Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
y . t . . 5 a 1914, 5. RE-MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, PAQ Fels- Naptha Soap gives you time for finishing up the odds and ends, and time for rest and pleasure, too. You can do more work, with lesstime ’ and trouble, than you ever did before, if you do it the “Fels-Naptha Way,” which hight and Anty Drudge Enjoys ofa Call Mre. Brisk—“Good morning, An make yourself at home. my work, and then I'll hav you while I darn Jim finish before dinner, because this afternoon T have some friends coming Anty Drudge—“How pretty your house is, and ow clean and bright things look. use Fels-Naptha Soap. You are a sensible WE MAKE MOTION PICTURES Finest Equipment ta Northwest JACOBS PHOTO sHOr Is on Monday, Tuesday, Wednes- @ay. Made to your order and sure to please. Venus-Martell Corset Co. 1527 SECOND AVE. OLD FEATHERS Ostrich. coque and all kinds of fancy feathers are good. Have them Temade into faney effects. Fiat band trimmings. pompons, boas. Plumes il dyed, cleaned, curled. remade Birds il of Paradise cleaned, dyed, branched refilled. | ‘$18 Firet Ave. Near Columbia St. OR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. & pleasure in reading your letters, and| PAINLESS DENTISTRY | Means what it says at our office. | This is why we serve daily such a remarkable number of patients. This office is truly the Dental Cen. ter of Seattle. Our marvelous suc- cess is not due to any special streak of luck, but is due to hard, fonscientious efforts to give our patients nothing but honest, high- grade dental work at reasonabie prices. Regular Extra Heavy Gold Crowns ees Regular $10.00 Never-Slip } WE GIVE GAS | Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clarx, D. D. &., Manager 1405 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor. Union St. Note: Bring this ad with you. | $10.00 Snow White and Sweet No Knots—No Tears 2, Cents Per Lb. Dry Weight 40c Per Minimum Bundle 50c Rach bundle washed in a separate compariment.~ No ,rubbing of the dlathes, because we use the BEST Imundry soap. t A coupon in each bundle tells about our special dinner set offer, Call Queen Anne The Washing Fine Auto Service This Kind ty Drudge. Just I've nearly finished et talk to Follow the socks, I want to directions on the Red to see me.” and Green Wrapper. I see you vrs @ jor Canada balsam. is the warm Q—For a ong time your letters have been read with great Interest ‘and profit in our home Our daughter, Bertha, has been en- tleed away by an unprincipied man Her two /ittie boys, Ear! and John,; are sick and we want her to come back to them. Won't you pl publish this? She always read your column, and my one hope is that she will see this and come home. May God biess you for it) Yours sincerely, Dd. B. 8. A—Your request {s unysual, and I cannot make a practice of Insert- ing letters of a like nature, but if these few lines will bring an erring mother back to her home, ber chil- dren and her duty, I consider that been well occupied: Q—Kindly inform me how to pre- serve autumn leaves, so they will retain their bright colors. | have been camping this su ome still doing so, and find so many gorgeously colored maple leav which | should like to keep, but fin they do not retain their colors by simply pressing. Thanking you In advance, and hop) to soon receive a reply, | am, very respectfully, CAMPER OF THE FOOTHILLS, A.—The leaves may, after press ing, be dipped tn melted beeswax; the same may be applied solid to the surface and be melted with a hot smoothing tron; or they may be varnished with dammar varnish Varnish is ob Jectionable on account of the length of time required for drying. Dear Mies Grey: | take great night | saw a request in| 1 do not! take the trouble to can enough to Jast all winter, but make it just 1 use it. Here it is: Put one can of tomatoes on to boil; put into it one large onion, chopped fine; 1 tablespoon of salt, 1 teaspoon of pepper, |, teaspoon of all the ground spices except clove and only '4 teaspoon of that; 1 de sertspoon of sugar, and boil all slowly for a half-hour. This is very fine with any meats, either hot or/ com roasts, It is also much easier | to make. Respectfully, A READER Dear Miss Grey: Ask “0. 0. B.”| kindly to re-read the article criticis ed, written to help “Young Wife” EAT LESS MEAT IF BACK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladder bothers you ~—Drink lots of water E trouble in sc form or other, says a well-know authority, because the uric acid In meat excites the kidneys, they be overworked; get sluggish clog up And éause all sorts of dis ney produces k tress, particularly backache and misery in the kidney region; rhew matic twinges, severe headaches, scid stomach, constipation, torp liver, Meseness bladder and urinar irritation. The moment your back hurts or kidne aren't act right, or if] bladder bothers you, get abgut four pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then net fine This mous salts is made from the acid of @ranes and lemon juice, combined with lthi d has been used for generations to flush clogged kid neys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine s@it no le irritates, thus ending bladder rde Jad Salts cannot Injure any one make a delightful effervescent drink which millions of n take now and the |to keep the kidneys and urinary lorgans clean, thus avoiding sérious aidney disease, lithia-water and wor Grea nd am) | thing to do. ting meat regularly eventually | g: ea ,, cool, fireless day you have no hard rubbing or boiling of clothes to get them clean, because | with Fels-Naptha Soap you don’t need hot water. It works bes water. ! can frult without sugar, with the octopus and hie profits an after! thought. Nowhere did it seek to regulate any one's diet, except to suggest the silly extravagance of sugar in tea and coffee—nay, it is even an insult to perfectly good tea| or coffi Preserves and jelly are aimost taboo upon our table. Pre- in these mestic science. A party is known to me—chronic sufferer from pros trating headaches and alimentary | weaknese—whom no facts convince that four epoone of sugar are too much In each cup of tea or coffee ach meal, and that thereln Iles the source of pain. “D. O. B.” entertains a dangerous) philosophy, carried to its logical ends. Taste, whim, desire and en- joyment are sophistically Jesultical s guides in life. By them, men) feed beer to babies, eat tobacco— nay, even smoke In crowded street cars—IN SEATTLE! By them liquor, lust and tobacco drunkards are self-intrenched—and hospitals work overtime ‘Ware! ‘Ware! Sugar cre acid in the blood and sours the die position—and the world has need of our smiles. Sincerely, MINNIE 8B. FRAZIER. | Q—I! am a young woman of 19 and wish to know which is proper | |—for a man to court a young lady | in her own home or his? | am in| love with a young man who insists} jon taking me home to his folks for visits. He very seldom, if ever, calls on me in my own home, and | | my mother does not approve of my going there. She says the place for a man to court a girl is in her own home. My home Is just as good as his, but his mother Is known to be # matchmaker, and perhaps thinks | will be surer to marry her on if || am there more. Please, Miss Grey, | answer this soon, as | am very anxious to know what is the proper 1 do not wish to dis obey mother, and yet this young man is all the world to me. Thanking you In advance for your trouble, | am, sincerely, BLUE EYES. A ir mother is right, and you will do well to abide by her ad vice. It makes no difference how much the young man ts to you, if he does not think-enough of you to call on you in your own home, you are better off without his company Oceastonally, provided the invita, tion comes from his parents, it Is proper to call at his home. Q.—As we live in a lumber camp, we have no statistics available, so we ask you to settle a dispute be tween us. Please state the propor tion between men and women in the United States. LUMBERJACKS. A.—The population of the United os (exclusive of Alaska, Ha Porto Rico and other goncon sseusions)- comprised ir » the last federal census, 47 males and 44. 629,989 females, or 106 males to every 100 females wall tiguous p’ 1910, accord! Q.—Will you tell me where | can write for particulars about the Qld | Line Insurance Co., and Is there » |New York Bank Insurance Co.? If| | so, are they the came? Thanking you, A READER A.—-You ean get full particulars by |writing to the State Insurance | Commissioner, O1 Wash. Jose of summer, with | The the | abandonment of camps and summer homes along the Lake Burien di | vision of the Seattle municipal rait |way, has caused a falling off ir | freight and passenger business that nly will make It necessary for to take off one car, The |decrease in Septemb for the munteipal line was $722, as com pared to August An average lone of $2,000 a mont? was maintained the municipa stem during the summer. Hurry up with those motor buser and the Ballard bridge! New $25,000 joint city and coun ty library dedicated at Olympia. dissolves, dirt and appear, woodwork whitens, dishes shine, if you use Fels-Naptha Soap and follow directions. INMELODRAMA mM ACTION 'AT THE MOORE! ° : ‘ e aw The hip. This € og we are all unetrung.| ma. It's all about Mngiien people of the “sporting and ladies, a high-toni villain, an earl for a hero, a nice, titled girl for a heroine, a perfecuy detestable villainess, a weak-ko parson, a girl wh t in cool or luke- p whecesche’ neevenbe. on BINS Cise |i race, that vrivgs | rain wreck, an au jtomobile wreck, a sure-enough horse race, and action every minute, THE ORPHEUM iiltan's act has the ager of Better buy Fels-Naptha carton stage har ut or box, alar duties, to} Victor Morse’s “barg-stage act™ is one of tha funniest ‘things in all vaudeville, Ethel Littlefield ts the partner, It is an excellent—en un- usual—act, and headiines the Or- pheum’s bill this week } Claude Australian card| ‘expert | © and maxixe. Good. Gold 5 three chart wea 4 not much olse Lydell, Rogers and Lydell, songs, dancing and comedy, Pretty i] good. | Lou Lockett and Jack Waldron, id a musical dancing set. Pretty good. . Adair and Adair, comedy bar per Ho had just fintehed and he hankered for a em hopped on a Yosler car seat in the smoking comps formers. Good. | forward, and lit a fine, fat > etgar. He ok one soubsatistying & THE TIVOLI and then— .i* 8 1c, Yon can't smoke here,” said the! "=roiu fe a flirtatious actre bg eg Around her frivolities ar Why can't I?” belligerently Pa Maa too and joyously draped the ductar, Orders” sald the CoD" trotics of “Lulu,” this week's revel < ,at the Tivol! theatre. The man did not commit MUM! joanne Mal scores an individ der. He ont ted t Thee were wieumente every| success. It ts a lively show, and all minute Sunday between car crews | the members work with a vim. Gev- and passengers on the Yosler,| TA! catchy new songs are sung. James and Madison itnes. Tomorrow night amateur sum Following Judge Smith's tnjune-| bers will be given after the per tion against smoking on all cars| formance, and on Friday night the except those on the cable lnes,| Chorus iris’ contest will be held. the company Sunday put into| rie seta? effect a rule prohibiting smoking| on ALL cars i ——-2 THE SEATTLE o- ° There ten't anything the smok sdtenc Md § r ing public can do, as the company ic cant ag cosas ot appears to be within its legal!) ae agg: 0 lg apes fr second act of 5 | “Damaged Goods,” which began a week's offering at the Seattle the- atre yesterday. And when the cur. tain went down, a storm of ap |plause went up. The play, which jhas been the storm center of much jeriticism and abuse, as well as praise, found hearty approval from MINES IN BOATS COPENHAGEN, Oct. 5.— Mines lashed to planks and small boats have been seen ting In the middie of the North Sea. They were re- ported by captains of Nor wegian ships arriving at this tion was women. truth about a disease which hereto: fore was not allowed public discus sion Br more dangerous those hidden be: surta it Ie believed, they are so well disguised as not to be suspected, derick O'Farrel as the hus band, Miss Irene Timmons as the wite, Jane O'Roark as the nurse— in fact, the whole company—were | very creditable in thelr respective ENGINEERS LIKE | BROAD PASS ROUTE R. A. Gray and T. M. Bacon, lo} way commission, returning: with a/ party of 40 men to Seattle, deciare| the district from Broad pass into| the interior is the most favorable | route for a ral i Editor The Star Please do not allow this hideous nightmare “war to crowd out “The Confessions of a Wife.” This story deals with our| everyday life at home, and we get some good points for our own use. the ears of the county commission ers this morning on the general tople of reducing taxes This afternoon, the commission will get down to business on the county tax levy. Let's have less war news and) 1p. Lewis, of the Municipal more of this serial and the “Lay|ieacue eald : Down Your Arms” kind. league, sald he was sure the com. - missioners could reduce the road and bridge expenditures 40% owner in 8. M 12, Lambert, a property |the McGilvra addition on |Washington shore line, in| — an audience of which a large por-| | | “Damaged Goods” depicts the! | A deluge of oratory poured tnto { |at the department of justice. More | jindictments against food dealers) lare to be returned soon. | | aii | | ESTAMLISHED 1875 ac Joudall + fouthwic R. B. Gage, Receiver Second Alve. and Pike St $5.00 White Woolen Blankets $3.95 ae SE Blankets have a ver igh to keep them from shrinking, which adds to their wearing qgualit without los- ing the warmth of a pure wool blanket. They measure 68x80 inches and have borders of pink or blue, Regular $5.00 quality. Tuesday at $3.95. Pure Wool Blankets at $5.65 6pm tore open 9 a.m. mall percentage of cotton, just en Emmerich Feather Pillows at $4.60 Made of strictly pure wool, in good | The name “Emmerich” on a Pillow is a weight. They come 66x80 inches and are | guarant { quality and at ite purity. lack $5.65 $4.69. Woolnap Crib Blankets at $1.50 Fine Satin Bedspreads at $3.50 Warm wool finished Blankets, in white | Heavy Satin Bedspreads of splendid with pink or blue borders; have a neat | quality. Come in Mar atterti, in ase sorted styles, in size 78x88 inches. Priced at $3.50. Third Foor mohair binding and measure 36x50 inches. | One pair in a box, $1.50. e va elling. the 79c Sink Cleaners and Scrapers, regularly Imported Scrap Baskets, special regularly $1.50, special at Sih be .95c | Extra Heavy Block Charcoal Tin Bread Pans, in = sorted sizes, regular price 25c; Imported Scrap Baskets, regularly 1.10 | $1.75, spectal at oes ° regularly 1.19 special at 16c regularly $1 59 Triple-coated Gray Enameled Stee! Ladies, 5c regularly $1 89 regular price 10c; special at Steam Cookers, large size, made of 99 per cent China Teapot Tiles, price 35¢, regu Ate, 5c Imported Scrap Baskets, $2.00, special at Imported Scrap Baskets, | pure spun aluminum, burnished; reg- $2 75 . ular price $4.00; special at .......... 85c Deep Pudding Pans, of pure spun 39c minum, special at 49c r 95e size, special Tetiey’s India Ceylon Tea, in pound tins, Green Label Brand; regular price 65c; nported § Baskets, Imported German Stone a ried designs, regular sp jal at Small Meat Saws, with | handles, regular price 25¢ lack enameled spectal ... THIS: JONES FRIEND OF YOURS CALLED UP AGAIN | AND | ‘YOLD WIM THAT NOU WERE NOT AT HOME. | DONT LiKe WE'S A SINGLE. MAN AND IT'S { ALLRIGHT FoR HIM To BUM AROUND. HE CANDO WHAT HE WANTS To, BUT HE’S NO COMPANION FOR | poly see WHY HE'S ALWAYS CHASING AFTER ABLE To Give YOUR CHIN A Rest UNCLE SAM AFTER DEALERS IN SUGAR WASHINGTON, Oct. 5.—The food | price probe !s proceeding vigorously | building fund for St. Peter and St, Paul Episcopal cathedral at Mount SI3ISPAIDFOR FIRST FARE ON presses Federal agents are investigating! pyigently the Duwamish Valley especially the increased cost of Transportation bus line is mot men. jafraid of any “hoodoo.” — | The line was started yesterday GAS HEARTBURN | with two cars to operate between ’ y| First and University and Renton And the first ticket purchased who bakes fs fast coming to netted $13. recognize the many advan- the Lake cane a * N | iJ oh ‘was willing to give sway some won out with the high bid. He Dens Se eeqarel Dee estimated budget is $2,765 o . J sec ap wag Tho revenue is eatimated at |wila, president of tie bus ‘ot | Fisher’s Blend Flour 377,400, The balance must be| —— Jand the little daughter of George is superior to a ( jraised by taxation. Tho total is! ‘Time it! Pape’s Diapepsin will|K. Jones, vice president, christened | WHEAT FLOUR, oer An Increase of about $160,000 over digest anything you eat and over |the buses “Tukwila” and “Duwam SOFT WHEAT FLOUR for ne daca ec come a sour, easy oF out-of-order | Ish.” | Bread, cake and pastry, — - ne ms |stomach surely ithin five min The ceremonies of inaugurating | ‘ Don't scold your fretful, peevish ute th. line were helped out ir ’ child. See if tongue is coated; this|}| PHONE GIRL KILLED If your megls don’t fit comfort-|Commissioner Bob Bridg Fisher’s Blend Flour is @ sure sign its little stomach ably, or what you eat lies like a|Reynolds, chairman of the public is a better flour than an ALL- liver and bowels are clogged with|{ DIRECTING GUN FIRE J} jump of tead in your stomach, or if| service ‘commission, and Council EASTERN HARD WHEAT sour waste , || THR HAGUE, Oct. 6.—The || You have heartburn, that 1s a sign/man Oliver T. Erickson. The total! FLOUR; it makes a better When listless, pale. feverish, full|] Rhineland Red Cross chiet told |) °F indigestion receipts yesterday were $100. | loaf of” bread with better rf cold, breath bad, throat sore.|} 4 remarkable story at Atchen of Get from your pharmacist a fifty. % flavor, better texture and of Joesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, |] 4 Relgian telephone girl at ||Cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and | better color than an all-hard has stomach ache, indigestion, I hanion who telephoned Relgian | take a dose just as soon as you| euias fee Hiarthoea, give a teaspoontul off ofricera at the forts that they J/cm" ‘There » no sour rising, : California Syrup of Figs,” and, tr marly pincing their ||no velching undigested food | * 1 few hours all the foul waste, the vi ° nat properly placing their} vixed+with acid, no stomach gas Fisher’s Blend Flour sour bile and fermenting food sons Es - {natructions 4/0" beartburn, fullness or heavy is a better flour than an ALL- passes out of the bowels and you ay sa pai es ed c iy || feeling in the stomach, nausea, de. OF SCHOOL; TAKE SOFT WHEAT FLOUR; ft save a well and playful child again. |} Mey were able to regulate thelr |) iitating headaches, dizziness or fu nanehe ad lec Children love this barmless “fruit || ting efectively, and the tele- Hi intestinal griping. This will all go | of better laxative,” and mothers can rest |} Phone girl was killed by a shot }/ ang, pesides, there will be no sour A LOCOM TW | bread with. alee casy after giving it, because it|| Which destroyed the office from H!ro44 jeft oyer in the stomach to | crust, bétter alae never fails to make their little “in-|] Which she was directing the op 7) poison yout breath with neuseous and of better tan sl * clean and sweet erations. | odors, 7 Yaga ee | ture than an all- ‘ep it handy, Mother! A little | Pape’s Diapepsin ts a certain] SEDALIA, Mo., Oct. 5.—After a soft wheat flour given today saves a sick child to jcure for out-of-order stomachs, be ye night hog at ig miles <r hoary morrow, but get the genuine. Ask cause it takes hold of your food |! one or the most powerful locc or sale by ail grocers ron ote fone ASL GARL PERSON FREED s:i"iin''iitinc'sox" eo] motes on Waster Ready, of “California § ot Fig ry you mach wass't there. |boys who broke out of the reform rat ees which has directions™ for babies . e Relief in five minutes from all|School at Boonville escaped and | ————— ildren of all ages and for grown-| LINCOLN, Ill., Oct, 5—After delib ch misery is waiting for you| are still at large aps plainly on the bottle. Remem-| erating 20 hours and taking 21 bal) a 9 store | They whirled through Pilot ser, there are counterfeits sold|lots, the jury which heard the evl-| The: fifty-cent cases con-| Grove, Mo., just two minutes before | sere, 80 surely 190! 1 that |dence in the trial of Carl Person, | tain enc Pape’s Diapepsin” to|the switch was thrown in an effort ‘ours is made by t California | editor of a labor perfodical here, Keep the entire family free from|to ditch them. Fie Syrup Company.” Hand back|echarged with the murder of Antone) stomach disorders and indigestion] A few miles farther on they stop with contempt any other fig| Masser, chief of police of Clinton,/for many months. It belongs in| ped the engine and escaped to the syrup. — IL, returned a verdict of not guilty. your home. woods, | Princeton, N. J., gives $500,000 to —