The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 4, 1915, Page 5

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STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 4 Teething time is hard enough on the babies, without having to be neglected, too. But what is a busy, tired woman to do? She has so mueh work she must do, that the baby must be left to cry and fret until it is done. Evefy mother knows how hard it is to want to comfort the little dears, and not have the time to do it. But babies can be kept happy and mothers rested and well if women will use the vs ek ae | to help them with their housework. els-Naptha is ‘the easy-way soap, because it is the cool- water, no-hard-rubbing soap. It cleans everything it touches, dissolves dirt, takes out stains, removes grease; and all this in cool or lukewarm water. Anty Drudge Tells How to Help Baby Ure. Youngmother—“Oh, Anty Drudge, I am eo Gred and nervous! avy has been crying for half an hour, and I am in the midst of m washing, and can’t take her oP to stop her. +4 am_ nearly distgacted with this hot kitchen, and I think it makes her feel sick, too.” Follow the directions ion the Red Better Pele Naptha by the carton and Green Anty Drudge—“Give me the baby, and let me get °F box. Wrapper, r out of this steaming, y, hof place. I will rfind her while yo finish your wash. Then you come sit down while I tel! how . . in the future you can avoid anything like this by using Fels-Naptha Soap.” ELS 4 CO, PHILADELPHIA NOW, IF IT WERE RAILROADS TO ASK REPEAL "O™.iFt wene OF SAFETY FULL-CREW LAW Editor The Star: I noticed in;permit the appalling loss of life sading an article in the Tacoma common before the passage of the! mne of December 26, by Mr. W. full crew law, The railroads natur- | C. Albee, superintendent of the N. ally want to avoid this expenditure | . railroad, urging the uselessness for salaries, It is a cash outlay of the full crew law passed by the Loss of lives ts paid for by the in-| Jegisiature in 1911, that there were surance companies. one or two statements that were | believe the senators and repre hot perfectly c.var. sentetives of Washington are fair At the time the full crew law was minded enough to realize the ad put into effect, work was plentiful vantage derived from the operation | and there was no occasion to pass;of this bill during the last three as bill of this kind to create jobs ye and will be satisfied to let the unemployed, as he says was the bill stand as it is. ‘This biil was passed to com-| MARK FLETCHER, the railroads to-have sufficient; Chairman Ratlroad Brotherhood's to properly handle jong trains. Legisiative Board. vate, who guard Lon tenced to 10 years. PRUNSWICK, Jan. 4 local firm has million-dollar contract whi lke sold CHILDREN ARE N. J., re, EVERETT, Jan. 4 | have been WANT OUR HELP | case | | would like to have ae a true | but recently have had an awaken fing How |the party, If some of his friends Jare yours, also, be sure to invite them Having done this, and failed t J@ntablish any firmer footing on th grounds of friendship, there . LONDON, Jan. 4.—Heury Van Dyke, American minister at The | Hague, has been asked to assist In jan effort to prevent the execution jot William Lonsdale, a British pri auited his German first sen- GET BIG ORDER -A awarded a} for horse- | to be used by Russian TAUGHT CRIME Two arrests made, and others will to properly man the train: under the best circumstance: say nothing of bad weather, fog breakdowns. The train crew,! being held responsible for wrecks, | were anxious to have sufficient help to be able to absolutely guard both ends of the train against) wreck. OR. L. R. CLARK, D. DO. 8. G. A. Magnus Joins the Big Army of Regal Boosters gets, ean = COTTON LEAVES NEW YORK, Jan. 4.—A consign- ment of 22 cases of supplies and) 100 bales of absorbent cotton, gath-| ered by the Washington Red Cross, | left Sunday for Pa | was| leaving Auburn. | Levikow asked permission of his guard to go to the lavatory. He en- tered and locked the door, then es- caped from the window while the train was moving rapidly. | Police from the Georgetown sia tion are searching for him. DRUGLESS DOCS WILL FILE BILL A petition bearing 21,000 signa Sam Levikow, being brought by Detective James Doom from St. Jo seph, Mo., to face a charge of rob j bing the store of D. B. McHride & Co. of woolens valued at $2,000, last November, escaped from the train Monday morning as, it WeSHatntotid ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 4.—There will be no soctal frills to the new democratic administration In Minne sota. The official hall with which former governors opened their ad ministrations will be omitted. The new executive, W. 8. Hammond, is & bachelor, and the “executive man. sion” {is just an unpretentious bachelor suite in a downtown hotel The new governor represented Minnesota in congress for several years Service at Queen Anne Congrega-| tifully darkened, glossy and tional chureh conducted by candle Big Specials TUESDAY Seattle Market | | follow, on charges of coaching ctill dren to steal, in connection with re cent wholesale chicken thefts, Mr. and Mra. W. L. Taylor, colored proprietors of a «mall restaurant, are heid. They are by the children. HAVE DARK HAIR AND LOOK YOUNG Don't stay gray! Nobody can tell when you darken gray, faded hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur Grandmother kept her hair beau. bund ant with a brew of Sage and Sulphur, Whenever her hair fell accused of | rexpondence he would not think of having bought the chickens stolen | out or took on that dull, faded-or) streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonder. ful effect. By asking at any drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Compound,” you will get a e bottle of this old-time tecipe, y to une, for about 60 cents This simple mixture can be de pended upap to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is And here's bow it happened: tures will be filed along with a bill “I certainly want to join your|framed by drugiess physicians of band of boosters, for the nine|the state at the coming session of teeth that you extracted for me did the legislature, jt was announced Occidental and Yesler MEATS—(Stalls 1-9) Steer Round Steak, Ib. 17¢ splendid for | soalp and falling hair. A well-known downtown # everybody dandruff, dry, itchy drug: uses Wyeth's not-hurt a bit. I have had teeth | today. Loin Pork Chops, Ib...18¢ Sulphur, because it -extracted by dentists who told me | They ask that licenses be granted Mutton Chops, Ib...12/2¢ naturally and evenly that they would not hurt, but they | such practitioners without the med Pork Back Bo It that nobody can tell {t has been ap- certainly did hurt, so I was very ica) school requirement. wee Hae Dense, $0 Be piied—it’s #0 easy to use, too, You ane ‘yom yod said that ity | _ - for . » Bhe simply dampen, a comb or soft not burt, but you certainly | FISH—(Stall 11) srash and draw it thrangh your did prove to me that you can de- sir, taking one strand at a time. Mver painless dentistry CAPTAIN Is HERO Salmon, 3% Ibe Zhe Hy (Bb ven the gray hair disap “G, A, MAGNUS, LONDON, Jan. 4.—Capt. Arthor Herring, 3 Ibs 10¢ pears; after another application or “719 North $2nd Street, Cit M. Loxley, commander of the bat Salt Herring, per doz, 20¢ two, it is restored to its natural This band of boosters is what {s/\tieship Formidable, sunk in the color and looks glossy, soft and making the Regal Dental offices’ channel by a German submarine, ||} VEGETABLES—(Staile 16-17) [P) av iundant business grow faster than any oth-| went down with the vessel, com-| er dental office in the Northwest.| mgcently puffing a cigarette, ac As Mr. Magnus says, we can and | cording to stories told by survivors do deliver absolutely painless den-| —--- Our prices are low—our ma-| and workmanship the best. | FITZ IS TIR Denual Offices | OF STANDING UP Councilman Fitzgerald has intr OR. t. R. CLARK, MGR. | guced a bill providing that whe 1405 Third Avenue ever 15 persons are without seats 1. W. Corner Third and Union jn @ theatre or other public build ing. a “Standing Room Only” sigr must be placed in the ticket win dow. 17 HOMES BURN PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 4.—Seven | teen homes were wiped out and two lumber mills destroyed in fires in| eparate parts of this city Sunday Choice local Celery, 5e $1.00 BAKERY—(Stall 12) 2 10-cent Loaves Bread 15¢ 1% doz, Cookies......50¢ FRUITS—(Stali 10) Dromedary Dates, 2 White Gloves Cleaned 5c and 10c Plant and Office, 10th EB, Union. pkgs 2he Fard Dates, 2 Ibs....25¢ GROCERIES—(Stalle 13-14) f Ibs. 25-cent Cotfee..95¢ I! % Ibe. 2be Campbell's Soups, per can dike .. Re AND —EGos— Ave. WART HOUSE FE. $49—Phones—E. 1164 Peanuts LPARN Start now. taught—thorough, applications must January 16th. MILLINERY Complete reliable, BUTTER (Stall 1@ Plymouth 2 Storage 8, can fit_you 107, , noe ase MENDENHALL ALBERT LEA, Minn, Jan. 4 4 lurge cans Wild Rose Model Millinery Co. The Pen fipecialiet Twelve persons were serio Qhe elief train was expec tarrive before noon | Madison St Just Received 50 Firkins Fancy Creamery Iowa Butter Guaranteed Strictly Fresh RANCH EGGS, doz, ..... 38c Two Dozen, 75¢ | Fresh Chumed | Washington | Creamery 30: ‘Butter |IBUTTER DEPT. 1611 PIKE PLACE Pure Food Shop Union Dye Works, Inc. and We Cali and Deliver Promptly. course All in before CALIFORNIA CHEERS, | 3 [gaged or not engaged. |marringe with a woman, certainly | lought to have as much reepect for PAGE Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Q.—I have never and have also never observed imilar to mine in your col There is a certain party In this city that | love, and the worst of it, he doesn’t know it. | see him occasionally and he talke in a frégndiy manner, but | never seem to be able to attain the position of a reaDfriend of his. He is a good, clean sort of a chap, a wholesome conversationalist, and one you rlend It is not a case of “love at first sight,” as | Reve known him to speak to for a number of years; written to you um could | gain to know him #0 we could be true friends? m. | A.If you have not already done #0, invite several your best Young men and women friends out some evening and ask im to Join nothing else to do but submit to the inevitable, a# you cannot take the Initiative. Q—I! wee coal for cooking and cannot keep my oven from burning on the bottom. Can you tell me any way to remedy thie? C.D. A.-Place a sheet of asbestos on bottom of the ovas. Q—What region on the earth has the greatest annual rainfal and what city has the highest term. perature? w. A.—Cherrapongee, in Southwest ern Assam, has an annua) average rainfall of 610 inches, It is the wettest place in the world. Caicut- ta has & mean annual temperature of 824, the highest of which any| record is kept, Q—I am 18 y old and have gone with a young man several years my senior for a long time, and | love him dearly, We are not engaged, and he has not yet asked me to marry him, Since my grad uation from high school in another city, | have corresponded with sev- eral of my classmates (boys); but our letters are nothing more than| friendly. The man | go with gets furious every time he knows of my writing to these boys or receiving) a letter from them and Insists that ! drop thie correspondence. Do you think It le right for me to keep it up? NOT ENGAGED Well, f shontd say 80. No girl should give any man the right to dictate to her in this matter, ¢ married or unmarried. A person who may pot communicate with any one with out the consent of another is a slave to that other; and the fact in| not changed by any formula ré-| peated by a preacher or justice of) the peace. A man who Ifa fit to enter into| relations as tntimate as those of) her as he would have for an office) boy or a scrubwoman, whose cor censoring or supervising | ma young woman, 24) and am teaching schoo! | ‘esent time. | am deeply) interested In my work; but my/| poor mother thinks | ought to pay| more attention to men, and says | am losing chances every day. A number of my friends also seem to think | am too particular about whom | go with Two young men have me for about three y but | care for neither except as friends, and have made this plain to both of them. So they just take me out occasionally, is it right for me to, accept their attentions when | feel can neyer marry either? | have been teld it Is not a good thing to! go with men eo long without seri-| ous thoughts of the future. SCHOOL-MARM, | A—As long as the Young men understand = their position and yours, it is right. There is always in numbers, and you may ¢ as many tmpartial friends Ko with them as long as like. long ‘you are frank. Be as particular as you like. You still have, time enough to think of men in a serious | alled on you £0 as inane | Q.—Please print formula for mak-| Ing the salt beads, which are so popular. BUNCH OF GIRLS. A.-Take 1 cup fine table salt and heat it very hot. Dissolve 4 ip cornstarch In % cup water With the gornstarch solution mix the coloring matter, which may be bluing ter egg dye or red ink for salmon pink, To make black beads, use black Ink Remove the salt from the fire,| and add the colored mixture. Work with the hands into a smooth dough. Wrap ft in a damp cloth | and break off pleces of equal size, | molding them into beads. e | String beads on hatpin, a knit ting needle, or a fine wite, and dry ays. They shrink in dry several ing. To polish, dip the beads in sweet oll and rub with a bit of flannel. String with steel or gilt beads! between the colored white beads alternated beads are pretty. Some girls make several strings of beads of various colors to match or contrast with different frocks. | To make mottled beads, tint two| portions of paste with contrasting | dyes; for instance, red and blue,) then knead pastes together before molding beads ones. Pure} with ie List your vacant rooms in 1 3C Lb. 20c JACK Ib. ESTASLISNED 1876 Aac Dougall - fouthwick ° R. B. Gaye, Receiver The Annual January Sale of Muslin Underwear thi PPV HE Muslin Underwear Section open ary selling after month 7 The garmegts offered are, in every instance, es pecially selected models and have been chosen for the style, quality and the workmanship of each The variety from which you are to choose is and more comprehensive than we have offered in any previous sale. It comprehends not only the | imy practical garments for use in every-day }/ wear, but it includes the more elaborate novelties in cotton fabrics of unusual quality, in Crepe der? Chine, in Pussy Willow Taffeta, in China and Jersey Silk and in imported fabrics. The prices quoted on the items listed here are of careful preparation Janu greater di \\ in each and every instance, special. We have oe) withheld comparative values, for in some cases “ the comparison would be too large to seem fair ns Combination Suits In this selection there are many pretty and unusual styles. Here, too, the trim- mings include lace, beading and insertion in more or less elaborate effects. The special prices at which you will find these garments range from ¢ to $10.00. | Petticoats These garments are to be had in a full | range of styles, materials, trimmings and prices Close cut, well fitting, *neatly made and of excellént quality material Specially priced at from» 50¢ to) $15.00. | Crepe Garments These most popular Undermuslins are | offered in Drawers, Knickers, Gowns, Petticoats and Envelope Chemises. This + fabric, as you know, requires no ironing, and for this reason and because of its splendid wearing qualities it recom- mended to you ‘ Drawers and Knickers, special 50¢.. Full-length Petticoats, special $1.00. | Gowns, white, blue and pink, trimmed | in dainty lace, special 6B¢ and B5¢. aor Chemises, in white, special ¢. Muslin and Nainsook Gowns | is cheapest well made Corset Cover to the most expensive and elaborate. Specially priced at 25¢, 50¢, 95¢ and up to $5.00. Drawers In many styles, knickers or straight narrow models, in a complete variety of trimmings and quality of material. Priced specially from 50¢ to $5.00. Crepe de Chine Gowns In this assortment you will find some of the choicest and most pleasing gar- ments of the entire sale. In the gowns offered you will find either pink or white materials in plain or elaborate trimmings. Well cut, carefully made, dainty night dresses. Priced specially from $3.95 to $15.00. Envelope Chemises A large variety is offered in these most popular garments, whose introduction has simplified many a problem in undermus- lins. The materials offered are especially fine in the various assortments. The trimmings include many different kinds of lace and beadings. Special prices are 95¢, $1.50, $1.95 and up to $10.00. Envelope Chemise at $1.95 Is made of fine nainsook with the entire top, front and back of an excellent quality of shadow lace. It is* an exceptionally good-looking garment and one for which you would usally pay quite a little more. Crepe de Chine Envelope Chemises These garments are specially cut for us on our own pattern, which we have found In these garments we offer some of | the most exceptional values of the sale. You will find the assortment complete | as to trimming, cut and length. Spécial prices are 69¢, 95¢, $1.50, $1.95 and up to $10.00. A novelty slip-over Gown number, made of Dresden batiste, with square neck fin- oon eet laced with ribbon. by careful observation to be right in every a . | detail and to give the maximum wear and Corset Covers | comfort. Simple, dainty garments, or elab- These useful garments are offered in| orately trimmed garments, $2.95 to an almost unlimited assortment from me | $13.50. —Third Floor, A Big Special Purchase of Waists in the January Sale of White With Striking Values. Waists at $1.00 This is indeed a special price for Waists such as you will find in this assortment, for here you may choose from allover embroidery in various ‘models; some have inserts of lace in genuine Venise imitation Cluny. The collars are of batiste, either also prestnt unusually good values as well as a wide selection Here are included Voile and Batiste Waists that have long | set-in sleeves with embroidered cuffs, and | bodices are embroidered in unusually dainty patterns. The other models shown in the assort- | price of The Waists at $1.65 ment offer a variety of embroidery and lace pre ci.’ All sizes at the special 5. price of $1. The Annual January Sale of White Offers Many Especially Good Values in groups are particularly worthy of your attention. In each you will find new, fresh materials in a variety of beautiful patterns and at special prices very Group 1—Embroideries, Special 10c ‘These are Long Cloth Edges and Insertions in the matched seis, 3 to 4% inchgs in width, offering the newest eyelet an@ Madeira effects, as well as Convent Scallops on fine long cloth. Group 2—Embroideries, Special 25c In this assortment you will find 16- and 18- in especially inch Flouncing’ on long cloth good-looking Madeira designs; also Swiss Flouncings in the same widths. In the latter are prettiest imaginable baby patterns made on hand machines. Group 3—Embroideries, Special 48c Ruffled Baby Flouncings, 27 inches wide, on heer Swiss in a variety of exceptionally pleas- ing and unusually dainty designs, The ruffle is attached with veining. The Plain Baby ounces are shown in exquisite new patterns with castellated and French scalloped edges. embroidered or plain One of the most attractive models in the assortment is a Waist of plain voile with black satin ribbon ties. embroidered voile with organdy collar and vestee. All sizes are offered in the assortment at the special Another is of allover $1.00. The Waists at $2.50 are embroidered China silk, lingerie and batiste, with plain collars and cuffs, in V- neck models. One that is particularly at- tractive has set-in sleeves joined with beading. The collar is unusually striking for its large flare lines. The vestee in this model is finished with pearl buttons, There is a large variety from which to choose at $2.50. —Secor.d Floor.” The Lace Section Offers for the January Sale of White $2.25 to $6 Silk Chantilly ~~ Lace Flouncings for just been received by us in time for this sale, and offers an exceptional lot of fine Silk and Chantilly Lace to sell at a really exceptional price. The flounces are full 24 and 27 inches in width an@ present elaborate designs embellished With raised silk thread, thus causing the pattern to stand out sharply from the fabric and adding greatly to the beauty and clearness of the designs, There are nearly as many patterns in black as in white, while the Laces them- selves are the softest and daintiest that we have seen for several seasons. For evening dresses, flounces, waists and for general trimming purposes we recom- mend these Silk Chantilly Flounces, which are extraordinary at $1.50. Firat Floor, . . BERG ticeces Mannsanesasces

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