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EMIEKHRING fiahedt 1823, ES tact g@ecept: i or] . iy “gona 4 concert, wor! ps today & puareds oak hout ates. thro seed an design, with ene deep. ric uma: oa hed over *. Gran Award at AP. Vixpo at the ‘ir at st piano in B Over fn Ameri hore others. Any one WENO One too good for ore PeSOSeSeseeooes PePeSeSooeoooe LITTLE PROBLEMS OF LOVE AND MARRIAGE opepeesereceeeepoonecoroooenapess eore e ° 7 : e ? : ° Is the Clever or the Ordinary Woman the Better Wife? SHOULD A WOMAN HOLD Ay fiat and are ode of the happiest POSITION AFTER MARRIAGE? } married coup a, wide cirele of | friends know hey lunch outside the home as well as tn it The eo ensud of opinion ts that | | sh opinion of tradition. rhe woman who likes her opin | | ions handed ready made to her so that need not be bothered to think for herself neually Bitte her | jeyebrows and shrugs her shoulders| .Thie question of working after when a married woman of her ac: } marriage ts all a matter of clreum. quaintanee takes a position or ¢on-| stance and temperament. And ev tinues to hold the one she filled/ery husband and wife should be before the wedding. free to decide it for themselves The one universal opinion in re- | without rousing carping criticiams gard to it seems to be that her/and ankindly comments. husband can't support her or give| No woman should neglect her her as much money as she wants. | husband, the home or its responst two women I know, both artists, | bilities for this outside work. These Both married. One did not think | duties are her share of the partner for herself and so di@ the custem-/ship they have taken upon them ary thing. She gave up her work | selves. They should come first. It and undertook to manage a home. | is a question only of how they will She kuew nothing of housework |be best furthered. Can she make and had no hatural taste for it. But | the home happler by adding oer tn earnestly desiring to do what wag |come to her husband’s, truer right, from her viewpoint, she work-|companion to him by getting the @ and worrted and mnally at the | broad outlook on life that an out i of a few years Inid down her | side occupation may be necessary unsuccessful task and was buried.|to give her. Or wil! the interests The other, having a mind of her/of the home be best furthered by own, talked the matter over with ‘her remaining in charge her prospective husband. “I'll make| This is the only question she & perfect ftizele of housekeeping,” | should ask herself in regard to it she admitted; “but with what I/ She shouldn't have married if self. carn I can hire somebody vo do it! ish considerations creep into the right. We love each other, and just |problem. If she does it to shirk because I am no housekeeper is noj| the responsibilities of married life teason why we shouldn't be happy jor to make more spending money together.” ~ af hers: she is acting unworth- Being a man of sense, he agreed, | She is not true (o her marriage and they have the happlest fitte oi leaving bebind her a sbrrowing ham band and two little ones never to know a mother's care she SSS SEES . Me Cai Yee Crupren’s Prayvtime Peer eroeecerececorererererorooreroeoosoooesdoooee A LONG JOURNEY “I tell you move over, Mr. Orange, and quit crowding me so. I'm tired, and so would you be if you had traveled as far as I have,” said one of the dates in Jack Christmas stocking. “You say you have come a long distance, too. Why, you grew in am orange grove out in California, and were put in boxes with other oranges and sent here on a train. Bat t—why, I've come miles and miles.” So saying, the date sighed “My home,” he continued, “was an oasis called Temacin, in ‘e great Sahara desert, in Africa. grew on a high date palm tree aunt stood beside a tiny lake and reared | ite head to the hot gun. That tree will live 100 years, and when it quits bearing dates, the people wll use ite sap to make wine, and they | will eat the beart of the tree. They | will make baskets and ropes out of the leaves. Oh, it's very useful —my parent tree! One day brown men came and Fg Orange. “Tl do my beat not 0 crowd you, but this baseball and son and bog of marbles in the top = the stocking keep squeezing me jown so hard. | wish Jack woul thered us, and putting us in bags, wake Up and come get us out, ‘saat they loaded us on camels, It was} you? & tedious journey across the desert to a big market place in a town | 4 were then packed tightly in boxes and carted onto big. ships. Mine | sailed to America, where | and im § brothers were pat on a train to} meet Santa Claus in this town.” | “No wonder yeery tired,” said) SYNTHIA GREYS CORRESPONDENTS } | | ANSWEKS WILL ar | iN THIS COLUMN TO ANY FURTHER QUESTIONS STONE, FIG! R CO. In order to get roo patterns, $12.50. ABOUT OLD COINS OR POST- AGE STAMPS.—MISS GREY. “Enquirer” asks about the chile peppers I mentioned recently in my Oriental and floral designs. tamae and Mexican chile recipes. The Mexican chile is not quite the | same as the red pepper of the north, but these red peppers may .¢ used | when the others are not available. The seeds should be removed and the peppers parbolled five minutes | before using them in these recipes. Dear Miss Grey: I am 18 and have a sweetheart. He buys me some very nice presents, and I would like to give him a present oc casionally. Would it be et A.—-There is no reason why you should not make him a present now and then if you « afford it. constructed® davenport ; Dear Miss Grey: What is Jerome K. Jerome's latest play? ANXIOUS. A—"The Passing of the Third Floor Back.” On what date | Dear Miss Gre: was Thanksgiving in 1902? A SUBSCRIBER, A.-November 21. All clever women know wonderfully “cozy” air. Dear Miss Grey: I have a large | face, and a nice quantity of hair How can I arrange my hair with a rat? The ends of my hair What can I do for it? 4 Sak] A--(1) Part it and rolk at the) sides, and either do it up in a low cotl at three-Panel, Plain, solid regular value $2.75, | out are split Screens, ‘Three-Panel Sereens, fraines, finished antique ; f MN 1 plain green burlap; Spe ial at $2.85. the nape of the neck or} braid ft in two braids and bring it | around the head. of the reg F Shih NY hast an Skivt Rox tie hotyles, f nib ip recta MAPLEINE | Better (2) Clip the ends | hair where split re | |B) THE NEW my 3 Modern Than H Maple | Department tie Cresnenh 1414, Cho Stores Seattle, Wash, 8 ae eee lenmenemman hould not. But that ik the! Had the other artist done the same sh@, too, might be the mis tress of « happy home, instead of | : “TELL ME A STORY” $25.00 RICH AXMINSTER RUGS, $18.85 Size 9x12; extra heavy qifality and good range Same quality, in size 8-3x10-, Folding Steel Couch for $4. Converts quickly into a full size bed or regular value $6.00 ist Artistic Screens Underpriced Here's an opportu- nity to secure a fine one at little cost. oak. frames, immensely to furnish a room and give it a | Special at $1.95. | oh le g8. a: Sareens; regular price $4.75, } f THE STAR—MONDAY, NOVEMBER MANY BELIYE IW LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT Star Contest Already Brings Many Answers— What Do YOU Think? —There Are Nice Prizes for Best Letters, Is there first aight? If there t#, does It las! ? Does the love that comes like a flash to two people who see énch other for the first time flicker out, or is ft an undying Mame? such a thing ag love at If “at sight” {ts the real “when” of some people's love, what ix the of som people's what ts the how” If you believe in it, why do you believe In itt Ever see it your self? If you don't belleve { nit, why don't you? Do the divoree courts show more |fallures in love at first sight than tn the slow kind? at 8. tee = Ia it just « play.or a story? Could a fellow, or a girl, love “for keeps” at first sight? For the best expressed opinion on the subject contained In a let Iter not exceeding 60 words, a box [will be presented by The Star for! jqggea souls for trace They are a All letters should be addressed to bs the Love at Pirst Sight Editor. The contest will close Wednesday night Here's what some Seattle people think | 1 belleve in fore at firet eleht | Three months ago I met THE folks [girl. I haven't eaten anything since, | m! T have just discovered her address love at 1 be Don't I know? And her immediately Of course we will be happy 29, COING delve into the depths of each other's it \is unnecessary one, forming a small world of thetr first sight? tihve tn it 1909. BL EEOTRLO vaudeville perform of broken vows? e this. To them They become PLATIRAY SF A STORE, |PRESS CLOTHES AND COOK EGGS | WITH THEIR ELECTRIC FLATIRON | Con --W ORTH-- KNOWING yin the Stillman Witt boarding home everybody Iaughed when the/ conducted by the Young Women's TOL N. Ghat et & performance of “The Traveling! Eyeryone was meant for some-| Salesman,” and for the four next A few drops of ammonia added one, and love at first sight solves j best letters there will be presented, | i n4, Nile to cooked starch prevents the iron Teapectively, four, three and two ” A. T. SALESMAN | from sticking, and a little soap pairs of orchestra seata | lather added to cold starch ac |complishes the same good results or course! Why shouldn't co Friendship requires time for he thes rowth, but loye blooms | Wan ahovee though jalso te friends tn the truest sense! Send the tickets and I will call on | of that much abused word, first of all they may love not Adam fall in love with Eve at lovers should 1 need And, finalty, did It Se well to ke ectly clean rubber eraser or ph | of art cum for removing spots from |} if the dirt ts rubbed | off in this way after cach’ weartng it will be a long time before resor! profession: clouner bothersome home- rinsing in be had the or the to naphtha or some p on hand a per pre: ms pared cleaning fluid There's no chance about ft feat sight? J. KERNS, BESSIE K. LEWIS, — 2405% First ay, 108 N. Gist at The linoleum on Kitchen, bath- te ig i room and hall floors, should be Cannot two-thirds of the success | When peeling onions begin at the! varnished three times a year at jful marriages be traced to this! root end of the onion and per! up-| east to Insure its laating qualities jsource? Are they not happiest in| ward. The onions will then scarce-] Allow the varaish to thoroughly ithe fact that they do not have to!ly affect the eyes at all dry before the floor in stepped on Second and University. ! m for Toy Special, to close these This is elegant; lue. of both ba gee § Special, $18.85. Special at $17.50. 85 $15.50 DINING TABLE $9.50 Good Pir Dining Table fia ished golden; 424neh round entirely of steel; } top; solid pedestal extends ~ to six feet; regalar price ial at =_—— $16.50. Special at ‘99.50. rr that screens help Silkoline-Covered antique finish; with heavy oak illing best quality $3.75 ular price $3.50 DINING CHAIRS $2.50 Haridsome fall quarter: awed oak full box cane seat ning Chairs; regular price $ Special at Be. 0. Same, with full leather xe) Tatye assort t; regular price $4.00, Spe ab pricus a at $2.95, Oe en SV CT LO size B-3x10-6. EXTRA About 100 Rugs to be closed out ental and floral designs Size 8-3x10-6; $9.95. Just receiv regular price $15.50, New Sir Waist Boxes complete Second and University. $15.50 Rugs $9.95: $25.00 Rugs $18.85 Pronounced Savings on Floor Coverings and, we have had to take the Trunks up to the Third Floor. lieve the situation there, big piles of Rugs are marked down. BEST QUALITY BRUSSELS RUGS 9x12 size; regular price $18.00. To re- $25.00 SEAMLESS WILTON VELVET RUGS, $18.50 an excellent rug, woven in one piece; rich and Special at $18.50, , regardless of real Extra quality Brussels Rugs, large range of Ori- Special, to close, line of Shirt Waist Boxes, varying from $1.75 to $15. of and Camphor wood, Consisting Mattings, Burlaps, Cedar A Hundred White Cotton Mattresses Worth $10 to Go at $5 Apiece Somebody blundered They were ordered full size and the shipping clerk sent us three quarter size. The rare opportunity to sec tress at small cost. maker them and charge the loss to him cure a luxurious mat- tells us to sell A very Art quality,. pure white Cotton Felted Mattress, covered with best quality “A, C. A.” ticking, heavy “roll” edge, Regularly sold at $10,50, . On sale tomorrow at 3 Modern Department Stores where men came to buy us. | Yaa COMED @ ORES ATO CAT GD @ STONE, FISHER CoO. | The Star put the question, “Do/*8¢e “h : + saa Gate ze Hose ‘at treet aight?” | wife of the stranded actor took the ee association at Cleveland, to Ne readers Saturday. Already it} electric Matiron she had been doing The Stillman Witt home te fall |. If you don't believe in it, WhY|,ome pressing with, inverted it, and{of bachelor girls. To them must ple are flashing back their answers. |rricd: an exg on the hot, smooth|go the credit of discovering the Bob Blake, tn “The Traveling | ottom Varied uses for the electric flaliron Salesman,” now playing at the Everybody faughed, thinking it The bachelor girls in the Stilt Moore theatre, ts obliged to spend! was comedy. Probably the actors}man Witt home Invert their flat Christmas day in a Httle countey | who got up the sketch also thought irons and then get out cooking town. Heth Elliott, a pretty girl. ti: a funny hit paraphernalia. Anything that ean fs the ticket agent at the village) nut it wasn't comedy. That |be cooked on a hot stove Nd can station. And this jolly, good 100k-i way real life, It was so real that be cooked on a fatiron, is the ing drummer gets “love at firstiine electric supply people are now! motto. Little frying pans sit on the|# sight." The girl In about to lose lturniahing lite standards with | {rons and eggs inside splutter them- | tract of land because sho can't] wectric irons, The standards hold! selves done. Water bolls in amall pay the taxes, Hoe works for hetiine inverted trons lev » that/aluminum tea kettles. The trons rights and nearly loses his Job./iney can be used for Iittle atoves, | with current in them are just the Fut it comes out all right. His) The custom of using electric Mat-jright temperature for making thing, Mirwt sight” te the real lirons for stoves probably originated | fudge | | { LQOK * one | Cit as and iewed 4 yery FREDERICK & NEL Bore Closes Dail LSON, ‘Inc. Excellent Values in Separate Skirts at $3.65 and $4.95 WOMEN’S SKIRTS AT $3.65— Skirts of panama, serge and novelty diagonals in plain gored and plaited styles, some fin- ished with bias bands and buttons, Colors, gray, brown, navy-blue and black. A model of two tone gray diagonal cloth is in full-plaited, panel front style, with tailor-stitched seams. Price $3.65. WOMEN’S The good quality, SKIRT $4.95 assortment at thi peice comptises Skirts of good ‘ qualit panamas, Veneti and plain and novelty serges, in na blue, gray, green and black. The st A'l ins, include gored, full-kilted and cluster-plaited models, stitched seams, plain or with trimmings of lapped, tai buttons. skirt of } on either side tritmed with small ome have yoke and p! di agonals vy- yles laited knee rk serge in panel-front effect has cluster-plaits jet buttons. with flounce. A Pric ¢ $4.95. Women’s Glace Gloves, Special 65c Pair Women's Two-clasp Glace with one-row embroidery on back. gray and tan. Special, 65c pair. Gloves, in overseam Come in white, mode, style, ei Gauntlet Gloves for Children Special 39¢ Pair-———- Children’s Gauntlet Gloves, palm and corduroy back, pair. durable in black and gra quality, w ith kid Special 39¢ Women’s Silk-Lisle Hosiery, 25c Pair itk-1 weight, full-fashioned and clastic, black, smoke, Women's good quality $ colors, including wine, green, gray, pair. dsle Hosiery in medium in a good assortment of cadet-blue and violet tan, red, yellow, navy, champagne, Price 25¢ In the Cotton Goods Section 18x38 Hemmed Cotton Huck 10¢ cach Towels, with red border; 18x50 Mercerized Cotton Damask Dresser Scarfs with hemstitched ends; 29¢ each. Double-Bed-Size Sheets weight ; with 53c each 45x36 Hemstitched Pillow Cases; seamed center, Sc each, heavy Btore Closes Dally noes at $25. Women’s Coats of good quality tan covert cloth in semi- and tight- fitting styles, lined to waist with satin. The majority of the gar- ments in this assort- ment are strictly tailor- ed, with coat collar and revers, tailor-stitched seams and pockets; some are shown with velvet collar and cuffs. Price, $25.00. Seoond Floor INCORPORA Business Bringers. sell real estate, ete. We do} thing well, We know low 4 ' alin t mod apodnd floor Raven Drug —} FREDERICK & } NELSON, Inc. 00 ff y rep Star classified ads. Women’s hails Covert Coats Frederick & Nelson Buy or IANO ror RON ef, Ma fad. 1032.