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gies’ Suits Made to Order $25.00 and $28.00 and Workmanship Guaranteed Ladies’ Tailor Suit Shop Le ; Exchange 0 out all uptodate /qlosins 0 Skirts, m of the beat me. $8.00 Values at $3. y.T. TAILORING 01 Union. Phone Main 5976, ! Itice to the Public is is to advise that I will not responsible any debts con. 4 by my wife, Livdle D. ©. N, SANDAHL, 8 ya a Sewing Machine, Sewing Machines, all makes, and up Machines rented, $2.00 per SEWING MACHINE CO, 14% Third, near Pik Phone Main 15: CHAMPIONSHIP PRIZE WALTZ AT DREAMLAND SEVENTH AND UNION TONIGHT the Championship of the State for Cash Prizes 25c Ru LADIES FRER 5 Dance om e THE STAR—THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1913. Seven Ages of a Woman in Love; Chapter Seven! When Grandma Gets Her Reward for a Normal Life and Finds Happiness 50 By Cynthia Grey. I say all the djsea able everything but doctors do not know NATURE'S is obeys all of her laws shall some day and so nature invented the measles and the whooping cough HAVE discovered why chile ses of children INTENTION tren have the measles. Doctors are unnecessary and avoid more than nature does about who that the be made a grandmother, woman and the mumps and the chicken pox to provide something interesting for grandmothers to do! Thus woman in the SEVENTH gether happy. She is more SARY can do, and that is a grand comfort AGE-OF-LOVE is alto- than useful-—she is NEC She has learned to do hundreds of things nobody else Moreover, man does not then consider her ridiculous because she wears pretty colors the cu There is always happiness misery in departing from it Now this is a latitude sev nation maintains its and hospitals simply because p They keep right on paying and likes some style in expensive their t of her skirt in doing the normal thing and en days in the week, but the penitentiaries, and asylums, cople have not go it by heart. heaviest taxes year after year as the price of their indifference to truth The woman who thinks she can beat nature in planning} her ‘career is bound to pay for her youthful cleverness with wretchedness in her old age. nurses her own children so w trained nurse in the art of ¢ But if she marries early and ell that she can instruct any aring for her grandchildren’s measles, then she will never have any conspicuous miseries to advertise to a scandal-hunting neighborhood. Woman's attire always indicates the state of her emotions When a woman of any of the indefinite and undetermin-| able ages which follow forty-five puts on the coquettish dre Second Avenes and Pike Streat rc 04nech size, size, size, size, regular price $¢ regular regular price price 4-inch 36-Inch 71X, with heavy brassed bh leather straps, well finished. 30-inch size, 24nch size, regular price $7. 86-inch size, regular price $8, zed fiber binding and center heavy brassed hardware, dowels. ac] Joudall ale of Seattle $7.00 7.50) $4.95 regular price $8.00 ecular price $7.50 34-inch size, regular price $8.00 $5.95 50 86X Steamer Trunk, canvas covered, vulean- | solid ESTABLISHED 1875 7 fouthwick In Connection veith JAMES MeCREBRY & CO, New York e-Made Trunks Each One Is Guaranteed lack endmeled 91X Stateroom or Steamer Trunk, iron with straps, brassed angle steel binding on edges, hardwood slats, solid brass Excelsior lock and brassed hardware. heavy canvas d center bands; Solid brass her straps. Choice, $7.65 size ‘Trank, nized, fiber bound 4 large, deep tray and brass hardw Excelsior lock, center sunk. Sole regular price $9.00 regular price $9.50 86-4nch size, regular price $10.00 150 } Choice, | 82-inch sl; hardware and sole 400X Trunk, none better made; canvas cov- fiber bound, extra heavy brassed hardware, solid brass counter sunk lock; sole leather straps. Deep set-up tray with bonnet compartment and extra skirt tray. 24-inch size, regular price $13.50 Choice, ] $10.85 850X Lighter weight Trunk, but very strong 36-ineb size, regular price $14.50 and durable. Choice, Choice, band; extra large, brass lock and 28-inch size, regular price $15.50 344nch size, regular price 50 OWSTONE PARK Minch size, regular price $8.00 Stinch ate reedler price ots Choice, Five and One-haif Days Office, Butler Hotel. and manners of a girl, she seems a huge poster illustration of the revenge which nature takes when her Great Purpose is not fulfilled 26-4nch size, regular price $8, 38-inch size, regular price $9.00 $8.98 Basement. 0 38-inch size, regular price $13.50 $6.95 And her most terrible punishment overwhelms her in its most dreaded shape—the Ridicule of Man! Making which discovery, woman sometimes becomes that unhappiest of human creatures, the student of her own soul,| and a real menace to society if she takes to writing morbid books like the heroine of that misleading volume, “The Dan- gerous Age.” To the woman who follows her, nature offers a new en- thusiasm in every age of love. The poets are nature's inter preters, and not one of them ever put down greater solace for woman than Browning when he wrote: “Grow old along with me! Phone Main 7033, |. A. NUGENT, Agent. Westinghouse. Electric Fans at Reduced Prices Cffiee Phone, Matn Thone, Kenwood 1473 BERT CURTIS TRICAL CONTRACTOR ing, Repairing, Instatling 1018 Post Sts Seattle Wo have received a limited number of Westinghouse Electric Fans, 1912 models. Each fan is guaranteed to be perfect. The regular $19.60 size for $13.95 The regular $21.65 size for $15.95 The regular $23.15 size for $17.95 The regular $14.90 size for $11.65 The regular $15.90 size for $12.65 The best is yet to be, The regular $18.35 size for $13.35 DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. worked for many years on painiess plan of extracting, fill- and crowning teeth before we fed to announce the result of our to the public, but now we are our reward. endless chain of satisfied pa stands ready back of our promises, Remember, our on dentistry is one-half less our competitors charge. $10 Gold Crowns $10 Plates .. ‘Written guarantee given with WE GIVE GAS Dental. Offices LR. Clark, D. O. 8. Manager Third Av. N. W. Cor. Union ring This Ad With You E are out of the strictly in the hi The last of life, for which the first was made!” DRESS STATUES ST, LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 21.—Little old St. Louis today is engulfed to the neck fn a wave Ordered to display no paintings, pietures or statues in the nude, proprietors and managers of cafes and restaurants have dressed them, and weird sights meet the eye of the patron of these places. In’ one down-town cafe, Venus wears a pair of diaphanous trouser- ettes, and the Lady with the Goose is garbed in a slit skirt, the slit extending perilously close to the Lady's neck. In another cafe, where the pro- prietor boasted a really handsome group depicting Pan piping to bevy of “altogether” woodland nymphs, Pan has been forced to don a spectally-made pair of over- alls and the girls are dressed up in pajamas, nighties and Mother Hubbards. 4 HURT IN EXPLOSION LOS ANGELES, Aug. 21.—One man was probably fatally hurt and three received less serious {njurtes when an ammonia tank in the storage plant of the Pacific Coast Beet Provision company ex- ploded today. Max Hinich, an employe, was buried beneath a brick wall wreck- ed by the force of the explosion, and sustained internal injuries that probably will cost his life. Fred Stenky, Michael Bernio and Chas. Thompson also were treated at a hospital. high-rent district, but are h-grade piano and player piano business. We sell better pianos for less money, give easier terms than elsewhere. WAAK-BAKER PIANO COMPANY, Inc. 1406 FIRST AVENUE. Bon Marche Annex 106 UNION STREET. Seattie, Wash. Factory Distributors for the Ivers & Pond, Hallet & Davis, P. 8. Wick, Conway, and Others, Free Doctor for You, Mr. Workingman We are Going more for the working man and his family than } drug store in the city of ‘are sick, it will be to your advantage to call at the | BRENDEL DRUG STORE 117 YESLER WAY, n First Avenue and Occidental Avenue, and bave our Doctor | you FREE. Our object in givifig the people the services of a physician ly free is to build up our rapidly growing drug business. We Are Cut Rate Prescription Cruggists. Beattie. If you or any of your jf} \| i \| UNION HELP—16 8.50 3.15 8.75 | ht a Meat Specials Friday Ounces to the pound, Lamb Chops.......15¢|Salt Pork.......12V4c i Back Bones, 10 Ibs 25c | Choice Corn Beef .1214c Pot Roast.......121%c | Sirloin Steak......20c MG WHITE MARKET, Old Pike Market. SNYDER’ 'S MARKET, New Corner Market Your money returned {f any sales we make are not as represented of modesty. | ||" Dear Miss Grey: l | —_——4 " STILL HOPPING | Dear Miss Grey: As to the capa- bilities of the flea, would like to offer the following, If not encroach- ing too much on your space and time. Granting the averago length of « |flea to be 1-16 of an inch, and the average of man, 5 2-3 feet, the man fs 1088 times greater than the flea) in length. Thus, the flea spanning | a distance of 3 feet at a jump, cov-| ers a distance 576 times greater than its length; therefore, man | should cover a distance of 52,424) feet, or a little over 9% miles. | A.—My littie statement, that if a man could do proportion- ately what the flea does, he could jump eight miles hae called forth some interesting computation on the flea’s and the man’s ability. The die tance accorded the flea w 3 feet. If others wish to send In computations, now is the time. THE FLEA Is WEDDING ETIQUETTE Bp Dear Miss Grey: You seem to |mother us all, and give some an leverlasting sitting-down, so please | tell me Is is polite at a wedding supper to put the elbows on the table? To eat raw tomatoes with the fingers? To turn one’s back (almost) on |the person sitting next? Also to leave on the long, white gloves? For the bride to wear her veil at the table? To “rag” at the affair? I have been taught differently, land don’t belong to the crowd, but| have had an argument, so please answer. MAZIE A—It seems to me almost anyone should know these things are not graceful, nor do they show common sense, and you can count on it when a thing is neither, It is not prop- er. The long gloves may be left on If the hand Is removed from the glove and it is tucked under the arm part, Just fancy eating raw tomatoes with hand encased in long, white kid gloves. beg to cused. * TAKE THE OTHER VIEWPOINT Tam 22, and my husband six years older, and he craves drink, I think as he gets older he will be worse, as be said he would never give it up. Shall I give him up before I go to the coun- try to see my mother? Can he take my child, as he has threatened? Please give me your advice, for I | love him dearly. A GOOD WIFE AND MOTHER. A-—If you love him as much as you say you do, now Is your chance to show It. | don't be- fleve In a woman staying with a man who persists in drinking. She owes too much to her un- born children. But, how do you know he will get worse? What right have you to think so? Whether you stay or go, give him the benefit of having faith enough In his manhood to think he will grow more senal- bie as he grows older, Only a fool does not change his mind. Remember that. 1 do not know to whom the court would give the child, for I know nothing of your own char- acter, but if it Is moral, you would get it. o I Wuere TO FIND THEM ° s” Dear Miss Grey: I noticed re cently a letter to you from a young man signed “Lonely,” and I would like to say a word to him. He says he has been looking for ten years for a self-respecting girl. Now | know of no girl who respects herself more than I do, but I am looked down upon by lots of good girls because I work in @ factory. But my life is m busy one, as I help get supper after I get hom and I make all my own clothes, an do most of my laundry, so I never have time to go to dances, where most young men meet young ladies. I am an orphan, but my father always told me that the right kind of man always looks for a good girl in her home. You have heard th saying that “Many a noble hear beats under a ragged jacket;” well, I think that many a noble heart is beating under a gingham pron in the factori and these are the! girls who appreciate a good home. Sincerely, A FACTORY GIRL. A—Your honest little note contains a world of information to the men who look for good giris on the streets, and at the dance hails, and cafes. | do not say there are no good on there, but the really home giri does not care for that sort of thing, She does like a good theatre visit once In awhile, and probably a dance comprised of friends whom she knows, but her tastes are simple and sensible, and she loves her home. SHE SHOWED HIM THE DOOR Dear Miss Grey: I am a young girl, 15, but look to be 17, and ev- ery one thinks | am, I am 5 feet, 6 inehes tall and weigh 136 pounds. Do you think it improper for me to have boy friends come to my home? My father works nights and my mother works evenings till 10 o'clock. I have had my friends come once or twice, but the neigh- bors talk and my mother thinks it improper me to have boy friends visit me. When they come I play the piano and sometimes we sing, TI try to treat all alike. One evening a boy began to get fresh and I showed him the door. He apologized the next day. Please print my answer. BLUE EY: A—t believe you are the kind of girl! who oan take care of herself anywhere. Any gliti can who will be firm enough, but for all that, | do not think It wise to make a practice of entertaining young men in the sence of your mother and father. Haven't you an older relative or friend who could spend the evening the boys are there? She need not feel it ry to be In the room all * RECIPE FOR ik “MEETING A LADY” Phebe 2) In answer to “Handsom: " request for in-| formation on “how to meet a lady,” I would prescribe the following lt- tle helpful recipe: bottle of cologne, box rouge, manicure. marshmallow wave, cane. sign on back Inbeled, “A ten- cent dude.” Billy, with these ingredients you can't fail to get an ogle from one of the “loidies.” Do go find your. self a rea! job at $8.50 a w be a man. DISGUSTED. A—"Disgusted,” you neg lected to mention pointed shoes and Piccadilly coat tails, ° THE RIGHT KIND Ti OF RESPECT | -— — o Dear letters vice to others helps me. you answer this? I am a girl nearly 18. The other evening I went to a dance, while there met a young fellow whom I thought to be very nice. He asked to take me home, and | consented. On the way he asked me to go for @ little walk, and in- sulted me. I told him I wasn’t that kind of a girl, He didn't say much more till we reached home. Then, he wanted to kiss me and said good night and that he liked me all the better. Miss Grey, do you really think he does? I like him more and more every time I see him. My girl friend says he does, but when he sees me he just smiles and says “Hello.” Won't you tell me what you think of this? DOROTHY. A—Yes, Dorothy, | will tell you from the beginning to end. In the first place why did you go to a dance without proper escort and depend on just any man you happened to meet to bring you home? After a dance is too late for a walk, and a man who hasn’t respect for womanhood or his own man- hood under ail circumstances is not the man for you to ae sociate with, If he had b truly sorry he would not have asked you to kiss him, It makes no difference what he may say about how much he likes you for belng true to your woman- hood, he wi not respectful even to the memory of his mother, and you would best have nothing to do with him, until he proves himself worthy of respect, Don’t listen to any “love talk” from him. ETIQUETTE af -——_——--—-® Dear Misa Grey: After having a dispute with a friend, we write to you to settle the question, which is this: What is the proper thing to say lady? We have heard so many dif ferent remarks made that we can not decide. TWO YOUNG ADMIRERS. A.—I honestly wish there had never, never been a rule on etl- quette written except the Gold- ' been truly sald is to do id in the Miss Grey: I read your every night, and your ad- Won't ?K Goon RULE. OF ed, one cannot go far wrong, and even if he happens to do some little thing that book eti- quette says Is not proper, it will be overlooked. As to set re- marks to make on stated occa- sions, people In big spheres try to think up something that will at least sound natural and from the heart, why not cultivate real kindne ind let the heart To Discard Freckles, Tan, Pimples, Wrinkles There is nothing better for any condition of the skin than mercol fzgd wax, as It actually absorbs the offensive cuticle, The latter ts nat urally replaced by @ clear, smooth, healthy comploxton, full of Ife and expression, It's the sensible way to discard a freckled, tanned, over-red blotehy or Get an ounce of me wax at any drugelst’ nightly ifice cold ¢ the morning with Tt takes a » the transfor {deal wrinkle eradieator made by dissolving dered saxolite In ah hazel, Bathing the face in the sol tion brings almost {nstantaneous Fr sults, Advertisement when introduced to a young! We would advise you to be on hand early, as the quantity is limited. | Basement. ce Clearan Tables in the China Department ON THE 10¢ table are plates of all sizes, cereal dishes, egg cups, bowls, creamers, ash trays, brass finger bowls, rose bon bons, hearts, Your choice, 10¢. pades, clubs and diamond bon bons, etc, Values up to 35c. ON THE 25¢ table are cups and saucers, bon bons, creamers, plates and vases. Values up to 85c for 25¢. ON THE 50¢ table are plates, cups and saucers, trays and vases. Values up to choice, 50¢. MacDougall-Southwick $1.25. Your Fourth Floor. Second Avenue and Pike Street - For fully half an hour before the curtain rose, the 8. R. O, sign adorned Judge Humphries’ court this morning. ‘The second day's performance of the “Street Speak- ing Case” drew an immense crowd. Soctety was quite well represented, too. Occupying a place in front of the house was Mrs. John EB, Hum- phries, better half of the stellar attraction, who busily juggled o gold-rimmed lorgnette and allowed nothing of the kaleidoscopic show to escape her vision. Among those who attended this morning's session were also such notables as Justice Brown, Prose- wuting Attorney Murphy, Prose- man Wardall, Representative H. E. Kennedy, and several other distin- guished men about town, who had an hour or two to kill. ee Today's proceedings were pref- faced by a confession from Judge Humphries that he was mistaken when he enjoined Mayor Cotterill from speaking on Fourth and Pike. lHe had discovered over night that lthe mayor was not a party to the sult, the judge declared, and there lfore the injunction against the | mayor was dissolved. Thus, the first instance in Seat- tle of the operation of the recall of judicial decisions went on record today. eee Morris Sullivan, 16, son of Pat Sullivan, of the American cafe and Mquor house, testified he was em- ployed in the retail store, where “laundry women came in to get a glass of beer,” and he saw six street meetings going on at the same time, “Certain defendants are mention- ed in this case,” said Attorney Hoo- ver, “and where the evidence does not relate to them, it should be ex- cluded. We are not defending a blanket injunction case.” “Shut up, you, snapped Judge Humphries, “Sit down and shut up, or I'll throw you in jail,” . . The judge's speeches were com- paratively short for him, this morn. ing. But they came frequently However, he made up for that We« jnesday afternoon, when he spok for an hour continuously, discuss- \ing everything from the antedilu- |vian age to the proper raising of swine in Indiana, Occastonally |too, he mentioned the case at ba and he fiso read a poem, His dis- |nertation was addressed to soctal- ists and I. W. W.'s generally, “You mugt work,” he advised “Buy a business and let it double. Instead of talking, get a pick and ovel and work.''s “Tam a competent bookkeeper,” spoke up Millard fT ©, socialist But Judge Humphries interrupt ed him; ' ° ANOTHER FULL HOUSE IN HUMPHRIES’ COURT ‘HIKE TO ‘FRISCO . PAUL, Aug. 21—Because Bert Sullivan of Stillwater lost two out of three games of pocket billiards to Edward Costello of Chicago he must walk from here to 1 “No one would want to employ | San Francisco. you,” the court said, “You are a| The two men were discussing the worthless hunk of meat.” [recent walk of Edward Payson This remark evidently irritated) Weston from New York to Min- Mrs. Humphries, who had general-| neapolis when Costello proposed a ly showed her approval of the walk for the two to San Francisco, judge's oration up to this point. | to be completed in 1915. Sullivan “John, stop talking,” she counsel-| demurred, but finally agreed that ed, in a loud whisper, which could | if Costello could defeat him in two be plainly heard in the fore part of the room. But Judge Humphries was not to be stopped. He mechanically turned to her, and, apparently too engrossed with his own thoughts that crowded him for expression, gave her a moment's passive no- tice and continued talking for an- | other half-hour, . When he had finished, a spectator se and started to say: “But, your honor, the Declaration of Independence—" P. V. Davis, attorney for the busi- ness men who are petitioning for the anti-street-speaking injunction, objected on the ground that it was not a free-for-all discussion. “Sure,” acquiesced the judge, and, turning to the intruder, he sharply said: “You've got no business You have no more business than a pig.” ere. ere During recess, the judge was asked if he meant that spectators really had no business in his court- 1 when he resumed his place on the bench, the judge said: “When I said he had no more business than a pig here, I meant it literally, that is, he had no bus- iness to speak, But he is allowed to be here, of course, I "withdraw Yes, two or three witnesses have been heard thus far. They were called by the plaintiffs, business men who object to street speaking at Fourth and Westlake. The I. W. W.'s are not defending, but the socialists, and Calvin R. Ruther. jcontention is that thefr }at the fountain at Fourth and | Westlake do not blockade traffic or injure business, SOLVES SERVANT PROBLEM JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, Aug. 21.Governor Major ' believes he has solved the servant problem. Two weeks ago the Missouri chief executive learned it was customar: to give the servants at the tive mansion two weeks’ vacation every year. He didn't like the idea of living without servants, so The vacations ended today, and the igovernor moved back to the execu: uve mansion. ° the pig part. He ts no more a pig.” |} ford, a religious speaker, are, Their | meetings | he and his family moved to a hotel. | out of three games of pocket bil- | liards he would make the trip with Costello, Sullivan lost. The two left today for Omaha on their “hike,” but will work on the route to pay expenses. There are 20,000 different kinds of butterflies, BADSTOMACH? ONE DOSE OF MAYR’S Wonderful Stomach Remedy Should Convince You That Your Suffering Is Unnecessary. Intestinal Allmen' Thousands of people, locality, rtul S| me right have taken ing Spe Constipation, er, ete, and are praising and ommending it highly others s that they ma Stomach nost widely above ail- ist for a bot- test—one dose Remedy n Ask your dr tle today, Put it to should convince. It 1s marvelous in its healing properties and its effects are quite natural as it acts on the source and foundation of stomach ailments and in most cases brings quick relief and permanent Yesults, This highly successful Remedy has been taken by the most prominent those In all walks of them Members of Con- » of the Supreme Court, Lawyers, — Mercha rugeists, Nu Minis| benefit ani ful in your Valuable ilments to G: st, 164-156 Whi 8. people, and life, among K Mar ¥ ting let on Mayr, Mfe, Che Street, ¢ For’ sa Owl Drug Co. oh A an ting tle, Wash., by the