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

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For Good Short Cake! that is really short, you will find that By Idah McGlone Gibson Illustrated by Helen Dryden, Most Famous of All American Women Fashion Ilustrators > | NEW YORK, July 5 ‘There ts poune i iakine jonly one fashion artist who can do | pictorial Justice to the clothes that | New York women are now wearing, and that is Helen Dryden,” 1 said fs {ndliapensadle,| t myself as T came out of Waldorf | It works evenly|“peacock alley” and walked down! and surely and) Ayfth av, Words cannot describe | the costumes of the society women, | suspens ise in tit the cake is baked,|¥h®, on account of the opening of the race tracks and the interna 25c Per Lb. tional polo games, have remained in New York longer this summer Ask Your Grocer Crescent Manufacturing Company |than usual Miss Dryden, the cleverest fash-| ton New York, gra-| clously agreed to draw some of the most up-to-date details of costumes Western Ornamental Iron & for The Star. And, a little later. Wire Works we strolled up the most beautiful 2443 Irving St. Seattic, Wash, | city street in the world and went to) Bn od . tea at the Plaza. > t Enclo: * . scap Rae eine Windoo Guante | “The atyles were never no boautl-| indow Guards, | eandiaas | Folding Gates and Fencing. |{t! as now.” sald | Misa Dryder Phone: Beacon 1586. ‘ustrator In she added, as I lifted my eye “they were never 60 | but brows a little, often caricatured by women who Od Th are not close observers and who| ON Theatre ick tine painted taste “Ashes of Three,” a 2-reel number. Surely, you don't think that “A Business Woman,” a Tanhauser, YO™aA looks well T said No, of course not,” she answer. She is a chorus girl who has \strayed over here from Broadway, and she is a fine example of WHAT) NOT TO obo TO BE INSTYLE!” | was rarely <u 4& Co, Keystone com | Firet Ave, Net, Pike and Union. The girl in question | beautiful in form and feature, but} she had exaggerated every one of| the new ideas | FASHION BECAME FOLLY IN HER CASE. | Her fac s covered with the new “cubist” powder which all smart New York women are us ing. This powder is a deep tint of yellowish brown, and, used with discretion, it gives one a look of }healthy tan. The little chorus girl had used tt plentifully, but had also put on brilliant Hp rouge, not real izing that when a woman tans all jher coloring. cheeks ANDO lip takes on a brown tint. She had also ma her throat very, very DR. L. R. CLARK, 0. O. 8. I want to reach the people who @o care about the kind of dental Work they have done. Particular people who are look white. She looked Iike a clown, but a girl who came io later was a pic ture, although she had used the same aids to accentuate her beauty. As & matter of fact, your throat ing for a response to their own —and that part of your chest that sense of beauty and refinement.|{s Invariably shown nowadays, for ‘That response they will find in our no one wears a collar—must be You Simply Have to H THE STAR—SATURDA 5, eee Ke) Typ ce Y, JULY 5, 1913, The all-black costume and the cubist coat—The two styles of the summer, as sketched by Miss Dry- den. in the upper corner you will s Dryden and Idah McGion e Gibson “on the job.” Latens To o Cursthin Gi Grey dental work. It speaks a language whiter than your face, as the sun| THE FIRST STEP TO }things? I will watch for your sure to appeal to them and speaks does not get to your neck so quick. WHITE SLAVERY. viee BROKEN HEARTED. louder after ft is worn a few years. ly. A VERY LITTLE brownish-red) pear Miss Grey: | am a young A.—My first advice is to get My prices are the lowest that rouge can be used at the base of | gir) of 18, and badly in need of a| over, once for all, thinking you | have ever been offered in Seattle, your neck to give the {dea of sun: friend's advice. I have been hang-| ate broken hearted. Some day | | considering the class you get. Just | burn. ing around th streets here for, you will laugh to think you | ithink of getting an extra heavy, Four out of six stylish women gome time, and have gotten sol go ever entertained the idea for a | 1$10.00 Gold Crown for $4.00, or a) I$sioa" $10.00 Never-Silp Plate for eo’ Can you beat It? Our guarantee ts the one that wear all black this season, and an all-black costume, with white ruf files at the neck and wrists, on a woman powdered to simulate tan, | protects you. It is signed by the is as beautiful as it is stunning. itor and manager | Every season there is cno hat . Nasciaaeabe which takes precedence over all the | Regal Dental Offices | Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D. 8, Manager }1405 Third Av., N. W. Cor. Union ) | NOTE—Bring This Ad With You STAR WANT ADS | BRING RESULTS + small black turban, with an up can wear either black paradise or namidie feathers, or even a black ribbon bow, on it, {f you wish, and) still be “en regal.” One of the newest, and prettiest, hi is a white or black satin skirt, made plain and narrow, and Steamer “Fortuna” ICNICS st ZZ O > =e Scandinavian Aid and Fellowship At FORTUNA PARK Take Yesler Way Car_ Finnish Brotherhood — A Take Madison Cable Car to cafes with anyone I can catch, so, I didn’t know what I was do- ing, and the fellow that took me would go home with me and some times stay till morning. I have tried to quit, but there ts a fellow here that I hate, and he says if I others. This summer it fe a very do, he will make me trouble, so I come to you. Will you tell me what standing frill of tulle about ft. You to do? gE ¢ A-—Hanging around = the streets is the first step to the hell of white slavery. What a pity you took it. My sympathy le greatly with you, but | want to really help you, and | cannot unless | tell you that you must honest with yourself look deep into your own con- sciousness and see If you really did not know that it was wrong to hang around and catch who- weak or wicked enough to meet your advances. You may seem to have been driven by loneliness, for | know all about the grey tone of a email hall room with a single gas plate, the smell of scant cooking, the lack of room and proper home environment; but, dear girl, in the right state of mind, you could never have resorted to the streets for amusement. | am not blaming you. We all make mistakes, but 1 don’t want you to make the further mistake of blaming and hating others. ‘A home where you can enter- tain a man all night is sacrilege of the word—whether it be a mansion or a hall room in a boarding house. Around the “nome” hovers the best we know of life, and develops Into the larger experience designat ed by the word, almost twice its size—heaven. Heaven on earth brought to each one of us by an Improved mental state, which will bring ite kind to dwell with you. Why, you can get more 1 companionship reading Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm,” from all the pink cuff satelites of the white siaver that prow! the streets looking for prey in the shape of lonesome girls. Now for the solution of this tangled problem you have made for yourself. Say nothing more to the man, but apply to one of the protective police women, either of the Y. W.C. A. or the city, or, If you live out of the city, to your protective officer of the county. Tell him 1 sent you, and that you are going to make .a good citizen of your- self, and want his protection— then do it. If | can help you further, write me, A WORKING GIRL’S PROBLEM Dear Miss Grey: I am a young| orphan girl, and work for my liv-| ing, and lve with my aunt. There {g a pleture show near, where I met f&@ young man about two years ago Now, Miss Grey, he {* jealous of me, and don't want me to speak -to any other boy and to very few girls. gaged, but I minded him, d he very seldom! does as I ask. Why I do It ta be cause 1 love bim We quarrel every last time I said I would never make up, but still T do, I am get ting so I do not love him any more, and have told him I am going to be angry with him forever, He sald, “I should worry.” I don’t mean It, for I always speak first. I want to know what to do about him talking about me, every time we quarrel, 1 never do about him, We are not |and tho last time he told one of At ATLA A imy girl friends that “I wasn't any I know | am a good girl. good.” | shal I ignore him or telf gm 1 ldon't want to have anything fo flo'oun p with him since 1 heard these have) woo, and the| Fit, now He thinks| Bridge Work moment. The boy may not have said what you heard—and he may; but leaving that out, | do not think him a desirabl panion for you, for he be ecifish and exacting, and you are not mature enough In judg | ment to know that by “mind- } ing” him you are doing him a This Time of Year time when your have a chance is the children to earn a few pennies the bene by Teach them of earning having rt an account A 414 per cent in Accounts opened on or 10th months’ will have six inter est added 1914 The Bank for Savings 3rd Ave. & Pike St. on January 1, Cor NA ge) ALBANY- PAINLES? (84060084 |Albany Cut-Rate| Dentists BACK OF OUR WoRK| 15 YEARS, GUARANTEE SIGNED BY US, EXTRA For 90 Days Only The following prices “wilt be given at our offices until September Tt, Come tn YoAsy-adofit put off. We dental work,for leas than your on to ndvertine our work STAND FoR wr |Set of Teeth, sre ‘anteed Solid Gold or Porcelain Gold or Porcelain $3 75¢ UP Solid Gold vier Silver Filings ° Albany Cut-R ate Dentists Kecond Floor Peoples Bank Bullding, Second and Pike. Take Elevator er Walk Up. 509 Uupt great wrong by encouraging him In hie faults, So, | would advise you that you drop him completely; let him say what he will, and 80 conduct yourself that people will know you are what you really are | A COMMON CASE Dear Mine Grey I am a boy of 17. My mother died when I was 6 years old, and my father married again. My stepmother Ix very ‘Stearns’ Electric Rat Roach Paste The National Rat Killer Kills off rats, mice, cockroaches, waterbugs and otter vermin, It te ready for eronomioal Je and sold under an abso arantes of money back LADIES, DO YOU WANT TO BE IN STYLE? ave a Slashed Skirt, and Let Your Waist Line Out jaaicr folded over with a deep slash in the back, Over this the block-printed Hnen In a big deslen cout © than half the women Long Island polo game who ¢ not «© on black costume wore thene linen coate over skirts of elther black white ay: t coat of this kind at the I day Miss Dr ! with big splashy figures in tan yellow. It was a cutaway and | derneath there was a golden-br ) Walet th this was worn a light crean rt A bro bon t jwith brilliant red cherries and a stunning parasol of shaded brown Nned with cream cor leted the cos tume All the #kirts are slashed more or loan ially more-—and every wor an is wearing low-cut ghoes with fancy silver or cut kien, | Gray silk ho worn more than} black with the hoes, Often a girl with very lender ankles will wear tockings, and with an all-black costume ist confess this fad ather ing ve ust carry a parasol this summer and the more brilliant the | 'tlwe N | sum better in years ha mer hate been as ame even the panar being no larger than those sold to the me | You r t let your watet out and | draw your pompadour tn. 1 Neve ine the Introduction of corsets have the waists of all wom-| en been #0 There must be| no cur t the walst at all And your hair must follow absolutely the | contour of our head “Above all else,” concluded Mins | Dryden tell your rea to look natural and explain m that lookin. natural an are ite different! must conform to the straight lines and healthy coloring whether they have them or not “That {# all right,” I answer “if one in slender as you are, | what are you going to do {f you are as fat as 1? “VIL tell you what I'l do—t'll put us both In the picture and every one can see how the stout and the slender woman looks In today’s sty! And sure enough she did, for in the corr of this illustration y will see as they looked that day on | 5th av—-Helen Dryden and Idah Mc |Glone Gibson! | mean to m There ts a gir! of 16 that lives near us, and my moth does not like me to go out. | bring home $14 @ week and give it all to her, but she ts not satisfied. If Ij want spending money, & says I }ean work nights for {t. She docen’t| let me go out ‘unless I jump out the| window, What more can I do? An r oor BoB. | A.—Of course, you knowl am | an advocate of children's rights, or you would not have written me, and | am glad you did. But, my boy, firmly as | think a boy | should have a reasonable | amount of spending money, | do not believe he should run around with a girl scarcely out of the primer and spend what he likes. It is not good for eith- er. Many step-mothers are mii Judged when they have the child’s good at heart. It is a very difficult position to fill, and | want you to be very sure in the right before you follow my advice, which is to take your trouble to the juven- | He officer, and if you are really abused he will protect you to | the timit. awe | STRANGERS IN A CiTy. | Dear Miss Grey: We are two young men 2: rs of age. We have been here four months and have been unable to make an ac- quaintance outside the office where we are employed. These office as- sociates are all married men, and in a much older circle than we wish would Itke get acquainted |with two respectable young wom- Sold by Druggists, 25¢ and $1.00 jen We get good pay and are not cont dire arees prepaia, |Stingy, but are gentlemen, and wish | n re f price only to relieve our loneliness. We Stearns’ Electele Paste Co., Chiengo, m.jhave studied on the problem for! DR. A. W. LEONARD First Methodist Episco- pal Church ng—11:00 o'clock n of Holy Communion. Cele Bvening—#:00 0% the lock Subject Sermon astor “Successful Men of Affairs” elr standards, Their tempta tions, Their successes, Their tions. per Organ Recltal by Prof to 8:00. Donley, 7:36 All welcome, Seats free. Fifth Ave. and Marton st. Phone Main 963. Eyres Transfer.Co,) Office 114 Jackson St. Arnold's Catarrh Remedy For the head. and stomach, works without pain, Relieves all Mucous, Constipation, Indi- gestion, Dyspepsia and Torpid Liver." Makes “Pale Faces” Pink. If, after using one 50¢ pack- age, you get no relief, return the empty package with your name and address to the drug. gist from whom purchased and get your money back, All my remedies are put up in compliance with the Pure Food and Drugs Act 1906, Serial No, 15,5 in no way mish June 80, ° Ask your druggist for them, he can get them for you or we will send them direct by mail iene, WILL SURPRISE YoU. OUR WORK WILL PLUABE YOU, 233-834 Arcade Bldg., Seattle |some time and, to da arrived at a solution, Will you ad-| vise us? BLAINE AND 1 | A.—It Is difficult for respect- able strangers to become ac- quainted with the best citizens; and It does make one lonely for a time. Can you not ask one of your older men friends to | introduce you to some of their | wives’ younger friends? Tell them frankly that you do not | care to mingle with those with whom it is easy to get acquaint. | ed, and | am sure they will be glad of the opportunity, and | you need not feel you are for- ward in the least in requesting this. ASK RECALL OF _ JUDGE L LINDSEY Leased Wire , July 5.—The recall of Judge Ben. B, Lindsey of the juve-| nile court is advocated in circulars mailed to voters by Dr. Mary Bates, secretary of the Woman's Protec- |tive league. The juvenile court, Dr.| | Bates charges, is protecting des-| potlers of young girls, The cireular purports to give the! records of 84 cases wherein men and boys were acquitted of attack- ing girls. It is charged that only 16 of the 84 men and boys, appearing before Judge Lindsey were pun- ished for assault. INVITATIONS HAVE been re- ‘celved by local pioneers to attend |the reunion of Washington pio- neers at Potnt Defiance park, Ta- have not Best modern outside rooms, 25c Stewart House,.56 West! | |to 500, { Ladies’ $25.00 and $28.00 workmanship Tailor Suit Shop 119-240 Lumber Exchanges Buliding Suits Made to Order | Before buying VENICE guaranteed. | On Bainbridge Albert B. Lord, Northern Bank Bidg. Front Island BUNGALOW KRAFT-HARDWARE and DECORATIVE METAL WORK raftsman doors, bullt-in buffets, bookcases, yoard fire Ace € Expensive in looks and quality—but not in price to YOU Catalogue to prospective bullders upon request. Can be supplied by every hardware dealer in Unit- ed States and Canada. If not obtainable from your Jealer, kindly inform us, and we will send you the ldress of our nearest agent to you, who will be ased to call with samples. ART HARDWARE & MFG. CQ. 928-930 First Ave. South—Seattle, Wash. Canadian Pacific SUMMER TOURIST TICKETS To Eastern Destinations, on sale May 28th to September 30th. Good for return until October 31st. You may stop both going and returning. For full information as to routes and rates, apply to W. H. GORDON, Agent 113 West Holly St, Bellingham A. B. WINTER, Agent 1519 Hewitt Ave., Everett Cc. E. BINGHAM, Agent, Sedro-Woolley J. W. HALL, Agent, Snohomish W. F. ROBINSON, Agent, Anacortes G. BENJ. POINDEXTER, Agent, Bremerton E. E. PENN General Agent Passenger Dept. 713 Second Ave., Seattle. '.. NORTHWESTERN CREDIT ASSN. Established 1903 658 Empire Bidg. Main 6324 SEATTLE’S CREDIT BUREAU COLLECTIONS and Other Features LEMME Seattle’s Best Photoplay House R Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Pathe’s Weekly Motion Picture STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS parto® ocesP

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