The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 19, 1919, Page 7

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a SEATTLE STAR--THURSDAY, = 19, 1919. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE Se ® "He Wrested F Fortune From ‘the Frozen North FREDERICK i But Now Matt Brace is Sweeping Street Cars; & NELS ON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STR JHE BASEMENT STORE Women’s White Canvas Low Shoes Attractively Priced At $3 45 Pair ie, IX a favorable pur- iS chase, offering ex- tya-good values, White Canvas Pumps and Oxfords with low or high heels, one model as pictured. To Can With Greatest Economy the wise provider takes inventory and replenishes her equipment, mak- ing certain that she is provided with the most efficient, whether it is a matter of a new Steam Cooker or such a big “little thing” as a Jar Lift- er. Then when the fruit is at its best she is prepared to take advan- tage of the market and find the canning pleasant and successful. In Preparing Fruit and Vegetables for Canning Such Efficient Assistants as These Will Prove Invaluable A SMOOTH NEW DISHPAN, ample EASILY PARED AND CORED WITH- enough to hold a large quantity of OUT WASTE are fruits and vege- fruit or vegetables while they are tables with sharp Parer which is washed and sorted will be equally 10¢, 15¢ or 2 useful in cleansing jars and utensils. WHETHER IT’S TO WASH FRUIT of granite, enamel or aluminum, DIRECTLY UNDER THE FAUCET $1.25 to $4.50. or strain it after cooking, a sturdy }J [er OF BOImM a atte oe . Colander is a friend indeed. Of tin, ] A SET OF FOUR MEASURING granite, white enamel or aluminum, |] rey see ranging in size from one- B5e to $2.55 i ourth teaspoon to one tablespoon, aa Ea a | will take the uncertainty out of fol. THE EXACT AMOL NT OF SUGAR | lowing the recipe to the letter. Set OR WATER which a recipe requires | | i i | i Just 200 pairs in the offering, in sizes 2 to 8, $3.45 pair. New Street Pumps $6.00 Pair A NEW shipment of smartly-modeled Pumps in Kid and Patent Leather, with hand- turned soles and covered Louis heels, sizes 2 to 8, $6.00 pair. —Cress-Dale Photo Matthew Bruce is 76 years obd,but feels 10 and says 28 years in Alaska and abstaining from liquor and | tobacco are reasons for his youth |_ For 28 years Matthew Bruce has | == | mushed thru the frozen north from the Yukon to Viadivostok ky | Judge Cushman Hardships he has known, in the Is in Yakima Now (‘*"'*« <0! winters under the sw Federal Judge Edward E. Cushman | northern summ MAXO T IR ES left for Yakima Thursday noon to| Yet Matthew Bruce, at hold court in eastern district of Younger than most Wo Rim Cuts—Wo B Washington And he attributes lowout 7 loutdoor life that h the fact that he JACK HENSLEY IS HOME [the grape nor been vamped by the Jack Hensle: resident of the | lowly weed as contributing causes | University ¢ . is back home| That. however, is not all the story after 18 months overseas, during /0f Mat's It ts far more ro- which time he participated in two of | Mantic, for Bruce haa been at vari the fiercest engagements of the war.|0U® times in his career possensed He has just been discharged Jof fortunes measured in dollars by _ | the hundred thousand, and t is a member of the night crew wh sweeps municipal street the Jefferson street barn. | Outdoors His Fortune 1 “Lam rich,” says Bruce. T have my health and bat's all 1. need. lent that enough? Living in the outdoors, a man doesn't get to prize money very highly for there are too many other things of far greater THE BASEMENT STORE. never worry for the future.” } about 20,000 in 28 Jone a little thousand de yearn trappin ars at it in a while I've been beach: but mostly I've hunted pay And I've Made some was born in Bourbon which iw har hf prohibition was the only te then, of four, obec. may be accurately gauged in a tin, granite or aluminum Measure, at TO NIP THE HULLS FROM STRAW- 15¢e, 65¢ to $1.50. BERRIES OR GOOSEBERRIES TO MEASURE A CUPFUL OR LESS, without soiling one’s hands is a an Aluminum Measuring Cup is simple matter when one invests in marked to showethe amount desired, a Strawberry Huller at 5c. even to one-eighth of a cup, 15c. In the Process of Cooking whether it is to can strawberries by the Cold Pack Method or to make good old- #} fashioned jam, such conveniences as these are time and labor savers. i | \ Once town” | combin and he | dirt Alaskan ering suns of : Strike for $30 a Day to what about labor strikes Pay in Alaska? Well, they don’t strike up yhere, but a gang of boys workin’ in a mine at El Dorado in 1890 quit for higher pay. They were wettin’ $16 a and wanted $30. The owner of that mine couldn't seare up any pack animal when I was in Da to pack hin truck t I linten Bruce says Help Survey Bremerton ing Of 1890. » a Foaming career. the marines and was where he worked the preliminary sur pronent navy yard later he was ordered t nail on the “man never wooed his fancy joined life rent to Rremertor an a lineman on A few months Alaska and se WITH A SMOOTH ROUND-BOT- A “HAND FRUIT JAR HOLDER . TOMED LADLE, long handled fits any size jar and holds the jar enough to reach to the depths of the off the bottom of the kettle while kettle, the jam will reach the jar the fruit is cooking. Set of six, 60¢, | with no loss in transit, via a wide A WIRE CANNING RACK made to | mouthed Jar Filler whose narrow fit in the bottom of the wash boiler neck fits well into the jar. A Ladle may be adjusted to fit any size jar. | of retinned steel, granite or white Price 75c. enamel is 20c to 40c. A Filler of TO MAKE THE HANDLING OF HOT tin, granite, enamel. or aluminum is JARS EFFICIENT and “burnless” » 10¢ to 55e. there are Fruit Jar Wrenches and A LARGE SPOON FOR STIRRING, of Jar Lifters that are easy to use and two years to get there o way he ¢ ty With which he went military body the Unit: | nto Alaska, and they | te at Wrangell and ears at iben the pounds on the Will Stay Here Bruce “came out" of the North last fall, after mushing acrons Ber ing sea on the ice from Northern St beria “I'd been prospectin’ there,” he says. But he doesn’t believe he'll go back to Alaska. Seattle's all right. I'm satisfied ‘here, I think I'l! stay.” Hut every nook and cranny of the Far North has known Bruce's trail. Skinned 20,000 Birds “What I done?” he asks Mont but prompectin Mostly I have ekinned a fe a bit over have everything. tho for the National museu Today It Is the Highest Perfected Specialty of All Science ‘The dentist of today must be familiar with all the important muscles, their location, attachments and offices, for a slight in terference with the free use of a muscle might impair the use of proper mastication and probably change the entire facial expres sion. The unfortunate part of the dental profession is the fact that there are some people who practice the profession who have in ferior ability, are unskilled and careless, and care little for the health and comfort of their patients. ‘The dentist's work is almost entirely upon the finest of live tissues, treating diseases, correcting deformities and reproducing nature. It is a most exacting profession—the dentist must have & complete understanding of the bony structure of the head and face, as each canal, opening and prominence has a specific im portance and carries or protects some vital organ. Equally as important is the location of arteries, veins or the parts supplied by them. The dentist has probably more to do with the nerves than any other tissues of the body—must have com. plete, thorough knowledge of the nervous system, their exact loca tion and parts they supply. To accomplish all this we have per formed but a small part of our obligation to humanity as far as teeth are concerned. This knowledge enables us to make a proper diagnosis of per plexing and difficult cases, combined with a close observation of causes and results, long experience, honesty and good judgment All of these qualifications are necessary to the modern dentist of today And now comes the part that so seriously affects you when you are thinking of having dental work done. A modern dentist's knowledge of nerves, tissu les, arteries, etc., enables him to give the benefit of pain-d ying discoveries that are abso- luely harmless, administered to you in the proper quantities, in the right place, so that your dental operation will be absolutgly as painless as it is possible to make it Modern Methods—High-Class Dentistry —tLow Prices. These We Offer You Electro Painless Dentists Laboring People’s Dentists J. H. VAN AUKEN, Manager Located for Years at 8. E. Corner First and Pike Phone Mai HOME OF GLASSES THE BEST $2.50 ON EARTH EXAMINATION FREE-—— MARCUM OPTICAL CO. EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS 917 First Ave, Near Madison Established 1996 GOOD MILK And Good Delivery Service Order by Phone Elliott 223 or at your grocers Ise 15e Ie Ibe 15e 15¢ l5e BUYS lie l5e a Quality Lunch at HOYT’S $22 Pike, at ith We Never Close 15e lie 15e 15e 15e Loe lie 1de| VITAL STATISTICS MARRIAGES Leo A. Wilaon and Georgia Bvans, Se Davey, 6% and Anne M Portiand, Or Miner and Ida ta Frame and Melle R. Mac Winona ©. and Amelia Ho 27, and Lillian Edoe anta Maria, Cal na, Kirkland and Elinor swaquah, and Let's go buy and butter he 913 Second ave. joldt's French pastr 1414 Third ave., N10 Pike st If your sloughing and bleeding you have Riggs’ TAs is a menace to good We are the only Dentists cums are nore, Pyorrhea, so-called ease, which health. in the Northwest who specialize in this dreaded disease tion and estimate free, Spectal care taken of children's teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families, Examina All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Dentists INC. 608 Third Ave. Cor. James St. Vhone Elliott 3633. Hours: 8:30 a. m, to 6 p, m Bundays, 9 to 12, Nile, Cedar and Manna i Ith Jer, Puyallup, and Bisie Dignan and Vera B. West, | bambers and Clara Dornaife, Se | . Di 22, Beattie, and Mae A Nesier Pilte and Jean Fisher, W. Raardson and DIVORCES filee Tasmunsen against Irene Raw f againet Richard A | against C. Orville) st William Tan m against Mabel 1° against Thypore son against Howard Ti (ae against Brice V. Titus against Margaret | || againat Sascha z.| Hivat-Jourdan against | dan, eruelty from Susan Hick from Peter F Warnock Hel from Marry E Asmussen from Henry As noper from William L. 2 Alexander | DEATHS corner Roy an@ 68, 905 Olymple pL, 684 Olymplo atr., onthe, 7607 45th 8, BR. Whitner, > Mr. and Mra, F. Jacobs, Bima, une 1 Mr. and Mra, P. Stangard, Lake bivd., May 24 and Mra. Y. Osawa, 1108 at TO HOLD BANQUET ¢ Ballard Elks, o have id npaign, will be h fe club rooms, Arcade building, | ursday night | retinned steel, granite, white enamel or aluminum is 10c to &80c. A PRESERVING KETTLE of just the size and shape best adapted to one’s uses may be chosen from this wide assortment in granite, aluminum or white enamel at $1.15 to $7.70. FOR STRAINING FRUIT there are Wire Strainers, Ricers, Jelly Strain- ers of several efficient varieties and Berry Mashers, which mean a great amount of time saved at little ex- pense. inexpensive. THE DENVER PRESSURE COOKE] is strongly recommended by can experts as efficient in perfoi < easily operated and saving nance, It will prove equally useful for daily cooking throughout the year, The 25-quart size, $30.00. THE TOLEDO STEAM COOKER, in large size to hold 12 one-quart jars, small size to hold six jars, is of daily use for the rest of the year, and is a saver of time and an efficient cook- er. Small size, $9.50; large, $13.50. 11-quart Preserving Kettle with Ladle, $3.25 PRESERVING KETTLE of good quality aluminum, 11-quart size, has large lip to make pouring eas. and flat on the bottom to heat quickly. The ladle is well made and of a convenient size for lifting jam from kettle to jar. An exceptionally good value at $3.25 set. HOUSEWARES § SCTION, THE BA ENT STORE Fruit Jars, Jelly Glasses and Accessories ECONOMY LARGE-MOUTH seal with cap and clamp, no rubber rings, pint-size, dozen; quart-size, $1.50 dozen; gallon size, $1.95 dozen. KERR SELF-SEALING JARS, sealed with screw band and cap, eliminat- ing the use of rubber rings. Pint- i 5; quart-size, $1.30 dozen; JARS, requiring $1.35 half- -TOP FRUIT JARS, made air-tight with rubber rings and clamps, pint-size, $1.50 dozen; quart-si ze, $1.70 dozen; half- gallon size, $2.00 dozen. MASON JARS, pint-size, $1.10; quart- size, $1.20 dozen; half-gallon size, $1.50 dozen. ECONOMY JAR CAPS, 35c¢ dozen. KERR JAR CAPS, regular size, 35c dozen. JELLY KERR WIDE-MOUTH JAR CAPS, 40¢ dozen. OLD-FASHIONED MASON JAR COV- ERS, 35¢ dozen. SURE-SEAL GLASS COVERS, dozen. “GOOD-LUCK” RED RUBBER RINGS 2 dozen for 25c. SECURITY GRAY RUBBER 10c dozen; 8 dozen for 25c. “SURE SEAL” RUBBER RINGS, dozen. BALL “SPECIAL” RED RUBBER RINGS, extra large size for wide- mouth jars, 15¢ dozen. PAROWAX for sealing jams and jel- lies, 2 cakes in package, 10¢. GLASSES in low shape, 6- ounce size, 50e dozen; 8-ounce size, 60c dozen. —rHe BASEMENT STORE. 35¢ RINGS, 15¢ | | |

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