Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE 16 SS “she could only see this Cake/ Undoubtedly that Good Dame of ye olden days tn historic New England prided herself very much on those rich cakes and plea that made Colonial cooking #0 justly famous, Yot even the finest cook of Colonial Days would admit de. feat could she see a cake ked with CENT! AL PASTRY FLOUR! Wholesome and fluffy and satistying as only perfect cake can be, made with the same recipe that Grandmother's Mother used, and C NIAL PASTRY FLOUR— vety smooth, light and delicate in texture. The hearts of se lected wheat ground and sifted to powder, Inexpensive, because tt does away with poor baking uniform in qua bears the BRAND. Don't you want to try one of the famous olf COLONIAL cake and pie recipes shown on the package? Every good grocer has CENTENNIAL PASTRY FLOUR—a ‘phone call to him will bring some up before you can say “wink.” niat | On our left: The tight bodice. This gown's of comparatively recent date—1897. It's worn by Louise Huff in “Mary the Third.” On our right: ‘Secrets.” It’s of the period of 1888. In the center: The hoop skirt. wears this costume in In 1867 it was strictly in style. eee An we due for a revival of the - hoop skirt? And the bustle? In the tight bodice Not many people now living can remember so far in the pant hoopa. ‘The bustle, however, in recalled by merely rather elderty folk | The tight bodice in within the rec: | ollection of those hantly yet middie | aged. | Indications are that we are going to have the tight bodice with us BY MARIAN HALE | ming back? THE SEATTLE TAR The bustle. Margaret Lawrence PIN MONEY Do you want some practical eu In #pare time at home? boys and girls, men and women, thelr weekly brought them in good returns for Incomes by Qur Washington bureau has complied, out of t ma boys’ and girin’ clubs, Unele & & list of suggestions of « practh help increase the family Incom request ington bureau: taking up nideline cxestions on earning “pin money’ Would you Ike to know bow hundreds of added substantial suma to pursuits that have the time and labor invented? experience of and from ¢ other sources, J nature for peopis who want to , The bulletin will be sent on have Fill out the coupon below and mail it to The Star's Waab- She thought she wdas economical, but —~ She was a thrifty housekeeper — careful ef the pennies—eager to cut down expenses, Yet, she had never considered the saving it was good coffee. possible to make on One afternoon she was shopping, “You know,” the grocer said to her, “We sell M-J-B Coffée to our very best customers. “They are keen judges of value. They knowitr equires fewer of the golden grains of M-J-B Coffee to make each delicious cup, Mitt G ompany “When they buy M-J-B Coffee ded in Americas Centennial Year again. The bustle is something more than a possibility, The hoop skirt, perhaps. fashingten Bureau, The Seattle Star, New York Ave., Washington, D. ©. SPEAKS _AT LUNCHEON he preponderance of scientifia de recently haa been directed @estructive lines to such an the Y. M. C. A., conducting religious Awakening meetings among workers, He has made many ad dreases to various groups in the city and will conclude his stay here Fri day night, when he meets members of boards of directors and conimittees of the local Y. M. that th safety of the human | Methodist church ‘fg in danger, according to Dr. R. Mott, world traveler and lec. | who addressed 15 prominent Danish Appeal in Symphony Concert Seattle people of Danish birth or ancestry have a special interest in the concert to be given by the Seat- tle Civic Bynphony orchestra at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the Metropolitan theater. The first num- der on the program will be the over ture, “Elvehol,” containing the Dan- ish national anthem. The number ‘was put on by Mme. Davenport Eng- berg, conductor of the orchestra, in compliment to the Danish people. ‘With the added attraction of Caro- Ina Laszart, contralto of the Metro- politan Opera company, as sololat, a number of parties of Danish people have been organized to attend the oncert. The seat male is now on at the | Metropolitan theater, When You Have An Account Here it means that you are connected with one of the oldest and best-known banking institutions in the State; that you are enjoying safety and conven- in your money matters, and that you always _ have at your disposal complete and satisfactory banking service, and the intelligent, interested attention and co-operation of experienced bankers who believe that your success is their success. WAVAVAVAVAY, we First National _ Bank of Seattle Second Avenue and Columbia Street ©, A. at the First | At @ recent ball in New York a fashionable society girl appeared In a gown that reproduced the style of 1870 In all ite details, A mmart dosigner is bringing out | taffeta frocks with back trimming | | that strongly suggests the bustle. | As to tight bodices, fashion au thorities won't commit themselves, #0 I called on Mra, M. L. Thompson who conducts a school for corset fit ters, and asked her if stiff corsets are coming into style again. “BUtt ones, no,” she eald, “but cor wote, you, indeed. “Women positively are going back | to corneta, expecially as noon ae they realize what going without them ts doing to thetr figures. “A good figure tn the basis of every costume, Properly oorseted tn the new light materials, aparsely boned, women can wear whatever gowns they choose, They can return to Dasques or to the erinoline of former days without @lscomfort, because the modern corset gives slenderness without distorting the form. "Tn fnet, to achieve the destred un- corseted effect of today, It is neces sary to wear @ cornet “A woman fs not a marble statue, The most perfect figures have bumps and tmperfections which ‘only a cor set can conceal.” What's more, costume plays are all the rage on Broadway just now | They show women in every type of | gown, from 1300 A. D. to the prenent| day, so we actually can see how| | women have looked thru the ages.| | and draw our own conclusions. Jude: | ing from the exciamations of admirn tion and the applause which greet the beruffied, crinolined costumes of | the Victorian period there's a conaid: | erable desire on women's part to re- | turn to them. | “Styles.” remarked Mrs, Thomp-| son, “travel in cyclen, you know. “When the psychological time for the reappearance, sy, of bustles) comes, there'll be no way of prevent: | ing them. | “But whether or not that time's| come, I can't tell—-who can? ‘Who, Indeed? But—be prepared’ Members of the National Woman's party are still demanding equal rights. Flatterers. — Atlantic City Press-Union. I want the bulletin, “Pin Money,” and incloso twe cents in stamps for postage. | Diversions of N ew Y ork. ‘Intrigue Correspondent Citizens of Metropolis Eat, Dance, T BY W. #. PORTERFIELD NEW YORK, March 14,— Folks are quick on the tongue up here in| | Mr, Stuyvesant’s well-known {sland of Manhattan. “How are yout’ asked the pert soda fountain girl in Pennsy station when I blew up for « drink to show her we're not so slow in Ban Diego, I said like a flash, “Dry and dusty.” Quick as a wink she nays, like ol’ King Tut, I s'pone. Just te they advertise in the cars up here, “is in everybody's mouth.” eee “Jus Folks are up on the latest conver rational possibilities in little old Man: hattan ile Coue, with his “every day in every way,” has long since become passe, New Yorkers, it strikes me, do not think. They just talk and dress and dance and eat. They were doing all 25,000 POUNDS An Early Spring Special - Sizes 38 Satin Strapped Slipper at ’ This “Boston” Buy “Those Better Shoes for Less” at Our 5 Popular Chain Shop. But the pounds represent th ON HIS BACK ¢ value, not the weight of this magnificent suit of armor. The owner, Cyril Andrade, of London, insisted that armor wi clothes and to prove his poin as as comfortable as ordinary t strolled thru the streets of London and dined at a fashionable hotel attired as a knight of, old. now King Tut, like a tooth| Do Not Think; Merely alk and Dress four in all the Central European and Nordic tongues at the Bankers’ instl- tute ball, into which I stumbled on arrival at the hotel. Plump and [frankly fat girls, thelr pink |ereen silk underdrexses covered by r and gold shimmering robes, h cost $48.60 each at Blooming. or M were prancing thru hotel lobby, their plump arms bare to the shoulders, trying their Very darndest to arouse comment or jat least an occasional stare of ad miration, I encaped to the near-by theater, where, the bill being one of theae| hewly popular “super-melodramas,” 1 | found myself w ged between a cou- | ple of equally fat men. On my Jeft| |was an English-American who told me that “prohibition ts ruining tha country, for New York is today wot ter than ever.* whi dab the cy’s, New York's the olf man's para dine, all right. In the lobby three women just In |from Cohoes were declalming loudly over the holdup prac ticket specutators, and, in fact, tha Speculation graft ix as bad as ever in |little old New York, About the only * of theater y to. get a theater ticket is to walk | up to the box office on the night of the performance and buy one, and very few people ever think of doing | that. eee In four offices 1 visited, 1 found folks talking about impossible apart ment rents, Business ig not so good | in New York. Dollars are harder to get than last year, even, and yet rents keep up at a figure which ab- sorbs most of the revenue In Wall Street I found everybody cussing the farm bloc. One million aire broker and bond buyer haa gent out letters to all his clients recom. mending that they dispose of all Gem Nut Margarine Dainty, delicious, wholesome, and econom- ical. Learn for yourself 4 how good it is. Then note the saving on the grocery bill. Order a carton today Swift & Company, U.S.A. i) and| they save.” This is also true of Tree Tea. JE S ( farm loarth at once I remonstrated with him gentty, telling him the farmer ts the back bone of the country, eto “Well, I'm against ‘em, anyhow, when they send up such blather jwkites as that fellow Brookhart, | who wants to confiscate everything,” | he replied tae That night the annpal ball of the New York retail milliners held forth Oh, doy! & hoot for the farmers or anybody eine who Is fool enough to work for a living? Hurrah for the little milli ners! iS ‘There wns one, m perfect beauty in an iridescent robe of purple and silver, On the third finger of her left hand sparkled a priceless gem jin my hotet Who cares and from her costly colffure shone | & magnificent bejeweled tortoise shell comb, I thought of Babylon just before Cyrus turned tn the river, and then I heard my fair beauty laugh. 1 Wetened shamelessly. “Oh, yes," she surgied, tapping the robe, “you like it, do you? Well,*I got this at Gold heim’s. It was too big and I cut tt Gown. Cost me $27.75 cash. That tortoise shell comb with the brilliants is the swollest thing here tonight and loan of ft tonight. This diamond, | platinumset engagement Gee, look at tt. Cost 10 cents at | Woolworth's!” And somehow I never wanted to | smile at a girl more than I did right then. Great town, New York. |Costs $5 When an | Engine Is Calle: | COLCHESTER, Eng. March 16.— |To enforce carefulnens the counctl | has ordered that a $5 fee must be paid every time fire apparatus ts called out by fire in a chimney. it cost me just two berries}—for the | sparkler? | POST REWARD FOR KILLER ‘The Standard Of! Co. has increased the $1,000 reward it offered some time ago for information leading the arrest and conviction of the ban, ait who shot and killed Howard Me- | Creary, one of its Seattle collectors, last month. An additional reward of 500 has been posted. The new re | ward is offered for “information lead |ing to the conviction” of the murder No reason was given for the | change In language. oda Uses Razor on Corn; | It Costs Her Life | ST. LUOTS, Mo, March 16—When | Mrs. Henry C. Carlton was told by a | friend that razors were successfully need in paring off corns, she decided |she would use this method. Going |home, she got out her husband's | razor and started to work. Suddenly | Mrs. Carlton slipped off the chair on | which she was sitting. The razor cut an artery in her leg as she fell, and | Mrs. Carlton bled to death. Her hus- | band discovered her body a few hours later. BY ROBERT TALLEY WASHINGTON, March 1+—All other things being equal, you ars go- ing to live longer than your parents and your children are going to live longer than you. The span of human life ts increas. ing jn years civilization pro- greases, says Dr. koyal 8. Copeland, the new senator from New York, un- til last week health commissioner of New York city, He is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on public health, “Carefully kept statistien in New York city show that during the last half century the average length of life has Increased from 43 wo 63 years,” Dr. Copeland sald, f you are fat and past 50,” says Dr. Copeland, “your chances for dying are just 60 per cent greater than if you were of normal weight.” ‘The fatty condition, he explained, puts an extra load on the heart and other organs and interferes with their functioning, “On tho other hand," the doctor continued, “if you are underweight and past 60, your chances for living longer are increased in about the same proportion, provided, of course, that your underweight isn't due to disease.” ‘There's really no excuse for any: body being fat and no necessity for tarving one's self to get rid of it. “A regulatory diet and not a star. vation diet is the answer,” he said, “Take plenty of exercise and eat a lot if you want to, but be careful what you eat.’ ‘The reducing cure works, contin: ued Dr. Copeland, as he described a recent course for a class of 60 fat Russia Sxports Vast Grain Cargoe HELSINGFORS, March 16D. spite bolshevik cluima of hunger | Russa, the soviet government is ox porting vast quantilios of grain inland, Senatorial Physician Promises Longer Life We're Going to Live Longer, He Says, and Our Children Longer Than That women conducted by the city health department of New York “In 30 days,” he sald, “we took off seven and a half feet of waist- line and a half ton of Mesh.” Don't think you can reduce weight by means of Turkish baths. You can sweat out the water that way, but the tissues are still there and soon they will fill up again, Exercise and diet is the real remedy, says Senator Copeland, Loses Million in Wire Rates Boost PEKING, March 16.—It costs the Chinese government $1,000,000 for a two months’ experiment tn increas- ing postal and telegraph rates, As a result the old rates are again in effect. The postal rates are again the cheapest tn the world, People stopped using the telegraph when {t cost them 30 cents a word if the message went outside the prov- ince and 16 cents a word if they were sent to a point in the same province. Urgent messages were 90 cents a word with about the same speed as is given a night letter in America. The old rates of 8, 16 and 48 cents respectively, have been restored. SCHOOL CHILDREN OF SEATTLE What Do You Know About This? We want you to know, and we are woing to offer you $125 to find out— $125 in Cash! AS FOLLOWS: firat Prine—50.00 for the bent es- any on “MOOSHHMART AND ITS OBJECTS,” Second Prise—$25.00 for the beat en- by children Crot the High oolm. for the bent es- children from the Second—Hesay must be written on one aide of RARE only, Third 6 whort, in no case more than 260 words Fourth~ dronn, nd grade, and, if posatblo, tole~ hone number in LOWER 4BFT-HAND CORNER, as namon will be numbered and torn off before giving essaya | to the Judires, Mth--Contaat clones at midnight, Tussday, March 20th, 1923 Bixth—All eusayn murat be went to “Publicity Department, Moose Tomple, Pighth and Univer- rity, Seattle, Wanh.” sA handsome Iustrated book, de- ribing, MOOSEHBEART will be = \e8 PRMD to any child entering his “THE CHILD OF YOUR HEART™ APPEALS TO EVERY MAN, WOM- AN AND CHILD, for ie the child Whose parents have passed on, leav- ing to you and me as a sacred trust tho heritage of their children, THERE ARQ NOW MORE THAN 1,100 SUCH CHILDREN AT MOOBE- HEART of all creeds, ying and worshiping as their mothers and fathors taught them. At 9 o'clock each Hight the children at: MOOSE: HBART kneel at thetr bedaldes and offer up thelr prayers in to the Supreme Ruler of versa, FOR FULL INFORMATION AMOUT MOOSEHRART C. - LIOTT 1886, Seer 1818 Bighth Ave, Seattle, Wash. $$$, Ntest, calling at the Moose Tem ath and University, from Ree Sop. m., Saturdays § to bp, Prine oaaays and pictures of winners will be published in the pa- pers, Me a Credit te YOUR SCHOOL ana wi ratitud he Unt- &