The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 4, 1914, Page 5

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Round Trip ] Port Angeles EXCURSION SUNDAY, JUNE 7 THE SPEEDY, STEEL, FIREPROOF STEAMSHIP Leaves Colman Dock 9 A. M. Returning Arrives 8:30 P. M. Steamer will leave Seattle at 9 a. m., Sunday, June 7, 1914, for Port Angel: at 1:30 p,m. Returning, wil! leave Port Angeles at 4p. m., arriving at Seattle 8:30 p.m. This giv 2 hours at Port Angeles for excursionists to visit the town, They can make an auto trip of seven miles to the Elwha river, and Inspect the big dam of the Olympic Power Co., which fur- nishes electric light to the entire Olympic peninsula, and even to Bremerton, Can also the Puget Sound Mill and Timber Co.'s new mills, the largest in the world, just completed. Port Angeles is booming, and real estate changing hands fast, is also spending about $300,000 in street work. . arriving there THE STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1914. These pictures, direct from Paria, th are of the gowns that are worn by vague and restless an it fs over the soclety women of France's cap he No one as yet knows just ital . which way the fickle Dame ts go- They all show the popularity of ing to walk—whether It is toward the cape and they also show no hoops or Turkish trousers, but tt ts | widening the skirt about the sure to be toward something e f centric The new tunte ts long, which ts DAIRY LUNCH ABOARD THE BOAT SANDWICH 5c COFFEE 5c The trip from Seattle to Port Angeles, down the Sound, past Port Townsend and the three big U. S. forte—Fort Flagler, Fort Worden and Fort Casey—and across the Strait of Juan de Fuca, past Dungeness spit, the home of the Dungeness crab, is one that no one should miss. ROUND-TRIP $1 CHILDREN 50c TICKETS - (Stol2 Years) ON SALE AT COLMAN DOCK CYNTHIA GREY’S LETTERS AND ANSWERS | String on; I am great on duty, but many times we misunderstand our duties, | | thereby encouraging selfishness and "ET: I cannot print your let- | the size bead desired. ter, but if you will send me aj hat pins to dry. self-addressed envelope,| (2) Yes. stamped I will gladly give you a private| mooie |dependence on others, in thone | answer. Q.—Wii! you tell me where | can| about us. I do not believe tn} CYNTHIA GREY. | send to get a book of ancestors pub-| thoughtless or any other kind of lished in the United States? | am/|immorality, and it does my heart Q—(1) Will you kindly tell me hunting my lost ancestors, and | | good to ses married people awaken: | how to make beads from rose | have heard of this book, but don’t ing to the fact that tt is up to them leaves? know where to send and get it. Any | to live morally, just as {t is to those (2) Also, do they vaccinate to pre-| information will be most highly ap-| who are making mistakes in this ". ii as smalitl-| preciated. Respectfully, line outside of marriage—even more sla ae nged ccs fs MRS. J. M.D. |s0, for they are living under the Thanking you In advance, A—TIf you will write the gene | name of the {dealistic structure of A CONSTANT READER. alogical department, Was>ington, | the home and family. A—(1) Cun the rose petals|D. C., you can get the information. Far be it from me to try to regu through a meat grinder several late the size of families. Each must times a day for a week or more (un-| Q—! am a young man, 19 years/attend strictly to his own problem til of a consistency to mold), and, old. | am in love with a girl 17./ But no child should be carelessly or | roll into balls a little larger than | Her parents ob, immorally born, You ak of giv- ing company, ing your children the sweetness of life. The real sweetness of life con sists of a mind filled with honesty, joy, love of good, contentment, and & broad-minded charity toward all.| This will far outweigh all that edu-| cation and money may bestow upon them. Teach your children to help them- selves in every way possible, aud by so doing they cannot but help oth- s. | and we have just about quit. Do you think it would be wrong for us to meet in places Thing Now Is to Peel Off Soiled Skin Those who abhor sticky, «re shiny, streaked complexions shout A—I do think it unwise to de religiously avold creams, powd vigewt § and rouges during the heated ‘days | ceive your parents. The deceitful There's no need for them, anyway,|ness will not hurt them half as since the virtues of mercolized wax) much as {t will hinder the develop. have become known. No amount of! mont of your own and the girl's un company? | Awaiting an answer, | am, as ever, ta] REO HEAD. | perspiration will prod any evi- | dence that you've been using the | foldment. ‘ wax. As it is applied at bedtime and Some one has aptly said that our) Q.—I am a girl of 18 summers and washed off in the morning, the com- he b 1 lenton never looke like =’ make-up, | dividualities are like beautiful f¢| statues, on which we have allowed am now In my last year In high. fercolized wax gradually takes o Not long ago | met a boy of 20 to a bad complexion, instead of adding | dust and cobwebs to gather. The whom | became very much attached, anything to make it worse oft at | vanishing of these cobwebs is what | We were very good friends and were ritlcs, and accomplishes much more|I mean by “unfoldment.” As we always together until two weeks In keeping the complexion beautiful-|get rid of the dust and debris | ago, when he suddenly became very ly white, satiny and youthfu \. iw we faults), t me pogo ape mS ae Seor deaaslote hich we call faults), the gleam-| cool, and I find that he is now going and seo what a few days’ treatment a statues show plainer and plain. will do. Use like cold cream. Another effective summer with a little telephone operator where he work Cynthia, these two weeks have been the most exquisite torture, as | can't keep my thoughts awa “tt you hang this cobweb of de-| ceitfulness on your indjviduality, it will only serve as a catch-all for more dust and cobwebs. him, and he never even looks at me Just be patient and wait awhile,| now. Tell me, Cynthia, what | can knowing that before long you will|do to win his love? both be of age to decide for your-| A LOVELORN LASS, selves. Even then, remember your| A.—Don’t try to. You can't win parents really have your good at|love that way, and will lkely suc- and flabbiness— ener made by dissolving 1 o” dered saxolite in % pt. witch hazel Its use (as a face bath) leaves no} trace.—Advertinement | | heart. ceed in humiliating yourself. | > You may not think so now, but | Q—Please let me know the mean-| you nor I can tell what is best for | Ing of a heart pierced by an arrow,| you. It might be the worst thing for | something like the one | have! you to have that particular boy, and drawn. | received a letter with) some day you may think so. In the one drawn like it ANXIOUS TO KNOW. No one but a child, or a goose, would draw a pierced heart on a letter. meantime, you can only be still and walt to be shown The other girl may care just as much for him as you, and you may| not have thought you cared so much |had he not gone to the other girl | Q—I always read your answers| That is human nature, with Interest, and enjoy them; but| Do not bla I did not notice that you said any-| but try to DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. |thing about “Why a Baby?” well as your own. Keep busy at in | | am a workingman's wife and we! teresting work and fill your heart| Are ¥ ou From |: two beautiful children, | have| with unselfish wishes for them. It seen it will be a dreadful strain for| will bring you greater blessing than Missouri? |both to have a larger family, and| you wot of. we have both decided not to until, | ne the girl, or the boy, | it thelr happiness as | You no doubt have read our little| conditions are better for the work-| Q—1 have three expensive net announcements from time to time,! ing class. waists and would iike to know} but you still feel a little skeptical) When I look at some of my friends| how to clean them. | do not like about our sbility to make od. of the same class as myself, bring- to send them to the cleaners, as it We know that If you will take the! ing children thoughtlessly into the|is rather expensive, time to stop into our office for &| worid, and not able to look after THANKFUL, | free examination we can SHOW | those they have nor to pay for help,| A.—Net waista look almost like | YOU and prove to your own satls-|we are more resolved than ever to|new when washed in luke-warm | faction that we can do everything that we claim. How about that old plate that you have been wearing? give the two we have a little more | sweetness of life than we could by having more. Do you approve of} water with a pure soap, and froned on the wrong side You know how inf bg YO" our way of thinking, Miss Grey? You| @—In order to settle a dispute, | have wished you had one of Our are great on duty, | know. Oo you| would like to know If the United Ever tageaigh org ¥ arya lllprees think it our duty to do well by the| States is In debt to any foreign bys Daas et a naa v4 it WhY NOt two we have, or be thoughtlessly im-| country, or has what is called a na now, and fave yourself perhaps 4) moral and take what the gods send? tional debt, and if not, how tong | sick spell because you can't chew) we have a discussion on, so await| have we been out of debt? ‘chicadages ugh ig written BUT) your answer. Thanking you, Miss| Please answer through daily pa- Grey, for your trouble, per. Yours most respectfully, WE GIVE GAS A WIFE AND MOTHER E.G. 8, | if | pmf he that most of what) A.—A nation {s not usually tn} Regal Dental Offices | we attribute to God, or the gods, in| debt to any country, but to the big | Dr, L. R. Clark, D. D. $., Manager | mere superstition, and that we are| money holders of the world, who| | 1406 Third Av., N.W. Corner Union. the means of bringing it on our.|buy the bonds, and tn turn sell Note—Bring this ad with you elves, , them. Tho debt of the United [the knees fs the kind that will be the explanation of the sudden blos- soming In the gown departments of the stores at least 60 days before the usual time. The long tunic that comes below | worn fn summer and early fall. Parisiennes are wearing the leape gathered into sleeves and | tled down to the waist in front with thelr trotteur sults, and every one of them wears white spats , j sult fatally. at fashion in France ts quite as LOS ANGELES, June 4.—Trap- ped in an empty oll vat, in which a gasoline forge tank had exploded, | four workmen fought thelr way up| a narrow ladder to and narrow-| ly escaped with their lives were seriously burned, and H. Jones received injuries that may re- | with her morning suit. White gloves are still the only | wear, although there is a deter mined effort on the part of many to introduce the old-fashioned light shades of pink, blue and lavender | dolls Ruffles and frills afternoon costumes, and black and] HERE ELSEWHERE white is worn more than any other | @ — le colors Five die. Government ends argument ? It will be seen by the {llustration| Butter soars. suit to dissolve anthracite coal trust ene Thirty-four births reported. Lanchow, China, looted by Four file divorce sults. brigands of “White Wolf.” R. G. Green new chancellor Se- attle lodge, 51, Knights of Pythias. | Native Sons postponed dance to next Thursday. Central W. C. T. U. holds mothers’ meeting. Ben Lichtenberg will have charge of Lake Washington patrol. Progressive Thought club pienic next Thursday. Central W. C, T. U. annual meet- ing Friday. Jas. Balkweil pinched on charges of selling Mquor without license and staging cock fight at Baring, W Green Lake Rose Show opens June 20. . F. E. Farnsworth, American association secretary, guest of James D. Hoge at benquet States has not been paid. In fact, & national debt is almost never | paid, and I am sorry to say a coun try's wealth is usually judged by the amount of {ts debt. Our war equipment, ing army, ete, are the cause of the greater rt of the national debt, and the sooner the nations de cide to settle disputes by arbitra- tion the sooner the debt will be liquidated, and the drain on the people diminished navy, stand- 4 Q—! am a married woman, 33 years old, badly in love with a married man, who has one child. 1/" Myrtie Social club meets Monday. have no children. He loves me Scribes’ study class meeting to- just ae dearly ae | love him. Wel nient. | have talked it over a thousand | times and lize it will break up two families, but It Just seems im- possible for us to live without each other, We have been In love for going on four years. At the present we are living far apart and have not seen each other for a long time, but the same old love is there, Would It be very wrong to break up two unhappy families to make one of the happiest on earth? Thanking you in advance. do tell us what is best to do A HEART-BROKEN WOMAN. A.—I am not unkind when I tel! you facta, and !f you will do what ts absolutely right you will thank me some day You and the Bachelors’ dance at Fortuna Fri- day night Pathe Freres fiim branch will be established here. Annual gold medal elocutionary contest held at Church of Immacu- late Conception, announce winners June 18. E. P. Clark appointed assistant general freicht and passenger agent Alaska Steamship Co. Bremerton Commercial Club starts campaign to bring more vis {tors to navy yard A, F. Lin » Puget Sound Sav- ings & Loan Association vice presi. dent, leaves for East tonight. Minnesota arrives here Orient June 11. Nippon Yusen Kalsa steamship line cuts rates on flour and wheat. from man have talked b . oe. over a thousand times too |e vee eet goode worth $200 You have thought of the other| from home of J. J. McDonald, 2486 woman and her children, or you| Birch av. hice ds would not ask ff “It would be| Liner Tambu Maru Bee a very wrong?” It would, indeed, be;Orlent in charge of Capt. 8. very wrong for you to take her hus.| Nagasuo, new commander. band and her children's support Phy hag Ridge Improvement asso- ace PP jo {ciation formed, from them—if nothing more Semiceroha bts “with Red. exactly to her as you would wish to be done by if you had a family. Cannot you see that, in all like Mhood, it 1s your encouragement to this man that 1s making his home unhappy, and that this at- traction you feel for him is mak- ing your own home unhappy. All I can tell you is to do what YOU KNOW TO BE RIGHT and make your own home happy by do- ing your duty. Humphrey to see that Willapa har- bor isn’t eliminated from river and harbor appropriation. Seattle wants 1915 United Com- mercial Travelers’ convention, G. W. Rouke attacks compensa tion law before Rotary club. SEWING $ 5 and MACHINES p New Machines rented. WHITE SE + MACHINE Co. 1424 Third (Near P's) Main 1528, Q—! would like to have names and ade of all manufacturers of in U, & How would you proceed to get same? A.—Write to or consult a trade advertising company. You can find addresses of such companies tn the clty directory or telephone book. The Wise House Hunter hunts her house at home. She reads STAR “FOR RENT”, ADS until she finds it. Use your own Panama or Leghorn this season, Nothing better on the market. We clean and reshape them into the newest styles. MODEL MILLINERY Fifth Floor People's Bank Bldg. Second, at Pike. BEFORE | The Stingier You Are the Better for Us. The larger a dollar looks to you the better you will like the care- ful money-saving shoe-repair work which this shop turns out. A lot of people in this town have found out that our expert shoe repairmen can cut a good big slice off the family shoe bills. Why not let them amputate yours? REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP 1124 FIRST AVENUE Corner Seneca Telephone Main 4136 HIRE*sOND/SeELSEWHERE | His wife's health was given as the | cated Patrick H. Hart, secretary board of labor statistics of Illinois, ac- cused of embezzling $4.3 Utah poll tax law declared In- Pl valid J. F. Payne confirmed as post- master at Auburn. D. V. Jauch, who “discovered”| “I had a pair of buckskin ‘pants’ John Arthur, D. B. Ward, T. dynamite he planted ia department|that lasted me two years, and that|©420, Mrs. Samuel Leroy Cra of agriculture building, held for|), 1.ore than you can say of clothes | “24 Mrs. Rosamond S. Densmore, y 3 eran grand jury. Mexican federal forces are bot- tled up at Durango. Raliroad presidents point out now Has! -| other leged flaws in administration's|° trust bill. Senator Cummins’ plurality In recent lowa primaries, 45,000. Killing of Weston Burwell, Amer- fean, at Tampico, confirmed. Huerta’s followers are cheered by arrival of arms and ammunition on German shif. Crew of yacht Santa Maria, mutiny at San Francisco claiming vessel is overburden John Frank, butcher, shot and killed wife, swallowed poison and/ blew out own brains at Frisco. | Congressman Hayes Introduced a bill for a monument on Fremont's peak, commemorating the unfurling | of flag there at the outbreak of Mexican war, John E. Scott gutity of first-de- | gree murder for killing M. A. Var-| ney. Life imprisonment recom-| mended. | Gov. McGovern of Wisconsin an-| nounced candidacy to succeed Sen. | Stephenson. Ex-Gov, Sulzer of New York an-| nounced pe is again a candidate, | this time independently for gov-| ernor, Prospectors from Crooked WiI- low, Poorman Creeks and Noon Guich, Alaska, reported a rich strike of pay dirt Secretary of the Adoo and his bride, pion wi 600 an Mea y Me President Wil MacDougall-Southwick they dis stood waiting for their old pioneer wives to announce that an old, in Pioneer hall. The after dinner program included ward Clayson, Patriarch, and still others by Judge FOR REN Gas Range, Laundry Tub, Front and Back Porches, Fine View ESTABLISHED ac P)ougall 7 fouthwick fa connection with JAMES MoCREERY @ CO, New Tork to 6 p.m AROOND AY, and PIKE ST. BESour Grecian-Treco Corsets Women of fa hion are famil the Grecian Treco Corset ciate their correct style the highest perfection « ervice and valu Model 227 bust, long s elastic cloth Model 281 with rubber Guecian-Trece ar fastening, m a uede material Third Floor, IN TWO SPECIAL LOTS LOT 1—UP TO $50.00 VALUES FOR $24.50~ LOT 2—UP TO $75.00 VALUES FOR $34.50 A real opportunity to purchase a suit of the highest, grade in the semi-tailored mannish style. For convenience we have grouped these into two lots!” $45.00, $50.00, $60.00, $75.00 Suits for $34.50: The season’s most wanted materials are to be had in this selection, and every suit displays individuality, To be had in the staple shades. $34.50. $35.00, $45.00 and $50.00 Suits for $24.50 crepe poplin, black Smart suits of gaberdine, serge, and white checks and combinations of serge and taffeta, Every suit representing a conservative new style. Spe- cial $24.50. Second Floors Second Av. and Pike St ONEERS EAT PIONEER DINNER IN PIONEER HALL PIONEER DAY adays,” exclaimed Thomas P. ty, an old pioneer, to a lot of r old pioneers yesterday, as mssed pioneer days and SEATTLE MADE jeer dinner was ready upstairs hen {it was finally announced, of them answered. address by Prof. Edmond 8. ny, another in Chinook by Ed- Sr., editor of the STRICTLY MODERN - 4-ROOM FLAT West Seattle, Mount Rainier, Smith Large Private Closet in Basement, Excellent of Water Front, Lana Par! Bldg., etc. Beautiful Lawn, and All Other Latest and Best Modern Conveniences, Neighborhood. We Want a Permanent Tenant for This Fine Home, Reason- able Rent. Located at 1711 Washington St., Between 17th and 18th. Phone Beacon 1952. son's daughter, returned ai honeymoon. Francis Wood, 16, grasped chain dangling from an tlectrie| street lamp and death at Frisco. was shocked to| Thomas A. Edison, addressing the National Electric Light asso- elation, sald only 25% of the prob- ici Y lems of electricity. have been| Well-Known — Musician De solved, clares Medicinal Mineral HE'LL STAY AWAY CLEVELAND, June 4.—John D. Rockefeller announced here today that he probably would not visit his estate at Tarrytown this summer. | teen | Fran the tra, for and reason, Workmen were busy today getting the golf links on his Forest Hill estate in shape. says OLD FOLKS’ CONCERT | mine The Ladies’ Aid soclety of Queen | of | Anne M. | gage debt. jright shoulder. ‘The pains at tim | were intense, I tried many things, | PLAYFIELD DEDICATED lut got no results. I decided to Queen Anne M. E. church dedi-/try Akoz. By drinking the mineral its new playfield Tuesday Fred | known musicians in San Francisco, B. church will present an|could continue his work er for three weeks I freed my- ‘/Akoz the ‘Swan Song” for Sciatic Rheumatism, SaysF. A. Dauernheim Gave Quick Relief. A. Dauernheim, of 380 Fif- th av., Richmond district, San neisco, leader and manager of 1915 Premier band and orches- has furnished the music | policemen’s annual balls} § and one of the best/ who the parade the wonderful medicinal Heved him of a bad case! rheumatism, 0 ed | He also are eral, 8C old folks’ concert tomorrow even-|found the mineral excellent for ing at the church. The 40 singers|treating lumbago, He writes the will be attired in costumes of colo-| following: nial days. | “For the past three years or The concert 1s expected to yleld/moro I have been the victim of the sum needed in the $800 contri-\ sciatic rheumatism in my left leg | bution pledged toward the mort-| Also a touch of rheumatism in my Jevening. ‘The exercises closed with| seit from all. pain, aud after a | games of tennis, quoits and croquet) month’s treatment feel as well as by officially chosen teams. __|ever. I also found that the rem ledy was good for lumbago, driving! F. A. DAUERNHEIM, Perr ATTy |the pain out in seven days, after| /suffering with the ailment for nine| Akoz will be found effective im Mo Prag months. 1 was afraid for a while| treating rheumatism, stomach trou- that I would have to give up my/ble, eczema, catarrh, liver, kidney |band work, but Akoz has restored|and bladder trouble, piles, poison mi) SIKr es me to my normal condition, and I}oak and other ailments. i can now walk with any of them. I| Akos is sold by The Owl and all “THE END OF eee: will be pleased to tell my expe-|other leading drug stores, where ~~. en ton YuwteRDAx” |Tlence with Akoz to any one inter-| further information may be had re ested, It is a great remedy.” garding this advertisement,

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