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adies” Suits Made to Order $25.00 and $28.00 Hie and Workm } Ladies” Tailor Suit Shop Lumber Exchange Bide Silk Pe Skirts Waists Gloves Ladies fafpat this ad and mail for p etc. Silk {mporters SEATTLE, WASH. es; Phone, Main 1764 Phone sod 1478 ROBERT CURTIS TRICAL CONTRACTOR Repairing, Installing 7018 Post St. Seattie Ornamental Iron * Wire Works rv) — St, Seattle, Wash. Josures, Fire Es ioe ond Wire Window Guards, Poiding Gates an¢ Fencing. Phone: Beacon 1586. “DENNY-RENTON” All Clay Products 1007 Hoge Bldg. CARROLL’S Jewelry and Optical Store New Location Pike Bidg.). Saturday, August 9. sale still continues ‘OR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. Bemember, we can fill, crown or any tooth you have witho Our prices are the lowest th ever been offered in Seattle | { the high-class work which we Just think of getting an extra $10.00 Gold Crown for $4.00, free of our famous $10.00 Never And not only Plates for $5.00' We pin a guarantee to eve Mettpted bill; ‘ting to you. WE GIVE GAS Regal Dental Offices LR. Clark, D. D. S., Manage IM Third Av., N. W. Cor. Union ring This Ad With You IS PRETTY GIRL’S PICTURE Eitiett 2006 Mberty Bide. and tn PACKIN ANY'S Stockings apes, (new Joshua Green that means some- oship Guaranteed HOW DREADFULLY ‘ SHOCKING Dear Miss Grey think of the W. C. T cream at a pt answer this to I think you vod work, | What do ye U, selling te ance? Plea an argumer doing wishes to you AN INTERESTED READER A.—-I cannot what ment there can be on this sub- ject unless it might possibly be that some might object to women, who represent some. thing the majority of people call good, attending public dane Personally, | see no reason why they should not seli ice cream there If they want to. They may reasonably think that the more lee cream they sell the liquor will be used. People whose good will not stand the teat of associating with any but the good are not very strong. | do not believe in play- Ing with fire but one who knows he Is strong enough to stand up anywhere can go anywhere and not be harmed. ar & poo oBvious Dear Miss T am a youn | girl 18 and I met a young man at ested in me. He asked if he mig call some night. mother would not approve. I seems to be a nice young man an I do not wish to appear cold. F tell me what to do. | PERPLEXED. A—Ask your mother. If she does not object or if she does, tell the young man. eS | ESPECIALLY FAVOR THEM ° | Dear Mise Grey Har exceedingly }looks. We | mark as we pass them on the stre: |"There go two o | girls in town.” We have many young friends, among whom are | whom we espectally favor. We ha | | | | | We are and striking been going with them for two years jand they have acted strictly with the bounds of etiquette. Bat, evening as we were returning hor they suddenly became very kissable we jand huggable, and although |like this change of manner ve |mach we do not know whether jcontinue gofng with ther. or stop. | Please advise us EXPECTANT AND HOPEFUL. A—t honestly think It beet for all to either revert to the plain friends you were, or to stop altogethe The combi nation of two vain girls, and two kissable, huggable boys, does not sum up very well. Of course you will over this vanity some day; but | would like to save you the hard leseon you will have to learn, if you do not recognize soon that mere beauty, unbacked by under. standing of how fleeting and unsubetantial it Is, is not to be desired; while, if rightly looked upon It fe harmless, and lovely. a PROSPECTIVE wibow. ° | ear Miss Grey: I am only 2 and have been married; but a suing my husband for divorce. {t proper for me to attend a sho married woman? yhen I lor show with him or alone. answer soon WIDOW-TO-BE. A—tI suppose after such rigid discipline you begin to feel like a bird let out of a cage; but I would go slowly. Do not allow your head to be turned. It is all right to go to a good, decent show once in awhile with other women, if you want; but it will be best not to attend dances or to accept the company of men until after your divorce. You att have waited this long, be | patient a while longer. at | \e GoT PEEVED. — | Dear Miss Grey: six months. her way wherever we went. I wou! ry |not let her, and she got peeve Now, Miss Grey, when I take around not spoken to me. Miss Grey, a@ I not right? I think I am. I wou ike to hear from some of th readers in regard to this. IN BAD JIM. A—l| can imagine that It makes a man who is ac customed to paying a lady's ex- ir the result of a ha hour's effort, depend upon goc work and fast serv- ice from The Rapid Service Engraving Co. The Fastest Engravers on Earth G HOUSE MARKETS Meat Specials Wednesday UNION HELP—16 Ounces to the pound, H Pickled Pork. ..-10c| Pot Roast. ++-14e Comed Beef.....1214c|Bacon ............18¢ Spare Ribs........15c/Pig’s Feet.. 8G WHITE MARKET, Old Pike Market. SNYDER'S MARKET, New Corner Market Tour money returned if any #a lee we make are not as represented A great an | party one night who seemed Inter IT am afraid m two girls 17 and 18 years old, very popu have heard people re- the prettiest men two one Jor dance with my sister and another | profit. lived | alted emotion of an |with him I never went to a dance | Brunhiide Please PRECIATIVE MAN! ——# | single, often sees the most poetical, I have been going with a young lady for about} The other night we were out, and she wanted to pay) lady friend out I want to pay all Since that night she has I am, clearly proves that you can THE STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1913. j z Aa JUST HAD TO GIGGLE @| penses when out, feel like lene ¢| than thirty cents to have her do 80; but at the same time I firm. | ® ty believe, to the polnt of know. | ing, that this is one of the customs that has weakened women, and some of them try to get all the money from a man possible, | do not belleve that a girl has the right to make a man appear ridiculous by going against custom in 80 small a matter; but if she in sists on paying can you not compromise by allowing her to pay you afterward? | like the spirit of Independence she shows, and the day will come when each and every individual will be responsible for his or her expen } but | see no use In quarreling over conditions while we ate gradually develop- ing out of them. | ° 0 Dear Miss Grey We young girls, very popular, and con jsidered fine looking here has been a fine young fellow taking us both to theatres and al dances | We must admit he has been agen | }tleman alway# Two weeks ago jhe took us to & dance, and we met Jother young men. One of them| asked us who brought us, and my sirl friend started in Joking about him tn a terrible manner about his fat face, He came up and was in troduced to them, and all us girls] | got to laughing so we had to leave, | One of the boys put him wise, and now he doesn't come and take as |anywhore. I'm sorry, for It embar | rassed him to a reddish purple, but }1 Just had to giggle, We want to) win him back, but both of us atimit | are two | a ‘we will have to laugh if we start! == OF INTEREST TO OUR WOMEN READERS == to apologize, Would it be better to write him? A WINSOME PAIR. A.—1 am afraid your signa ture is a misnomer. No win some girl would be so unkind as to laugh at anyone—espe cially one who had always shown her respect and a good time. | don't think you are sincere In saying you are sor- ry, 80 advise you to walt until you are before apologizing. The young man is worthy of the companionship of better hearted girls than you two have proven, It is such treat: ment as you gave him that makes some men think all girls ¢ heartless. You may have been thoughtless, but when you carry It so far.as to want to laugh when you apologize, you are cruel. The Seven Ages of Woman in Love! When, By Cynthia Grey. Except as a memory, romantic love is supposed to be unknown to | THIRTY-FIVE, the sixth of the! SEVEN - AGES. OF- WOMAN. IN-| LOVE. Average man sees nothing about average wornan of this age to pro- voke @ sentimental attachment, un- already a member of his ned to re- lepect the worthy qualities upon, ) which he has often depended. 1 | “That's DIFFERENT every man admits. “The USEFULNESS @ of Thirty-five is beyond dispute.” But the bachelor of that age does not turn to the spinster when wd wants a wife. That HE cannot love her {* proof | sufficient that THIRTY-FIVE can-| not love, according to the kind of | logic man uses when he thinks| about woman. But man isn't always right! His mistake here is that what the MAN of middle age calls LOV WOMAN of that age DOES RECOGNIZE by that name, It is hard to find an adjective which deserlbes just what Thirty. five does mean by love. Only af- finities use the word spiritual (in @ nonreligious sense), and they misuse {t. In fact, they misuse all the words which distingui#h any fine and high attachment between a man and a woman, Which is a pity, because “affinity love” ts usually only the moat tncorrigible physical passion blindly obeyed by individuals who are intellectually qualified to know better. And so there are not any left-| over words in the dictionary to ex press the exaltation of love which Thirty-five can actually bestow up- [on a man. Some it oppresses, and others have to strive harder than | they like to be worthy of-tt. | And this is the reason why you {have to doubt the veracity of the music box in many a beautiful par | lor as it trolls forth “Home, Sweet Home.” | The husband's dally mental diet $ Consists of hard business facts and MATERIAL profit. He @ per- > mits the word LOVE to be alto- 20,/ gether eliminated from his vocab- m | ulary. Is| The wife attends al) the local cul- Ww | ture clubs, to her great PSYCHICAL She longs to lavish the ex Isolde or @ REALLY AP- But her hus | band {s confident that he is appre jelating Wagner sufficiently, and | rendering full tribute to love—when Be pays for opera tickets. No man UNDERSTANDS! (An Jother perfectly good word gone wrong by constant association with affinities.) That ia the TRAGEDY of woman in the sixth age of love. | YOUTH and love go together tn |the mind of man. But women not |zouns are permitted to be USE- | FUL And so Thirty-five, ° | 5 a ht y te nd in et, ve in ry to upon a The husband's dally mental di and material profit. | screained, but they dragged her to an untenanted house near by, where they strapped her ankles, but could not quite succeed tn gagging her. Her mother heard her cries, the story goes, and mustered an armed por When the kidnapers heard the posse approach, they made a hurried exit, and the girl escaped. |, ‘The police accept the story, a married or|told, with a perceptible shrug of the | shoulders. BLAME COMPANY That the pole on which he was| working was rotten and unsafe and that the Puget Sound Traction &| Lighting Co. had not used due pre caution in safeguarding the sald man's life, was the verdict of the coroner's jury Monday, investigating the death of August Wickersham, | a lineman, who was killed by the collapse of a pole last Thursday The accident ccourred at W. 59th st, between 20th and 22nd avs. N. W. The pole broke, carrying Wick: | ersham with it to the ground. He |was taken to the Seattle General weird story of attack within one| hospital but died without regaining block of her home, by two desper- | Consciousness. ate-looking masked men. The James girl, married seven months jago, Is living apart from her hus band, who is tn California. vd : (bi, "eno tn cattoraia” ee Meat Prices ly relations between the young cou-| ple, buf that the husband ts eT to support her. | According to the girl, she was) returning from the grocery near) Seventh and Lenora st. when the TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY) two mén accosted her. One man | grabbed her by the neck and twtst- |ed her arm in a hammerlock hold. | ‘The other fellow attempted to push | FRYE: co a handkerchief saturated with some | e drug under her nose, She says sho RKETS As Follows: ..10¢ unselfish and splendid love of her| —o) ite quite WASTED, No man wants! It. A brave woman faces the fact, and accepta the place she ts ex peeted to occupy. She makes her- self useful at the price of happt- ness. id d. a EVA TELLS A WEIRD STORY Eva James, aged 17, residing with her mother, Mrs, Bleanor Lewis, at 2219 Seventh av., set the police agog| Monday night, when she told « m ld 4 If od PIKE PLACE MARKET TO BE IMPROVED Improvements costing approx- imately fifty thousand dollars are being rushed at the Old Pike Place Public Market. There will be rest rooms, drinking fountains, incline stairways and, in fact, every mod- ern improvement for the convent ence and health of both patrons and merchants. There will be larger and more sanitary quarters |for the farmers, who have hereto fore been obliged to stand in the street with their produce. | The Old Pike Place Market is | Seattle's Pioneer Public Market, |having been erected in 1907, sever- jal years before the building of any of the other markets in the city, and, throughout the years, has re Choice Steer Bolling Pork Back Bone 10 Ibs. for Cholce Steer Pot Roast . Rib and Loin Mutton Chops ... (This mutton is of quality, Try It.) English Breakfast Bacon, stripped | 5c Choice Liver 1 1c Sausage Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp It signifies purity and quality Shops open until 6:20 p. m, * Jan ounce of It at at Thirty-Five, Truth Becomes Tragedy ESTABLISHED 1875 ac] Joudgall ig |: outhwick Second Aconan ond Pike Streat In Connection wath JAMES MeCREERY & COs, New Yor Exquisite Lingerie and Crepe Dresses oa to $15.50 HES pose were priced earlier in the season at from $22.50 to $35.00. There is a limited assortment, and in many } Dresses are taken from assortments instances only one or two of a style are offered. The materials include crepe, batistes, ratine, voiles and , marquisettes. The trimmings are lace, ribbon and embroidery. The styles all one piece effects, the skirts being either draped or slashed, or both. These dresses are really most exquisite productions, and when their charm is considered in connection with the extremely low price at which they are offered they should prove irresistible. Let us repeat that the price of these dresses, up to $35.00, will be $15.50. Second Floor. fon. et. i) $1.00 Silk Gloves (The New Coverall et consists of hard busin: Proper Thing Now Is to Peel Off Soiled Skin Those who abhor sticky shiny, streaked complex! feligiousiy avold creams and rouges these heated daya m, anyway, areasy ns should powders There xince " any eviden iq the wax ints applied at t ne and wash off In the morning, the complexion never looks like a make-up. Aercol ized wax gradually takes off a bad complexion, instead of adding any thin, make rao, It has none of the disadvantages of cosmetics and accomplishes much more In ping the complexion utifully fte, satiny and youthful. Just get Your druggiat’s and nee what a few days’ treatment will do. Une like cold cream Another effective summer mont—heat ting to cause kles and fia *—is a wkin ener made jolving 1 0x. pow dered saxolite % pt witch hazel Ita une (aw a face bath) leaves no Advertisement b treat- wrin tent trace. Ama'gam Filling): ‘The best grade of amalgam ts used by us The tooth ts put in proper condition before the fillings are placed, For $1.00. Gold Crowns, $4 To obtain gobd service from a bad ly decayed tooth, allow it then fill It, and afterwards ft with Gold or Porcelain own Crown. You will be surprised at the quality |s of Bridgework, $4 It requires considerable of expert ence to place bridge work correctly Our specialists can mateh your teeth and place In the missing teeth of Porcelain or Gold ao that you will have the best service from t such @ tooth. Full Sets Teeth, $5 Up ei We have tho ds of Se attle cus era who Ww MN you that they never knew that plates could be fit ted so perfectly until they had us do the work Any work that doesn't prove satis factory he repatred free of y_ time. N—-today, if y oH examination and 1 wieh oat! . 12-Year Guarantee to All Free Examination OHIO fai DENTISTS mained the favorite of thousands of economical housewives, 207 University St, 2d and University Bt, Opp. Bre on Ov treat HIS season's most _ popular Silk Gloves, made with double finger tips. These gloves are full elbow length and are guar- anteed to mt and give good service. This is undoubtedly the best lot of silk gloves we have been able to place on sale this season Plenty of white, black and tan. All sizes except 5% white. Special, the pair, 6 \ “ First Floor. __MacDougall-Southwick Second Avenue and Pike Street A. Pittsburg man who worelhere in Seattle wearing slashed PANTAGES —| |slashed trousers was chased by skirts who are chased by million- newsboys. But you can see women aires. A music act, Lewis Bernie's Five aresical Lassies, heads the Pantages program for this week. The lassies, who prove themselves to be instrumentalists of exception- al ability, well merit their place at the head of this week's offering The musical act 1s gotten up in @ pleasing manner. Two pretty girls and a man make up the cast of the Rondas trio, who offer a bicycle act that is entirely different, The trio combine sing-| ing and acrobatics on their wheels. Tilford, a ventriloquist, amuses the audience with many clever feats In ventriloquism. * Verga and Dorothy, in Italian singing and talking; the Four Victors, acrobats, and Becker and Adams, songs and patter, wind uup the bill, T HIS greatly fa- | Apron 75c T vored garment serves the pur- pose of both dress and apron, and is espe- cially cool and com- fortable, as it may be worn without a dress. Made of percale, cham- brays, etc., in light and dark solid colors or in stripes and checks. The garment, Third Floor 5th, 6th and Pine a EXTRA SPECIALS WEDNESDAY Trade Where LOW PRICES and HIGHEST QUALITY Always Prevail. See Bulletin Boards for Other. Special Features. THE LARGEST RETAIL DISTRIBUTORS OF FOODSTUFFS ON THE PACIFIC COAST. Free Delivery. Free Delivery. THE MARKETS Below you will find a few specials, and hosts of others that are not listed will be found on the Bulletin Boards. > The. prices paid the farmers come. under “buying "and the sum paid by the retailer under subse, Ung price.” Prices tn ail e to vartation, .15¢ 3 Ibs. Best Sago ......10¢ 4 large cans Milk .....25¢ -20¢ Yew Salted Herring 25¢ 3 pail Lard ......42¢ 5 pail Lard .68¢ 10 pail Lard ..$1.27 Minced Clams ....10¢ .25¢ 4 Ibs. Pearl Tapioca 6 Ibs. best Cane Sugar 25¢ With order. 20 Ibs. New Potatoes 25¢ Ib. ..5¢ Oranges, doz. ‘ O¢ Good Eggs, doz. ......25¢ Best Eggs, doz. ......35¢ Good Creamery Butter, Ib. 4 Ibs. Tomatoes, 60 3 cans Cove Oysters . Fancy 12.N No. No. No. 15 Large 6 Ibs. Rolled Oats ... Black Figs .....25¢ AT THE ARMORY ALL WEEK AUGUST 18-23 THE MANUFACTURERS AND: MERCHANTS: FAIR: A SPLENDID XHIBITION OF ‘f- Séattle Products GOOD MUSIC “DAILY ADMrKS SION TEN CENTS liver sausage Holcenn Tubs Tams ny Spring drotiers Hens keys, tive | Spring ducklings i 30 “f- Puget sound timothy '.. Alfalfa 5 Wheag hay.