The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 28, 1912, Page 5

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PARISIAN SAGE-—ask for +’ sehen want the real hair 4 angratt cure ry This oe re mA to is a ple in which each bott tle of SAGE is packed, PARISIAN SAGE will banish dandruff, stop falling halr and itching scalp, and promote a growth of hair if the hair root is not dead. It is a clean tonic and contains no pok sonoas lead or other dangerous substance. It will put radiant beau. ty into dull, fade das a dainty hatr for women it cannot be Boconi bottle of PARISIAN Me y. If it doesn’t give } satisfaction, your money r Bold by Rartell’s everywhere. | elegantiy furnished Jowest rates at Hote! Vir ci and Virginia, near STUMP PULLER PYHE STUMP PROBLEM rite or Call for Free Booklet it telts to clear stump land per acre than has } heretofore. Pacific Stump Pull- machine which is borse. is built for North. is the very latest stump puller ever in Fe wt land to clear, wale have a copy of this free, . Kt is yours for the asking. mc eail, write for one Letters to Cynthia Grey ANSWERS A “SAILOR’S DAUGHTER” Dear Miss Grey you! “Bailor's Daughte: T am a Norwegian girl, bora close by the # ke hands with and brought up ” et me to love ft, and T am a sailor'ewife-to-be. t agree with you in everything you say about the sallors! am a woman aud have seen a great deal of the world, and have met all kinds of men, My aatior ts the only one I ever answered “yes.” Whyt Because he man I have never met known him for years. is the best, noblest and the purest minded young I know what [ am talking about, for 1 have 1 have always been very serious, hav al lived a pure life and always respected a pure minded man, so way 1 certainly would not choose any other ture of the carton) do 1, and | would not have him ¢o any other kind of work He loves the sea, and #o The sailors are lonely, having no homes. My friend says the PARISIAN| *#loons are the only places where they are always welcome That is the reason so many of them drink. Why don't people, who have means, furnish good, clean places where sailors can find amusement! tended was in a shipwreck not long go. how he and another boy risked their lives to save the others are a hero.” [ sald, ‘just as much looked Things like that happen too often to ever wrote about” He “Why, no, I am not a hero! ever be noticed in mire them! Yes, “Sailor's as they really are. - sailor's life,” Daughter,” we know the sailors! Aren't they worth it? My itn He tolt me about it and “You papers asked, the he 4 hero a8 anyone surprised, “Hero?” Good, brave men! How | ad- Know them SARAH R ARERR Ee ee | the habit of talking about other peo a TO FIND WORK a *® Dear Miss Grey: What is « * a fellow going to dot? Lamas * stout, healthy young man, and & ® am willing to do anything ® have been out of work so long #! ® Tam getting desperate. * not ve without a without work. * DISCOURAGED. «® * <A-—Apply to the Open # &® Door, 512% King st * SRE R RRR ican money and # THE AMERICAN GIRL Dear Mise Grey Would you kindly give me a little information about the American girl? I am reading your letters every and like the advice you give. I am a young foreigner (25), have been in America about six years, have a fairly good position, and am thinking of making my home in this country. I have been keeping company with several America: ‘irks, but Rot disappointed nearly every time, as these girls would rather go to cafes and public dances than to a nice show or other nice places, Are all American girls like. this? ONLY A POREIGNER. A--By no means. You cannot judge the American giris by thoy who frequent cafes and dance halla You are looking in the wrong places for the homemaking, merry heart ed, broadminded American, who is a beautiful type of true womanhood They are difficult to meet, but, Hike beautiful gems, are more vahe able for not being too common. POT CAN'T CALL KETTLE BLACK Dear Miss Grey: Can you tell me why they let the Jews have fake sales, when they want to make the/ town so good? | 1 went to a certain store yester. day, where they had hostery in the window for 6 cents, and when you! a | O8aln ple. I don't mean to do them any harm by it, but if { hear anything bad about any one, I can't help from repeating it to ab t the firat per son I see. Tell me, please, how I 1 #/ CaM break myself of this bad habit, * 1 know it is very wrong and would do anything to be able to keep my mouth shut, I hate gonalp era. Thanking you, Ww. L A.—The only way to stop any: thing is to stop it, and the way to stay stopped is never to begin It Fine yourself every me you speak I) of another, hand the mon ey to some one to hold, only to be regained by you after you have per formed some work that is particu larly distasteful to you. He your own taskmaster and make the fine heavy, Cynthia’s Answers to Many Questions A note of after six years. y kind ts outlawed In the year 1892 there were 255 persons lynched in the Unitet States. In 1910 there were 74 Obtain addresses from the Mo tion Pieture Magazine of film com panies and write to them concera ing your stories. THE STAR—THURSDAY, SAYS “THERE’S NOT A LAZY HAIR IN BEAUTY’S HEAD!” BILLIE BURKE THE FIRST WORD—We can have nothing in this world un leas some one has worked for it. . 1 wish T could make many of my readers understand that nothing comes to us of itself | Love, Beauty, Happiness, Wealth | jand Health do not come of thetr| own accord to minister to our well} being A woman cannot be thin unless) she burns up ber superfluous fat; she cannot have good health un less she works out the laws of bod ily sanitation and hygiene, [ h eald once before th © me tho was meaningless unless it was an incentive to doing, and it seeme) to me that the entire work of the! Universe bears out this theory You mast remember that there) jis not a lazy hair on beauty’s head ave to work just as hard for ovelinors ax you do for wealth or! success in any other of life's pur-| sulte Don't think that you can sleep | in the morning In a heated Id be out in the ty air taking a brisk walk and not have a sallow, dry skin Don't think you can eat greasy foods, chocolate creams and drink| alcoholic liquors or pernicious soft drinks to excess and not have plm- For perspiration, ure xine oleate, | 4 drama; boracic acid, 3 drams, and | keep the surface constantly covered with powder. It {9 estimated that 9,500,000 per sons died of hunger in the great famine in China in 1877-78. Sneezing is caused by the fttle| alr passages far up in the nostrt's| becoming clogged by particles of} dust or other obstacles. To remove mildew from coloret woolen material. rub well with 9» | FACTURING CO./ went in to bay, they were 18 cents. | nonalkall soap, then rub some fine! Ave., Seattle, Wash.) They had 6 cent ones, but they were French chalk well into the stain: AE'S CREATION JUST IN TIME ll H, CERNY Dec, 16, 1911. years ago I was com- DS mr position on (of a rundown condition, with occa- stages of lat 3 say that the Probie is to get people that it can be conquered. | Yery quickly in its early ‘The first great lesson to # testimony above is a Case, yet how many when they have contin- Weak lungs, a fullness in Catarrh, asthma, loss of are = generally ron they are bordering on BO serious? Yet it is Many times every Our vital statistics show Der cent of ail deaths Tuberculosis, and of the sayeral con- to ft i. on are way or gradually los- ‘s delay. Na saved thow not you? Address CREATION ‘6 Bank Bldg. and Pike St. Wash. not worth carrying home. They are violating the law, and I know the police kaow all abous it. Thanking you. STUNG A-—-t will answer your question if you will tell me why Gentiles are allowed to have fake sales. Ih is no Worse for a Jew to cheat than for a Gentile. The remedy in both cases is to vote (qr officers who with enforce the law, and after they are in office to see that they do. A GIRLS “BEAU” AGE Dear Miss Grey: ' am a young girl 16 years old. Do you think f am to young to keep company with a young man, such as going to shows and parties with him? 1 like bim all right: but as far as love is concerned, I have never thought of euch a thing. What age do you think a girl ought to be when she starts in ing with young men? Please wer. FE. A.—Some girls need a guardian all their lives; some are sensible enough by the age of 15 to accept male company: but the average girl has not sufficiently developed her powers of discrimination to accept much company before 18. A girl who spell “too” “to” should be ap plying herself to ber studies. TEACHER’S CHRISTMAS PRESENT Dear Miss Grey: Could you sug gest a suitable present for a pupil to give the teacher for a Christmas present? I thank you in advance. A PUPIL. A.A subscription to a first-class magazine. MOTORING Dear Miss Grey: Do you think there is any harm in a girl going motoreycling with a boy friend? 1 |have oftentimes heard people say, jwhen they saw a girl on a motor, “lan't that horrid?” or some such thing like that. I have evew heard people go so far as to say, “That girt is tough, or she wouldn't go on @ motor.” ‘ow, as | am a motor rider myself, | don’t think it right for people to run down a girl for that. Am I right, or not? MOTORING KID. A.—There is nothing wrong about the mere act of motoring, but a girl must be very careful where, when and with whom she goes, because a few evil-minged men and boys use them for wrong purposes. |THE CAUSE OF UNHAPPINESS Dear Miss Grey: 1 am a married | woman of 24 and I do not love my jhusband. My marriage was one of the mistakes of my early youth. I have a friend who is very fond of me and is persuading me to leave | my husband, and marry him. I love him very dearly and think I would be happier with him. My husband is very good to me, and 1 think it would break his heart {f 1 should leave him, but I am very miserable and know we cannot continue to live like this, Knowing you have helped others, 1 would like you to advise me in this matter. | A HEART-BROK | A.--Bo, too, did you ‘your husband before you married him, and thought you would eppy with him.” | S46 reason y\u ate not happy ts |because yo aré not doing right. | Drop this man at onee and be grate- ful you have a husband who loves \you and ts kind. I know acores of | women who would worship a man |who is man enough to be “just kind” to them. TO BREAK HABIT Dear Miss Grey: I bave acquired } lay on the grass, | with a litte will come out NOTICE TG READ All letters cannot we it dries, wet er and the stain) * ba * * ® ore & A stamped, self-addressed en- @ ® velope always brings a prompt @| ® reply. CYNTHIA GREY. SPEER ERE RRR BE ED GOV.-ELECT LISTER HERE FOR BIG GAME Governor-elect Lister fa a football enthusiast, With Mrs. Lister he will be on hand at the annual big game between the niverstty and Washington State today. The gov ernor-elect attended a innheon given in his honor by King County Dem- ceratic club in the Good Eats cafe teria at noon. DIVORCEE, 14, REMARRIES SOON FORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 28. Just 30 minutes after 14-year-old Mrs. Annie Scroggins was granted a divorce from William Scroggins she obtained a license and married him one hour later, Judge Swayne, who ganted the divorce, when he beard another Ii- conse was procured, threatened to spank her, at which her intended bristled up, but there was no en counter. Dance at Dreamland tonight. When Locking tist, Find the One You Want ny ne fn tke be- cause it will mot Many people w my offices at 713 Union Block, see Right Doctor Brown, Washington Block they are coming t they soon discover t the office of the wrong Dr BEWARE OF DENT AY. CLAUM Y are locking for First av. in the the sign, “The front of the and think that ny Offices, but “be | a Brown, D. D. S. ook. of the Postal Tel graph Building. Open evenings until 8 and Sundays 4 for people who work Y know i SHATTL TiS Wiewt Door South One | clnating ples. Jon't think that you can spend your time lolling around in arm chairs and allowing your mind to voretate, and keep up with the fas women wih brilliant brains who understand the value of working for a good purpose 1 have one young woman in mind who never gets up until noon and who thea spends the most of the day at her hairdresser’s and mant cure’s, at the candy shop and tea she has an appolu Big Surprise to Many In Seattle Local people are surprised at the QUICK results received from sin ple buckthorn bark, glycerine, ete. as mixed in Adlertka, the German appendicitis remedy Swifts Phar. macy, 2d av, and Pike, states that, this simple remedy antisepticixes red in the paper, and many @ the digestive aystem and draws off Pt thout name or address. @ the impurition #0 therougbly that |; A SINGLE DO@E relieves sour stomach, gas on the stomach and constipation INSTANTLY.—Adver | tisement Wanted-—Furniture. Main @518, Modern Furniture Co. ; MADE TO ORDER LADIES’ suITS $25.00 TO $32.50 Ladies’ Tailored Suit Shop. ‘228-240 Sumber Bidg HEAR BETTER AUDIPHONE Ad juetemen| whereby an Audiphone for = make su any hearing device you may be using now, Address STOLZ ELECTROPHONE CO, 464 Arcade Annex, Seattie. from a severe shaking up, the only Some of the diseases that Dr. Lydia A. Lathrop successfully sega ee A inma, Heart Troubl peps Troub! Constipation, Neuralgia, Liver Troubl tiem, Appendicit Headaches, Bright's Disease, ‘alysis, Kidney Trouble and Stomach Trvuble, Office, 213 People’s Bank Bidg., Second and Pike, Lumbago, Rheum gee , NOVEMBER 26, 1912. “Beauty doesn't sleep till noon"—posed especially for Mise Burke. ment with her dressmaker or ce | ner. She eats a big dinner and the! evening is given to the theatre or| fome other social function, supper of ail sorts of indigestible things and then to bed at any old hour of the night. This young woman said to me the other day eannot understand, my dear e ws ; | l HER MENU WINNER |) OF PRIZE TURKEY AS. NORA M. SARGENT ora M. Sargent, 2625 45th W., In thankful today, be- she won The Star prize tur hey—not because she couldn't have been happy without It, but because it is always a pleasure to honestly gal anything The judges all 4 that of the hundreds of * sent in, Mre, Sargent’s wae the best balanced. Besides that, she gave th® recipes of every dish and iemized the to @ fraction Here ts ber me y Sa. Miliblet Gravy is a la Thomas a7 ned Sweet Potatoes. i, werved in anberty Sauce a tomate pichies. he ib, $3.50: bread for stuft- ing. S¢: 4 tbe. sweet potatoes, the carrets, Se; 1 dor apples. tic: in, Te ee; milk, 5 coffee. ib. 196 loc r, be; ‘vinegar, salt, pep- mustard, sage, Ga, mute, lettuce, CALCUTTA, Nov. 28.—-British officialdom in India Is pretty well used to the picturesque mis- use of the English language by native subordina: but It is gen- erally agreed t the official records contain nothing better than the following report of a railway accident forwarded by a ation master at Midderpore: “L have the honor to report that yesterday morning the |. up ran into the V. down. The two trains w inextricably com- mingled, Carriages on the right mingled. Carriages to the right THANKSGIVING DAY! BY A.W. WRAY The goldenrod candies are all burned out, Hy the zigaag fence of gray; The asters have turned to withered seeds That the wind will flutter away; But here's a cheer for the waning year, And the glad Thanksgiving Day! the body deteriorates you can be sure that the mind -will follow ia a more or less degree.” x e28 iT ONE LAST woRD— is only one microbe thae is worse than the on lazy, and that is the one we call worry. Tho thrushes have flown from the treetops high, And the bluebirds could not stay, And lone and hushed age the empty nesta; Hut the children smile as they say, When frost is ehill on the misty hill, Comes the glad Thanksgiving Day,” Jus Th They know the harvest is garnered in, In its ripe and golden store, And patient and still the brown earth waits, For the time of its toll is o'er; It waits the snow that shall fold it low, Till it wakes from sleep once more pecially in street cars and when SOME HITS ON HOW [there in a hich wind, For the nose TO KEEP HEALTHY |" provided with filters that catch jand hold cold germs that would get BY STAR PHYSICIAN. into the system if breathed through Poor ventilation is the Indirect] the mouth cause of a large proportion of dis Ww Don’t in a car, theatre, leh irch or other meeting place when the is offensively charged with ff from the lungs of the peo- ple th It's better to hear folks cali you @ crank than to hear them say, ‘How natural he looks! stay ONE LIGHTED LAMP OR GAS JET IN A ROOM SPOILS MORE AIR THAN FIVE OR SIX PKO PLE, | Your Hair Show formula, on each label, to your doctor. Ask him if there is a single injurious ingredient. | Ask him if he thinks A: | Hafr Vigor, as made from ingredients, is the best pr tion you could use for jhair, or for dandruff. Does |color the hair. Al that the warmth and tha fun for too remember source of is within much external heat puts internal fire. Billie, how it is that you keep in so much better health, looks and spirits than [, You certainly work hard and I do absolutely nothing.” “That's it,” | answered. “ht is only when we do absolutely noth. ing that we become absolutely of | no use In the world. Nature real izen this Immediately and takes her| revenge upon our bodies, and when . |in cold weather, Keep them warm ARREST WRONG MAN; jand dry, for wet, cold feet are a HE LOSES FIANCEE | prolitic source of ‘trouble | DANVILLE, 28.— William | Wilson of Champaign was arrested | as he stepped off an interurban car| here on suspicion of belong William Wilson, a plumber, wanted for steal-| and brass from Joseph} Cavanaugh. | A young woman he was bringing | here to marry returned tearfully to Champaign and vowed she would have nothing to do with bim. naugh was out of the sts hiv return said Wilson was not right man. Draughts, being merely fresh air, are pot as dangerous as folks are wont to think, but beware of get ting one on the back of your neck. That 18 dangerous. Take particular oare of your feet Breathe DROP READ SEWING MACHINES $5 and Up This is a clean-up sale of all slightly used sew- ittg machines and ma- chines taken in exchange for our new “Whites,” including Singers, New Homes, Wheeler and Wilsons and all other makes. We must dispose of all these machines before sending in our anrtual re- port December 5, and you can have them at All machines guaranteed to through your nose. os | PUBLIC MARKETS WESTLAKE MAnKiOT 10 wack flour, 26 #1, @reen poss. Omts, 2b. potatoes 10 the ane corr ) 1 codfish, 20 brick mS 5 PIKE PEACE MARKET Pitted plume. ibe, Bie; 4 Jap orange box: honey pefrult, 4 fo practically price in first-class condition. White Sewing Machine Co. New Main Store: 1424 Third Av., Near Pike. Phone Main 1525. “We have just what we advertise.” B.—New machines rented $2 per month. your own be oysters. arp cheese herring ih, turkeys. ib Rooms warmed by gas or oil stoves require special attention to insure proper ventilation. VISIT THE MILWAUKEE” EXHIBIT CA And see a handsome display of GRAINS, FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Grown in Washington and the Northwest. To the Public: < You are cordially invited to visit Milwaukee Exhibit Car 500, which wil be open to visitors at the Jackson Street Union Passenger Station, Seattle, on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, November 29th, 30th, December Ist, from 10 a. m. to 12 noon and 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. This EXHIBIT CAR is handsomely decorated fruits, grains and vegetables, grown in Washington and the with of them, carriages to the left of them, carriages everywhere and nowhere. Thank God no lives lost except guard of I up's left eye.” HENS TANK UP ON FERMENTED PLUMS « BANGOR, Me., Nov, 28.--Mrs. Harry Stevens of Sabathis, a mem- her of the W. C.T, U., was terribly shoeked the other day to observe that all her hens were staggering ‘ound the yard intoxicated, Then she remembered that had ‘hrown out several jars plums whieh had fermented FALLS NINE STORIES, BREAKS FINGER CHICAGO, Novy. 28.—Grover Neil- son, structural jronworker, on a new Modiling here, plunged nine stories thrqugh an elevator shaft and, aside she of fory he suffered aM finger, of nn HYDROPLANE PICKS UP MAN AT SEA ‘EWPORT BEACH, Noy, 28.— Wihft was sald to be the first time a bydro-aeroplane ever took a pas- senger aboard from a motorboat wae accomplished here when Glenn Martin, the aviator, picked up Col. was a broken He landed on a pile Pacific Northwest, and is one of a number of such cars being operated by the “MILWAUKEE” for the purpose of demonstrating to the farmers of the Eastern and Middle Western States, the wonderful agricultural possibilities of the GREAT NORTHWEST. This is the first “Agricultural Exhibit Car” that has ever been displayed to the public in Washington and it will un- questionably prove of great interest to visitors. The car will be in charge of polite attendants, who will not only furnish information with regard to the manner in which this car is handled in the East, but will also be glad to receive comments and suggestions from visitors, who are interested in the development of this great country REMEMBER. The car will be open to visitors from 10 A. M. to 12 Noon and from 2 P. M. to § P, M. FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY, NOV. 29th, 30th, DEC. Ist. at the O.-W. R. & N. Passenger Station, 4th and Jackson St. R. M. CALKINS, GEO. W. HIBBARD, Traffic Manager General Passenger Agent CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & PUGET SOUND RAIL- WAY, SEATTLE C. H. MeKinstry, the U, 8. army engineer, off a launch in Newport oe]

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