The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 9, 1913, Page 5

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Pastry are welcome BAKING When not dry. 25¢ _ per Grocer } CRESCENT MFG. CO, Seattle, Wash, Re! PRER. Onotce 0) ie fr 7 $25.00 and $28.00 AMUSEMENTS Phone Main 43 Tonight—All Week & POPULAR PRICES Matinee Daily ALISKY'S HAWAIIANS “The Police Inspector” We and 20c to do dental work without x “Our Method bas revoluttonized the old-fashioned torture of the chair. People are gind dental , keep appotntments here, for ‘know WE NEVER HURT A An as to CUT “R it honestly belongs. two. all work. Tt wilt alwage be good, wholesome food if raised CRESCENT POWDER never fails to raise the dough, feaving it light, Ask Your erent Siena ee MAKE MONEY—LEARN MILLINERY Mode) Mitiinery Sehoot_opane Jun (Pail term) Course Therough and of jst hat you MaKe to those whe apply with this ad S27? PROPLE'S MANK BLDO, Ladies’ Suits Made to Order Mt and workmanship guaranteed. Ladies’ Tailor Suit Shop 898-240 Lumoer Exchange Butiding — “ SEATTLE THEATRE |) THE REGENERATION Pantages Theatre herve sient | Becauso it has long deen his inten: 4—OTHER BIG ACTS—4 OR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. Real Cut Rate Dentist | Banish the fear, if you have held to the idea that it was impossible hurting to. {te strength makes it go fur- “RATE DENTIST. we have cut it down to where Just think of we have cut all dental prices in A written guarantee given with) Ice Saves Its Cost in What It Saves HOT WEATHER QUICKLY SPOILS FOODS Ice keeps the milk pure and sweet; the meat chilled ; the vegetables crisp and the fruit fresh. For Rates Phone Elliott 5560 Ice Delivery Company KLEIN’S SHOE HOSPITAL, 613 2nd Ay. WE DON’T DESTROY THE COMFORT IN OUR REPAIRING “UY. S. Government Inspected Meats” LITTLE LAME GIRL CURED BY GREAT SURGEON OF EUROPE, NOW HAPPY PRINCESS OVER OWN BIG PRINCIPALITY; MISTRESS OF $2,000,000 HOUSE Staff Special. LAKH PORK ML, June St momber ? '# the daughter of of Meat, Grandee of Grain and Em fen't what makes Lolita famous, miracle with his hands, putting | Nature had forgot to put it, Now « fe well and strong and imps ever so little, but ives free youth in the paradise her father has Tuling over her own princtpality Father and Mother Armotr are ing: Melody Farm, the country estate | tle to the west of Lake Forest But little Miss Lolita has To begin with, there's Job on he the | went {nto the miracle business hims He undertook to build Lolita’s prine! Nearly seven yours now scores dredge siourhs for a to make sunksn garde and gre ovely Naouses, to And this summer she {8 particularly happy To Know what that means you should see Melody Farm! & really, truly princess has a far humbler principality lost princesses, too, haven't much to do but wear thetr coronets place “country place” that he started to build for his ttle girl when he was Attle Lolita Armour—do you 1 oO Armour And be's Kin peror of Refrigeration | Lolita ie the tittle girl who was born lame and never walked a step until the great Dr, Lorenz came from Vienna and worked a hip bone In the place where happy from pain and full of the made for her joy ¢ in Kurope, and tn thelr of the Armours, out on the pra Man r hands. King Daddy calla tt just #0 happy berause the doctor cured her, But there ar Muropean sins amt queens who would be glad to trade thelr picayune palaces lor it | Théy say that $2,000,000 went into this beautiful white marble | villa, And tt doesn’t look at all as if tt ever had any(hi » do with pork. And it’s all so lovely and restful and harmonto fo nd color you ckn't help thinking that you yourself would feel at there when the strangeness wore off. There are cool halls and corridors, and clean, wt walks, and fountains playing, and green things growing, and big raries, and galleries, and music rooms, and dining rooms, and conserva. and coay dens, and luxurious baths, and dainty bedrooms with out end. And Princess Lolita looks after it all and sees that the serv ants keep everything In order, that the guests are entertained, that the jlarder is stocked and the tradesmen are paid That ts but the beginning. For you must know that King Daddy elf when Dr. pality out of a swamy of workmen have plant shrubs, re Rut that & beautiful girl of 14, who For she ts a princess, absene this bright little lass, who but lately was a helpless cripple, is manag Lorenz got through. tolled to rear outbuildings and Was and terraces and pergolas and paviitons, to winding lake full of islands and swans, and fish ponds and flower gardens and vere orchards and forest a of i y table ore | trees, to bAId roads and bridges and cottages, and to drain and cultl vate 1,000 acres of farm land | To Quit Job | in 20th Year| |tlon not to remain pastog of one) ehurch for over 20 years, Rev. W. A. Major, D. D., of the Bethauy Pres | that church befom the end of the 5 | year. ‘ ; | Rev. Major is one of the best known pastors in Seattle, and it ts | very likely he will'remain here after resigning from the Bethany church. He way take up the pastorate of an other church, or wil! enter some sort | jot religious work. Rev, Major was }Pastor of the Calvary Prosbyterian church at Linwood, O., before com | ing to Seattle. | Cold Medal, Londen, 1911 Largest Sate NICH GRADE Tee | = Werte, A whift of an Indian Gar Ws den's fragmnce comes to the tables of the Western World ther tham any other tea. All Righ-Class Order Triat Package } UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY Looks Silk. Costs One-Fourth u hh Weight (guarantors Better Service One detty ory aye tem for ail feo — com- pantes, cov- ering Geat- tie thoroly, PUGET MARKET COMPANY'S PACKING HOUSE MARKETS Meat Specials Tuesday | UNION HELP—16 Ounces to the pound. Lamb Chops ......15¢| Corned Pigs Feet... .5é Leg of Lamb ....15c| Choice Pot Roast...15c|Fancy Bacon......20c BIG WHITE MARKET, Old Pike Market. ° ° SNYOBR'S MARKET, New Corner Market. Your money returned if any sal@® we make are not as repreasente’ | |Pork Steaks teeee ee | om i dleach or whiten a byterian church, has announced that ¢¥eater (hat has turned yellow by) he will retire from the pastorate of S8shink me ont the evening }the afternoon without jcompanied by her mother? Do you think it nice for a young Indy to go with him to the park or anywhere jhe @id not have as nice a jhe expected, for him to treat her jcoldly and say little mean, slight ing things? would be better for him her the same, but not ask her to go [again if he did not wish ber com \Pany any more? tell me how to powdered sugar? lyour earliest convenience TO BLEACH A WHITE SWEATER Dear Miss Grey What and what rom shrinking? Yours for success, A READER. A.—It is much better to h a white sweater dry cleaned; you may do this yourself with powdered magnesia if it is not too badly solied. A sweater should not hed im hot water, as it both shrinke and turns it yellow. Wash in luke warm water and use woo! soap; rinse thor oughly in water of the same temperature. To bieach, mac. @ in peroxide, diluted with about five times its volume of water, and rendered percept- bly alkaline by the addition of ammonia, for from hours, with frequent stirring. Although the color is perma. nently destroyed by the per- oxide, the wool retains a slight yellow tinge, which may be masked by the addition of a little methyi violet, etther in the bath, or separately after. ward. After the wool has been freed from the liquid, the bleaching is then completed by ekposure to the sunlight. will keep ARE YOU PosiTive? As you seam to jbe an encyclopedia on all ethical igeeets ons, 1 am asking you to help | Dear Miss Grey mistakes, What I want Ie it proper for invitation t man to ask & young in the afternoon, and then be me Don't think to tre you Please answer this soon, as I a: |anxious to know about going out | with this young man MISS EB. X. Y A—lf you know the young man to be perfectly moral and nice in every respect, there is no harm in accepting the invi- tation; but do you know? Are you positive beyond doubt that he is a model young man? if not, do not think of going a long way from home in the evening uniese you are accom. panied by your mother or an older friend. it is rude for @ young man to make it plain to a girl he has accompanied that he has not enjoyed himself. “Certainly he should be polite to her and not ask her to go again if he finds no pleasure in her company. 'PLAIN FROSTING Dear Miss Grey: make {cing wi Kindly print A YOUNG COOK A.—White one egg, two tea- spoons cold water, 44 cup con- fectioners’ sugar, '% teaspoon vanilia of V2 tablespoon lemon juice Beat the white of egg until stiff, add water and sugar; beat thoroughly, then add flavoring. Use more sugar, If needed. Spread with @ broad-biaded knife. Dear Miss Grey; Will you kind inform me, through the columr where I should write to get info mation regarding — the Pension? . EF. M. H A.—Judge Frater, 500 Ninth av,, city., WOMANS PAGE COAXING A BEARD Dear Miss Grey: Iam a you man past 22, but look very yom much to my regret. I have Dave guessed 1 tures are you about that of a 17, and sometime younger. My fe and my size is iT-year-old boy I think, or rather know if I cou | grow a beard it would help me. a business way, look #0 you will white wool Tam not used to the ways here in the West and sometin maks know ta this: young girl, say 18 or 19, to accept an bd A READER. a A.—Your first marriage is le gal until it le set aside by an- - nulment proceedings. Your from a young man whom she knows to be ; moral and good in every some distance away from home in to church, or out in y to Ko being ac. ause as Will you please Mothers’ whiskers and people think me about handicaps me, so I will appreciate it very much {ff you can tell me of something right away that wil mote the growth of a beard, L. A.—Most men would appre it) ciate what you deem a misfor | tune, and consider themeetves lucky if they did not have to | bother about “a shave.’ i Massage pure, unscented vas- | eline well into the skin each evening, as it in one of the best | | known hair producers, and may be used without Injury to the skin. AT THE DANCE | Dear Mins Grey: What should a} | poy say when leaving his partner) Jat a dance, and what reply should the girl make? Thanking you. NL A.D. A.—It Is customary for a gen- tleman to remark, upon leaving the dance, or mere! She may acknowledge same by a bow, A MATRIMONIAL PROBLEM Dear Misa Grey: Will you kindly tell me what day of the week July 24, 1906; Sept. 16, 1887, and July 17, 1883, fell on? Ifa boy 18 years old marries Seainet his parents’ will and has children by this sald wife, and she leaves bim, and he marries after he becomes of age, is hia last mar riage legal? Can the children of bis first wife get any of hin property that the) second wife bas helped save? e Thanking you in advance. IY} second marriage is not legal un- less the first hae been canceled. At your death, the children by your first wife will inherit their share of their father’s property. While you live they cannot get anything untess they bother you with a question United States, and, if so, what day fs it? | |The fugitive is heavily armed and 'a battle Is expected. | One of Our Best Buyers |‘%": Spends a Vortune Each Year for Choice} Pad ete thousands of dollars’ Comet grown supplias annually peop | Piweutt Company as an are under age and the court has ordered that you support them and you refu duly 24, 1906, fell on Monday; Sept. 15, 1887, om Thursday; July 17, 1883, on Tuesday. “t) SHIRKING DUTY Dear Mias Grey: I will thank you for your kind advice. f am a m|Youns wife of 18, and have been unhappy. My husband works well, three out of four places they do not pay him, he says; but I cannot un derstand why they should not When I ask for an explanation, he will not answer, I have tried every way to find out the reason. Ho does not drink or gamble, and I would be very grateful If you ean tell me how to find ont if he ts paid, and {t would break my heart money to other women, when I need it so much, fle derites it, ff T men tion such @ thing, AN UNHAPPY WIF®. A—Your husband Is shirking proot | front oan and with Almost imoaleulabie sien, married ftve months, but I am very |» but | th at Union Dentists ™ Hdgework Fillings . Painless Extrotion oo be We offer you good, first clans den tal work at a moferate price, and would ike to have you consult us ding the condi of your ‘Our consulting specialist hax years of experience, and his 17 n Of your condition will be vai uable to you 1s With the aid of first clase material or-|] and a modern equipment, Able to serve you and having confidence in our ablilty to produce we are jneting results tn all Branch@ of den we offer you a. ib-yoar suarantes All work done patnidssty by moa- ern olectrioal devices. INVESTIGAT® OUR EASY ng * PAYMENT PLAN. pl Examination free, Offica hours, 9 NO}T to 6; evenings by appointment. Sun days 9 te Lp. m, -Union Dentists LADY eATTENDANTS ne n® ny ld We are permanently looted on In|] corner Pike and Third, with en- trance 806% Pike at.” over Owl nei Drug co where you will always find this bank. Just now lit is at Third and Pike Shown New York’s Underworld to be “The Regeneration” at the Seattle Theatre This Week | The most important dramatic production Scenically, “The Ke n” will reveal which Seattle has seen in many i d picturesque coming to Seattle and to the Seattl ratre present on this It is “The Regeneration,” a play by Owen attention is called to the first | Kildare, and this is the first time it ha act showing “Chicor Hall,” a_ hiding i he Regeneration” — she New York's | “The Regeneration” will open tonight. The famous underworld, its brutality, its crime. | price will be 25¢ for any seat in the house, But it also shows what one woman can do | but it will be well to go some other night, to make the world better for the demand for seats is very great, and hie duties as a married man, the house was sold out before noon. How- Is there @ national holiday tn the | We have bad an awful argument over it, and they tell me there is| really is, not July a@ national holiday? think congress had better get busy, don't you? Now, why isn't the Fourth of If it inn’t,| tO AN ARDUOUS READER. A.—As yet, no law has been | enacted by congress whereby the states are compelied to rec- / ognize July 4th as a holiday; however, the legislatures of all the states have made it a legal holiday. In reality, we have no nation- holiday; Thankegiving Is national holiday each year by the prociamation of the president. The al paid ibe, Sfle Comat Prod world, buys hundrede of, worth of Pa Thu ay be a real eurprine e who have thought of the 3 Paet tte supplies and baieine With widespread — distributton, | Dried then the N it is good to know manufacturer who and trom ws tends to if I should find out i he gives his | , tons of the Nat are already tmm Const. te & heavy burer of “ fo doubt tend towards even greater pos alarity buye large q of This 1 reat proctty Promote kind fee supplies and| Moth ngs. I vthy the Knowledge that the get Comat produ Wheat Bran Rhorts -From Beatle Trade Ree! HA TEE nual Sto: ler's Drug for most of the people of Seattle will be the place St. In a few years it will be at Fourth and Pine. The rate makes it easy | for you to save: | 42% interest The Bank forSavings Cor. Third Av. and Pike St. | q host cages Miss uM Mins Mr. wu vecoming nature. write, by local comm Kastern Alfalfa service te deeply an but the a {close to it in his charac | every day. |THE MARKETS the average prices merchan' following are As a melodrama, from the standpoint of the commission and detection of supposed crime. alytical is the hardest thing in the world uthor has appeal to you as people whom you hear of odueers and pi Wa by the re re The prices under “buying (plertin No i Washington tim sound timothy hey. and barley RVARD announces SENIOR that dance. p that toothache Liquid Tooth Filler. Co., Seattle Odeon Theatre 1 wii Ragin af orl ys special, price, $16.85. comedy BARKED FROM THE MATES. Scenic C Our ro afford, we clase meals are the marke perfect highest 4 the entertainers of (he stage in Seattle rRoGRAM Bolle Manning. Meten Vatt Frances Grey—... Lyr! Chas Sifleman.... Viol pifred Dolly Plume SCRNIC CATR 1605 Wiret Ave. ‘ “e Dressed Mrate—-Selling 7.0 Feed, Selling Price. my Prive. the sur paid by the Wier —— —_ under “selling price” Prices In all cares SAUL? 8TE. MARIE, Mich.,|are sunject to variation. according to June 9—-An armed pone is neok- (‘renner and ng ey ing today Joseph Tovens, who fa |. erader tally stabbed Alfred Seritmer and |!« Killed Deputy Sheriff Jas, Sutton re ee 1 134016 ° Mee 1s Price. | of Simple, unaffected emotion, life as it drawing. ine erate.) 1.28@ 1180 1 ess @ 15 6 rate 6:00 oo | COMMIT. tangos and trots will not be barred at the an-| the But- Butle ¥ a afe jutely the 4 our ene vaudeville 2" Bopenno” Comedian te Soprano in Wonder - Pianist Poor Mer ever, “The Re tell them ory; if he is cee \ i . turing irst be being bald Pon wait be apt |'* keeps up a liv weeree: CNTINE tHe : Sunday. The to tell you the reason. two acts, and after that, when the finish has best seats in NATIONAL HOLIDAYS | become obvious and a mere matter of working | | 1. an. . 4 balcony, 2 Dear Miss Gre Mere 1 come to! in det ail, the play grows even better by | are possible real human Seattle Th written very They | Cherry street FORMAL OPENING OF LUNA PARK Luna Park opened for the sum- mer, and in spite of the inclement thousand people were on hand to take part in the weather, several festivities. Dieastro'’s famous band iondered & well-chosen program, which made} From 3 o'clock till 11:30 every attraction! was taxed to {ts capacity, Man- a hit with the crowd. } generation” runs all week, with special matinees on Thursday, Saturday and evening prices are SOc for the he 30c for the for the gallery. These prices reason of the fact that the the tse, and re is independent+-the only one in Seattle which is not unger the domination of the Theatrical Syndicate of New York City. It is expected that, “The Regeneration” will | fill the fine old Seattle Theatre at Third and at every performance this week. i THOUSANDS ATTEND faa Labb promises that there will be something new in the way of free attractions every week. | A large canvas canopy im front | of the band stand affords sholter in | case of rain, | Dicastro’s Royai Military Band The World's Recognized Talent in Concert 3 p. m.—Dally—8 p. m. Admission Free | Interesting Values in Dependable Furniture $30 Oak Dresser $16.85 A beautiful Dresser, similar to picture, but has wood knobs instead of brass pulls; buil€ of selected quarter-sawed oak’ in the popular golden finish. Has two ‘full-length drawers and two divided drawers. Large beveled. French plate mirror. A remarkable value at the erator this ‘week the easy terms. . 5th and Pike In the Heart of Town Buy a Herrick Refrig- $25.00 Salid Oak Library Table $14.95 $14.95 is a mighty small | Price to pay for a solid, quar- | ter-sawed oak Library Table of this quality. Has large under | shelf for books and magazines andvis unusually well finished throughont. Speciat.for the week at $14.95. $f Down Weekly on 5th and Pike In the Heart of Town

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