. LONESOME. There is certainiy no harm in letting your old friend know you are here, but the proper way is to drop him a few lines, asking him to Hi on or come to dinner with you your husband—of course, with your husband's knowledg». ~ and Coats LATEST STYLE alll cS’ SAMPLE SHOP DE BUILDING. SARARKRR AAR EERE S | * *# IN LOVE WITH AN f i A EALTHY GIRL 3 Ist. We are closing out all machines taken . EDUCATED W * and ali machines that have been used, at a very |a8 We are moving to our new store, 1424 Third October Ist. TREKENEERERAR ERED Dear Miss Grey Your assist ance will mean a whole lot to me. fam a young man of 17, and work ing, having only finished the Sey- enth grade, and not enough of chance to go to school. I am in love witn a woadahioe Birt who bas finished the high school and fs of a wealth family and used to living bette: tam, 1 am learning a trade and will be making from $3.60 to $4 a day in two years. Do you think that we 4) could get along, and without my |havies the education she has had? ‘ O. FP. E. Many a wealthy and educat wy girl has become a poor man's |wife and been happy, but there is rs a jno embarrassment quite so keen as AeA SEWING MACHINE CO. SHIERS ee lto feel a loved one is widely lack ing. | One person cannot know every- thing, and it Is no disgrace to ac knowledge tgnorance at times, but lim this day of free education every man and woman owes It to himseif and herself to read, write, spell and speak the English language cor- rectly, and all honor to those who have done their best and fallen short—but be stre you have done your best. Inquire at the city su perintendent’s office about the free night school soon to open. peed ¢ FLOUR a RRR Kh * WHOSE FAULT? * * KERR KKH Dear Miss Grey; As you are the! most able person, I think, on this continent to anawer such quegtions and you are certainly doing good work, keep it up. I know quite a number of young people who read your letters every day. They breathe it all in, too. You cannot imagine how much good they de- rive from them; you certainly de- serve a grand reward, if not in this world, it will be in the next. ® tést new t6 the flour-making industry. | “Miss Grey, what’ do you think of at, AlL-P a girl who will allow men to get lad uae Flour has long been the vulgarly familiar with her in the presence of her own people? My fet vd until FISHER’S BLEND had * * * Best you can buy For biscuit and pies Makes bread and cake Without mistake, sister has been visiting in another city for six months, aud seems very carelas in her manners since her return, We are all very much wor- ried about her. A BROTI 3 | A—‘Famillarity bree con- tempt” is old, but true, and just as surely as a girl allows a man liber. tles, he will turn against her. If your parents cannot influence your sister to behave decently, even in Lei Picberpoe the should be re If she .were found In a = ea Mie’ police, she he sack of flour in all you need, in your kitchen, 4 if it be SHER’S BLEND tai For sale by all Dealers ™~ "MMR A MS the police, she rrested, The fact that Letters to Cynthia Grey RRRRRRARARR ARERR we we & ANd Cate HOU milk dally bas discov: j CAN | DO ANYTHING TO STOP THAT CRAVING? aren't very 1 want to know if er thing, nity |My sympathy is with you, for you may not b such a habit with men more and doesn't cost as much to get as your own The way seems \practicing attorney She ia a graduate of the | the butt of their jokes— Claas are #0 closely have more patience with details jan & great de jeauses nc tj Ue | breath THE STAR—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1912, | CE CREAM OF » SOUR MILK A woman who reada Metchnikoft # /Sred & wayoteronverting plain sour createst one and | am just crazy many will have them va could, no child on earth would get saya wait and I wi We are here wn, It for a place, is anything I can do to is an awful thing to want a/th CHILDLESS. thi and each of us has one to Ne what we think we cannot get. | un all the cause of your | da and doctors to that they really believe it tr tes with the oppor bis life in not giving yet argues he cannc opted child eats no more, wears no] and it ls wonderful | just as well, and some to open step by step paying fe. financtal she in at home does not excuse her, and if she has no respect for her self, she should have for her par ents. | cannot conceive of parents! allowing such a man inthe home. | Wants Women Judges Juvenile judg says Luey L should all be wom che Sandberg, a| in Washington yo! tac en. bw Heston university law school. She declares women would make bet! lawyers than men, “because they! Success in Pharmacy Mi Strange to many women country say, there are not pharmac' in the but one of the most auc} cossful i# Mise Susannah G. Hay dock, in Philadelphia, who has many wealthy women among her customern WHEN WINDOWS STICK i windows «tick, rub a little melted lard on the sash cord and |I NSO between the frame and omnes. HOw To MAKE SAFETY PINS) «. SAFER the safety pin ts rewarded | ce ita general litde inconventence at} # by the habit it has of cateb-| tng in | and tea th an Incey material of fine fabric ften making it n fabrie or work « ar or mo coneary to ver it to get It out. eclally true with pina made of} or silver and used to fasten acey parte of waints This trouble can be 1 1 if a small pearl button fs slipp before it is pushe fabric. The button} the coiled part of the pin and effectually prevents ep tanglement, Ko wily Modern cremation originated in 1566, The state of New for Woodrow Wilson mary. Jersey went at the pri- Sis Hopking is dramatized from the book of the same name, and can be bought, of ordered, at any |first-class book store, The moon's mean distance from the earth, center to center, Is 238,850 miles, ” The total numbe July accidents, f otherwina, 1,603 in 1911 tomatoes, or cheum- bers, make an excellent bleach for the faee and hands. vr & Mason dies in good standing and the wife is too old to work she is taken care of by the Masonic order, Pure unscented vaseline, mas- gaged into the sealp, fa one of the beat hair producers, and preventive for falling hair, known, A HAPPY CHILD IN A FEW HOURS When Cross, Sick, Feverish, Tongue Coated or Bilious Give Delicious “Syrup Mother! look at the tongue! see! if it ts coated. If your child Is Hatless, drooping, isn't eating well,| is restless, doesn't eat heartily or/ is cross, trritable, out of sorts with everybody, stomach sour, feverish, bad; haa stomachache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or is full of cold, it means the little one's) stomach, liver and 30 feet of bow els are filled with poisons and clogged up waste and need a gen tle, thorough cleansing at once. Give @ teaspoohtul of Syrup of Figu, and in a few hours the foul, decaying constipated matter, undi gested food and soor bile will gent ly move on withont nausea, griping or weakness, and you will surely have a well and smiling child short- hy. With Syrup of Figs you are not drugging your children, being com pose@ entirely of luscious figs, sen- na and aromatics it cannot be harmful, besides they dearly love it delicious taste. Mothers should always keep Syrup of Figs handy. It is the only stomach, liver and bowel cleanser and regulator needed—a little given today will save a sick child tomor- row, Full directions for children of all ages and for grownups plainly printed on the package. Ask your druggist for the full name, “Syrup, of Figs hd Elixir of Senna,” pr y the Cailfornia Pig Syruj is the delicious tasting, genuine old reliable, Re- fuse anything else offered, | milk # dish is called jacto frappe. SRR RR em om me really a soir Take oak 1% Suic milk My husband is disappointed in life that [ can not have | eggs but whenever I want to take one he Turn the Looking twenty Justify Has Been jyoung friends as too old for them} to be turned down possibly. into \a frozen dainty, The It is ik lee eream. of good sour milk poundg lof sugar, 2 eges, the of 3 létfons, 2 tablespoons or t cup fruit juice, To add the ar straip into the lee dnd salt crank lk begine to tre emon julee ip of Jui turn the freezer difficult to turn er and atiy the n the au th cream ally until then add ring and fresh fruit constantly remove the lacto well, Re and allow to stand for an hour ) before serving. a0 nd flav from |GETTING GRAY, EH—OLD MAN, AND BALD, TOO. years older than ua really are. Reing made the uehing stock of your friends and Old Age beca grey hairs} associated with old | simply it le very humiliating to be grey i bald when olther your age doesn't! to be classed and set fe by your in jYour appiloation for that new pont | ton MAN was WANTED. Get the don't let them get the best of you. because a YOUNG-LOOKING bast of the grey hairs SE HAY'S HAIR HEALTH, You Le its T The Week bine} Pic Brin@ thf ad with ‘ Canova Stucito ret vee THR COVEY Wer wasnt AUNDRY ©o. Inoréesing their ee nyigen beat Bh Ladies’ Kid Gloves Main Floor, Extra special tomorrow dozen Ladics' two-clasp Gloves, in black, brown, and white. Cheap at Tomorrow's price, BDAIE cedevocessnees 25 Kid tan $1.00. 59c NEW FALL HEADGEAR For Ladies, Misses and Chil- dren. Swell uptodate cre ations, combined with char- acter and refinement, are be ing opened and placed on dig play daily. All are being sold at our small-profit-4ystem prices Tomorrow we will show the NEW CORBICAN HATS in plaids, etc; also the newest styles in the “Johnny Boy” Hats. Just the thing for outing, street and school wear, La- dies’ sizes as well as misses’, New Velvet Shapes, New Beaver Shapes, New Silk PI Shapes, New Felt Shapes, In Black and Colors, all at popular prices, Trimmed Hats For Dress and Street wear, Nearly 1,000 to select from at priges from $2.75 up, includ- ing a @plendid selection of New York and Chicago pat- terns, besides a very repre sentative collection from our own work rooms. Special orders executed on short notice. 75¢ and 85c ‘Fancy Silks 39c Yard Tomorrow—Main Floor, Hundreds of yards of fancy striped silks in neat little de- sigds; most all colora in the lot—Messalines, taffetas, fou- lards pling, etc, Special for t w only ae _ Another I Bargain Main Floor, 2,500 yards of Embroidery Jdgings and Insertions, from 2% to 5 inches wide. The musiin alone is worth the Tomorrow morning they on % ustomer. Embroideri and 18inch Flouncings, worth 250, for, per yard 1,000, .yards of nd one of the s bargains of the season, on sale tomorrow at, ay * ee eeevoeserersorooososoroers * SMALL HAT WITH QUILL ROSETTE. PUNCE EOS 6066 6 66 0.6b0466- 650 661 SPECIAL Kt RDAY THE UPSTAIRG®* STORE 1 The Ladies’ Ready Tailored Suit Shop 2/0 Lumber Kachange Bide Ave. and Semeen St Lepper’s School of Physical Education self always ¢€ man | poration an¢ felt j observing ecent tr Sulting one's fashion ts not ashion aver ilustrated, well down on the he ard a ample in the crown highly piled Irews trimming consists of straight quills, placed at the right and circled at the base with} toque mode|quilis of the same hue, curled to the task of the|form a unique rosette. ts fair that jen will they find a really | th new smal! hat season But offset this there are a variety trimmings in t which should make to suppose have their t w roon yle two ni b to ing clubs, Odd Vellows® BRAN FOR HEALTH cases of indigestion red by of bran is & general It is inexpe reach of alm | with cinnamon. Cream butter and have | sugar togethe ir milk and | white flour and baking powder, add the | cup of nuts and fruit, add bran, add the |soda dissolved in cup of hot water andjsalt, and cinnamon. Stir well. | every | Put in legreased gem pans and| {pee in a slow oven 20 minutes. ve id 80) sift been ¢ daily us iliver and 4 tion within the omekeeper. One of the mout wait oe at sem TN INFANCY OF lowing leup or th f brown) of an water teaspoon ot baking { hot fige cut fine Flay as dog- ostrich of your bone made the persistent \ ald sive to 19744,,,807 shade, we bu nix thre teaspoonful ¢ cup raisins ations, Even so late n of Charles IL it was 1 for guests to take their forks to a banquet at he did this lord mayor's wder cups modern int as the the cus own knives and when he went to the feast in the Guildhall In the reign chamberlain bras and dates ods sne-half teaspoonful of wal i 227 to 235 LUMBER EXCHANGE BUILDING. the lord it neces for previous had 4 All Kin } of t wet Ren r we save You money sult linings and all sup- ShamekBros. 227 to 235 Lumber Exchange Ballding. mplete lining: ave added a silk and satin and resh the the required be ine f 4 leary to Cut Flowers rs ce Paris ann mg od € Florist ery two 4 bones under the 218 Pike | Street. ’ not arrival not to goblet to ev o throw the able, nor to lick velr han one shea, not their fingers! to take out} beef tallow Use hot ink stains. Continental Corn Starch, 10e packages for Se. Saturday Rubber Gloves, 35e per pair. In Druggist Florida Wa' big bottles. 15¢ each. Main Aisle, We agents for May Manton Patterns. t, are Corsets for Saturday Special display and sale of Warner's, Kabo and R. & G. Corsets, medium and low bust, long hip, with four hose sup- porters, made of splendid Cou- til or Royal Rib ma $1 00 terial, Price. —Third Floor. Paper onty. |} Sundries Dept Second Avenue, Beiween Spring and Seneca Main 6035 Ladies, Read This And you will immediately make up your mind to be here to- morrow morning when the doors open. Listen, we have just received about 3,000 samples of fine Plauen Embroideries from a big Importing House in New York These are the Euro- pean samples they select from and all are 8 inches long. There are 18 and 27-inch Flouncings, 5 and T-inch Bands and Inse tions, worth 50c to $1.50 per yard; splendid for yokes, sleeves, cuffs, medallions, ete. and the price is, each At our Embrotdery $9 9 8 Our Price on a Special Group of ° Coats Like Other Houses Show at $15.00 and $17.50 Wonderful style and value elements are embodied in this splendid collection of new Fall Coats we are selling at $9.98 per garment We no doubt buy and sell more coats at this price than other dealers, simply because it has been our experience that a great number of Ladies set aside this sum as the amount they wish to pay for a coat, Hence our specializing in garments at this price. The materials are beautiful qualities in chinchillas, cheviots, German zibelines and mixtures in more than twenty mod- els in full and three-quarter lengths, including the stunning “Johnny Coats” and other leading models of the season. Don't fail to see these “record-making” Coat Bargains at Two grand good lots of the very latest and up-to-date cre- ations, Over 50 styles to se- lect from in each lot. Lot 1—worth up to 75¢ 25 for, worth up to Let $1.25, for, each New Coats for Girls Worth up to $7.50 $4.98 These are stylish, that will give the of service during the rainy season —and every single garment is brand new and right up-to-the-minute in style. We are showing more than 4650 of these Coats for girls in sizes from 4 to 14 years, at prices rang- ing from $1.98 to $15.00, but we have arranged for tomorrow's buy- ers a special group, consisting of Coats worth up to $7.60, that will be sold at this very low $4 98 price of ong Kimonos Worth $1.50&$1.75 98c Another Panton London Sale of Long ‘ated At the last sale we had at this price we sold 548 Kimonos. This special assortment is even better than the last. Beautiful, new pat- terns, in flannelettes, crepes and challis, Light, medium and dark shades, All sizes 34 to 44, WOMEN'S DRESS AND STREET BOOTS, $3.00 ee These boots are really in the § class. Yow'll see that at once. Their clean cut lines will appeal to you if you lke good shoes. Tans, pat- ents and the serviceable gun metals, All Goodyear welts, Cuban heels, perfect-fitting Buttoners and Bluchers. $3.50 value for $3.00. HIGH-CUT SHOES FOR GIRLS. Made of splendid dressy models greatest amount quality - $3 and $4 Silk Petticoats $1.98 Plain and fancy messaline and taffeta silk petticoats from our regular $3.00 and $4.00 stock. In the plain colors are blacks and about a dozen other shades. Beautiful patterns and colors in the fanci Extra quality silk and guaranteed, gun metal—the one storm proof shoe material, Cut full and high; adorned “with pat- ent cuff. Note the low prices: Sizes 2% to 6 for large eis $2.25 Sizes 12 to large 3 for motes 2,00 Sizes 8% to 11% 1 75 for children. . . ' Girls’ Lace Shoes, good plump viel kid stock; $1.50 values, Sizes 12 to 2, Special per paly . 98c BOYS’ C. 's OES $1.25, Here is where values speak louder than words, 100 pairs of Boys’ Calf Shoes in all sizes from 13% to large 5%. Special tomorrow .., 1, 25

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