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pitiows, you have and oe up inside ‘a bdilious and oy sleep. will bead clear for months. morning with gent! inactive liver and ou need Cas- carets sure. a throb an your head, a bad mouth, your eyes ‘skin is yellow, with dark yeur eyes; your lips are No wonder you feel ugly Titempered. Your sys of bile not properly what you need is & — Don't continue nuisance (o yourself ‘who love you, and don't harsh physics that irrh ag Remember that of the stomach, liv ines can be quickly thor o—they work while ‘A 10-cent box from your keep your liver and ; stomach sweet and chil to take Cascarets, be- od taste good and never or sicken- Cabinet Pictures vale SPECIAL ‘That Please” Week Only. $4 ad with you pva Studio Third Ave. Your Kodak W as dom ostrich ot your TO ORDER LADIES’ suITs _ $25.00 TO $32.50 Ladies’ Tailored Suit Shop the diseases that Doctor treats are: sneceasfully Heart Trouble, Dyspepsia, ¥ bago, Neural Trouble, Rheumatism, Headaches, Bright's ly Insomnia, Kid- La Grippe, Female Trou ti Lam! and Stomach Trouble. 15 Peoples Bank Bidg. AND PIKE, m| mistaken, and som: Letters to Cynthia Grey i a oe a a a * * . FOR HALLOWEEN * a 2 2 2 Dear Miss Grey: Will you please tell me some games to be played at a Halloween party for folks between 20 and 30 Also, how to trim the house, and what refreshments to serve, Suggest some thing that is not too expensive. Thanking you, ALL A--Crepe paper Vines with the blossoms and pumpkins hanging from them make a very attractive decoration, A large stack of corn stalks and bunches of autumn leaves and berries are also very dec orative, Why don't you tell fortunes instead of playing games? This ean be done In several different ways, One way {a to have a real or imitation Kale garden, and have each guest go into it blindfolded and pick a leaf of kale, If he gets a short, broad leaf, ao will his bride be; if a long, narrow leaf, she will be tall and slender; if the leaf is bitter to the taste, she will have an ugly disposition; if sweet, she will be kind and loving. If you have a fireplace you can have some person who knows the guests, dressed as a witch, sitting by the fire, which should be burning very low, and no light except that of a few jacko'lanterns, tell their fortune in the most ridiculous way, That is, to ma’ lives turn out in a most unusual and different way than tb For refreshments, serve cake, coffee, sandwiches, nuts, fruit or candy ® , wise, sho will “stick around. ®/} man, you are a fool! Instead % | joy life with the young we *®/} a higher plane, a pleasure w eek e eee eee RAR HER! tho mothers can also participate eo Dies lees.” Dee you,| Hold her high tn your estimation | through your columna, find some| Keep your love for her elevated, If } one that has seen « clam crawl? you must go to h through your Years ago I saw a clam crawling| OWN cholce, you should, In justice to | with his hinge straight up, sliding) humanity, give the young woman, Jon the endges of the shell like a| future mother of our r a | pair of runners, the shell being part-| Chance to choose for herself whieh }ly open, and the tough, muscular| direction she wishes to travel. | wedge part of the body stuck out, JACK manipulating itself along in a slid - " | ing manner. Tt could go fast enough! NOTICE TO READERS to beat a snail in a race }® All letters cannot be an | I have never met any one who has/ @ swered in the paper, and many seen such a thing, therefore, all to) ® are without name or address. n to think Lam # A stamped, self-addressed en- go far enough|® velope always brings a prompt to insist I had a “pipe dream,” 1f| # reply. CYNTHIA GREY, no one but me ever aaw a clam! * crawl, I shall always know it is a gaye yee fact, but would like to find some fone who could verify that state ment WEBFOOT. | REAR ARAAAR RAH oung * en * CAN A CLAM CRAWL? * | whom I tell this se eaeeeeee ee ee Cynthia’s Answers to Many Questions | RRARRR ARERR RRR *. * * JACK, TO YOUNG MEN * The 14th wedding anniversary is * ® | ivory RERRRARARRRRRREEE <aionlin Dear Miss Grey: To read the let John D. Rockefeller was born at ters on Cynthia Grey's page of The! Richford, Tiogo county, N. J., July Star nowadays, one would think the! 8, 1839 young men had turned traitors to - - the young women and were seeking) A non-citizen may obtain property their downfall, remembering that, of} by mortgage and can will it to old, man has been a constant pro-| Whom he pleases tection to woman, and, correctly, he « | should be, It is rather difficult to| It is necessary to vote where one comprehend such a change in soct-| bas registered. In case of nomreg ety. The mothers of the nation feel) istration, he is deprived of his vote. that they cannot trust their dangh-| ters with the young men, and, judg ing from the remarks men on the | Shaw, streets make to girls and about) Fifth ay girls, one would conclude the moth-/ ers’ fears were well founded. Young man, take a tumble to yourself, You imagine yourself brave and smart to throw familiar remarks at « young woman as she ERA | passes you on the street corner) To remedy olly hair, shampoo ev. where you are occupied killing your-| ¢TY two weeks with pure soap, and self with cigarettes and weaving, the week between use a dry sham | cobwebs in your deluded brain. You! Peo of powdered orris root are not brave, nor amart. You are| The address of Anna Howard uffragist leader, in 1706, 606 New York City, N. ¥ To remove pitch from woolen goods, sponge well with kerosene and bang out doors until it has | evaporated, THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1912. GAMES FOR HALLOWEEN HOSTESSES |. Halloween ts one of the jollionst | festivals of all the year. | Two hu d years ago it was customary to build ho fires on the bills, allhallows eve, to show that sacred rites were being observed, and therefore a huge fire of logs is an interesting attribute to a halloween party Of course, if you only have a gas log it will answer the purpose, but it will enhance ite attractiy na to flank it with impishly shaded red candles. Large red and white ears of corn are named by the girls and placed over the doorways, and the man who firat pa under the corn the pposed to} » life partner of the girt| od it Bobbing for apples is an old stunt, but a halloween party would} be Incomplete without It | Place lots of lighted candies of | all colors in an o} window —-nanm ing each one, The one burning the jongest bears the name of the one who will be the truest The raisin race |x a good stuit Thread a raisin on a yarddong string. One person participates at joach end, The one who succeeds }in reaching the raisin firwt by chew ing the string will be the first to | be married. Try to thread a needle while sit ting upon a round bottle laid lengthwaye upon the floor, The one who can perform this accom plishment will take a flying trip to | the altar, ‘IN FAVOR OF “MOTHERS’ PENSIONS” Foss has recently signed a| bill for the appointment of a com |mission in Massachusetts to con sider the advisability of granting pensions to mothers who are) | widows, Mra. Henrietta C, Com grove, of Joplin, Mo, is said to have been the first person to agi ltate the question of mothers’ pen sion. She is state vi president for Missouri of the Southern Con-| ference of Women and Child Labor ‘WHAT WE'LL WEAR. Moleskin is one of the fashion lable furs that trims beautifully with ermine. This fur combination is to! be much worn in scarf and muff) neta | | Maltese crochet lace ts being re-| vived. it makes a dainty edge | where a stout Hnen one ix desired. | Large, round buckles of ivory-| | white cellulold are much used, and | with these are sometimes worn two-| jinch belts made of a network of round white celluloid beads. Some of the moxt exquisite mod-| ern point lace ia made in the Vienna | schools by trained peasant labor. | | A TRYING SITUATION | Little Jean, aged 4, was noticed Gov a coward and ignorant. You are a j coward, because you have not the | ‘The Philadelphia Americans|Tubbing her nose repeatedly, | | (Athletics) and the New York Na Jean,” said her mother, “What tionals (Giants) played for the; ™&kes you rub your nose #0 mu nerve to approach the woman In | the atmosphere where she rightful- ly belongs and delight in helping) | her to remain there, instead of try- | ing to drag her down to your level, | Only to leave her stranded. Can you blame the mothers for wanting to watch you’ Oh, no, you ITTLE, WASH. 4 SEATTL E'S DANCING PALACE. and University. Per Couple. nd.” Well, if the “old lady’ don't want “the old lady” “sticking|, jchampionship of the world’s series last year. Philadelphia won four games to two, Satin crepes are as great favor ites as satin charmeuse for day and evening gowns. Sticking at it has won many a thing that wasn't worth the effo Why, mother dear,” was th ply. “I have an iteh that woa't stay | wcratehed / } A high-priced box at tho opera seems lesa expensive to some people | than the cheapest church pew | . : 52 } Charter Oak Heaters. Modern | Fornlture Company *7” Concentration Sale HOFFMAN CLOAK & SUIT CO. TO DISPOSE OF THEIR IMMENSE STOCK AND WILL IN THE FUTURE HANDLE Tailor-Made Suits Exclusively Twenty-two departments, consisting of complete lines of Dresses. Gowns, Shirtwaists, Silk Waists, Petticoats, Hats African Plumes, Men's and Women’s Raincoat , Furs, etc., to go on sale tomorrow at sacrifice prices to move them out quickly and make way for the change in business Hoffman's success with “Hoffman's System” Man-Tailored Suits causes the change, We have our plans perfected to open the largest exclusive Tailored Suit House on the Coast as soon as we can dispose of the general stock of wom- en's and children’s garments now on hand, A sale that will be long remembered in Seattle. A bargain festival that will bring joy to the hearts of clothes-loving women, OPEN AT 9 O'CLOCK TUESDAY MORNING. Now is the time to stock up with Holiday Presents for little money. $15 Char- meuse Dresses $10 Ladies’ Raincoats $25 Long $4 Messaline Silk Coats $2.50 Petticoats $15.00 Serge Skirt $15 Johnny Coats $40 Char- meuse Dresses $22.50 $15 Lingerie Dress $3.95 $35.00 Silk Opera Cape Petticoats $15 Black Voile Skirt $5.00 Waists $35 Tailor- Made Suits $15 Voile Dresses $6.50 Messa- line Petticoats $2.45 $4.00 Silk Waists $35 Novelty Mixture Coats $22.50 $30 Chiffon Party Dress $18 Silk Fou- lard Dress Serge Dresses $7.65 $2.00 House Dresses $1.50 Lin- gerie Waists $15 Chiffon Silk Waist $4.00 $40 Broad- cloth Coats $15.00 Men's and Women’s Slipons $7.95 $18.50 $15 Blazer White Coat $12.00 Party | $4.50 House Dress Dresses $30.00 Tailor Made Serge $15, 00 a Suits $35 Tailor Made Suits $22.50 Men's Wear Blue $1 2.50 Serge Suits African Plum Hundreds of other specially priced garments in new seasonable assortments that we haven't room to mention. $10.00 Plumes ... $20.00 Plumes . $30 Plumes ... -.- $5.00 $10.00 -$15.00 $7.00 Plumes . $5.00 Plumes . $3.00 Plumes .. $8 and $10 Roughneck Sweaters $3.45 and $4.95 $10,000 Stock of Furs at One-Third to One-Half Off Brewster’s Millions” at the Seattle Theatre This Week Bailey & Mitchell Put | On Big Production At Popular Prices FINE CAST, TOGETHER WITH | LAVISH SCENERY, INSURES DRAMATIC TREAT FOR PATRONS ii nes Specia Bargain Tonight Price 25¢ aT THE BIG STORM SCENE IN THE THIRD ACT EGINNING tonight the Bailey & Mitchell stock company will present that most laughable of all recent comedies, “Brewster's Millions,” a play that has literally made millions laugh. After the production of “Salvation Nell,” which closed last night after a highly successful week, it is not necessary to tell the patrons of the Seattle Theatre the sort of plays the Bailey & Mitchell company produces. It is the aim of the management to give road shows at popular prices, and nothing is lacking in either cast or scenery to make “Brewster’s Millions” just as good as was “Salvation Nell.” Bailey and Mitchell's production of “Brewster's Millions,” with a powerful cast and spec ial scenery, will be the first play under the new policy, which opens Monday night, October 21, ‘Brewster's Millions,” a real live comedy, needs no introduction to Seattle audiences, i u Pany reads like a page from the highest class dramatic register. and the whole production is described as one of the most successful vehicles that the stage has seen in many years. lul third act scene. which shows Brewster's beautiful yacht before and after a great storm. This scene is so real that a great many imagine they are on board a moving ship. receiving all the effects except seasickness. tailey and Mitchell will The personnel of the com- Special attention is called to the won- exhibit to the patrons of this theatre an artistic production of strength and value, PRICES: EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT MONDAY, 50, 30, AND 20 CENTS ij MONDAY NIGHT IS SPECIAL BARGAIN NIGHT—THE BEST SEATS FOR 25c. —____NEXT WEEK: “MRS. WIGGS OF THE CABBAGE PATCH”— ALL MATINEES —THURSDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, 25c