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1} APRINDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, GAS, } SOUR STOMACTH---PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN In five minutes your Stomach feels fine—Surest, quickest Stomach doctor in the world, fe! t want a slow remedy ;get @ large fifty.cont case from any stomach is bad an|/drag store and then if anyone one—or a hari il one=-| should eat something which doesn't fs too valuable; you! sree with them; if what they eat dajure it with dra ugs.|lies Like lead, ferments and sours in ts noted for its |and forms gas; causos headache, 2 £ or ti i rene ving relief; its harinless.|dizginess and nausea; eructations eat Me certain unfall action|of acid and undig food-—re- pest ing ick, sour, Kasay |member as soon as Pape's Diapep- a Its millions of cures in jain comes ia contact with dyspepsia, gastritis stomach all such distress e stomach troubles haslishes, Its promptness, certainty on the world over, [and ease in overcoming the worst it famous this perfect stomach doc-} stomach disorders is a revelation ito those who try it your home—Keop 1 handy [to th wal Smt eo AY YOU SAW IT IN THE STAR. Second Avenue, Between Spring and Seneca Main 6035. ’s Sundries S ggist’s Sundries Sale a Mency oval box with shaker top, Talcum Powder, in assorted " Ihe seller. 5c odors; 266 seller, 19c Shaving Soap—The }| Sanito! Goods Speciai—Sanitol always 4c Face Cream, Sanitol Face Pow- tol Talcum Powder, Take your chotce Thursda: 12¢ 3 Cakes Toilet Soap in carton, Special, per carton . You Seen the Last Shipment 66 99 of New “Johnny” Coats mixtures, made up in four models in the new $9.98 Coats; tans, browns and grays. All sizes. J Third Floor. You don't need to pay a fancy price to secure that perfect fit comfort Priced corsets possess these qualities. Our corsetieres will Pleased assist you in selecting the correct model and giving MODEL NO. 1—A splendid cor. set for the average figure. Me hose supporters attached. The material is a good quality coutil, lace. Price MODEL NO. 2—A good style for reason why « large woman need be uncomfortable, This splen- with Jong skirt, wide front stay with extra strong hook below porters attached. Material of extra quality coutil, embroid- Talcum Powder in Bailey's Pound Package of Best aeasseeeeee Spectal ee var der, Sanitol Cold Cream, Sant- @MOR «0.6.6 ees $12.00 and $15.00. Pure wool materials {n the jwery woman demands in a corset. Even our moder. fitting. Plenty of roomy fitting parlors. dium bust and long skirt, four with trimming of the stout figures—there is no did corset has medium low bust clasps; four heavy hose sup ery trimmed. Price ODEL NO. 3—For medium full figure. One of our latest models with double material be low the waist line, extra hook below front clasps, six extra quality hose supporters attach- ed, and extra quality material throughout. Neatly trimmed in embroidery. $2 00 Price ...... Candy Special 200 tbs. of assorted candies —Bon Bons, Candy Straw- berries, Jelly Rolls, Peanut Chips, Candy Gooseberries and other good kinds, regu- lar 20¢ per Ib. Per 5 half pound, Wednesday. JC Beat Hand-rolled Chocolates, including nut tops and fancy flavors. Special 5 per half pound ct t-weight cotton ite tights; odds worth up to 50c. 18¢ New Belt Buckles Main Floor. A beautiful display of new Belt Buckles and Pins in both plain and oxidized finishes—many Special different mountings, such as Reveres and Col- imitation turquoise, amethyst vols linen and pique | and topaz, that are hard to dis- Bint beautiful, new line tinguish from the real thing. Teeelved by express—well Four grades Morth 6e; on sale 35c | 15c, 19c, 25c, 35c Five hundred Stocking Darners given away. We will give ab- 738 free one Ideal Stocking Darner to each of the first five hun ne ladies presenting this coupon, properly filled out. ‘This is for opal of advertising our new Main Store, which will be the ‘ing Machine Store on the Pacific coast. Owing to unavoidable delay it was impossible to have our open © Wednesday, as advertised ing rn” New store will be formally opened SATURDAY, OCTOBER } upon the crust. eoeeee oe SOCCHCC HCE HO SOOOE BY MAYGELLE MORTIMER Paris, June 26. It goes without saying that the separate coat will be the one “high apot” of the winter fashion. Every house is showing them, even con servative Worth and Doucet, who are of the “standpatters who lag behind the “progressives” about as far as do the “standpat tera” and “progressives” In our na tonal politica Hy the way, those same politics [TALKS BY THE S Bedroom Ventilation Every person should that {t {s easential to ventilate bedroom properly. Impurities the body are thrown off while peo ple sleep exactly as much as when they are waking Yet scores men and women forget apparently that there is any need of an exit for the tmpure breath, or that it ts quite as essential to have a source of fresh air as tn the waking hours. On retiring. the windows in the bedroom should be raised from the bottom and lowered from the top. If there are two windows, raine one from the bottom and lower should be toward the side from which the wind ts blowing. Tho} lowered one should be on the other) people who want the best, but who sometimes are not !\#ben4 side. If the room bas a window or win- dows on one side only, it ts oftes| retailed for. The National Piano Manufacturers have) necessary to open the transom on the other side of the room or per haps leave the door open a few inches to create a current of air * FALL DRESS HINTS DIRECT FROM PARIS. * the} other from the top. The one raised | THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 191 POCOOCOC SHOES SH OO eee eeeeoeoeoeoesd SeKkankakike wn * ” i ee ae 2 Dear Miss Grey: 1 have r wanted to adopt a baby, and asked r told her I am not ause she loves me as she is very sensitive i never will hurt her lots of people have said she looks Hike you to tell me if | am doing A.--I think you should know t age and keep in touch with thelr duty is to get the adoption i ee ed ee ed Dear Mias Gre: teach the child to call you “mother, pression be with it each day as it save it many a heartache, SARA * * *® ADOPTED CHILD BOASTS e * OF TWO MAMMAS *® * * - — SEER REECE EEE EHD jare being talked about much over Dear Mies Grey When one here, the French designer being | adopts a child it is well to remem quick to grasp any national devel-| ber two old sayings: “Honesty is opment that he can use to exploit] the best policy,” and “Murder wil! his wares for the American, jout.” Parents are often called upon All this fs in explanation of the/to tell untraths to others as well as t use of navy blue serge with /the child and I live in fear of the t hes of scarlet and white. truth being found out These deluded foreigners seem! One little child | know proudly to think that because we are in the! poasts of “two mammas, one in midst of @ natiogal political cam-!ifeayen and one at home. We palgn we will want to wear red,/nave all read of the little adopted I white and blue |givl, who told her friend that ber we 2 = \mamma took her because she want ed ber while the friend's mamma took her oecause she had to. An adopted child is a welcome ehild d when they reach the age of understanding they will feel TAR DOCTOR WORD CAME LATE | LAST NIGHT Here is what will prove a genuine bonanza to everyone in Seattle who is in need of a real fine high- |grade piano. This is going to be an opportunity for |able to pay the costly prices that the best pianos are | just received a carload of the most magnificent as- |sortment of high-grade pianos that ever left a piano The temperature of the occupled| factory, but unfortunately, nearly every one of these panning 2 tates a ag we Pd | beautiful pianos had some marks or other on the cases, | but the interiors are in perfect condition and there- grees Fahrenbett even in winter. “Tongue Tied” Shoes The leather tongues of laced shoes have a bad habit of slipping down into the shoe by wrinkling The wrinkles cause more or leas pain and sometimes raise a blister on the ankle and instep. To keep the tongue always in place have a shoemaker fix a hook like those used in lacing the shoe, in such a position that the lacings cross under it near the top of the shoe, If the lacings are always caught under this hook in lacing up the shoe the tongue will never slip. TWO NOVEL APPLE RECIPES Birds’ Nests. Put into a buttered baking dish 6 or 7 pared and cored apples. Mix to a smooth paste with cold milk, 5 tablespoons flour, and add the yolk of 3 eggs well beaten. Then add 1 teaspoon salt and the whites of the eggs woll beaten, Then more milk, using 1 pint ir all, Pour this mix- ture over the apples and bake one hour in a moderate oven. Serve with any good sauce. Apple Jonathan. Work butter into bread dough un- til it is quite soft, Then with it line the sides of a baking dish Heap the center with pared, cored, sliced apples and place a thick layer of the paste on top. Bake well, then lift off the crust and turn it upside down on a second dish. Into the apples stir sugar and butter, with spice if desired, and spread Eat hot. NOTICE TO READERS * =All letter cannot be an ® * swered in the paper, and many ® |® are without name or address. ¥ \® A stamped, self-addressed en- * rompt & * |& velope always brings 4 | ® reply. CYNTHIA GREY. i* Make Of Machine | The Ballard high school debaters |met yesterday and elected the fol- lowing officers for the ensuing | year: President, George Kastner; vice president, Winnifred Lake; treasurer, Henry Hanson, Shingle reporter, Robert Lee. SEWING MACHINE CO. ‘ation—1424 Third Av., Near Pike—New Location fore each piano is secured by the factory ten-year guarantee. You know that a slight damage on a cheap article does not amount to much one way or the other, but when costly and exclusive, choice, high-grade pianos like these are even slightly marred it makes a tre- mendous difference in the selling of them. So that this lot is going to be sacrificed at reduced prices that will take them off our floors at once. We have had this matter up with the railroad company for two or three days, and it was only late last night, just in time for us to get in this announcement for this morning’s paper, that a settlement of the claim was agreed upon. You will get the benefit of all this. Come right in and pick any one of them out, pay down whatever you can spare and then any small amount each month will do for the balance. At the same time, you re- ceive all the reductions that the railroad company have allowed us in our claim. The delay in our business which this has caused has created a most awkward situation for us. Other big shipments are coming in, and the store is full of pianos, which all means that we are mercilessly using the hammer on every price. Then, again, there is a | pianos here, which we have n trading in on sales of our Player Pianos. To those who will come in at once we will now sell on monthly payments or for cash a dandy Ebony Emerson for only $75. Fine Ma- hogany Richmond for only $90, a Fischer Piano for only $108, a $650 Knabe Piano for $315, a $575 Weber Piano for $327, a $650 Ellsworth Piano for $355, a genuine $600 Bennet Piano for only $318, and besides, remember these are brand new pianos. Then, again, there is a long list of others at $95, $98, $126, $168 and a great many more that we could tell you about if we had the space and time. The best thing is to come right into the National Piano Manufacturers’ Cut Price Salesrooms, 823 Third avenue, near Marion, one block below the Or- pheum Theatre and opposite the Central building, the Manufacturers’ own salesrooms, direct from the Fac- tory to Home. During this sale we will discontinue renting, as we will not have any time to spare from the Sales De- partment. Remember the place, National Piano Manufac- |turers, 823 Third avenue, near Marion. Seattle’s busiest piano salesrooms—because we sell the best and sell for less. AM | DOING RIGHT TO MY FQSTER-CHILD? oWp mother Wight years ago I went to a children's home and saw there a little! baby two months old that was very ill, A lady had adopted it, but} brought it back because it was sick. I loved that child the minute 1] Y it, #0 waked the matron if { could have it, | knew nothing of its ents, and (hey knew nothing of me, #o | never had any papers made} 1 nursed the child until she be sweet child, and I love her #0 much knows she is not my own but my husband and my par right from your point of view movements may do as she pleases, stay with you or go to her people. There are very few cases whore a child should not know that the adopted parent is not its own. In the majority of cases, no matter how well guarded, some one tells the child, and the older it is, the greater the heartache. If divulged by others at the unreasonable age, it Is often disastrous As things stand, the parents can take the cbild from you at any time, and if anything happens to you, the child cannot inherit. Your ed * ADVISE “CHILDLESS WOMAN” TO TELL ADOPTED CHILD *& * In anawer to “A Childless Woman,” I would say, ‘Ki. age before you let it know that you are “| child needs to call her mother; but ig accumulation of used | ed * ao * tae ek tm | several answers to the woman who| if she should tell it she was not ite came well and healthy, and now she her own mother, and, really, I think| so much, and [| am afraid it might) Do you think | am doing | rig #, and | I would like me, Now, Misa Grey, B. 8, K he particulara of the child's parent for at the age of 18 she! papers, which make you her legal} ee ed don't wait till it is any certal ot ite mother, Let that im- In doing this, you will LC. grows up. jerateful toward those who took them in and fed and clothed them when they were strangers. It is just as ¢ to fill a moth ers place when a child knows as when {t doesn’t, and one feels much jmore easy fn mind for not living ie. Yours for the truth, INTERESTED. Se ie de te te tne de ee eed * * * LOVE IS NOT LOST BY * * TELLING ADOPTED CHILD® * * EERE REE EH Dear Misa Grey In reference to |the woman who asks for help to de c about adjusting relations be herself and adopted child |My suggestion may help, although there have been other thoughts. She intends being as real mother Jin spirit as though she were mother jin flesh. It is right that she shoul | wish to be called “mother,” and the prevent her telling facts as soon as it is that need not | | nd and before oth-| | | | the child the able to tnd ers can do eo. If done with under letanding, the explanation can be given so that the love of the ret tionship which ts the reality need Inever be lost ONE WHO UNDERSTAND. | ee WHO DID WRONG? | * | Pee eee eee eee ee eS j Please give us| CAN 7 \* le Dear Mins Grey lyour advice. There was a home broken up by a young man. He | persuaded the woman to leave her Her husband got a di jvoree. The young man left her. | She remarried her former husband, but she still says she loves the oth-/ er man better than her busband.| There is a baby two years old Now what kind of a man was that |to break up a home? Is be worthy of her love? Also what kind of a! woman was she? Did she do right) jto remarry her former husband, land is she doing right to tell him that she loves the one who broke | up the home? Did the husband do right by remarrying her? He did it for the sake of his child. Who did wrong? They all want to know Your answer will settle this mix-up.) | A.—Right motive, coupled with | | good judgment, Is what determines |the right or wrong of an action. There ts no question but that the | young man and the woman did very | wrong. If the husband took her back for the sake of the child, or for her sake, he did right. If the woman followed the mother-call when she} remarried her husband, she did right; but if she married him be- |cause the young man wouldn't sup- port her, she did a very selfish thing. If each will be governed by prin ciple, by the right and wrong of leach action, happiness will result {Neither should dig up the skeleton lof the past, for its bones will rattle Jevery time, and it {6 not pleasant to hear. If they are kind and thoughtful to each other, true love will come, “Mae,” call up the Florence Crit |tenden Home and you will be taken leare of and a home found for your baby, or if you will send me your Jaddross 1 will find a home for it./ If 1 can help you further, write me again, and send your address THIA GREY Cynthia’s Answers | to Many Questions || Drinking about ten quarts of w: |ter a day is said to produce flesh, For an auto driver's license, ap | ply to the license bureau, City hall To clean a baby's bearskin coat, sponge it with gasoline, rubbing the direction the nap lies, A unique masquerade is to rep. resent a big sunflower, with the face for the center. A large leaf may fall over each arm, and the shirt be rather tight. For hop stains try ether. It dis- solves the green matter in grass and may do the same with the hop stain. Work in the open or tie fumes may affect you, a treaty regarding the Panama canal was ratified in Panama, and December 7th was submitted to the United States for ratification. The Spooner act had 2, Dee. 190: been passed in .anuary, 1903, which authorized the president to make negotiations with Colom bia that would insure the digging of the canal, White ostrich tips and plumes are easily cleaned by using luke- warm water and a pure soap. Rinse in the same temperature of water, and shake until dry, 2,500 IN NIGHT SCHOOLS BALLARD FIELD HOUSE Tho enrollment of the night| Tho Ballard field house has open- schools of Seattle has now reached| ed its winter season with a total of 1,094, that at least 3,000 will be attending! tions have been found for athleties 2,500, By next week [t is expected! enroliment Organtza- the schools ‘this winter. You like BARTELL’S Drug Stores Because You Like His Clerks They make his busi- ness what it is. They give you satisfaction and savings—always. Tomorrow Specials-- Bartell sells for less 50c 50c Syrup of Figs Pape’s Diapepsin 33c 33c $1.00 Re Cascara Pills King’s Dyspepsia Tablets 23c 37e 25c 25e Carter’s Liver Pills Bromo Quinine 13¢ 13¢ 25c King’s Orderlys 15¢ 4-ounce White Pine and Tar 25c 35c Hair Brushes, special .23¢ 75¢ Ebony Back Hair Brushes.... 75¢ 13-Row Bris- tles Brushes .48¢ $1.25 Ebony Back Hair Brushes .......++..-88¢ $2.00 Ladies’ Long Bristle Hair Brushes......$1.58 25¢ Goodyear Combs, Un- breakable Rubber. 40c Combs . 50c Combs.. Renewable Nail Buffers- Polishers— 25¢ Buffers..........18¢ 40c Buffers..........38¢ Hinkel’s Hand Forged Flexible Nail Files— 25c values...........18¢ 3S5¢ values......++0.-e¢ 35¢ About’ half of Castoria Seattle deals at 19¢ some one of my 25¢ stores—it's a big Pure Castor Oil | business of little Nestle’s Food 18¢ savings. 35¢ 50c 50c Horlick’s Malted Milk Borden's Malted Milk 33¢ 34¢ $1.25 Hornbro Seam- Seamless less Elastic Red Rub- Anklets, Leg- ber F gings or Knee- tain caps, made of inge . beat. silk, . css 85c Sani- seeeees 81.89 cary ee eae Sitar White White's Elastic Rubber Leggings, tote ™ Kneecaps or eee Anklets $1.49 $1.50 Lyon Maroon Rub- Abdominal Belts ber Combination Hot Water Bottle and Foun- tain Syringe. .95¢ $2.25 Bartell Special 8-ply Pure Rubber Hot Water BOM 2 eves - $1.89 $2.50 Dr. Stork Whirling Spray $3.00 Paragon Belts...... Safety Seciage.:. He! Re Sees — “AGH He . $1.89 — $3.00 Septol -- 82.98 Whirling Spray COMFORTABLE Springe ...$2.15 TRUSSES 50c Doan’s Kidney Pills 9 ¥ Seeley’ 33¢ i\y Radical Gare. . { Truss 8-ounce size ok Syrup Salicyllates Q (For Rheumatism) 69¢ 8-ounce H. A. J. Haarlem Oil, Asparagus and: onpet $2.50 New Pad Elastic ¢ Dread ss 5 ccs oad $1.85 50c $4.50 Staffen’s Swedish Asparagus Kidney Pills smal a aan ‘$3.75 B38¢ atl elbourne’s $4.35 40c 1-lb. Cans Special room for fitting. Loraine's Corylopsis Taleum 19¢ Bartell Stores — Store No, 2 Store No, 4 610 2nd Ballard Store No. 5 Lady attendant for ladies at Store No. 5, 1406 2nd Av. Quality Store No, 3 Cor. Ist Av. | 1406 2nd ~~ ab or, Ist Av. 406 2nd 4 and Pike Avy. a ee . Store No. 6 ms Cor. Pike and Westlake