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), 21 REAPPEARS—SHE’S NOT EXACTLY LOOKING FOR HUBBY. and got myself! you a lot of trouble a scrape When T wrote to The Star the in reply to “Housewife,” who complained of her long} and: nous tasks, I said I was sick of the life of a ta man who wanted a home with ave I'd work all day in a home for the} and somebody to come home to me | advertising for a husband and I'm not “on the "as “Mere Man” insinuated in his letter. I didn’t say any man nor every man, I just uttered the lit y that cx the man,” instinc »mes to the lips of every woman ing for a But oh ry day a wand offer a h of what I’ve done, ft any joke never rghit it sorry if a girl has led a man to think she cares for him] it’s al istake. Of course, I haven't done that by my letter, fe appealed to a lot of kind, honest men who would like to} ahom fife. I can't marry them all m. Rut a wite and a home. F Its sad. Don't you think it is? than I am, for a woman can sort of fix things about room and make a little home of it, if it is only a little hall bed ome, and “there’s no home without the ear, I didn’t mean to stir up such a lot of trouble. | The I'm scared to of big-hearted men write letters to “the little shop girl.” but whole lot me to cross my heart, I didn't mean to. to a woman about and | for a man to propose marriage was. It's something to cry but it seems ¢ with a woman and give her the best of their love Maybe I can’t marry any of} or more lonesome men who want ere are a dozen I believe. they're viet | 1 don’t know what to do about all these men, do you? I feel that I've got ‘em all on my hands, and somehow that it’s my fault. | believe I'll just run away and cry and leave ‘em all you. just tell them in the paper that “No. 21” is sorry and fun away and hid. Tell them something that won't hart Sure aman. You can fix it up with them. But be sure to Pm sorry and that I hope every man of them will find the woman who will make him happy. “NO. 21." --W ORTH-- KNOWING Mead, Beacon bill: Your; When putting away your white on will be answered if you|net waists, wrap them in blue me an addressed envelope. Joth or tissue paper and HIA “GREY POPONDED answer your question | place in a box, if you wish them h the paper. \to keep perfectly white. 3 bccn 4 | Instead of washing rice half « ‘The request for a tried marshmal-| dozen times in cold water to remove recipe In a recent issue of the the starch, rinse twice in very hot jper brought forth a number of water, and the same resulta are good ones. However, it is|gained. Few northerners succeed ly possible to print the first ones|in getting the separated grains, wed, but many thanks to all/such as are always seen on south tributora. jern tables. To obtain them, throw Miss M. P. sends in a goodirice slowly into r nd suggests that if one slightly salted water, d wish to keep the candies any minutes uncovere h of time, they should be put! airtight box, such as a Na Milk may be kept from scorching tin, for, if exposed to the air, {it the pan in which it is to be goon become dry. | cooked is rinsed thoroughly io cold Harriet M. G. sends in a| water before the milk is poured in. and says that she also has Very good recipe for “French is" if anyone wishes it. Send rapidly boiling, and cook 20 if a turkey or y chicken is rubbed inside and out with lemon, it will make the meat white, juicy and ten- der. ‘AM. H. gives-a few hints. Sug using egg whip when beating | . and to beat for half an| Covering the pan when fish is fry in a warm room, as cold alr | ing ts apt to make the fish soft. A the candy tough. This | *olid, firm meat, that is at the same fe als says to pour candy after/time flaky, is what the good cook has been beaten for the full | likes. wr in a tin that has been - buttered and sprinkled; [It is @ new wrinkie to serve starch, while E. M. P.|™marshmatiows with hot chocolate. against using the buttered | When the candies are dissolved a ing It will spoil the candy haga flavor is given to the choc. | olate, oolteacher” asks for a recipe mat brittle, which her cook. wishes to use in school Peanut Grittle. To arrange an at tractive afterdinner dish, _pile/ large, handsome bunches of rais-| d of brown sugar stirling on a dolly in a glass dish and| r and two tablespoon-/ nn in the cavities between them Cook steadily for} is and then stir.in four eee and blanched nuts of| onfuls of butter and cook B little dropped into cold water at once. Just before re- from the stove stir two of sh peanuts into the 4m pour into buttered pans. , mark off Into squares oo] enough for the squares separated fed Peanut Wafers. Cream bait a cup of butter with } cup of sugar. Put half a tea > inl of soda into half a cup ‘ Milk and add with two cups of r Mour and one cup of chopped Beat all well. Butter a pan and spread in nly over the bot light brown. ays that the recipe Mrs. Maxwell's Christmas fruit Sounds good, but wants to in if there is no soda or baking t required For information Others who perhaps may want WY the cake, want to say that pee fecipe requires no soda nor powder, as the quantity of OMehalf dozen to a half a Pretty Dish When the neck of your sweater ts! stretched out of shape, simply dip the neck in clear, warm water, wring and dry, It will resume its original size. When making Waldorf salad, pour} lemon juice over the apples as soon) as they are silced. It improves the taste and keeps the color of the ap- ples. Freshen black silk or satin by sponging with strong tea, to which ja@ little ammonia has been added, | press on the wrong side over damp cloth. MOTHERS PROBLEMS The mother who does her own work has frequent employment which cannot be interrupted, for in- stance, baking ples or cookies. To BPMN of flour, makes the cake| keep baby safe and amused, one ~ Aa Trust “Mre. B. ¥.” has| Mother has put a dry goods box in cake. & corner of the kitchen. The box 4 luck with the ; is neatly painted, and is padded with blankets, About the edge are tied all the favored toys, on long strings; baby throws them out of} the box at pleasure, but finds it en's Mis Please tell me to mp kc id-fashioned suet tuch *s our mothers and} | rs used to make. } MRS. KD.” |equally entertaining to pull them BeeSaet Pudding: Pat into|*!! beck again. ena ct pped suet.) In giving an alcohol rub to @ bread crumbs child use an old tollet water bottle with shaker cork, allowing only ow drops to fall. ‘The other hand iy then free to massage. ad of flour. } ped # of ginger, | chopped almonds, ywdered sugar, the ypped rind of haif pend ope half a lemon, one | ee of mixed spices, thre snd a pint of fruit julees H. L. KLEIN THE SHOEMAKER. It you can't get boots or shee Ne 08 ree gue them made H to measure ira Irom MARY”, \C@DK_BGDK DAILY MENU, BREAKFAST Bananas Cereal with Cream. Kidney Saute. Lyonnatse Potatoes. Toast. Coffee. DINNER Jullenne Soup. Roast Lamb, Mint Jelly Mashed Sw Potatoes. Pensa Cottage Pudding with Fruit SUPPER. able Salad Tea Rolls Nut Custard with Grated Cocoanut Loaf Cake. Nut Custard With Grated Beat the ly, add 3 and half » beat again, Add 1 pint o 4 halt cup ef hot firm. ¢ with fresh water Thla desira ts composed of ¢ of 5 plunged Into boiling water, after which they are added to con somme and cooked in ft, thus giving to the soup & pronounced but at the same time delicate vomotable favor. Handbags are Knitted coats are temptations, Sachets are acceptable. Blanket bathrobes look “to the good.” Lititle they go.” There's always the standby hand kerchiefs. Pretty please. Material for a blouse or a dress may do. Cutlery and table linen very often please the housekeeper. A plant. Box of bonbons. Bunch of roses. The latest tn novels. Subsertption to good magazine. One of the classics, well bound Tickets for the opera or the thea tre. Tickets to lectures on subject that is congenial. A calendar in @ decoration suit able to the ee DUT OF THE WISDOM watches are fine, “If stockings are itkely to OF SYNTH GREY How Disappointments Help. She had aspirations to be an ar tist and she was very clever in school at drawing. She took vari- ous sketches around to newspa- pers, magazines and adverttsing of fices, but somehow she didn't seem to sell them. Then the next thing her friends knew, s! was a stock girl In the coat section of a large department store. It was absolute: ly necessary that she add to the family income, and so she had been finally compelled to take any work that offe If she had accepted this check to her ambitions in the right spirit it would have mattered little. She would win out in the end. But she didn't so ppt it. Her manner | SEMI-FITTING COATS | |gives much scope When he knows only the best will satisfy you, the dealer will send a can of Ghirardelli'’s COCcCoA THE TAR—TUESDAY, obstacles elroumstances | | her way If she sits)" discouraged in thelr shadow DECEMB back alley when a lot of kids | j¢ patted me and then tled a 21, 1909 They used to Today they string on there to play nds of mine those me (OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO WOMEN READERS OF THE STAR) @=)="S!i82ii-" only protecting me against an, wicked boys game is up, If she climbs over them Miho revchea the other sido|™¥ tall. I thought they were fixing|| For etor enele broader |™@ up like my aristocratic friends} ae oh E And grog tty whe | Who wear bows of ribbons on thetr| Xmas, ds if she wante to do any big/ Pecks, #0 | wagged my tall to shor a box of ing in Ufe. 7 them | a elated it, Then the Saya. was @ bai jingly sound, and look-| Natur REMAIN IN FAVOR}. didn't I ran with t This sketch goes to show that the} long semi-fitting style in coata ts} still maintained in dressy costumes. Originality in ent and garniture for indlvidual| taste, if Give a Sweet Xmas as well | ‘ as a merry one, and send | her a | box of THE CHICAGO MISFIT PAR- “seed 1400 FIRST AV. Mon's Furnishin, Hult Cases its for rent ngs Hate, Pull ing back I saw a tin can beside me. all laughed and began stones to make me run. because~it is per- fect and goes farthest — less than a cent a cup. Don’t ask merely for cocoa—ask for Ghirardelli’s. Shly mix and pour into molds im four hours, 217 WAME STREET. Cocoa Fact No. 10 ‘The food value of cocoa is due to the large porcentage of gluten it contains. It is even richer in this muscle building con- stituent than bread, For this reason co- coa is recommended to anyone whowe system needs builde ing up. ally, I thought I must have so | walked away fr m it, but ny tall and ne, too, 1 waged Main the can bounced around. Maybe I ck up my ears! The boys to throw And I did Bob's home and bang lickety cut for Bet hat old can bumg Once “That no man who owned one acre of good, productive land ever need hunt for work.” A rather broad assertion, but, nevertheless, true; for, when you look back to the days of our forefathers, you must appreciate the fact that tilling the soil was the principal means of liveli- hood. When you take into consideration the fact that they made a success of land culture with the primitive methods of cultivation, and depending entirely on nature’s method of dis- tributing the necessary moisture, are you at all surprised at the wonderful results being obtain- ed at present, with all the modern methods of soil culture at hand? Of course you are not. Then, in addition to all the modern methods be- ing used to advantage, you add the most won- derful of all, IRRIGATION, which has. in- creased the results tenfold, you will appreciate why, every year, more men are looking to the free, outdoor life of fruit culture in an irrigated district for a livelihood. At Richland You will find men from all walks in life, happy and contented, busily engaged in developing their fruit land, feeling satisfied they are under obligations to no man, and knowing their land is growing into money day and night. Wouldn't you like to work for yourself? Then we call your attention to the Richland Valley Where hundreds have taken advantage of the opportunity that is presented to the homeseek- er, The valley where you can buy the finest of irrigated fruit land for much less than similar land can be bought in any other district. The terms: LAND Main Office, 18 Downs Bldg., 709 2nd Ave. She'll like them. 6260—Phones SRN & DAL Tallors and Men's 1107 Pike Stree ween Boren and Minor. Horace Greele aid It requires but a small payment down, and then you have three years’ time be- fore your next pdyment is due. Call for book- lets. RICHL 917 ist Ave. 1023 3rd Ave. 11 FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc, Store Closes Dally at —Will Not Be | Pure , | Open Hventags for Christmas Rustnens. Basement Safesroom \ | indicated sho fot herself entirely RITITITI TILT ee too perior to hang coats on racks as The 1 is not difficult to pre r a 8 I M 4 Sry 3 | atot {ll neve ealize he K | j | ; A P P ‘ * artistic ambitions, and she wilth® - 3 | Shopping Daring the Morning Hours Is Best From Every Standpoint blame {t on her parents or clr Crinoren's Pravirimec 3] CHMALALICGH, | OF WhALOVOL Nhe) PeOeoeoededeovororoeoooosrororosoosoorosooooooees || 9 ° . chooses to ca vat drove her to sordid work, She will never be a A GOOD FRIEND in behind me, hitting my legs and omen S$ al ore ul Ss success as a business girl, She vurting my feelings will probably marry to get out of ; Just as I got there Bob and his }atore life and drift into an indifter-|, Of course, I'm only a common yel-) master were coming out. We dogs ent wife. She is, at any sate, |/O¥ dog, dnd my home is the street, | talked the matter over, and hin mas Ad shaping her course to become a|™Y, bed In some doorway, and my | ter patted my head and untied the disappointed wom ining room @ gathage can at some: | gtr) Well, Bob and I tore acron e Without realist it, perhaps, shejOBe’s back door, But for all that I] the street, his master running after is vory foolish and bi ‘making t nad {DAVE Home mighty good friends, and | iy» and whistling for Bob, But Bob pt Mig ne 2 they aren't all such tramps as Lam,.! jist followed me, and we ran up “ # miiow many girl ambitious to[*ther. Several are real aristocrats,| that alley after ‘dds, Bob Women’s Tailored » om eae eee * ah with faney collars: and even sweat owling and sh s fine big i : up some special work find Jt lorm and blankets to. keep themltueth, und I was barking loud as til! Suits Of cheviot, home- need at the outeet of thelr career tg da yd bi caf 1 ng But they pluckily turn aside their] voy iesked To}, a As sempedt elled, “There comes cross |] SPUN and novelty suit- own desires to lend a hand until | 70K t veo {n @ ge 9d and maybe thoy didn't reat such time when they ean 4 ake | sh d lives in a house on the) We chased one of the boys, and y - * - rata eek thoy ace lonmtaug todo, {avenue. Once in a whilo he sneaks| Hob was getting near enough to ings, in green, navy, ma- | A few years ep evdmon an {Out When his master isn’t looking,! bite him when his master caught! ai fr ee A few yours apent thus does a3 1004 wo soo the town together, Ho| Sr with us sad making nis atop, TOON, light-gray, Oxforc| ons her # athies, her outloo! always gets Heked when he et#/ fastened a chain on his collar | A lite. ’ It eames ten gatunbo Mond | home but he says the fun we had| Yo patted me and said we were} and pretty mixed ef fects. he 0 0! d we bays for it | Just two playful pups. But I hope a a achonda apen how a girt{ This morning I was sleeplng tn|ne don't lick Bob this time, ‘causellf The ooats are 42 inche long, semi-fitting effect, plain tailored, with coat collar and revers. The skirts are well tailored and have cluster side plaits. Special $6.35. Ha lexroom Taffeta Petticoats at $3.95 Women’s Taffeta Silk Petticoats having full flounce finished with narrow tailored bands. or tiny tucks. Come in brown, raisin, Copenhagen, pink, light-blue, navy, catawba, green, red, wis- taria, gray and black, also changeable effects and stripes in navy, green, red and Copenhagen. Price $3.95. —Basement Salesroom IR rrr eee Glace Kid Gloves, Special 85c Pr. Women's Glace Kid Gloves, overseam style, with two clasps at wrist; come in black and tan. Special 85c pair. Women’s Golf and Cashmere Gloves, 25c, 35c and 50c Pr. —Basement Salesroom. Women’s Silk- Lisle Hosiery, 25c Three pairs, attractively boxed, 65¢ Women's good quality Silk-Lisle Hosiery black and a good range of popular colorings, 25¢ pair; box of three pairs, 65c. <sciaieeaivait; Gahaiiiadins Children’s Mittens and Gauntlets, 50c Children’s light tan Gauntlet Gloves with stiff cuff ; 50 pair. Children’s Mocha Mittens, fleece-lined, in gray and dark-brown; 50c pair. Infants’ Mittens with furry back, kid palm and long cord, warm and durable; attractiy ely boxed; 50c pair. in Basement Salesroom, Specials in Christmas Slippers Women's Felt Juliets with turned sole and SA oon in brown and gray with black fur trimming or green and brown with brown fur trimming; special 95c. Women’s fine Felt Juliets in green, wine, plum and Lon- don smoke, trimmed with fur and having flexible hand- turned sole; special 95c, i] . Girls’ Red Felt Slippers finished with black fur; spe- ] cial 75c. Infans’ all-felt, fur-trimmed Slippers in red and blue; special 45c, ! Women's fine Felt Overgaiters, shaped blue, brown and London smoke ; special Basement Salesroom. Frederick & Nelson INCORPORATED attern, in green, GIFT SUGGESTIONS EWELRY “THAT IS OUT OF THE ORDINARY DAMASCENE, SATSUMA AND CLOISONNE Belt Buckles, Brooches, Hat Pins, Watch Fi Scarf Pins, Cuff Links, ete., at very attractive prices BEAUTIFULLY CARVED IVORIES—An i for the lover of the fine in Art | A selection from our extensive line of fine SATSUMA, CLOISONNE, BRONZE OR BRASS will make a gift | that is not only lasting, but a joy forever. »bs, eal gift Appropriate and useful gifts can be found in our exten- sive line of LACQUER WARE, such as GLOVE AND HANDKERCHIEF BOXES, JEWEL CASES, TRAYS, ETC. M. FURUYA CO. 806 SECOND AVE. SEATTLE Between Marion and Columbia | —MOVES BY— ‘CONTRACT Estimates Furnished Free. eltiace Reaper nipebetteesiemaueyrraone