The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1912, Page 5

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t for Complexion Ills 2 eC com tor all com % . Tt the skin ne oe ; wax literally aplexion—ab ead partl Hart near gine tee8 ax. 80 gent! pot vou expartence fuvenate even the It is ameared Hetdte retiring an fe with warm water wax habit is a " re economical on fete. Dabit Wrinkled or Mabby im @ aolution made nee of powdered ° EVERY PATIENT. why? Simply be- pune only A-| materials im m maa on our staf! se GF actual experience Adeating from America’s colleges. All work ly done and there is to be had, name!y: and satisfies we have. Don't for- our work is backed up tee. Our prices they ‘t help but dst think, we will jon a regular extra heavy $10 cate $4.09, or one of our NeverStip plates for i you best it? : ©. D. &. (Manager) J Ave, N. W. Cor. Union your velvet if. eatin or felt te Mae Colery, oliver ee wen $. [ unt & f 5 and Su is ndays Ww EDITOR PLEADED WITH MISS BURKE TO DESCRI8E HER NEW CLOTHES Mise Billie Burke in One of Her New Outdoor Costumes EDITOR'S NOTE — Miss Burke 4s called “the be dressed woman on Fifth av. ‘This fall she has some particu larty pretty clothes for hes new plays, so the editor asked her to describe them for Daily Star readers, Miss Burke demurred, at first, modestly considering the subject too personal, but fi- women really wanted to know. This is one of the articles on that topic. BY BILLIE BURKE THE FIRST WORD—! have had a very warm feel- ing for that woman who said: “There ie a satisfaction about being well dressed that religion cannot give.” . “Every man wants every women bat those of bis own family to be extravagant, sald a clever friend to me the other day. And a stu dious one added: “Do you know old be the greatest calans ity ¢ could happen to this coun try? She answered her own question by saying, “Not war, nor pestilence, nor famine, agreement of all women not to bay a new gown for @ year.” Several firma that make pett! coats have failed recently because we don't wear them any more, and you can see where commerce would be if women suddenly stopped buy- log clothes. lam going to tell you about some of mine, becanse the editor thinks it will interest you. First, the Pere the street clothes. I wear white when [ can; it fs my favorite color and I always have two or three white street suits, One that I like very much this winter ts of white corduroy, made with a plain narrow skirt, and Menu for Thanksgiving. Oyster Soup. Celery. Pepper Sance, Roast Turkey with Cranberry Jelly. Mashed Potatoes. Carrots with Cream. Mashed Turnips. Roast Pig. Baked Beans. Chopped Cabbage. Pumpkin Pie, Plum Pudding. Apples. Nuts. Cheese. Tea. Coffee, GERTRUDE JOHNSON, Redmond, W. Good and Reasonable. Cream of carrot soup .. ee Baked chicken, dressing, with cranberry sance . ed potatoes, sweet pota- toes, bread and butter . “abbage salad Jelery, olives . Pumpkin pie, mince ple . Hickory uut cake, fruit, cof- $1.96 tid, OLSEN, Silverdale, Wash. Sounds Good. with rice and —— "40.20 ‘36 Win poand coast o6 it ovat at ae hut faeces, breea gravy, ws arvots, baked © . ‘ ealed, moeh pickies.. pie. Pe 88 Rona! Bi and Onton Baked ‘Sweet Potatoes Boiled White Potan,.»\ Cream Sliver-@kie += Ontons. Salad. Yesaing. May: Grahan THE STAR—SATURDAY; NOVEMBER 16, 1912. Letters to Cynthia Grey ARE THESE YOUR SONS AND DAUGHTERS? Dear Misa Grey We have n reading ye columns, and as you have given so many girls good advic © are coming to you. We want! you to help us, We were asked byi§wo boys to take a walk, and, think: ing it no harm, we went, Now, thé boys who are reaponesible for our) conditions say they will skip the eodniry, What would you do In our) place? TWO TROUBLED GIRLS, A.—Deo not watt, but go at onbe té the Juventie judge, or to the women protective police officers Who are wWwying to safeguard young girls and keep them from just such predioaments as yours, THERE NO WAY OR LAW? Dear Miss Grey: Uwonder if you can tell me how a poor working airl, who works eight hours every day in the week and only receives $5) & week can manage to live on that «mall sum and pay her room and} board, clothe heraelf and have any money at all in her pocket for street) car fare? Is there no way, or law, at all, by which a git] can receive more pay? Is it any wonder eo many girls have gone wrong, when they are #o much in need of money? There are lots of girls who do not willingly | want to go wrong, but on account of such amall wages and living #o high, they are compelled to, It seems as though there should be some way to help a poor working gitl to keep straight. What do you think? Thanking you tn-advance, BELL.” Aowl think it a crime that a woman does not receive for the same work, equally well done, the same pay as a man. There ts absolutely ho reason-why she should not, The thing for women to do, since equal suffrage |s gained, la to see to it that they do; but as long as clerks, stenographers, ete., refuse to coopdrate, they are delaying thelr own good. The printers, waiters and other branches have solved the question to @ big extent and are drawing Jarger salaries than pon-union’ if you will your ad I will help your salary JEALOUS WITHOUT CAUSE ' Dear Mies Grey: | am a married! yo woman and have a baby boy of 8) to read? We thank you very much months, but feel very sorry the way) in advance, and hope you will not my husband treats me. | think us foolish. Please answer as I love bim dearly and make him) soon as you can. a decent wife, We have been mar} TWO MOTHERLESS GIRLS. ried three years and live awful uo -Love at 14 and 15 im not the We are very much in love, Would} u please tell ua Kome good books) A aly ah | alt |e Paes The first “Movies,” taken in 1872. (Reproduced by courtesy of the| Scientific American.) BY GERTRUDE M. PRICE | The moving picture in the latent) | jun |MOVIES INVENTED TO SETTLE! A BET ON HOW HORSE RUNS | | He made the first ‘Movies’ EADWEARD MUYBRIDGE shutters and literally photograp' himself 24 times, Hurdles were set | at given distances for the horse to “The result was a series of es showing each movement horse. The test decided the question that no animal has all its feet off the ground at one time ex cept when jumping. But it also suggested to Muybridge the possi bility of showing pictures in mo- tion He put his 24 separate pictures happy. I know he ts a decent man and he don't mean what be says, | but every dayewhen he comes home |from work he always says he met some nice girls and they winked at him or smiled at him. I know ft tmnt the truth, but you know how 1 ought to feel about it. Sometimes it makes me think he does not care for me or the baby either Bo please, Miss Grey, advise me what todo, READER OF THE STAR. A--~You are a very foolish wom an. While it gets monotonous and sounds silly for a man to tease In a belted coat, the skirts of which are sharply cut away tn front. The same an it je in later-years, and if you girls will send me your address and ask any question you w Just a8 you would your mothers, if you had them, | will answer each one privately and truthfully. *Rebecea of Sunnybrook Farm,” by Kate Douglas Wiagin; “Anne of Green Gables,” by L. M. Montgom. ery, and “Uncle William,” by Jean ette Lee, are dandy books for girla your age. A LETTER OF APPRECIATION Dear Mies Grey Was so gind | and most wonderful chapter in the|into an old fashioned zoetrop, a Kistory of the drama, leylinder-shaped contrivance made It# amazing popularity rests on! of pasteboard, with slits in the up- the fact that, after all, and at heart,| per part, and revolved them rapid- we are all children, to whom the! ly. The experiment was crude, but fascination of a picture never grows) it simulated motion, and proved the oid. jfeasibility of bis idea, and was The moving picture is both an| probably the FIRST moving" pie- accident and a alow growth. It was!) ture. “born,” they tell us, away back in 1872, the result of a wager be- tween Leland Stanford, governor of California, and Kadweard Muy bridge, an Englishman, -as to whether a horse ever has four legs Edison Gets the Money. However, there are many other accounts of the origin of the movie, |The greatest step after the first crude idea came with the’ invention of Photographic ffm, instead of Rich Wife Must Help There is nothing In the law to | prevent a rich widow from getting |a divorcee after she marries again, but when she seeks freedom on a@ charge of non#support, she can't |have her decree, Thin was the rul ling of Judge Graham of San Fran- eiaco re The jodge held that a rich w . Ip marrying, gives a “tacit promise” to help pay ex | penses, Use Cucumber Vinegar Vinegar in which homemade cu cumber pickles have been preserved can be used in salad dressing. The flavor is delicious. TO COOK WITH NEWSPAPERS A fire made wholly of newspa pers im the coal range is sufficient to cook eggs, fry bacon or heat cant soup. Also steak can be broiled over them, its fat feeding the flame. DANCE TONIGHT MINUET HALL 24th and 26th, Wednesday and boc. Ladies rent on open dates. Beacon 1476. Jackson st., bet Central Wet Wash re me Queen Anne 1634 rvice—Rest of Work 20 pounds for 56 for every additional pound, Rough ary 400 per dozen 624 Ninth Av. “DENNY-RENTON” All Clay Products 1007 Hoge Bldg. Original fire bow tnings and repait for ail kinds stoves, ranges furnaces, Water backs and colle put waistcoat is of white kid buttoned with old silver buttons. Ao old silver clasp holds the belt at the waint that sort of way, nevertheless thelio read in Wednesday's Star that man who does do it, is not the you had received another letter guilty one. from the young girl who signed be I have tn mind two old gentiomen.|neme “Bettina,” saying she was off the ground at fhe same time while running. How Movies Started. To settle the or a test was glass plates, for without film mod- ern movies would be impossible. George Eastman developed the film, to make amateur photography pop- but the! a THANKSGIVING MENUS go| At_the Reduced both of the courteous old school ltype, who all their lives have en- joyed this kind of joking, and nolther of them would utter s word against a girl, and always are ready } with a helping hand to those who With It T wear a white plush hat that comes weil over my head, with an old sitver buckle holding a stiff little feather that sticks out, straight behind. For morning wear and for shop ping | have a black and white serge | need it that I like very much, perhaps be Now, if you don't want a walk cause it is so very plain and “tal-|through the divorcee courts, weed lory. The skirt is cut narrow. The} all jealousy from your heart at once, coat is Just a loose sack with a/and be « sensible woman. | velvet collar and white silk revers,|love you and the baby. {With this suit I wear a white hat pps with paradise feathers across the) WHY CAN'T THEY? brim im front. I wear with this fine) Dear Miss Grey In answer to French blouses that torn fn as the | Inquisitor, | wish to say I would neck. Vike to shake on his letter, Why 1 never wear a collar; in fact./can't boys and girls be friends no one wears high collars this fall. without falling in love, or at least The doctors say that to swathe the/think they do after they have gone neck is to imvite throat troubles.| with a girl once or twice? tam glad that the ‘@ agninet the bigh collar (hat m a woman look | would be a friend or chum without ag though her head was disconneet-| thinking I belong to him. Thank ed from her body. We can wear you for your time and space. our necks dressed low and aay|enjoy your letters. “by doctor's orders” Even with BROWN my outing coats and sweaters I do not wear a birch collar, My sweater ia bine white and | wear & with a white hat and a white broad cloth skirt 1 | BYES. |SHALL WE INFORM HIS WIFE? r Mine Grey We are two lgirts working ins grocery store, and there is a swelllooking post The tailored sult Is the only|man an this route. There te s lit thing for the street and for the|tle girl 14 years old who ft» wild igirt who must count her peunies [|about him. Do you think we should would advise that she put most of Inform his wife; as we know he le her money into her street dreas, as | married? abe will wear ft most. If she is| A person Informed us that he under 30 and slender, the Frenchjhad five children, so we do not lingerie blouses are fine to wear{think it at right for him to with it, bat for “fair-fatandforty” | flirt with r girlie, Do you? & waist of some soft material that THE GROCERY TWINS. blends with ‘he skirt material is} A—If you will call up the pro- | better. ; tective department of the ¥. W. C. to colors for the fair girl there|A. agd give them the little gtr is nothing prettier than the taupe|or the man's name, they will ve sbade of gray. I like it so well|quietly see that he is warned to that I have a taupe or moleskin|stop Mirting with children. jush gown and three-quarter —— Lo for the cooler days. I don’t CALLED A FOOL ike te see the color on a dark! Dear Miss Grey: I have been woman. But this year the bru-|reading your advice to young folke nette can wear all shades of brown|for some time. Now | am comin, or green and be in fashion. to you for a little advice as to ft ee old folks. JUST ONE LAST WORD— 1 am somewhat smitten on a nice Have your street dresses the | young lady, Do you think it would emartest in your wardrobe. be a manly thing to propose to her? Se }! © been called a crazy old fool jand other things too numerous to jmention, but am a man of much wealth. Please give your advice. PATIENTLY WAITING. to call him one, and wealth does not make up for it if you are a fool You gave me so little information that it is Impossible to advise you White Currant Bread. Chow Chow.! Mince Pie. Gingerbread. Fruit. Coffee, MISS ENID SCHMIDT, Lowell, Wash, A PET NAME FOR HUBBY Now that we're engaged,” sa! girls th : bac ‘tiltaaeia® Tot tee aoa not sisters, but very great friends, v" One of us has a father, but the meig er al ee ey eee other has neither father nor moth- “Why, dear,” aunt. Carmichael, “the fellows at college isn’t very vine, rr @asy to tell need to ‘eal meer“ Pie Wace.’” [things that we would tall our moth- A debt cannot be collected on/ers, if we bad one, so we are writ- Sunday. ing to you for advice, THINGS WE WOULD TELL OUR MOTHE Dear Miss Grey: Wo are two f 14 and 16 years. We are re er and is living. with her ree eee | Now, Misa Grey, it ~.\Pacific Northwest Land Products Show and Pacific International Dairy Show Association, Portland, Oregon, November 18 to 23, 1912. Extensive exhibits of products of the soil of the Pacific Northwest. Practical demonstrations of sych problems as marketing and financing of fruits and grains. Great exhibition of dairy cows of various breeds from ovér the Northwest. Plan. to make your trip to Portland over the Rate for the Sales dates, November 18, 19, 20; final return limit No- vember 25, 1912. Tickets good ®n “The Owl,” leaving Seat- tle Sunday night, November 17, at 11:15 p. m. FOUR HIGH-CLASS TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN SEATTLE AND PORTLAND’ 0.-W. LOCAL ...:... ++ 7:30 a. m “SHASTA LIMITED” ++11:29 a. m, PORTLAND EXPRESS..,...11:45 a. m, THE “OWL” ..... +-11:15 p, m. For further information call on J. H. O'NEILL District Passenger Agent, SEATTLE Leaving Time F. R. Hanlon, District Freight Agent. 716 Second Av. Phone Main 932, Seattle. He does I would Iike to meete man who} Tt doesn't make # man a@ fool) fathers and aunts Round Trip $7.50 | housekeeping with friends and getting along nice ly, a8 I wae very anxious to help ber | I think you are a wonderful litte |woman. You do so much good for made at Stanford's Palo Alto ranch.| ular. Then Thomas A. Edison ap- Twenty-four cameras were placed! plied it to moving pictures, East- aide by side along the race course.| man makes the film and Edison Silk threads attached to each cam-|gets half a cent a foot royalty on waffering humanity, and there seems to be plenty of it in this world Your answers are always so broad and sensible. I think the young man who signs himaelf “Lawrence,” In the same ‘wane, in to be highly commended for # manly and noble attitude * anwumes. What a blessing it would be if all young men felt as he does. Permit me to congratulate you on the loving work you are do- ings I am sure there are countless |nambers who deeply appreciate It and benefit by it and of whem you never hear. “BYMPATHY AI thank you, but | cannot see that great credit is attached to (what I do. Who am 1 that I should censure or judge another? Had I bad the same blood in my veins, and the same conditions with which to cope, ‘might not I have done even worse? Who can tell? | MISFORTUNE TO MARRY A CIVILIZED (7) CITY GIRL Deat Mins Grey: 1 read the lot |ter from the young woman who signs her nam and | know | how she feels, for I am an ex-cow- | boy. | l would give my month's pay any |time to be on the ranch again; to throw my Jeg over a waddle and ride in God's country. I had the mis | fortune to get married to one of the olvilized (7) city girls and now I am divorced, but have my little girl, who ls naw eight years old. To my idea, a country girl is more civilized than a city girl Maybe cowboys are rough, but they don't insult girls like civilized city gen- nm (7) do. EX-COWBOY. A-—-Thank God there are good men in both city and country, and to these and good women) is given | the task to solve the great problem of present conditions, A CHRISTMAS PR NT FOR THE RYTHER KIDDIES Dear Miss Grey: In our estima- tion, calendars are becoming alto- gether too common and we have ob- served that about half of them go directly to the waste basket, doing ho good to anyone., We have therefore decided to make Mother Ryther a Christmas present of $25, to use according to her judgment on her large family, instead of investing that amount in alendars, a& we have done in past ¥ @ would like very much to have your valued opinion in this matter. INTERBAY HAY & GRAIN CO, A--I_ belleve you will get back the “bread you cast on the water” in this way tenfold. It is a fact that when men come.to regard good to their neighbors above mere dollars, there will be no frouble in getting money. “A MAN” ON HOME MANAGEMENT Dear Miss Grey: In your column last night was a letter headed: “To "Beat the Game.” I believe the writer should have had a home ready for his bride tf he was so afraid of old age, and should not have asked her to marry and help. I believe a woman does her share if she manages a home, whether @ does the work or has servants, One pays well to live at a good hotel, for comforts such as good meals, well-heated rooms. and other things that go to make mankind comfortable. Then one says what a fine management it is, etc. Now why shouldn’t you give due credit to the manager of a home, even if it happens to be your wife, and still be able to pay for it? Please print this and see what other readers have to say. “A MAN.” A.—For the benefit of the discns- sion, remember in the letter to which “A Man” objects, the young hugband did practically all the beside his datly work, and wanted the wife, who had no children, to help only a short time until they could get a start, and not be overshadowed by the high cost of living. | A good, sweet sandwich filline ts made of dates, stoned, and , ered sugar, For the all black evening gown, a girdle of heavy Oriental embrold- ery in vivid colors is a pleasant fnd fashionable touch, era shutter were stretched across/all that's used—a neat half million the road. As the horse raced by] dollars on the hundred million feet he broke the threads, opened the of film used every year. ero eee apap) Woman, striving as she ts today interested in that bil?’ to enlarge her sphere, finds Preju- dice her most ‘stubborn foeman. | This was ilustrated by an Mlinots merity.” legisiator when an influential! “They were fully explained at a friend raked him over the coals for|legislative hearing, by Jane Ad- Bot supporting @ bill for the benefit |dams and other experts.” of women and children. Weil, the fact.is, 1 didn’t go to “Why,” said the legislator apol-jthe hearing. The speakers were ometically, “I didn’t know you were just a parcel of women!” bill on its own merits?” “IL don't know anything about its teen in and connected. PK MADE TO ORDER LADIES’ suITsS $25.00 TO $32.50 _ Ladies’ Taito: Suit Shop. 234-240 Lumber Hache: “But why didn't you vote for the |s Ve : hindre nee from work a tas mast auetinate cosen saftey to apply — Medal. Proorss of no no further use for trum We we my by sending you trial solutely FREE. WriteyTODAY. Address PLAPAO LABORATORIES, Block 346 St. Louie, Mo WHOOPING COUGH | Sreater or less degree for three or Whooping cough is one of the four weeks. most contagious of diseases that) Furthermore, the contagion can children are subject to. So when | be carried by persons other than this disease is prevalent, every pos-the victim of the disease, who sible care should be taken for the have come in close contact with protection of children who have the patient. hot been infected. Thus, for absolute protection of During the whooping stage the children from whooping cough, victim of whooping cough spreade they should not only be kept from infected secretions continually. associating with children who For at least a week after the havo, or have recently had, the dis-; whooping stops, the danger of in- ease, but giso from contact with} fection is still very great. Some those who have recently been in times the danger continues inj|contact with such children. pea = on on eres We extn ye a 08 OO NOTICE TO READ ® All letters cannot be an- & & swered in the paper, and many & * are without name or address. * * A stamped, self-nddressed on- & & velope always brings a * The thirteenth wedding anni- pt CYNTHIA GREY, * versary ts lace. Alice Nielsen was born in Nash- ville, Tennessee, In 1876. To contract holes left in the skin by blackheads, bathe the face with cold water in which a few drops of alcohol bave been added, well mixed, SSPE EEE EERE RR EEE vp.ss CURED IN ¢ TO 14 DavS An open account or bill is of lawed In Washington it five yew and a note in six. Foot baths of hot water in which « little alum has been dis solved is one of the best home rem- edies for feet swollen from stand- ing. One Fare and a Third to Portland The late Governor Cosgrove was elected in 1908, and died almost immediately after his inauguration. M. BE. cay, leutenant governor, took his place, and acted as gov- ernor for the unexpired term. The term for governor is four years. The prices differ in the union and nonunion printing shops, the unton giving the best salary. An expert earns $30 a week, but a proof reader must be a printer be- fore he or she can join the union The prices in nonunion shops ran from $12 up. WHICH TICKETS ON SALE NOVEMBE! LIMIT NOV! CHICKEN OR EGG? Dear Miss Grey: To settle a con- troversy, which was here first, the chicken or the egg? And which is mother of the chick, the hen that laid the egg, or the one that hatched it? $7.50 Roun M. A. G, A.—Your first question I cannot answer, Both the chicken and the egg seem to embrace life, Who can say which expressed it first? The hen that hatches the chick and cares for it is truly its mother, just as the foster parenis are more truly parents than those who for- sook thé helpless child. LEAVING Berth reservations and Tickets Second, or King St Albany Cut-Rate Dentists We do exactly the same kind and class of work on other 1e"8 teeth that we would want done in our ep bien = may our exami and consultation costs you @othi 1% BEST ‘ARTIPICTAL TE! CONSTRUCTO! BEST. PORCELAIN CROWN A‘ WORKERS, best and fillers of teeth, and the best Pain- loss extractors of teeth in the United States today are with the Albany Dentists, and our reasonable are beyond all question the } ever offered in Seattic. Our prices will continue because they are bring! us the large practice we desire and require. We guarantee all work for 12 years, Call and see us and you will find we do exactly as we advertise Our work is the . Our prices are the lowest. ALBANY CUT RATE DENTISTS Second Floor People’s Bank Building Second and Pike. ‘Take Elevator or Walk Up. OUR PRICES WILL SURPRISE OUR WORK WILL PLEASE ACCOUNT Northwest Land Products Show AND Pacific International Dairy Show NOVEMBER 18 TO 23 R 18, 19, 20. EMBER ‘25, d-Irip Rate FINAL Rs?TURN Open to Everybody Three Fine Daily Trains. KING STREET STATION 10 a, m., 3:45 p, m. and 10:30 p, m. at Ticket Office, Columbia and reet Passenger Station. Great Northern Railwa HOME OFFICE White Bldg. SEATTLE, U. 8. A. HEALTH ACCIDENT LIFE Pays Monthly I accident, manontly disabled, Pays specific amount loss of hands,, fee! H.W, Andrews 'T, M. Mor Vioe President 24 V.P, & A aN INSURANCE COMPANY OLICY ROVIDING IN ERFECT ndemnity for disability through any sickness or Paya your life insurance premiums if per- D,. B. Morgan y Gen, Manager Office ROTECTION 8 for Send This Coupon to the Home Date of Birth ............2..- Occupation ........eseereeeee

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