The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 15, 1919, Page 7

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“FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET The Economical Housekeeper Appreciates The Ohio HE Ohio heats so quickly that very little | fuel is required to make it ready for bak- ing and cooking. It takes only eight minutes from the time the fire is started for the oven to be ready for baking—a feature that is especially valued at this season of the year—for it eliminates the | hot kitchen nuisance while saving fuel. The Ohio works just as quickly at water- | | heating. Fifteen minutes after the fire is | started there is an abundance of hot water for all houséhold uses. Stove Section—The Basement Store. BILL HART TALKS TO BOYS “Be Maninlepen: Thru and Thru,” He Urges BY BILL HART Noted Movie Hero American boys! Today we have in you the makings of the finest manhood on earth. Any boy bred in this wonderful country of ours has advantages that no other boys in the world have. You are born bigger. You have a bigger country to grow up in. Nobody can make you into a man. This is a job you must attend to yourself. And I reckon there's nobody can do the job as well as you American boys. First’ of all, you must know that you are an American! Children Need Room To Play and Grow City Dwelling Not Good for Young jg: ge: fae ee In reading the lives of our most suecesaful men we find that they were almoat invariably raised in the Sour Mi Milk Recipes DON’T THROW AWAY YOUR SOUR MILK! Isabelle Clark Swezy, cooking and Baking ex- pert has prepared for us a cook book devoted exclusively to sour milk. It contains fifty-seven splendid recipes for utilizing sour- milk that will at once appeal to every economical house-| wife. Free Copies to Housewives ‘The edition is limited. Send us your grocer’s receipt showing that you have purchased a sack of FISHER'S BLEND FLOUR and we will mail you at once a copy of this valuable cook book. Address Home Office : FISHER FLOURING MILLS CO. West Waterway, Harbor Island SEATTLE country, away from the noise and strife of the city. Their mental, moral and physical vigor owed or- on to healthy youth spent in the PSeattle fathers, clerks, artisans or business men, can have the advan- tages of country life for their little ones and yet not miss any of the conveniences of the city. “Little Shey supe solve the problem of fe divin if-ecre” “tracts of good soll, in- side city limits, city water, graded school, with 60-foot frontage on a wide paved city street, with the [sites only $950, on easy terms, rings waaay life, with health and wi AY. For your children’s sake see H. C. Peters, 716 Third Avenue, or take Tagavlerey, car, get off at Gatewood Ik back to 35th ave. Office Go the evocnaa is'deen ail tay cnt evening and all day Sunday. You can drive out 35th ave. 8 W. to Property without getting off pave- ment yiget the reach of every attractive with a red, rough, Lacey» Aromas po But Resi nol Ointment, aided by Resinol ‘Soap, will umally make poor skins clear, fresh and charming. Resinod Seep and Resinol Otsemsent are gold by all druggints. Why net try them! If your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis. ease, which is a menace to good health. We are the only Dentists in the Northwest who specialize in this dreaded disease. Examina- tion and estimate free. Special care taken of children’s teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families, All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Phone Elliott 3633. Hours: 8:30 a, m, to 6 p, m, Bundays, 9 to 12. Bill Mart Shows His Boy Pals How to Saddle and Mount a Horse—Lots More Fun Than Riding an Airplane Do you know the qualifications of & real American? These are honor and patriotism, ambition and initia tive, courage and grit, hard hitting, straight dealing, clean living and sportsmanship. your big brother march away to war) and you have seen him return vie torious. You felt great pride in your big brother because you know that you are going to grow up to be the same kind of man. But, you must re member the qualifications. Your in heritance {s freedom and manly! ideals. Live up to it. Kéep your American birthright. Every American boy 1s going: to Young America! You have watched | |srow up to be a regular he-man. Stay outdoors. Play your games with good sportsmanship. My boy- hood was spent on the primitive fron. tier of the Dakota territory. In my book, “Pinto Ben,” recently pub- lished, I related how I grew up with Sioux Indian boys for playmates, |how I played their rugged, body | building gamnes which required great endurance and the best sportsman: ship. I was a Western boy. | But, whether you are a boy of | the West, East, North or South, you can grow up to be a regular he- |man by living right. Just remember | that you are an American boy! ! (Signed) BILL HART. Peter Finds Out Where Killy Lives BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, HEN Peter Rabbit had gossiped enough with Banker the Bank Swallow and had learned how Bank- er and his wife actually had dug the little hole in the bank where they had made their nest, he took a short cut for home across the Green Mead- ows. It took him past a certain tall, dead tree. A sharp cry of “‘Kill-ee, killee, kaill-ee,” caused him to look up just in time to see a trim, hand- some bird, whose body was about the size of Sammy Jay's, but whose longer wings and tail made him look bigger. One glance was enough to tell Peter that this was a Hawk, the smallest of the family. It was Killy the Sparrow Hawk. He was too small for Peter to fear him, so now Peter was possessed with nothing more than a lively curiosity and sat up to watch. Out over the meadow grass Killy he kept himself in one place in the air and then dropped down in the grass, In an instant he was up again and Peter could hee that he had a fat grasshopper in his claws. Back the tall dead tree he ate the grasshopper. and handsome was 1k was reddish-brown, of black, His tail jot black, the longest featherg ig white bars. Under- neath hd wad a beautiful buff, spot- ted with black. His Ipad was blu igh, with a reddish cap right on top. Before and behind each ear was a black mark. His rather small bill, lik the bills of all the rest of his | family, was hooked, As Peter sat there admiring Kil |he noticed a hole high up in the} trunk of the tree, Right away he |remembered what Jenny Wren had |told him about Killy’s making his |home in just such a hole. Just then | Killy flew over and dropped In the (_ PETER Gets a Scary Package BY THE STORY LADY Ever singe Peter dropped Aunt Grace's letter into the creek, he had | been very careful with the mail, One | morning the mail man handed Peter a big, square box, and told him he had better handle it pretty easy. ter walked along as if on eggs held the box in front of him 1 he knew, it might be a bomb! When |he reached the bridge he seriously considered. dropping it into the creek, | He had d that wet bombs don’t | so off. There were very mysterious noises coming from it, too, ‘They were so faint that Peter couldn't tell what they were, but it scared him just that much worse, Still, the package was addressed to grandma, and he couldn't imagine | even a Bolshevik wanting to kill his | grandma, so he marched straight | along on two shaky legs and laid it | gingerly on the kitchen table, | “Here's a p-p-package,” he stut- | tered. “Do you suppose it's a bomb?” Grandma looked at the label and smilingly took off the wrappers, and | out tumbled 16 fluffy yellow chick- ens! —HELEN CARPENTER MOORE. sailed. Suddenty, with beating wings, } n, with a band of | end, the tip being | ings were slaty-blue, | by T. W. Burgess) grass just in front of Peter, where he caught another fat grasshopper, “Is that your home up there?’ asked Peter, hastily, “It certainly is, Peter,” replied Killy. “This is the third summer Mrs. Killy and I have made our home there. Yellow Wing the Flick er made it for us, tho he didn't know he was making it for us at the time.” “You seem to be very fond of Srasshoppers,” Peter ventured. “I am,” replied Killy. “They are very fine eating when one can get enough of them.” “Are they the only kind of food you eat?” asked Peter. sharp cry of “Killee, Kill-<e, | Kuen caused him to look up. Killy laughed. “T should say not,” said he. “I eat spiders and worms and all sorts of insects. But for real | g00d eating, give me a fat Meadow | Mouse. I don't object to a Sparrow Jor some other small bird now and |then, but take it the season thru, I live Mostly on grasshoppers, insects jand mice, I do a lot of good in the world, if you did but know it.” Peter said that he supposed that this was so, but all the time he kept thinking what a pity it was that Killy ever killed his feathered neigh bors, | a | Next story: Boomer the Night- hawk Startles Peter Rabbit. ANYBODY WANT TOOTH PULLED FOR NOTHING? Anybody got a tooth that needs yanking? If you have, just travel up to the Franklin high school building and it pulled for nothing Nearly 300 members of the British | Columbia Dental soci and the thruout the week, their lectures will be demonstrated on patients, Mayor Hanson wel- comed the dentists, MERCHANTS TO MEET The Chamber of Commerce has an- nounced the seventh annual conven- tion of the Northwest merchants will be held in Seattle August 11-16, in- elusive, under the auspices of the Seattle Sale: anagers’ association. Leading n nts and wholesalers of the cit Il co-operate with the Chamber in entertaining the visit- ors. FREDERICK & NELS FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE To Keep You Cool While You Shop a Two great air- washing and fan cir- culatory systems (one for the East and one for the West section of the building) are distributing 200,000 cubic feet of cooled, purified air per min- ute, affording, every 15 minutes, a com- plete change of air. twelve million cubic feet of water-cooled, pure air per hour are circulated over the floors of this building to ensure a_health- ful, zestful tempera- ture for the staff and }j/", a 8 patrons of this store CAME ima during warm sum- mer days. “Keep cool while you shop” is sensible Summer advice, and you can be ey é cool while you shop in the warmest day, in any section of this nine= | -and-one-half acre building. The First Whispers of a New Season Are Caught in These Advanced Suit Modes "THREE charming variations of the new mode are suggested in th sketch, each one expressing more graphically than words some new | style-making detail. The Wool Velour Suit at Tight, in brown or navy, with blue r broidery decorating the bottom of the 36-inch jacket, \and self=~ color messaline lining, $85.00. + The Silvertone Suit at center has a row of closely set buttons follwing the plait from pocket to point of the graduated fron panel. The jacket may be wor buttoned closely at neck or open In brown or navy, $57.50. The Wool Velour Suit at is checked with liberty-blue an Burgundy on_ reindeer The collar encircles the neck and fastens with loops over clo ly-set_buttons, and the pockets ai just as original. Price $67.50. =Second New C/B a la Spirite Corsets Designed to Give the Fashionable Outline : RR the medium and moderately-stout figures, there the model pictured, No. 602. A low-bust, hip-coni ing style, With extra long hip and long back. Made @ firm coutil, with reinforced tab front, double-koned fro clasp and elastic gore inserted in back. Sizes 22 to 0 Price $4.00. For the slender figure, Model 717, made of pink coutil, with 114-inch elastic top and very long skirt. Sizes to 26. Price’ $3.50. For the average and slender figure, Model 642, of fine p brocade, with elastic gores inserted above the waistline and over the abdomen. Fitted with three sets of hose sup- porters. Sizes 22 to 29. Price $5.00. Second Fiemen A New Supply of Vacation Stationery ; a ase peat in this vacation season is a plentiful supply of good writing paper an essen- tial. These are the favorites received in a new shipment: Old English Lawn in regulation size, blue, green, buff, lavender, pink and white, 50c box. Old English Lawn with oblong envelopes, white and buff with gold border and blue and lavender with self border, 60c¢ box. Rainbow Linen, a white paper with horder of blue, pink or lavender with gold; oblong en- velopes; 85c box. Chambray Lawn, with oblong envelopes, white with gold bor- der, 85¢ box. Mandarin Linen, a white paper with oblong en- velopes, 60¢ box. —First Floor. JHE BASEMENT STORE New Pumps $7.50 In Patent or Dull Calf QUALLY suited to dress well or street wear is the smartly-propor- tioned Pump _pic- tured, made over new long-vamp last, with hand - turned sole and full Louis heel with plate. Sizes Price $7.50. Needle Cases 25c WO hundred good steel Needles are contained in these cases, including Darners, Art Needles, Millinery Needles and Sharps of all sizes—25¢ case. THE BASEMENT STORE. R 214 to 7; widths AA to GC, Men’s Balbriggan Underwear 75c Garment HIRTS and Drawers of fine Balbriggan cotton in ecru color, made with reinforce- ment and knit anklets,, ‘ sizes 82 to 50, 75¢ gar- ment. 4 —THE BASEMENT STORE.

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