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the best way. work weeki Anty Drudge Disagrees Soap. Me. Oldway—“I told Mrs, Newfangle the other day that I wouldn't be hired to do things thi way she does. Why, she says she never boi! her clothes any more since you told her about @ome sort of soap to use. I don’t think used to. It means usin STAR—THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1914. PAGE 5. cool or luke- oer that aren't rubbed and boiled are fit Follow the Better puy wear. directions Fels-Naptha dome, Divdgo—"T cortatal did tell Mand ae on the Red by the e , m. 1 o io %, 4 ines the Maras wer, but I baow Mrs. and Green fi ° r carton Newtangle's clothes are just 1m, cee “ Wrapper. (A or box wi r, withou' ie ha aby ) ayn ork” Till every woman about Feo aptha MOOR ce noses a gato 5 P yor the pity if they are too ss le meee wrtnn = aat Pele @ Co. Pitiateiohia "$500,000 MILL|MURDER CAS IS BURNED UP) BALKSPOLICE CARLTON, Ore, Aug. 13—~The| CHICAGO, Aug. 13.—The police Plant of the Carlton Lumber com-/ #re Without a clew to the identity f the person who killed Secretary pany is in ruins today as the re| ° A , sult of « fire which broke out short- R a re of the Wostery,, F 7 Saeotan et ten a fe; “Amory’s stenographer arrived at etimated at ce 1 fre) his office at her usual hour Wednes- departments of McMinnville and | Py ‘amb: but could not get in. Late tn Yamhill were rushed here by 8 SP¢| the afternoon the office was en | tered by C. A. Thompson, bullding «0 wenttllablatdan lattendant, and the corpse was |found. Death was caused by two SEWING $ and j eon cuts on the head. Confusion MACHINES in the office indicated Amory had Mew Machines rented made a desperate fight. WHITE SRWING MACHINE. CO. 2496 Third (Near Pike) = Matn 1578 valued at DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. There'd Another Reason Than looks why your teeth should be kept in perfect condition—your health. Without good impossible to maaticate your food properly, and so indigestion ensues and a long trail of troubles. Re- meber, Dr. Clark will examine your teeth free of c! re and tell you what you need and how much it will cost. You will be under no obligations to have anything done unless you so desire, | Our prices are exceptionally low. We will make you an extra heavy |$10 Gold Crown for $4 or one of ‘our famous $10 Never-@lip Plates for $5. All work guaranteed. WE GIVE GAS Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D. 8, Manager 1405 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor, Union St. Note: Bring this ad with you | A STAR WANT AD will SEATTLE sell it quickly. Porter’s| Home- / | | Thousands of Youngsters, Leading Grocers All Over Pacific Coast Sell It. MRS. M. A. PORTER | Friday Clearance All broken lines of Suits, Coats, Dresses, Skirts, etc., in values up to $25.00, Friday and Saturday . $1, $2 and $3 Your Choice CASH—NO EXCHANGE SALE STARTS 10 A. M. Hoffman Cloak & Suit Co. 1316 SECOND AVE. WESTERN-GOODYEAR QUICK SHOE REPAIR COMPANY We Guarantee You the Best Work in Town—The Best of Materials Used. Bring Us Your Old Shoes—We'll Make Them Like New. 219 James St. John Cicchetti, Prop. teeth {t's} “ae Q—i am a reader of The Star} Be very careful not to crush curd, |and | know that you help a great many young people who get them- serves into awkward positions. 1 am a young man 26 years old. | Have been for some time, and am ing company with @ young id, to my sorrow, | am me very much, 1¢ loves me so devotediy that. |! am afraid to tell her the truth. She ie @ dear, sweet, pure child, and | am in no way worthy of her, as | have led a wild and sinful life. But 1 love her, yes, a thousand times Qreater than my own life, so it is @ sure thing | cannot eay any thi that would hurt her. } you tell me of some way out? Wit you help me? | am wilting to sacrifice anything ts a eelf rather than blot and ruin thi girt’s life. | know | have done a Qreat wrong, but it Is too late now, oe Sen ee re oon ee A~-Bosh! It fs never too late. There is only one honorable thing for you to do and that is to be man enough to tell the girl the truth. If you really love her as much as you say and she loves you, it will sound much better, I assure you, from your own lips than spun from the tongues of gossip. The path of deceit is winding, tangling and confusing, but since you glided so |smoothly down {t, you must hunt | your own way out. |. Don't be too sure that the girl's life will be ruined because of the knowledge of your past. She will |be disgusted rather than broken: hearted, and even though she can- not tolerate your presence, she will be forced to admire you for your frankness. If you go on decelving her until she hears the story from others, the result will be much worse. Q—I! have written to you some time ago, but have not seen the answer in the paper. | think per- haps my letter was not silifenough to be printed. Will you kindly tel! me how to. clean a white Panama hat? Hoping to see my letter in print this time, | remain. A READER, A-—Thanks for your high esti. mation of the letters that appear in my columns, I have printed instructions for cleaning Panama hats at least one- half dozen times during the sum- mer, and I dislike to bore the ma- jority of my rsaders by repetition to accommodate a few. | If you will send stamped, self- addressed envelope, repeating your request, I will gladly send you the recipe. Q—! am a giri of 18 and want to | get acquainted with a boy whom | | think is about 20. | have seen him (a few times and wish you would tell me of an way to get ac quainted with him. He lives in an- other city. I know his name and think | know hie address. CLO. A.—Did you think Cynthia Grey would tell you to write to him? | If you know of no one who is | acquainted with him who might in- troduce you, I can suggest no other way. If he 1s the right sort of fel- low he will not recognize chance acquaintances, Q—Will you kindly give me a |recipe through your columns to make ordinary che such as is purchased at grocery and other stores where foodstuffs are sold? By 80 doing you will greatly oblige AN ADMIRER. A.—Use about one tablespoonful jof rennet extract for three gallons of milk, If the curd is over one- half hour in coming, increase the quantity of rennet; if less, decrease it. Rennet tablets may be used. Warm the milk to 85 degrees F., add rennet, mix thoroughly; cover jand let stand at this temperature for one-half hour, or until curd will ". | break, leaving the whey clear, Cut leach way, leaving in columns about jone inch square, Let it stand until whey rises an inch on top of curd, then warm the whole grad y, taking two or three hours to reach 98 degrees F., lifting and stirring and breaking gently with the hand all the time until the pleces are about the size of grains of corn. as that will cause cream or fat to escape with whey. Let stand at this temperature, stirring occasionally to keep from packing, until curd is so firm that when squeezed gently tn the hand and the hand opened, it will sep- }arate into particles again. The | whey should have a slightly acid) | taste, Dip curd into basket Hned with cloth to cool and drain, it Is drained, using 4 ox, salt to 10 ibs. curd, mixed carefully, or rubbing, after pressing. The pressure must be gentle at Fels-Naptha Soap does better work in 400 Men Work for Just because a thing is new doesn’t say that it isn’t as good or better than the old things we have been If you don’t know about Fels- Naptha Soap, it is time that you learn. Fels-Naptha Soap is one of the changes that means a lot to tired house- keepers. It means away of doing work well. It means saving a lot of time and trouble. warm water; it means making things look bright and new. Anything—paint, wood- kitchen sinks or greasy pans, the y wash, fine laces, heavy blankets —looks better if done with Fels-Naptha $1 Day in Lumber Mill, Owner Says Four hundred men are working in a lumber mill in an American clty today for $1 a day, out of which they must pay their own lodging, The company furnishes the board, This was the admitted testimony of Nell Cooney, manager of the Gray's Harbor Commercial Co., of Cosmopolia, Wash., before the fed- eral commission on industrial rela tions today, Axsked if that admitted an American standard of living, if {t permitted family life, Cooney frankly stated that It did not Just Loves to Work. previous to Cooney’s test! mony, Paul Page, of the Page lum ber Co, of Eagle Gorge, Wash., In which Speaker Howard Taylor of| this state is a partner, uttered this | sentiment: } “A man gets a lot of pleasure out of a good day's work. I do,” 6 had been asked about the Jength of a working day and that was his answer. Likes "Em Short, Though. Questioned by Commissioner O'Connell, Page admitted that he gets more pleasure out of a short day's work than a long day | A heated session ensued between Page and Commissioner Garretson over the practice of deducting a hospital fee from employes’ wages. | The subject seemed to jar on Page's nerves, and he wanted {it dropped after stating he didn't know any- thing about it. Charge Hospital Fees, His testimony, however, devel- oped the fact that his own com- Just Salt after) pany collects $1.00 a month from every employe for hospital dues. In cases of accident or illness, the | worker is sent to the Kent hospt-| tal to be treated by Dr, Taylor.| Page sald the doctor got all the! money and the company made no profit on it. He told commission that where a man worked only four days, he was charged 25 cents for hospital fees several times in one month when thrown out of work in one place and securing employ- ment in another mill. TO SAVE EYES |Is the Object of This Free) Prescription—Try It if Your | Eyes Give You Trouble. the Thousands of people suffer from eye troubles because they do not know what to do, They know some | retson. | oxiat }tn killing it in the legislature. He estimated there were 50 nceldents treated by Dr. T in the past year The Page Taylor company employs today 138 men At this rate the hospital fees pal by the workers to $1,656 about amounted Comes Rather High When Garretson asked Page if that wasn't an extraordinarily high rate of insurance, especially tn view of the fact that in the rari way organizations the men pay smaller fees and are able to build their own hospitals and to pro. vide doctors and medicine for the ent! amilies of the workers Page replied “Oh, | never heard of any doctor making a million dollars out of the hospital fe “Would leas than a milion be worth stealing?” Garretson asked. P. Gets Peeved Page flared up and declared that | question had nothing to do with| the investigation. Workers Exploited? “It certainly has,” insisted Gar. “This commission wants to find out the conditions as they It the workers are betng exploited by hospital fees, if some them that should not be taken, ft is stealing.” Page was one of the employers who helped draft the workmen's compensation act. The original draft of the bill contained a pro vision for “first aid.” This would have abolished the hospital fee graft Partners Have Difference “Is Speaker Taylor your partner in business? asked Attorney Thompson, counsel for the commia- sion “Yon,” replied Page. | “Speaker Taylor opposed the ‘first aid’ provision and succeeded | Is} that right?” Page admitted {t was true. “I favored it,” Page said, “and he opposed it” The courtroom, which was again jammed with interested auditors, burst into laughter. Throw Out Mattresses “If the laborer would refuse to Maten to agitators and wouldn't read certain literature, he would | be contented,” Page sald | Discussing the sanitary condi. tions of the bunkhouses, Page sald “Many of the loggers are | funny. We furnish mattresses in the bunkhouses, but they throw them out of the win. ESTABLISHED 1875 ac Dougall 7 fouthwick K. B. GAGH, Receiver SECOND AV, ond PUKE #T Store open 0 4. m. to Op am New Neckwear Novelties 50c Vestees collar made of the finest of good quality pique, with a new roll sheer organdy, in round, square or novelty shapes, either hemstitched or picot edged, 5O¢. New Nose Veilings—We have just received a few pieces of Nose Veils, the yard showing with neat border in black and white, 60@ 2 the hexagon mesh 65¢ Floor First FINAL CLEAN-UP OF Sure Seal and E. Z. as Preserving season is well under w: Fruit Ja rs therefore we will offer the balance of our Double Safety, Sure Seal and E, Z. Atlas Fruit Jars. These three makes are the highest grade of fruit jars made %-pint size, regularly 95c, to clean up at.. l-quart size, regularly $1.25, to clean up at. Y%4-gallon size, regularly $2.00, to clean up at. .69¢ 89¢ $1.15 As these quantities are limited, we would advise you to place your order early. ‘riday morning. This sale begins Basement Salesroom. We Have Just Received New Crepe Kimonos amaniaaiall A new assortment of Kimonos is now being shown. They are made of an excellent quality flowered crepe and are shown in rose, Copen, pink, gray and dark and light blue; the sleeves and fronts are finished with shirred ribbon. These Kimonos will sell at $1.75. MacDougall-Southwick Second Av. and Pike St. because he “never went to war.” Third Floor. known in Seattle, was sued for ab but thoroughly; or salt by brine bath |£ first or the milk fat will run out.) %, thus leaving @ poor cheese. In- crease the pressure in a fow hours take rearrange the bandage and press as before. It 1s now ready to cure; and this is the most important part of cheese-making. The room should be, first of all, capable of being kept at ao even and medium tem- perature, From 60 to 60 degrees | F. is now regarded as the best for domestic pu The room should be fairly dry, but not too dry, and, while being well ventilat-| 5 04, should be free from currents of | alr. If too dry or subjected to dry currents, the cheese will lose weight and be apt to crack. Great care must be taken to keep out all files. The bandage should be greased § and rubbed and the cheese turned over on the shelf ev- ery day or two for a month; later this need be done only once or) twice a week. If the cheese should crack, paste strips of cheesecloth or stout paper over the openings. SAVED FROM D Tv SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, Aug. 13.—Word reached here of the rescure on the desert of Thomas Guynne and Robert Caville, pros- pectors, who were near death from thirst. . 42ers Crawiord E. White Candidate for republican nom- ination for the office of Prosecuting Attorney For Freckled, Tanned, Red or Wrigkled Skin Just. bi neath that freckled, tanned or reddened complexion. there's an exquisitely beautiful skin of youchful tint and delic: If you could only bring this complexion to the surf discarding the discolored one! can—in the easiest, simplest, natural manner imaginable, wet at any drug store an ounce of ordinary " mercolized wax, apply nightly like cold cream, removing {it mornings with warm ‘water. ‘The od wax assists Nature by gradually peeling off the lingering particles of scorched and half-dead surface skin, causing no dine whatever, Cutaneous defects like pimples, blotches, yer «pots, moth patches, freck! of course disappear with the old skin, Nothing else will ac- complish such wonderful reaults in so short # time. Fine lines and even deeper wrinkles often appear at this season. In such cases nothing is better than a face bath eo by dissolving 1 oz. ow dered olite In pt. wi eAn h s remarkably effective. — Advertisement: geen, and jeese, turn It, |? 004 minor allment, but none for troub: because the trouble | to drive them to an eye home remedy for ag 4 other elr eye They neglect their eyes rouble! not sufficient les. on.” that prescription n Keeps His remedy Gows and demand hay to sleep Commissioner Garretson suggested they may be doing becauee “geome others may be occupying those mat- tresses.” As to food, Page declared it was| period of enforced idleness. He & good business proposition to give the men the best possible. They give better service, he sald for the social rest fs to restrict immigration ab- solutely except to farmers. un. Biethen admitted that many out yorce today by Mrs. of employment really want work Jah harees ct Doane m, on ol o' § and can't get it. They were married in Seattle Jan, * ., In the lumbering industries, he | 9, 1913. said, the work was seasonal, and 2 Ses goers GREECE ANXIOUS wages to support them in tne ATHENS, Aug. 13.—The kt Greece today called a the members of his cabinet and all favored labor unions, he said, and expressed the opinion that a uni- versal eight-hour law might be ctl : beneficial, Skilled labor should Pressure work fewer hours than unskilled, | Gress ta tates and iene on he said. was increasing. The king anxious to remain neutral. Henry Pauly, business agent of is and quickly and {rritation; ni | weak, over- worked, tired eyes and other similas watery, report have after weeks’ une. nod for the eyes jand contains no Ingredient which * Dal would Injure the most sensitive ¢: of an infant or the awed. Any Drug Store or any drumgist can fi!) this’ prescription promptly. 4 know Try tt or once what real eye mn STEWART HOUSE i) wt. Ti PIKE st “BLUE PETE'S ESCAPE" (Two Reels) “EHOSE MAPPY DAYS” “THE MIDSUMMER LOVE TANGLE” mit ICE os ICE DELIVERY CO. ELLIOTT 5560 | DR. MACY Let Dr. Macy Cure You All Chronio and Many So-called Incur- able Disorders—The Wye, Ear, Nose, Cataract, Ataxia, Stomach and ‘ders, Kidney, Liver, All Urinary Disorders, Di kin, Acne, Kezema, Pimple Piles and all rectal troubles without th knife, All Disorders of Women—tIrregulari nful Periods, displacement and a aon ® peculiar to the sex without resorting to surgery. All Disorders of Men—Nervous Debii- | ity, Blood Polson, eotal and Ch Disorders, Come te me for o1. ‘Wassarman test. I am the only doctor in Seattle advertising to cure men whose | off! own, who uses his own | picture and stands personally every promise and guarantes, My treatment for all Deapondency, Im- | red | Vitality and Nervous Debility j Sundays, | behind | m. to § p,m. sultation free, Ten years’ practic ‘DR. MACY, Specialist In Advanced Methods for All Diseases, Tut this ad, out now for reference. 818 Becond Ave., Seattle, Wash, Opposite the Rhodes Co., opposite Arcade entrance. Labor Unions No Aid to Majority, 1.W.W.Man Says | That labor unions are close cor- porations which fall to distribute any w ure of relief to the ma jority of the workers was the con- tention made before the federal commission on industrial relations yesterday by James B. Thompson, former organizer of the Industrial Workers of the World. “Any organization that {s not revolutionary,” he declared, “can- not hope to gain the red-blooded members of the laboring class.” Thompson attributed the social unrest in the country to the fact that the producers do not get a just return for their work, and that the development of machinery throws more and more people out of employment every year. His solution was to let the work- ers of the world own their own jobs—to own the machinery of production and distribute the work among all Col. A. J. Blethen strikes, boycotts, lockouts, W. W., street speakers. He sald strikes and boycotts| should be classed as criminal. “Would you say that of war, asked Commissioner Garret denounced the I too?” son. The colonel said he didn't know WILSON: Watch for Me! jcoming to the the Itinerant Workers’ union, dis- cussed the hobo sftuation. RAINBOW IS SAFE VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 13.— After repeatedly being reported damaged or sunk in an imaginary naval engagement with German warcraft, off the coast of Califor- nia, the Canadian cruiser Rain- bow, convoyed by the British sloop of war, Algerine, arrived m this port this morning. The Ratn-| bow will proceed to the drydock to undergo repairs for several days. The British war sloop Algerine, about the fate of which many ru- more have also been in circulatton, is expected to arrive here this afternoon, JAHN IN DIVORCE SUIT Nicholas F. Jahn, member of the Jahn Contracting Co., and weil Information Wanted An appeal to the public for in- formation concerning the Oil Fields of Clallam and Jefferson County. There are thousands of people who would be glad to know | seepage | if there is a natural oll surface in these counties, and if so, your informa- tion will assist in the development and upbuilding of the great natural resource. Please write at once and give all information possible to 8-728, Care Star. Gets the it not in every home? The “All-Gas” Home Benefits IEN thousands of Seattle people find gas best and cheapest for cooking—other thou- sands for water heating for lighting—others for house heating—is apparent that it is the best and cheapest Gas Makes Any Home More Pleasant, But the “All-Gas” Home Is the Best of All Seattle Lighting Co. RHOADS DENTAL CO. Third and Pike Dental Experts. When it comes to class dental service at a price, these dentists can something entirely new and resulta. Let them about your wi your dental needs x quote you terms. You will ed court ‘and should you dental work y them, certainly receive value in full. nly that, but you will surely Dental Co. Third and Pike Greatest other thousands