The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1913, Page 5

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nascar TO TALK T DEMS’ LUNCHEON of uine ay Atlan A. J. McKe and Dr, Ann Natio Conference © here, 1 way fo t ta, | Strong of on s and Cor he ce plank | onven, Hereafter are £0 ng to give yur time ex clusively to the selling of Suits and The few remain ing lots of other art! cles in stock, such as Dresses, Kimonos, Linen Suits, Waists and Dusters will closed regard of cost. oats, | Lot No. 1—$20, $25 and Suits (just a few of , all go at Price 2—Rine Serge 50 left), re- $22, $25 and oy Lot No. 4—A few extra gpd cut from $18 $23, to No. 5 — Twenty Serge Suits, reduced $18.25 and $30, at just Suit Shop ROOMS 5001.22.4.56.7.8 ARCADE BLDG. MOND AVE, Bet. UNION AND UNIVERSITY, By Aunt Gertie would you think, children, Id _you that little Prince Wil which fs William tn inglish # born on the Fourth of July? Doesn't {t seem Hke a joke for a What Germany | royal child of Europe to be having @ birthday on the day American nd girls are ce rating be- | CAUSE OF, AND REMEDY FOR |WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC | Dear Miss Grey: Wil! you tell) me what you think the cause of the |white slave traffic, and what you} would suggest as a remedy? Thank-| jing you in return, I hope this will] [Rot escape your attention. ANXIOUS, A—A combination of causes lies back of the greatest bict on our civilization. In giving what evems to me the primary causes, | in no wise intend to malign our local “heads,” nor the conscientious parents who are faithfully doing their best In th ive spheres. Here are what | think the prin cipal causes in the white slave traffic: “Accidental” children—those born of mere animal propensi- ties. Lax parental guidance and careless oversight. Allowing the young to feed their minds on sensational [it erature(?) and other danger. ous foods. Failure on the part of offi- cers of the law to enforce the same. Double standard of mor ality, resulting In a law where by the fine for stealing a horse Is greater than that for stealing a young girl. Low wage and attendant temptations. Business == employment of girls “living at home,” depriv- ing the homeless girl of a liv- ing wage. The remedy, as | see it, is marriage based on high mo- Children born of true and in healthful environ. ment as to parentage and home surroundings, and of parents sensible enough to be capable of instilling principle in the children. Home improvement in every line. Proper moral instruction of boys and girls by the parents. A money allowance to young people by the parents, coupled with training ae to the right use of it, thus allowing the homeless working girl her place and rightful wage in the business world. Abolishment of obscene liter. ature and pictures from the news stands and stores. Self-improvement of men and women in the right use of the ballot. The raising of the self-gov- ernment of girls from 18 to 21. The abolishment of intoxi- cating liquors in hotels and cafes. } |THE TRIALS OF YOUTH Dear Miss Grey: I'm tn trouble ‘and come to you for help. I am a young girl of 14, and got a letter from a boy of about 16. I answered his letter kindly. The next time I got a letter he said: “I never wrote the letters; don't write any more, for this is the end of you.” Now, I like him very much, and he said he never did like me, and whenever he sees mo he calls me “cowhide,” and “a homely mutt.” I hate to be called such names. One [night I went to the end of the line, |¢ and he was with another boy, and| I didn’t say anything to him, bu Just went about my own business, and he called my name. Don't think me foolish, but will you ad vise me? Shall I call him up, or| have nothing to do with him? | A.M A.—if | were you, and called him at all, | would “onli ‘him | down”—and hard, too. But the best thing you can do is to let him severely alone, Don't let the fact that you think you love him make a fool of you. Even If someone else wrote the let- ters, he could be a gentleman. Another thing, don’t = run around at night alone. Have your mother or an older, sen- sible friend with you. \TO TRACE FOREIGN ESTATE Dear Miss Grey: How can find the address of someone as can ‘nform me of some sh let, to my, ‘a PRINCE WILHELM cause their country fs a free repub- le? That is what little helm will be doting n July, for he will be just 7 then! Of course, you know, boys and} girls, that Prince Wilhelm t» the oldest son of the crown prince of This means that, some day, he will be emperor and reign over 60,000,000 people But, now, little Prince Wilhelm fs growing up just Itke any ord! nary child would. His mother and/ o Cy he waa very young, and has never been claime It is In England and an Englishman told me that it ia still there, waiting for the heir to claim it AN ENQUIRER. A.—You would best employ a lawyer whom you know to be clever and honest. Where the prospect is good, an attorney will usually take a ciek in giv. Ing his services for a certain amount of the money secured. This sort of arrangement will reileve you of present expense. TO FIND A LOST HUSBAND Dear Miss Gréy: My husband went away and 1 do not know Funeral Designs at Half Price Paris Florist, 218 Pike Ladies’ Suits Made to Order $25.00 and $28.00 Fit and workmanship guaranteed. Ladies’ Tailor Suit Shop $88-249 Lumber Bachange Buliding Wedding Bouquets Decora- tions Cut Flowers Lowest Prices mpt Attention. Rpeciaity Your Rusiness: HOLLYWOOD GARDENS, Inc. Second Ay. at Fine, Phone Main 1045, Filling 50c Up Tee best i pee te prover = ‘fitings are piaced. Gold Crowns $3-$4 To obtain good service a badly decayed tooth, allow us to ‘Treat Wt, then fill ft apd afverwerde crown ry ne 14 of Poreaiain Crowns. Corprieet at the quality of an . Tooth Bridgework $3-$4 OHIO |DENTISTS 207 University St, Seoond amd Ustoorelte Ope. ea er ee oT = a Seid, f-g* yf wm have the best pervice from them. FullSets Teeth,$5 Up We have thousands of Heattle oustom- ers who will tell you that they never |kenew that plates could be fitted go per. Fecdy ‘antil they had ue do the wo ‘Any work that dosen't prove satiefac- tory will be free of charge at oma in ORE tay fre cite ome In BOOM—toda! 12-Year Guarantee to All Free Examination CUT-| RATE) \e “¢ ~<4é THE LITTLE WILHELM, BORN ON JULY 4th, WILL SOMEDAY BE GERMAN EMPEROR though very great pe Germany, believe that their family should learn to work; to'do things for themnelves They belleve they should play out of doors; learn to ride horseback, all and all the nic happy games you boys girls Ike to play Do you wears? The little prince wears this garb all the year round. But in winter he {ts allowed to have on a sweater and stockings, too. This simple makes him strong and rugged! father, other notice the tunic he well and asthin. G where he ts. I have tried to locate him, but cannot. WII you be so kind as to advise me how to find him, as I think a lot of him, and I suppose he does of me, but the company he keeps spotls him. A BROKEN-HEARTED WIFE A—You might get in touch with him by inserting a notice or ad In the paper. If you do not care to do this, the city po- lice or detectives can prob- ably locate him. ENGAGEMENT ISN'T A MORTGAGE Dear Miss Grey I would like to get your opinion, although I am old enough to know without asking. T am past 40, and engaged to « widow of 36, whom I love dearly. She is gotng away on a visit for few months, and she tells me she intends going with other men while jaway, knowing I don't want her to |4o so. Is she right, or wrong? | What shall I do? jA MAN WHO DOESN'T KNOW, A—An engagement —for- tunately does not have a mort- gage attached. She is honest In telling you her Intentions. Why don’t you trust her? A woman often must forego many pleasures unless ehe has a male escort, and on her visit she would make herself very con- lcuous If she should refuse all invitations from men. Be sensible, and uneelfiesh, and she will think the more of you for It. THE PROPER AUTHORITY Dear Misa Grey: Please Inform me whom @ person should go to to! make an assignment for the benefit of his creditors. I am up against {t good and hard and cannot find a lawyer. J.B. H. AI hope by the time this reaches you you will have found another way out. If not, con- sult the prosecuting attorney. THK AKKREHhKhhhh Owing to the continued growth of the Cynthia Grey department, no information can be given by telephone, but all questions by letter will be answered as promptly as pos alble. A stamped, self-ad dressed envelope will always bring a return-mail reply. If the matter is very important, put on a special delivery stamp or six 2-cent stampa, and mark it “Special.” * * * * * co * * * * eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee * * * * * REE EARHKE KKK Hat Point Iron $2.9 $3.50 Hot Point Iron, full nickel plated, with 6-foot cord; 5 or 6-lb. Guaranteed for 10 years. On sale Saturday, only $2.98 | Colquhoun Hardware Co 1426 Third Ave. Eraser-Paterson STAR—FRIDAY, way of dressing him| *! JULY 4, 1913, ac Dougall cfouthwick Special Sale of In connection with JAMES MeCREERYS CO., New York Boys’ Clothing At Sharply Reduced Prices $5.00 5 for 85. for $5.85. for $7.82 Suits $10.00 O Suits Suits Special Sale of Boys’ Straw Hats Hats for $1.25. $1.50 Hats for BO¢, $1.00 Hats for 65¢. toys’ White Duck $1.00. Khaki $2.00 ers Roys’ $1.00. XM | 14, Purchased by Stores to 4,000 pairs will be sold tn t been able to offer at anything had are 9, 9%, 10, 10%, 11 and gray and navy. hose, It has Isle heel, toe and $1.00 B. V. D. Union Suits $1.00 two-piece suite at She. $1.00 Porosknit Union Suit This hose ts heavy silk plated, with the lv ar in ra lor It of the Trous on side with large pearl buttons Trousers, Third het 396,000 Pairs of Men’s Hose are Our Affiliated Seli at 25c he Men's Section This Howe is the most wonderful value that we have ever like the price. The sizes to be 11%. The colors are black, tan, ter of a pure ailk top. It will wear better than any other hose sold in Seattle at 25¢. at She. Also any of our regular or two-piece sult, S5¢, —Just Inside the Pike Street Door. The MacDougall- Sou thwick Co. Second Av. One Store open from 9 a, m. to 6 pm. ape Summer Dresses at Two Very Low Prices $7.50 and $9.00 A appropriate than the terials. and will give , could be more » check Madras close diagonally T $7.50 are a variety of dainty st colorings and 1 They not only pretty—they 4 efully 4 good service. For boating or outing wear noth black and white or blue and wh ‘esses with collars and cuffs sealle in red They front with large pearl buttons—V-neck AT 89.00 are Dresses of finer materia of pink and white check gingham is made with short sleeves and ther low neck. The turn-back cuffs and large sailor collar are scal- ved and trimmed with nds of plain terial and buttons to ma is piped with the plain material down the front and about the ed, overskirt, and closes with the little pink buttons. WASH SKIRTS POPULARLY PRICED. Plain taflored Cord Skirts in six-gored style, for $2.00. At $4.00 are plain tailored six-gored Skirts of Horreckses rep attractive Skirt in wide wale Bedford cord, closes at the It {s a four-gored model. Price $5.00. Natural color Crash Skirts, trimmed with large red bullet buttons; new and smart. They are priced at $7.50, and more elaborate make. A very —Second Floor. T BASEMENT! ARGAIN. SQUARE More for a $ Than a § Will Buy Elsewhere Imported Gloves 25c An assortment of women's Gloves, including silk Msle and chamolsette, {n black, white and colors. The pair, 25c, 50c Double-Tipped Silk Gloves 43c An accumulation of various shades, as well as black and white. All clean, desirable mer- chandise, placed on sale in the Basement Bargain Square. $1.15, $1.65 and $2.15 Are the Amounts You Save When You Buy These $2.85 Shoes The Former Prices of Which Were $4.00, $4.50 and $5.00 VERY pair ts Sorosis make and the styles offered in- clude patent kid Oxfords, with round toes, short vamps, tips, welt soles and Cuban heels. Patent Blucher Oxfords with jong vamp, light welted sole and Cuban heel Dull kid Blucher Oxfords, long vamp, light flex- {ple weit sole and Cuban heel. Tan Russia calf Oxfords with tip, ribbon lacing, welted sole and Cuban heel, Priced at $2.85. —Second Floor. and Pike St. The MacDougall- Southwick Co. When the Crocker land a “Mothers Are to Blame for Their Daughters’ epeabine dior g efi re Downfall,’’ Expert Declares. “Stop Joyrides and Put More Clothes on Them,’ LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 4— Oriet for a danghter shook the | frame of a little mother, who walk- ed the floor of a bare cottage in the factory distric ‘The girl lay tn a white ward In the county hospital, badly hurt. She was only one of the 70 girls taken to hospitals during the past six months. A motorcycle “elope ment” with a man she scarcely knew was responsible for the girl's {liness and for the mother's grief. “My daughter is dead to me.” said the sorely stricken mother, with no tears, but quivering with hoarse sobs, when asked what she thought might remedy the threatening s0- cial condition. “It fs on us, on us mothers, that this blight strikes heaviest. What can we do? “A few hours ago my daughter was here by my side, happy with her lessons. I never suspected any- thing. Then—she went to a mat- \inee with a friend, and the next jthing I hear is this.” | At the room's side was a cur- tain. The mother pulled It back and revealed a sleeping baby. A bitter glance, and she almost threw the curtain back into place “That's another!" she exclaimed. ‘That's another daughter, another \girl. What can I do with har when she grows up? Is she going the way my other girl did? Oh, God, I wish someone could answer me. I must bring up this baby as well as I can, without knowing what minute she will be snatched away | ‘Thus the mothers grieve their girls are gone, yet it is the mothers, And the mothers only, who can save their girls, according to It's almost more than I can bear,” | after! HUGH C. GIBSON, Hugh C. Gibson, chief probation of- ficer of the juvenile court, Mothers are often largely blame when their daughters astray. * This is the verdict of Hugh C. Gibson, chief probation officer of the juvenile court, in answer to the question What ts great recent ber of girls |for dissolute Gibson sa to go the increase who 1} remedy for in the num ave good homes lives? 8 that _the e Paid $200 fora Fake Divorce how Joseph Mellenberg of Boston was swindled out of $200 and was |given a “fak recited in the Suffolk divorce court when Emma Trest, whom Mellen berg married, thinking he was a dl vorced man, was given a decree of | nullity, Mullenberg sald that he | {went to a Roxbury lawyer and ar- | |ranged to sue for a divorce. When , & man stepped up to him| “That lawyer ta no good |He can’t get you a divorce, I'll do it quick for $200." Mellenberg sald he pald the $200, and a short time later received a paper which read, “Decree, after hearing on libel, granted April 5, 1912." It was sign ed “T, Howard Becknell, Regis- trar.” Two months later Mullen berg said he and Miss Trest were) wed SHINGLES ASHES NOW PORT ANGELES, Puly 4.—A mil- liom shingles were destroyed in a fire which broke out at t Puget Sound Mills & Ttmber Co.'s mill here Thursday. The origin of the |blaze ia unknown The fire was [confined to the pile of shingles, | which were fully covered by tnsur ance | | The wireless time signals sent) jout by the Government from Wash ington are picked up by thousands Jot watchmakers, CHICAGO, July 4.—The story of) ‘Teach Stealing i in | School, Says He CHAMPAIGN, IL, July 4.—“Even cabmen tn front of a Chicago de- pot may be just as good citizens as any alderman,” said Dean Daven- " divoree decree Was port in an address to the University | of Illinois summer students. “The | jcabby’s life may spell success from | the real standpoint. to steal in the schools of today, and we are teaching thievery. When we get into the high school it ts called swiping, and when the pupil enters college it is spoken of as col- lecting souvent Freckle-Face Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots —How to Remove Easily Here's a chance, Miss Freckle face, to try a remedy for freckles | with the guarantee of a reliable deal er that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles; while if tt does give you a clear} complexion, the expense ts trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine— double strength, from the Bartell Drug Co, aud a few applications should show you how easy It 1s to| rid yourself of the homely freckles | and get a beautiful complexion Rarely ta more than one ounce | needed for the worst case Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine, as this is the prescription sold under the} | ditions three brides and their husbands, members of the party, will be sep- arated for at least three years, ? His Advice) ean only be permanently bettered in the homes, by the mothers. There lies the remedy for the evil which statistics show is menacing the American home. “Proper restrictions at home would prevent girls from being lured aw: declares Gibson. “If mogh- ers knew where their daughters went, who their acquaintances and friends of both sexes were, and how they conducted themselves away from home, and governed their daughters accordingly, the problem would be nearly solved. “Rag dances, they are called are one of the causes. “Automobiles start many a girl going wrong. Do away with ‘rag- ging,’ put more clothes on the girls, stop the midnight joy-rides, and there will certainly be a cor- |responding decrease {In the number lof feminine delinquency cases we! have to deal with.” The Wonder Millinery Co. 1525 Second Ave. 216 Pike St. $5 SMALL DROOP PANAMA SHAPES $3.49 TRIMMED $5.00 A large number of splendid Trimmed Hats at HALF | PRICE. ——TWO STORES—— 1525 SECOND AV. 216 PIKE ST. WwOMEN— Use Your Credit Open a Charge Ac- count at the Fac- tory Hair Store— You Can Pay on Easy Terms. We manufacture everything in Hair Goods, including: Front Pieces, Trans- poh came Curls, Puffs, Toupe: 4 Wigs, Old Pieces or any Spe- cial Pattern or De- sign. Bring in or mail us your Cut Hair and Combings. Zamora C. Cauffman Factory Hair Store 1401 Firet Av. | Specials for Saturday JOIN THE CROWDS AT OUR QUALITY MARKET. ALWAYS BETTER FOR LESS MONEY. NOTE OUR PRICES—READ THEM. Pork Roast 15c¢ Pork Steak 15¢c Legs Lamb 15c Lamb Chops... 15c Choice Corn Beef 12%c Corned Pig’s Head 8c YOUR MONEY RETURNED IF SALES AS REPRESENTED Watch our daily ad in Star for specials—We always sell for less, Children learn | ARE NOT PUGET MARKET CO.’S PACKING HOUSE Big White Market Snyder's Market New Cor. ner » Market Old Pike Place Market money back if it fails to remove freckles, MARKETS

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