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Sc cach acter te ps Su a He d Q.—1 am on the convalescent list fright? 7, A.—By practice, by appearing be fore an audience as often as pos sibl Some famous actors, how ° have confessed that they | never entirely recover, but learn to | endure the misery suggest nourishing 9 some ELIENE’S NURSE THE (foods which will make me recover USUAL TROUBLE MAKES my strength rapidly. (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Ex-| A.—The physician sup io eroree: Saseenaties | plies this information. diet in Sliene sent her car for me today. | convalescence after typhoid and She wanted me to come over and some other diseases should be out see her and the baby, Altho the dise should lined by a person familiar with the Roing out very little. I take easily digested are gruels, custards short walk every evening with|T®¥ 88s or soft poached ees | baked potatoes, chicken broth with either Dick or Aunt Mary, usually Aunt Mary, for Dick ts away al” Rood many evenings now. I some-|called Mary immediately, Of times think I can't blame him, for} course, I know, Mrs. Waverly, that I am not either very good to look | urses are quite necessary in cases of sickness, but it fs not always at nor interesting to listen to these days. He tells me he is very busy start best to ki ts {ll every p from the person who one but themselves. I ing the traveling men out on their) Won't burt Miss Eliene,” sald Mor new spring campaign. He brings |rison, wiping her eyes in first one and then another from} 1! told her why I was wafting! off the road and they go over the | and it seemed to make her feel | ground together, talk over situa-| better that I, too, had to bow to| tions in the different towns each | sick-room rules. one has to visit, and Dick maps out; “Even Madame Symone did not a plan of procedure for the next|get in to see Miss Ellene the other six months. Of course, every one| day,” she confided, “and she made of these men {ts anxious to see the /a big fuss about It to Mr, Sym “bright lights” of the city, and / too.” Dick thinks he has to take them to “Well, Morrison, you see there the restaurants and cabarets. }is no discrimination,” I sald, as I wonder if one must always/|the stiffly starched and aproned n came to tell me that could see me now en rather a co mix business with one’s social life. | young we When I arrived at Etiene’s I was | Mrs. Symon greeted by her nurse, who said, It's always “Mrs. Symone {s just nursing her|nundrum to me to know why train baby. Will you please wait a few|ed nurses make such an uproar in minutes?” ja home. The help tn the hous Of course, I knew this was some/|are always at swords of the red tape which belongs to|them. I think, perhaps, the regime of modern nursing, but} cause the trained it made me laugh, for I also knew | stands her position, it nurse in be under lighted to receive me while she/do so. While, on the other hand, was nursing her baby. She would/those who are called “domestics be so proud of the fact that she/are never quite sure of t' selves could nurse her. While I was| They have never been taught the waiting, Eliene’s housekeeper came | glory and dignity of service in to see me a moment. She bas| Surely Morrison, who was keep been in the family ever since|ing Eliene’s great house in Eliene was born, and | could see/and directing her hc immediately she was disgruntied | was entitled to quite trained about something. sideratic as was the “When you go in to see Miss|curse. She knew her business Eliene, Mrs. Waverly she said,|quite as well, and dispatched it “please tell her the reason | have with quite as much capability mot been fn to see her is because) I think that this ts the reason her nurse would not allow me to/that we have so much discontent go, as if I would hurt the dear Mt-|among the people who work in tle mother! I, who have loved | homes. They have no standing and cared for her all her life. Why,| They do not realize that their work Mrs. Waverly, do you know those|is quite as necessary that of} starched and white aproned young; those who have Gunpilien admira- women have even forbidden her/tion for the service they give. own maid to go in her room, and I wish some of those club women Mary has cared for her ever Mies | iid take up this {dea and work she was born. Yesterday Miss/it out to the satisfaction of them Symone why|selves and those who work for Mary had not come near her, and | them. when she was told the reason she {To Be Continued Tomo So an aaamanaeamaaeal eee Lote: ToC Cyitthio. Grey | points with | and she ts de | that Bliene would be perfectly de-| termined that every one else shall) STAR—MONDAY, JUNE 21 Jrice, mutton, chops, steaks and red) counts, and, as in this instance, fall roast beef, lamb ste®, rice pudding,! ure to tell the truth ts bound to be milk toast, creamed chicken on paid for some day, probably in the toast, salads with olive oll, milk, way which hurts most cereals with cream - —- Q.—I have been keeping steady| Q.—! am a girl 17 years old, but company with a young man for the} in spite of my youth | have th deep wrinkles in my forehead Please suggest a way to remove them. Massage might help for a while, but | think the ugly wrinkles would return again HL A Defective eyesight sometimes which Surgeon's 1 every night might help, altho a red nark will remain for a short time fter the plaster is removed causes a scowl produces aster worn Q.—You cannot help me, Mis Grey, but please print this for the benefit of other women who may be tempted to foolishness. After going out with single girls and tell ing falsehoods to my husband, | left him a short time ago, thinking my love for him was dead, Now | find that | do love him more than ever, and see my mistake only after it is too late, for he says he does not care for me any more REPENTANT A This ts probably the usual | experience of young married women who disregard conventionality The initial step is the one Rann SMART SHOES for women lace in the back; for men, on the # eee “KNEAD BREAD bh,” advises a teacher i of act and get r grouc domesti nag te A STATUE of Florence Nightin gale pen erected in Waterloo place, Li ndon | A CHINESE coat which was kept in an air-tight case in the pal ace of Pekin for 170 years has been sold for the benefit of the! queen's work for women fund in |London. The coat fs a marvelous plece of blue embroidery le black satin n purty CALIFORNIA'S EIGHT. HOUR labor law fr manufacturing es tablishments, ¢ vesting and canning fruit, boarding houses and graduate nurses in hos pitals, was Id recently as con | stitutional by the supreme court at | Washington. ' | eee MME. WALSKA, the Petrograd | prima donna who was to make her | firme American appearance in New York Monday, has just been ap prised of the death of her husband captain in the Russian arm. inger has postponed her York opening — indefinite! for women employed and wv preantil those in har which | The | past year. As yet, | am not engaged to him and do not think | ever will be. My parents want me to stop going with him, saying that | am missing splendid —opportunit Shall | tell this man of my parents’ wishes? | want to do as they say, but on the other hand 1 do not want him to get angry, as | wish to retain hie friendship. & A In matters of sentiment many girls consider evasion perfectly fair, On the preten of not hurting a man's feeling, they tell half truths | This is most unjust to the man, for it permits him to plan his future on basta It would seem ob vious that the man is entitled to the whole truth now What kindness ts in sparing bis feelings today, only to hurt them ; future time, when he arn of the deception n. false know there re at must finally | Q.—Do the boys or the girls fur Pe the junch fora picnic? We are! members of a club RW. H, | A.—The the car fare, and other tnctdental expenses, and! the girls furnish the luncheon, | boys ie publish a recipe for making rose beads. ge | For pink, lavender and light ise only the petals of white ght pink rose will do for to the wall paper store or |wherever they tints and Ket diffe shades. Grind petals and mix small amount of the st de Make up in beads Right away put on pins to dry, Add spoonful of salt to every pint pulp. While working with this pulp use only china dishes | Any kind of petals will do for the| black beads. Gather the petals| while fresh; run through the meat} grinder eight times daily for eight | days. Then roll the pulp into beads twice the size wanted and string on} hat pins, Keep the pulp tn a tin or iron vessel. If dark brown {= want ed, keep in a crock They may be polished & with a little sweet of! and polished on the car Q—I am a young lady 21 years of age. | have been going with a young man almost two years, | r¢é- leently spent four or five days with parents, who live out of town. | Some of my friends say this was not the proper thing to do. What advice would you give? H. B. | A—If the mother of |man urged you to visit her, there was no reason why you should not pt the Invitation—theoretical In reality, such a visit is inad | visable. the young N. W. LEAGUE MAY BE ABLE TO STRUGGLE THRU SEASON AFTER ALL; DUG POURS OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS HERE BY SNARING ‘NEW’ BLOOD Here is the Northwestern league situation, which has been giving the mags the jim-jams, nutshelled as it stands today fans have rallied to club's support B. C. Electric Co, has indicated|in face of rebellion, which almost fits intention of lending aid to Bees | put him out of business; six va- 7 EE EXCURSIONS =: P.S.Navy Yard, for rest of year; Otto Nye will con tinue as manager. Bob Brown reports Vancouver | Continuance of Tacoma club in league assured when players agree to cnt In pay Dug strengthens Seattle team by signing Bill Yohe and Pitcher Mar. tinon!, former Portland star; Yohe and Bill Abstein, ‘nother new one, already on job. All of which gives the nervous |b. b. potentates occasion to heave one husky high of relief. | PENNSYLVANIA ACCEPTS in- vitation to participate in crew races here July 16; Cornell, Columbia and Syracuse decline bid. “ROWDY” ELLIOTT succeeds Tyler Christian as Oakland mana ger. 6. A. C. TENNIS tourney | way: Pollock trimmed H. 2, 60, Sunday. under ARVID ANDERSON took all |three events, the 2, 5 and 10-mile |races, in chug-bike meet at Elma 8. 8. H. B. Kennedy and Tourist or . Lingeren was hurt. -slaaae Colman Dock 6:30, 0, | - 10:20 a. m.; 1:30, 2:00: 5:30 Dp i | MOTORBOAT EASTERN STAR Visitors Welcome Daily |covered 270 miles in 14 hours, 46 FARE, 50c ROUND TRIP minutes and 50 seconds in race be Children, 5 to 12, So, _ | tween New York and Albany. WOODLAND PARK tennis tour |nament opened Sunday; game be- tween Dr. W. won by latter, was feature W. M, DUDIER leader in check ers tournament, with 57 games won and 15 lost. MR. AND MRS. ADOLPH Top. PENWEIN, world’s greatest fancy 30 DAYS shots, accept Invitation of Seattle | CUT PRICES Trapshooters’ association to visit Seattle, FREE DR. KING, high amateur, with 49 EXAMINATION out of 50, and Les Reid, high “pro,” with 98 out of 100, at Seattle Trap. hooters’ meet, Sunday POLICE JUDGE G GORDON made straight run of 26 at Green Lake traps Sunday; C, E, McKelvey was high man for day, scoring 99 in 100 Porcelain Crown. shots. Gold Fillings .. Silver Fillings.. TACOMA PLAYERS accept We do exactly bd advertised. '" salary va oct gertvetees 10 years, WASHINGTON WILL play neither Oregon eleven next season. The following schedule is announc ed: October 23, Gonzaga, at Spo- kane; October 30, Whitman, at Se. attle; November 6, California, at Berkeley; at Seattle; at Seattle November 1%, California, Thanksgiving, Colorado OUTFIELDER WILLIAMS, Spo. kane, got longest hit ever made on Spokane field Sunday. and Pike, Opp. Public Market 10 Shoring People’s ventiets Breck, | § C. Speidel and Wada, | cut PRESENCE OF two new Bilie— Abstein and Yohe—in uniform Sun. | day gave Tilks apeparance of regu- lar ball team. They won easily | with Eastley’s hurting. ABR MPO. A. an, Ward Harkne Let Dr. Macy Cure You Successful — treat- ment for Eye, Appendicitis, Kidney y ‘and all Weak- nesses, CONSULTATION FREE | No Exten Charge for Medicines Hours, 10 to 12, 2 to 6, 7 to A. Sun- days, 10 to 12. DR. MACY 181814 Kecond Ave. Seattle, Wash Oppo Arcade Entrance AMERICAN CAFE FOURTH AND PIKE HIGH-CLASS ENTERTAINMENT FRENCH DINNER With Zottle of Wine—50c |” Use Star Wants Ads for Re- | sults. {| ELKS ANNOUNCE smoker for June 29 with following card: Geo. Engle vs. Billy Wright; Ed Pink man va. Battling Wolfe; man vs. Jack McClellan; vs. Earl Conners Charley Davidson Billy Chap Leo Houck Billy Vetroe ve VENICE TIGERS will lose home within next 30 days. | NORTHWESTERN SWAT rec 4 . ,|ords: Murphy, Aberdeen, .233; nic: 4 Smith, Seattle, 328; Haworth, Vic = toria, 321; Williams, Spokane, .317 | Hone tb 3 @ 2 1 4 0|Enstley (7-2) heads pitchers, || ont ae al 3 6| EVERETT A. C. plans smoker Meichoir, rf . 4 1 9 next Monday night, with Travie | Ward, os te aa : Davis and Charlie Marshall head he? : ing card | Harkness, p - | sHiyter 1 | FIFTEENTH ANNUAL cham ay {pionship of the Pacific Northwest i “ Golf association opened at Ameri so ey { Can Lake course, Tacoma, Monday }A arth, M * How They Stand In the Leagues Cineinnatt AMERICAN LEAGUE Won. 1 .37) (20 2 OK er ‘ ‘ 24 19 FEDERAL LEAG Won Chica aes a1 Butte oes Baltimore 19 COAST LEAGUE Won. Lost. Pet an Francisco 41° a Halt Lake City e hem Lom Angelos... 4a 40 51s Onkiand 4 481 P nd ae ait | V a3 43484 a4 SUNDAY'S SCORES oe! o| NORTHWESTERN Spokane 11-8, Ta AMERICAN—Chicago 1-2, ¢ and| 1 t. Louls 1, Detrott 6. NATIONAL—Chicago. 6, Brookiyn 1;| Louis 8, Boston 2; Cincinnat! 2, Phila: | |aeiphia 1 Newark 0-8 4-4, Low kelen 0 rtland bel Lake 10, Venice 3. 1915, PAGE 7 "A PAGE OF THINGS FOR WO! PRAADR ADIDAS PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PP PPP PLP PPP PPL LP PPP ]wome N Wo HEL ENE OF Famous Women Who Have Made Wars—Queen Helene of Italy; HAVE VE MADE WA ITALY NOY THE ON Me VG mnie ° QUE EW aL VY ONE | Inset at Top, ex-Empress Eugenie; at Bottom, Harriet Beecher Stowe. By Nixola Greeley-Smith! NEW YORK, June 18 THE QUEEN WINS!” said the Italians when Italy declared war against her former allies, Germany and Aus tria For the ten months which have elapsed since the world war began, diplomatists have known that the | royal family was divided against it- self on the matter of Italian participation in the titanic con- filet. From {ts Inception, King Victor Emmanuel! II, declared himself for neutrality and peace But the queen, educated in Rus sia und passionately attached to the | royal family of bia, into which her favorite sister had married, and whose orphan children she brought up daughter of the king of Monte », Whose army fights for the al ites was passionately, relentlessly for war Queen Helene is not the only wom aa known to moder nes who cast her Vote for war Eugenie, beautiful em of the third Napoleon, spc of the Fraaco-Prussian conflict as “Ma vetite guerre a mot”—"“My own lit tle war Actually Eugenie was the tool of the reactionary party in France which realized that a war abroad! was the only possible preventive of revolution at home. An American woman—Har- riet Beecher Stowe, author of “Uncle Tom's Cabin,” was large- ly responsible for our own civil war. 80 THIS IS THE LITTLE WOMAN WHO MADE THIS GREAT WAR!” said Abrabam Lin coln to Mrs. Stowe when she was presented to him for the first time Miss Pauline penthal, a co-ed at the University of Indiana, re | cently made a world’s record when she vaulted six feet and one inch HER HINT " F NIN NI IE I I= lng \ NG pr Dit c( SHC R GA Rie PEE | t Sil Wit | Gh IK SOUTHERN STRAWBERRY jly they got down to five; but be ‘ ctly honest judges, they onsclentiously pick @ they mixed the names e wh contributed the ws ato pes and drew one, which ly % a of mith ‘which has} proved to be that of Mrs, Flora heaton Rose, 7015 Brooklyn ave, The othe er four wer Mrs. P. E. Bolens, the fingers lo twe Fall ye r Hd fp ) i od layer cake " ke in « hot | erett r mina 8 ohn, b red Inyer cake tins, Bake ti cenme St Se ng are the names of other me recipes were t they deserve tobe 1 of honor with butter (eweetened butter, If pre |ferred). Put eake, crust side down, AA A prepared berries, : pleve of cake. ¢ “ r We defy the person who said there is only one w to . Laughitn, $668 thing and that's t ight wa ova. Chan we know of 200 different | jie, at “has. ways to make strawberry short: | s cake, and they all sound exactly | Mr The judges developed sev M hairs in an effort to prize recipe. Fina al gray cide upon the AN Nef FAWN UU By MADAME SCHUMANN-HEINK {mother should see that her little The Famous Diva daughter has a family of dolls to Let us begin at the beginning: j|care for, She should be taught to The young mother bends over|make their clothes with painstak- the crad where ing stitches. sleeps. her little I myself got my first love of chil- aughter and dren from my dolls; my great hope was for a real baby take the place of my that would china, wax dreams dreams of the time when love shall come and rag ones, to her—but she A little girl who is taught to play idom dreams with dolls is learning by the Mon- md the plac tessori method the profession of ing of t mar. motherhood. Too much have dolls riage rin been glected by the modern And th they | mother, too insidious has been the raters 74 ived & cry, “Bring our girls up to play ly er aft outdoor games with their brothers,” ; - n hen The great out-of-doors is a that she learned | . ata, lac | splendid playground, but moth. Geek dese, wena | ers, let your little daughters at that point her play at keeping house out” dream ends. there with shells and stones to she realize that| mark the rooms and leaves can commence almost immedi ately to make that dream come| &fd mud to fashion into ples. true for her darling? | (Another Schumann-Heink Article First, she can put back into her} Tomorrow) arms the doll that has gone out of | I wonder, does fashion. Yes, I know we hav kewple dolls and paper dolls and vris dolls and-character dolls | UDion Dye Works ery kind of doll except the sensi- ble baby or little girl doll—the doll that can be undressed, its clothes made, mended and laundered—that our grandmothers loved. Teddy bears and poodle dogs are ibut makeshifts, but every young | (Inc.) EVERYTHING IN CLEAN AND DYEING Prince Albert will give you a new idea of how good tobacco can be! Youget youreupply of Paine Albert at any store anywhere that sells tobacco. Toppy red bags, 5c; tidy red handsome pound ani pound tin humidors—and- that nifty p erystal-glaes hw dorwiththesporge- moistener top that heeps P. A. at the perfect point from the time the lid to the last dummy pipeful! Wy, ley you lift If you are one of thousands of men who have put your, pipe under cover so you can’ forget your sore tongue and’ parched throat, get it out quick! For here’s smoke freedom for every man who's fond of a pipe, and cigarette-makin’s freedom for every man who likes to: roll his own—if you'll be sporty enough to follow, suit and lay a short bet on / PRINGE ALBERT the national joy smoke . _‘ bide Men all over the nation—all over the world,’ in fact—have taken the friendly say-so and to-day P. A. is their standard before, between and after meals! : You pipe and cigarette-makin’s-shy men should realize how different Prince Albert must be to hit the taste of men everywhere. that—and cuts out the bite and parch. \ Get a slant at how cheerful it is to smoke a// the tobacco you want and smoke as Jong as you want without your tongue even grumbling. Men, that pipe and cigarette joy’s yours “sure as you're alive if you'll get your tidy red tin or toppy, red bag of P. A. right away—and go to it like little folks beat it to a circus parade—can’t-help-it-like ! R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C, 4 The patented process fixes