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‘<p rt Lady Swimmer Tells How Break Grip of Drowning Person Adeline Trapp, America’s Great Endurance Swimmer and a , Mustrates In Photograph How to Subdue Terror-Stricken Victim, Adeline Trapp, in a recent/arriving fn fifth position and beat- swimming match in ing the hardened ma! 90 U. S. Volunteer Life Sav- the Life Saving Corp: entered, was the only wo-) Miss Trapp is instructor at the! arrive at the finish of the free public baths patronized by the swim through “Hell Gate,” women and children of the poor jot New York, and supervises the instruction of over half a million women and children during the} three hot months of summer. roac eS In her swimming lessons Miss | Trapp never neglects the life-savin: | feature, and the above picture is) on. men and women, when fn deadly fear of drowning, lose control of their wits and almost always try to seize the rescuer around the neck, thus endangering both. | Her method, as shown in the| ,| Photograph, is to shut off the! breath of the frengied victim at the! nostrils and the windpipe. ‘The pressure on the abdomen as- sists in relaxing the body and after that it is easy for the rescuer to take the one in danger ashore. CITY NEWS The Coliseum investment Co. is to be offered $3,000 for the bulld- |ings now situated on the county property at Third ay. and James st. The county commissioners author-) ized the offer Tuesday. eee | A flight from Port Townsend to Seattle by 22 homer pigeons, picked from the Seatle Homer Pigeon club's birds, was won by Silver Queen. Next Sunday the pigeons will fy from Portland to Seattle. eee jal to Ladies Skirts, ready to wear, lens, $4.00 Alterations N. Y. T. Ladies’ Tatlors. je, Wash. Private funeral services will be held for Dr. E. Manning Shaw at Butterworth’s Thursday morning. Friends will be allowed to view the remains today from 6 to & p. m. Dr. Shaw was killed in an auto ac- cident at ‘Vietoria. St. Seatel Phone 5976. ‘ABLE SILK IRWEAR AND HOSIERY Like Silk. Costs One-Fourth 1s Bank Bidg., 2nd & Pike; King and Pierce counties have been restrained from collecting or distraining for a tax of $1,143.09 levied in 1912 in Pierce county on the bridge equipment of the Inter. national Contract Qo. . A fine of $10 or 10 in the county jail was imposed on Mrs, Amelia Dynard by Judge Frater Tuesday for disregarding the court's orders. Mrs. Dynard failed to ap- pear in court last June with her daughter when ordered to do so. Furs alias ye approximately $125,000 were brought to Seattle when the steamship Senator of the Pacific Coast Steamship Co. reach- ed port from Nome and St. Michael this merning. | . meahip Sok Pacific Coast ip Co., returned to Seattle Tuesday with 200 tourists from all parts of the country. —$—$S—_$———$$s (Official Publication) REPORT OF THE FINANCIAL condition of The People's Sav- ings Bank, located at Seattle, State of Washington, at the close of business on the 9th day of August, 1913. RESOURCES Loans and discounts. .$ Bonds, warrants and Home Dealers ETE LINES PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS eeli the kind of Pianos You will be proud to own Biad that you bought an Piano at an honest price. Prices are far more rea- 726,605.11 than prices quoted at so- Facto: other securities .... 227,501.65 ry Sales, Removal }) pinking house, furni- ae ture and fixtures... 364,854.79 t instrument absolutely bere ee. ee 382,882.70 4, Reasonable terms. |} Gash on hal 884,529.55 change 8rd Av., Bet. Pike and Pine soeeseeeses 2,586,228. 7) TABIL ITIES Capital stock paid in..$ 100,000 Surplus fund .. e 20,000 Undivided profits 228,772 Deposite ..... +6 ,561. eterna Total 00 00 42 38 Total . sees $2,686,323 80 State of Washington, County of 4 King #8: I, BE. C. Neufelder, President of the above named bank, do solemn- ly swear that the foregoing state ment is true to the best of my was WE and belief. NEUFELDER, President, Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of August, 1913. (Notartal Seal.) CHAS. D, THOMAS, Notary Public in and for the State| A few odds and ends of long Medium Corsets to close 50c Jashington, Residing at Se- Mostly Small Sizes. a le T T Correet Attest MRS BARRE 4 RK. J. REEKIE, G. i. NICOLL, Directors, veterans of | 7 r= Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Dear Miss Grey; Will you please tell me if there is such a} thing as a ponston for aged people in Seattle, and wheré to find It? I thank you for your time AN OLD WOMAN A.—I know of none, If you will go to Mr, Hanna, at the courthouse, he will tell you anything along that line you wish to know. 4 > 1 am tn love and he has ¥ | HAVE BEEN TRUE. Dear Miss Grey with a young man turned me down. eight months, and he suddenly quit I have been true to him. He told me for an excuse that he going to leave town, but he here. | Cynthia, my heart ts broken, for f Hove him so, Can you suggest any 1 win him back? No one his place. Don't think I am young and foolish, 1 am 30 I have gone out with other men ‘since he quit, but I hate their company, FAINT HEART, A—1 don't betleve in trying to win people back. If one ever had a person's real respect and love he cannot lose it. A man whom one must put forth an effort to retain Is not worth retaining, for even if you held him long enough to marry, you could not hold him afterward. So what's the use? You may seem to suffer greatly; but the time may come when you will be thankful you have not vowed to love and cherish the man who seeme 80 dear to you now. Just keep quiet, and let him go hie way. “THE RIGHT Dear Miss Grey: Will you tell me if my writing ts very bad? Also what books a young wife should read? Is there any way I can learn to read, write and spell? I wish there was a school for young wives. I didn’t bave a chance to go to school much, and we were very poor. Now, that I am man |ried, I have lots of time, A READER. A—t am giad to tell you that you can go to one of the public night schools that are held in the high school build. ings every fall and winter. You can take any subjects you wish free of charge, and you need not feel backward about tending. Your writing le nct all bad, and is very read. | glad you wi improve. If | were you | would get a speller and keep it by me NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—Accom- panied by the latest Mra. Goodwin, No. 5 in the serles, Nat Goodwin, the actor, is a passenger today on the steamer Rotterdam, bound for Europe. Goodwin sald he was go- ing to Baden Baden for the bat! and declared that pis marriage to his present wife rked the final chapter in his matrimonial experi- ences. We went together | 1 | THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, NEWS OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO OUR WOMEN READERS | Billie Burke Wri Beauties She Fi Redrawn From Bilile Burke's By Billie Burke The Ritz Carlton, Parts, Aug. 13. —-I have sent over a little sketch of a typical Parisienne beauty, and | want your artist to redraw it, for you know that while I may be able to sketch characters on the stage I am not able to draw pictures that would be good enough to go in the paper, Over here, being a Paristenne beauty ts a profession for which some are born, some ultimately achieve and some have thrust upon them. A little “midinette’—errand girl, to translate freely-—-may be found to be clever and show certain hee tude to wear clothes well and is immediately made a indeed, French women are seldom pretty in the way we count beauty. They are chic, however, and thoy are, oh, so clever. The one I saw yesterday was sitting In a window of a fashionable tearoom and very consciously making a pleture that was charming. She ts typical of the whole pro. 1913, tes of the Chic inds Over in Paris Sketch do a show girl on Broadway. She {s thin as only a professional mannequin ts thin and in a way that no other woman on earth is thin—-attenuated, but not at all bony, She was woaring the very latent and most eeccentricly designed gown I have seen this summer. You know, of course, that every gown is made now, as the French express it, in the “mode a donner du venture,” which {s most ugly unless you are as thin the girl in the picture and have no abdo- men at all, This new gown {ts of black char meuse made in a manner that wil! give undue prominence to the abdo- men and the ankles, which are cov- ered with hose embroidered in the ame futurist figures that dot the silk ratine coat, hat and parasol, the background of which is white Having your hose embroidered or painted to match your cost and hat is the very latest fad, so new that it has to be done to order. “Coats and sox to match” have not reached the shops yet, but many of the smart women are wearing feasion, You could tell her aa you all the time, and learn a few words at a time. Follow the doctors direction about keeping quiet, but don't worry about what he told you. Doctors are sometimes mis taken. XK VouTHrut prostem CS - a) I am a young & girl, 18, ata it, and asked if She seemed embar- I might call. Cafeteria Was Built to Please YOU POSITIVELY the finest .. Cafeteria in Seattle .°. Go where the crowd goes — do it now [ Not in a cellar ] them. rassed, so I did not urge. Shall I sao her again, or overlook the sub- ject? A GOOD-LOOKING YOUNG MAN. A-—Yes, you might ack her again. Probably she wasn't quite sure whether or not her parerts would approve. Put the question this way: “If you are sure your parents will not object, | would like to come to This will to speak ure the par. ents that you are the right sort, ?" BeauTiFuL TO YOUTH f eo oa) Dear Miss Grey: I am 14, and |considered very beautiful by many of the boys, especially one who is |15. One of my chums and I are in love with him, and this causes | jealousy between us, but I know |he prefers me, What shall we do about it? WORRIED. A-—Love at your age is ilke the measies, and boys of the mature age of 15 are hardly qualified judges of beauty; however, if | were you, well, | wouldn't belleve ail | might | hear. Espe y when a boy | begins to flatter you about looks you may, or may not possess, it is a sensible girl who tells him she prefers to | talk about something more in- | teresting. | wish you might know how very, very silly you are making yourselves by such rot. | know young people don't like to be laughed do things that make them a laughing stock to others. If | you are the little girl that you | should be at your age, you won't care whether the boys think you beautiful or homely, “DO UNTO. OTHERS—”" Dear Miss Grey: Being a con-| stant reader of your counsel to af- | fiicted souls, I come to you. I mar- | ried a girl whom I dearly loved un til, by chance, I learned that while she was working in a strange} house she was led to live wrong by the man of the house for almost two years, of age and of a timid disposition. | After a revelation of that kind,| though I do not censure the girl, my love has turned. What makes it worse is that she is to be a) mother soon, Pray, how shall I proceed? Is she, under these con-| ditions, worthy of becoming a mother? W. 8S. T. A—How little you know when you ask such a question. Are you a judge as to whether or not she is worthy of moth- erhood? The fact that your wife did not tell you this be- fore marriage may mean that she was strong enough to with- hold the facta for the, sake of any children she might have. Are you worthy of fatherhood, when you allow your affection to be altered by learning that, when a child, with no mother to Instruct and guide her, she went wrong? Oh, if .you are only big enpugh you can do a most noble thing by not even speaking of this to her, but in trying to make up to her what yee her all the ten- better manhood dernees your holds. ¢ TURN ABOUT FAIR PLAY a4 " ° yet they . if ef She was an orphan, not ff Dear Miss Grey: We are twol] ESTABLISHED 1875 ac] Jougall of outhwick Second Acanan and Pike Streat Store on Fam G In Connection with JAMES MeCREERY & CO., New Yor: fi le Union Suits $1) $s Special Purchase of Hair Goods (IVE alt mms | ferent on Sale Wednesday at 1/2 Price]; :»'';': from which © choose in HIS purchase includes hundreds et Bwitches in such # tig ribbed T varied assortment of shades as to make the most difficult knit Under matchings possible and satisfactory. This great assort wand, thats ment was purchased in-such a way as to permit us to sell Pare low theso first grade A-l switches at what {8 conservatively less | | eck, sleeve than % their regular price less and $7.45 Switches for $3.45 ankle or These are full 26 inches long, made in the three separate | | ynee length stem style, which, as all women know, # the most conven styles; also the eat fent and useful way. The quality of halr uggd is excellent Se ement with ine \ The colors offered are #o varted that you'll Ge sure to find] | "ny ghort sleeves your shade among them Very specially pri There is also an excellent variety at other prices, ranging $1.00. Separa up to $13.00 values for $6.95. garments of the same The sale will be held on the Bargain Square, First Floor. quality, 50¢. Your attention is directed to a Second Avenue Window in Firet Floor. at) & First Floor. adit 5 / White Petticoats Specially Priced at From 50c to $5.00 White Petticoats, made of cambric with ruffle of Torchon lace. Regular 75c and $1.00 values which this merchandise 1# displayed for 5O¢. An excellent Petticoat with flounce of embroidery has wide ribbon beading. In this assortment are regular $3.50 to $4.50 values for $2.00, White Petticoats with flounce of embroidery. and ribbon-run $5.00. flounce of two-thread Val. lace From $6.60 to $12.60 values, your choice, At Gute ‘Sabead Prices Sizes 1 to 6 years. Children’s white crepe Rompers and Creepers, made of good, strong material, in sizes 1 to 6 years, at just '% price. Colored Gingham Dresses for Mttle maids, in pink or blue stripes or plaids. $1.00 values for 75¢, Dainty stripe Percale Dresses trimmed with plain colors to match. $1.26 values, 95¢. Plaid Dresses with turned down collars, trimmed in embroidery edging and pearl buttons, $2.25 values, $1.75; $1.50 values, $1.19. A good assortment of Percale and Gingham Dresses in checks, stripes and plaids. Values up to $1.75, for 50¢. Third Floor. Second Avenue and Pike Street work with them. Let them do the cooking, and you split the wood, This Western wood is very easy to split, so you will be getting the best of the barn gain. MacDougall-Southwick worrled wives, and will thank you] well, but they do not Iike to split for advice, Our husbands provide |the wood. Will you please tell us Oe ore what to do to change them In this HOW TO GAIN |respect? Please. answer, s00n. HEALTHY FLESH} TWO PERPLEXED WIVES. A—Try this: Exchange Bartell Drug Co. Advise Use of mose. | While thinness may not pe a dis- ease, yet it is in reality a cond!- tion that needs attention. Under the nourishing power of Samose healthy, natural flesh will soon be ff PUGET attached ray pol This remarkable flesh-forming COMPAN' food strengthens the system gener ally and builds up the fleshy tissues so that good, natural plumpness results. An ounce of flesh is better than a pound of theory. Bartell Drug Co. believe that the best possible demonstration of the flesh-forming powers of Samose is to have it tried by their customers, and to in- duce them to use it they offer to pay for the Samose in case it does not give satisfaction. No stronger proof than this can be given of their faith in it. They have seen hundreds who were weak, thin and scrawny, become plump, robust and strong, solely through the use | of Samose. NORTHWEST TRUST & SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY Statement at Close of Business August 9th, 1913, Meat Specials Thursday UNION HELP—16 Ounces to the pound. 17 Boneless Corn Beef. 15c| Pork Roast. we 15¢ Boiling Beef.......11¢|Corned Pigs’ Feet. . .6c Lamb Chops. ......18¢|Choice Salt Pork. 12%%c BIG WHITE MARKET, Old Pike Market. SNYDER’S MARKET, New Corner Market. Your money returned if any sales we make are not as represented. RESOURCES 159,074.92 7,600.00 13,538.32 2,750.00 14,800.00 15,000.00 28,054.11 Loans and discounts .....sceceeeeeseneces State and King county warrants ........++- Stocks ... Safe deposit and equipment ..... Furniture and fixtures .... Real estate and other resources ... Government and railroad bonds ........4 e+eeeeee+-$ 53,810.14 Cash on hand and due from banks ..... Meer ho. Total + »$1,285,359.33 LIABILITIES . -$ 100,000.00 18,785.26 caseeseesccesions AplOeor4.07 Capital stock paid in Surplus and undivided profits . Deposits Total $1,285,359.33 State of Washington, I, J. V. A. Smith, bank, that the foregoing statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. Pe SMITH, Cashier Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of August, 1913. MAUDE RHOADES. Notary Rublic in and for the State of Washington, Residing at Seattle, County of King, s cashier of the above named do solemnly swear ’