The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 27, 1912, Page 3

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'S” THE { SBEST LAXATIVE cleanses your liver and bowels while yous seep. how bad your liver, atom| all her life must be mad, or madly in love, oh your hea and ; how mv * miserat mi are fre tion, billous tines—you aly = with Cascaret 8 eng stomach, liver and) Take| wn end to! you miserable tonight; put un ronatipa and) ays get A man who consents to feed o nf clothe another man’s daughter TOM TI am a bachelor a life of wage slavery, 1 am afraid “she” 1 am afraid of a woman's in Diliousness, dizziness, | sick, sour, gassy stom | all other dis} and Women only your inside organs of) of playing a fool's part a and constipated! the is producing Girls always grow seen a motherindaw to my taste, Dox means health, hap- a clear head for months days of gloom Wil take a care then. All druggists sel Don't forget the chil or feit re-block yo , velour, satte 'MILLINERY Mt. Sth Cloor TO ORDER LADIES’ en Taltored Suit Shop. and dis Dear Mins Grey: IT am a young fellow, , and have been reading your letters with interest. Some fof them are very true to life and T am writing you to say that I am {single and expect to be until I find a girl who meastres up to the stand ard of my old mother I lost some years ago. These 20th century girls don't make any hit with me. I am a be- Hever in all that was taught me |by that old fashioned mother. No jgirl has come to my attention yet | who could fill her place and I don’t think I will ever meet one. So its | the simple single life for me. What's lyour advice to me—to charge my j ways from the good old fashioned ito the Hello Kid sort of ways? a A, 1 do not advise you to change) but to remember the ez jyour ideas —————-~ |mother you knew had had years of Truss is est Trial to Prove it LR. Clark, 0. D. 8. AND factors in deciding} Mental work. Wear tests ip, time reveals the materials. that i of expert ‘ are perfect; Of work is as repre dentists @ that, should there be it will i right gc and with | at any time, tages Pan old, establishe like this based Something they are so low that but please Just) On extra heavy $10) 00. hag a $10 never- egal a Dental Offices . i D. D. S. (Manager) d Ave, N. W. Cor. Union| fing this Ad with you LBRO WS m Looking for aes as poss a ¢ One You it, Find th Ww no good be-| High School girls are. in the be of the tt N ° th, m bridge, Fearn of wer ” have indorsed my next Sainrda hat Dentiatn Meo Brows, D. D. S. ci st Buthaine Baw! sana the dental OGr office ix the best that ja that its! on facts and} ttke| me silly and frivolous. ¢ falling out and now j experience and development, and ithe girls who seem to fall short imay be equally as fine women | later, Are you sure you are up to the | standard of some girl's splendid jold fashioned father? Ate eee eee eee eee ee A BLUE-EYED WHITE KiT- TEN FOR SOME CHILD. Dear Miss ( tT have a pretty blue-eyed white kitty for some o who will give it a good home, The nother was half Angora. The kit ten Is three months old and is very loving. I have two and this one won't make up with my little Spitr puppy, so I am giving ber away. 1 Want some one who will be kind to her. 2112 Sth Srrrrrrer eres. se’ Av, Weat eee eee eee eee tees RRR BEAUTY OF FACE FADES IF NOT BACKED BY BEAUTY OF MIND Gr We are two girls, of 16 years. We go to bigh school. All the boys tell us how pretty are getting it right for them to tell us, although we like to be told’ They all want to co with os We are quite popular, We go to all the parties in town, When they take us home they always insult as in some way, Thanking you very much for your ad and we will fo it closely TWO GIRLS. A.—Mere beauty is of jittie value, and if you do not cultivate your mind the outward appearance will change, and you will have absolute ly nothing on which to re Hoys who are always te ot your loveliness are doi jcause they see that you a enough to be flattered, and they can « your weakness to thetr ad vantage. You will certainly regret it if you have anything to do with then. It is much better to be tserved than to gain popularit tarnishing your modesty. Dear Mi: very begatiful we te vice ne you a little re THE GIRL. Dear Miss Grey; Don't you think they ought to pass a law that every working girl should receive at ies $10 a week? I am working in a large store | land receiving $% per week, and out of that I pay care fare, keep an ota} father and mother, pay house rent, | boy wood and food and care for myself. 1 am struggling hard to keep them warm and supply good, wholesome food and keep them from the poor house. I owe over $100 on furniture and) have to pay $6 per month to keep) them from taking it from me and lbreak up my home; for 1 will stay | by the old folks if | have to beg to help them, They must be cared for. There is nothing too good for them in their last days. It is only God who has helped me keep the |wolf from their door. Now, dear | Miss Grey, which way would you lturn if you were in my place? MILDR A—My dear girl, 1 would apply to the Charity Commissioner for a }monthly allowance; then, I would |try to make a good face cream and leell at odd times; or put up home- |made salads, and get the grocers ito handle them, paying them a com mission, and I would, if I had a lyard 6 feet square, get a few chick ens, and I would get a start, If you will send stamped, self-ad dressed envelope, and mention this letter, 1 will send the recipe for face » of charge. A_ girl who all you are on $8 a week should be in business for her- self. If 1 were you I would join the} and get as i y other girls ible to do the same, NOT WEAKNESS. Do not think as some I am really ‘sensible and hope you will give me tia true answer. I am nearly 17, with very dark hair and dark blue eyes, Will ‘graduate in February For the last two years I have been keeping company with a jyoung gentleman who cared for me very much. But he and I had a he refuses to *: sneak to me unless I apologize to him. Miss Grey, I was really the cause of the trouble and I wish you would tell me if I should apol jogize to him, Trusting you will give me a true and hasty answer, | 4 “FLOSSY. | | STRENGTH, | Dear Miss Grey It is not an indication of saaniciiie, but of strength, to ac knowledge a mistake. If you were jat fault, tell your friend you see your mistake, and are sorry; but \aon't, please don't, be soft about It, or he will think you are just trying would say “no.” [MIS OPINION OF GIRLS TODAY|to get him back rather than y by] John D, because I would not condemn my children to targets for guns, and food under this anarchistic system of capitalism, for BASHFUL, tongue. JOUN P. 1 can neither work nor think in the society of chattering women. OLD BACH, want your money and a home, 1 have no intention J to be like thelr mothers, and I have never YOUNG BACH, im pelled by principle SEATTLE’S ELDERLY PEOPLE. Dear Miss Grey Could you please tell me if there in an old man's home in Seattle where a daughter could put her aged father and pay for his care, an she has to work every day? Please answer through The Star. A STAR READER A--I_am sorry to aay there ia not. The Kenny Home, which ts full, and has a long walting list, and the County Home, are the only ones 1 know of. It fs a shame that a city like Se attle has #0 little provision for its elderly citizens, Why doesn't some one start the ball rolling for an elderly people's home? A GIRL ANSWERS ONE OF THE BACHELORS. Dear Mise Grey: In re Mr, Loco motive Engineer. I would like to say you have not met all the young girls yet There is one In Everett who cots two sults a year and is satiafied. WI soon be 17 and have never at tended a party of any kind; go to 4 pleture show sometimes; go and come alone, but not lonesome Several boys of my age asked the privilege of taking me out, but as I don't care to be a guardian to them I always refuse. I never intend to go out with boys of 17 and 20. When I keep com pany it must be with @ real live gentleman. And if | marry, a companion, not a boss A GIRL. NOTICE TO READERS All letters cannot be an ®& swered in the paper, and many @ are without name or address. @ A stamped, self-addressed en- & velope always brings a prompt ®& reply CYNTHIA GREY. ie i ie ie ie Mee ee eee ee eed Cynthia’s Answers | to Many Questions Woodrow Wilson carried 39 states in the recent election Sulphur and ¢ color in a cream tartar lavender will set drew, | ver Cleveland, the was born at ¢ N. J. and died June Princeton, N. J The Hawaiian islands are gov erned by a governor appointed by) the president of the United States.| The present governor is Mr. Walter| PF. Frear } The verb “to have” Is used with] ubjects, as children “have.”| erb “has” is the singular form] and should be used with singular jaubjects, aa the child “has.” The }pronown | is an exception and ab| * takes a plural verb,*as 1 ha Rockefeller has homens {at the following addresses: Pocan tieo He Tarrytown, N. J.; Cleve land, O.; West G4th st. New York, and Laiewood, N. J. NEW USE FOR OLD THINGS Empty spools and the flat tin disks that are frequently to de found as extra inside covers to lard pails make the finest sort of covers for small stewpang if a little cle perness is used in bringing the two together. The spool is sawed in haif and is attached by a nail or werew to the disk. The end of the nail or screw is flattened on the under side of the disk, and the cover is made. Being equipped with a wooden handle, it will not be too hot to remove at any time. The popularity of Frances Starr and “The Case of Becky” show no sign of diminution, and capacity audiences are the invariable rule at the Belasco theatre, Manhattan, where the attraction is booked until Christmas week only. THE COMB’S MORNING STORY You know the story the comb tells, It's @ very discouraging story, too. Day by day, a few more strands are added, of hair that is turning gray, losing its vitality, ite strength and its health. Gray hair is as unbecoming as old age. Natural pride should have its own say, You wish to look young and it is your DUTY to ap pear so, You can't even LOOK young if the silver threads begin to show. Be a “Young Womgn” In looks, al- ways. The gray bAirs belong to the chaperon and to the grand- mother. Stay out of the grandmother class until your years juatify it by using HAY'S HAIR HEALTH oat Drug Stor ay rice and deal Co., Newark, N, e name Send 1 “Philo Hay Spec. I want), iful of black pepper and 1 of salt "|food is clegged there and the pores THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1912. COCO CCR OOO Oo Oe * WHATCHA SO MAD ABOUT MISTER? SOOO HHHO OO EHEE THEE OOH OOH OOHOOS EE OLD-FASHION THANKSGIVING DINNER Turkey, Stuffed with Chestouts. Cranberry Sauce. OR Suckling Pig, Stuffed with Sage and Onlons Baked Apples Baked Potato Puffs. Escalloped Onions. Yellow Turnips. Cabbage Slaw Hread and Butter Baked Hubbard Squash. Celery. Raked Indian Padding Mince and Pumpkin Pile. Cheese and Toasted Bread Sticks, Chestnut Oressing.-One pint of} creas: and an ounce of butter; when d chestnuts broken in #mall Very light, stuff this mixture back 1 pint of corn meal bread into the potato shells and brown in bend with 1 cup of milk, 2 exes! the oven cali s'asnsoetaot Sek ree) CARE OF PALMS salt and a teaspoonful of black pep-! As soon as palms are taken in per. To thiayou may add, if you doors they are Hable to disease wish ped glszard of the fow!, leaving the heart and liver for) [Seale and mealy-bug are their en the «ravy Onion Dressing. One pint of cen can be warded off If the palms are ter of white bread softened with a! Xept in healthy condition: cup of hot water, 1 pint of white) Palms should only be repotted bread crumbs that have been rolled! when absolutely necessary through a coarse sieve, 1 teaspoon: | transplanted, care should be taken yot to break nor jar the roots. To teaspoonful of pulverized s8K¢; |keap palma free from pests, wash Add chopped onions to taste, and | ithe under part of the leaves with mix with a half cup of butter before | gean water. stuffing of disease, none wash with diluted kero Stuffed Baked Potatote. large sized potatoes un ly Bake til thorough ¢ and cut off one aide and dip| be th re with @ spoon; beat into} toward the t of pate ato one-half pint of each side and file nall on at outer edges conter of the BY DOR. WILLIAM A. EVANS Noted American Food Authority ard Former Health Commissioner at Chicago. Thanksgiving dinner is a dangerous thing—and must be handied carefully, for if you don’t get the better of your dinner, It is certain that it will get the better of you. In the first place, remember to eat slowly and to chew your food thoroughly. That i# half the bat- tle. The other half consists in holding down on the | Draw the skin of the neck back consumption of indigestibles. Begin slowly, A meal well begun ie half won. Eat the soup, don't gulp it, crackers you take with !t, and the vegetables and meat, if it be a vegetable or turtle soup. Browse around a little on celery or some other relish When you come to the piece de reristance—the turkey, or roast, or whatever it be—tackle it gingerly Chew diligently, eat plenty of bread—and, whatever you do, DON'T eat any of the “stuffing.” Eat plenty of the cranberry sauce and help your self liberaily to other fruits. Kat a light dessert, if available. tasse of coffer dinner will be well over. suffer—much, Then get up and take a long walk. Don't sit around all the after- noon in @ poorly ventilated room ‘hat..will induce indigestion even when great care has been taken with the actual process of eating. DR. EVANS. ELDERLY FOLKS! CALOMEL, SALTS AND CATHARTICS AREN'T FOR YOU Harmless, gentle “gyrup of Figs” ‘is best to cleanse your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour bile, decaying food, gases and clogged-up waste. Drink a demi You old people, Syrup of Figs is}er ducts in these thirty feet of bow- particularly for you. You who don't ne eg! Pa pg Sm bak a : ¥ " Olao © the blood ou W exercise ax much as you need 10; | never got feeling right until this is who like the easy chair. You, | corrected—but do it gently. Don't! whose steps are slow and whose|have a bowel washday; don't use muscles are less clastic. You must}@ bowel irrtrant. For your sake, palize that your liver and |pleave use only gentle, effective acsveagogndil: Syrup of Figs, ‘Then you are not yards of bowels have also become| qrigying yourself, for Syrup leas active. | Pigs ts composed of only luscious | Don't regard Syrup of Migs a8 /figs, senna and aromatics which can physic. It stimulates the liver and | nye injure, Sowals just as exercise would do if you took enough of it. It is not harsh like salts or catharties. The help which Syrup of Figs gives to a torpid liver and weak, sluggish bowels harmlese, natural gentle. When eyes grow dim, you help them, Do the same with your liver nd bowels when age makes them less active, There Is nothing more important, Costive, clogged-up bow. ela mean that decaying, fermenting ten A teaspoonful tonight will gently, but thoroughly, move on and out sour bile, poisonous food and clogged-up waste matter without gripe, nausea or weakness. But get the genuine, Ask your druggist for the full name, “Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.” Re- with © up unless it bears the name prepared by the Syrup Company. Read the label, ie and thies, but the attacks of these pests| When | Chew well the bread or| If you have followed directions you won't| | | At the first evidence! make the finger nalls tapering. | | roaster -| side lining. of knocking her sensel Coeoreeocooeos! rs | The Store That Saves You Money Holiday Gifts econd Ave. at James return of Thanksgiving calls forth, year by year, a fresh crop of sentiment; it has become fashionable, and we are now determined to do Thanksgiving in America after our own American fashion. Our celebration of the day takes the shape of eating large limbed, realized. PRIZE RECIPES Mrs, Nora Sargeant, 2626 45th ay 8. W., Seattle, ix overwhe requests for recipes, 80 printing a few of them below t Turkey—Sage oveutng the turkey ca Dus and pep prepared as follows be loaf of bre and trim of crast, and cramble small pieces. Season with 1 spoon of salt, 2 teaspoons powdered ‘ % teaspoon pe spoon melted butter and % ¢ milk, Mix well and fill up turkey sew up openings and put in double dredge with flour and bake we a Dr thoroughly |with sait | dressing, Take « day old ume tea 3 hours Salad Dressing Mix in the order given. Into a small saucepan, put 1 \easpoon salt 2 teaxpoons flour, % teaspoon dry mustard, 3 teaspoons sugar, Moist- en to @ smooth paste with water and add 3 eggs. Beat well and add small % cup vinegar and 1% cups water. Add 1 ‘ablespoon of autumn and winter color about Holiday games thoughtful joy at dangers past, ! butter. | Cook over a siow fire, stirring con-) HOW TO PREPARE YOUR TURKEY | ‘To prepare a turkey for roasting, first pull out all the pin feathers with a knife. over a flame so that the short hair ean be singed off. Now cut off the head and feet cut off the neck near the body, move the crop and pull out the wind pipe. Next cut the body open from the breast bone down, run your hand inside the foul along the} breast bone and loosen the fat. liver, heart and gall bladder. Draw out everything, being careful not to break the gall bladder. Cut the skin on the lower legs| and draw out the tendons, Th always barden the meat on drumaiick when they are cooked Now wash the turkey inside and ~if anything--and your Thanksgiving |out carefully and wipe dry After stuffing draw the legs back and cross them over the tail. Clean the liver and heart and giz zard by cutting off all the vein and any green looking matter. Slit the gizzard open and remove the in Wash in cold water. Red Haired Woman Is Holdup Artist SAN FRANCISCO, Search is being made | police for a wor ed as having br attempted to rob Mrs. A swich, proprietress of an apartment house, Mrs. Ipswich told ‘he detectives that the woman, fashionably dress ed, called to look at an empty apartment, While in the rooms |the visitor suddenly turned and said: “I don’t care about the jroom rent; I want your money.” She then struck Mrs. ess to the floor. The length of the Panama canal, from shore to shore, will be approx: imately 414% miles. Every kind of costume is worn of your system by morning all the! this season, from the simplest to the} fermenting | most extreme. Old pieces of fur make chic neck wearings Olympia.—A bronze tablet marking the spot where the firat California Fig] teritortal legislature of Washington met, in 1853, Then hold the turkey | | the Ipswich, | | } was |” ntempt, any other Fig|laid in the sidewalk on Main st., it, and mince or Thanksgiving merry to the young. pumpkin day and drinking, of family gatherings, long bills, large turkeys and a profusion of cranberries and celery. The literature of the season has a certain gorgeousness with footballs and besweatered men, accompanied by winsome- faced girls in red jackets bearing college colors. pies make But it is in later life, when we have become thoughtful and are made sad by memories of Thanksgivings past, That we really understand the deep religious gratitude which makes Thanksgiving Day of quiet and fears expelled and hopes Our sentiments are with the young in their merriment, and the serious in their gratitude, on this Thanksgiving Day. McCORMACK BROS. until thick with cream. a quart of ) for two or three Do ne This w dressing meal Apple and Celery Salad nd cut off tops and seo tut the apple pulp and add one and mix with d dre poon of whipped cre side. ¢ wa a tea The draped skirt ‘est feature of represet ne fons. ht red apples. Pe in small p diced celery Po on thé of each and cover with chopy ts the went fash. FEMININE FANCIES Corduroys and corded velvets are among the for winter wear. Women plaids and E an opportun months to we jonable. who are ed This year gown heavy many a and light the bodice; the chiffon or tulle lithe upper part of the waist only. Today's Styles Today CLOTHING APPRECIATED BY YOUNG FELLOWS Must have snap-and-go in the materials and the makeup— that’s the reason Bradbury Sys- tem Clothes are such big favor- ites with young men. All the new models in this superior tailoring shown here exclu- sively 3 Bradbury Suits ard BUY YouR new TH ING NOW AND PAY THE BEL LATER. Overcoats $25.00 to $40.00 A fine selec- tion of conserv- ative styles for middie + aged men, also pro- duced by these Breat tallors. We carry a popular -priced line of season- able suits which sell from $15 to $25, and are splendid values 1332-34 Second Ave., Near Aion “Seattie’s Reliable Credit House” YOU CAN'T PAY ASSESSMENTS? Then buy a small lot and your taxes will be in proportion to your ability to ¥ lawn and care for pu are working all day and haven't time to cut the your garden? Get a small lot and a few minutes per day will keep your place looking tip top without tiring you, Get such a lot at Columbia, in Rainier Valley, where prices are cheap—$250 for lots worth $400—and a few years more will bring $1,000. $5 Cash $5 Monthly BUY AND BUILD NOW. David P. Eastman 505 LOWMAN BLDG. popular heavy materials fond of bright pelish checks will have ty during the next few ar them and be fash- of the smartest s are made of a combination of material—the heavy in the skirt and lower part of in

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