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JWeedhouse-Grunbaum Co—-USE YOUR CREDIT*—416-494 Pike There’s an Opportunity for Practical Gift-Giving IN OUR RUG, CARPET AND DRAPERY DEPT. Select ough your gifts from this complete de- partment and practige thor economy Christmas We Charge by No Interest making your purchases at the Spe: cial Prices, Balt-Bearing aoe or $2.50 2.50 Christmas Pillows A fine selection Just received from the best manufacturers, packed in handsome Hol boxes, AU Feather Ptilows, packed in Holiday ir a fine All-moose Feather owe, packed In Christmas box, per palr..... 87.00 ax Couch Covers Atfordtr of the new terns ection nd pat woh Covers, In apestry, Spe $16.50 to $20 values in Body Brussels Rugs, 9x12 size, made of imported jute fabrica; an extra spectal at sin25 The regular $2.25 Body Brue sels Fuge, 27x54 tn made of Imported Jute fabrto " Blanket Bargains Our regular Pu Wool Blank uaranteed all wool both warp and filling. Spe ants etal The 5 Woo) Fintahed Bia extra large fixe, 7 Kets, finches. Special at Tindonse- Grinbaun ao eurniture © eg. Telephone—Private Exchange—Elllott 3096 An apple tree owned by 8. W. Alexander of Los Angeles, Cal. ts citing Interest through the fact that, in the last year, it has had two We offer you the services crops, kiving each time a different of a first class, highly edu- cated, conscientious physi- cian, absolutely without one 117 YESLER WAY fer the Yellow Front. the Interarhan Depot. | variety of apple. Finest Meats Lowest Prices Frye & Co. Markets Specials urity and quality. until 6:2° | Tt requires a great many steps to travel from cellar to attic, from back yard to front door, but the housekeeper can save “miles of steps” If she'll learn to work tn large circles. In making the beds, for tn stance, straighten one side of the bed, and before going Q.—Four yeare ago, when | wai not yet 16, | | moatly to my lamentabi the Ignorance which has ruined eo | many young girls. When my ehlid | was born, my mother endeavored to have me give it up, and ae she put It, “start over again.” Wheth- er rightly or wrongly, | refused to| rt with my baby. Even under |auch circumstances, motherhood to |me seemed holy. So | have kept my [ittle girl, [have never Cienernbied, always giv: 0 | made it p | have some good and true friends, who do not consider me [blackened for fife, and parents have, knowing my story, trusted the teacher of thelr children. | My road has not been all sunshine, either, and there are those who ge know | am the happy mother of chlid who adores me. The child’ father, my ringless hand, | do not! | remember when | look Into the In- |nocent eyes of my baby, and | would not exchai one soft little curt of hers for all the coronets of the world, | cannot see where any stigma can be attached to my baby’s name. For her emall sake | have held my head erect and |kept my soul white, and if | had | not kept her, my heart should have | broken In my sham Now will you tell me, do you, or |do you not, consider that an un- mot! hould knowl. edge and rear her Illegitimate | chit It le a question that must |eome before you often in the noble | work you are doing, and | would |like to know If you think | have |done right or wrong, not for my. self alone, but for my child? MAGDALENE. A.—As I read your letter, a m gathers before my eyes and a host of fairfaced gt with tearful glances, form within the haze. The faces are those of girls who obeyed 4 natural {mpulse and were to be © mothers, Blue eyes, gray hazel eyes, brown eyes, gaze into mine with pleading perplexity, all asking the same question “What shall I do with my babe? | You are right? This question has |taced me many times since I have taken up this work, But you are the first girl I know of who bas followed my advice, and your letter |comes as a nort of reansurance. | To my mind, one of the most tragic scenes ever enacted on the great stage of life was when | wit | nessed a child-mother legaily hand |her own fesh and blood over to « strange woman. They were both |handsome. The foster mother | rich, in dollars, with everything money can buy to welcome a Iit- Ue visitor into her home; but | chitdtess The child-mother poor, | Dut possessed of riches that money }eannot buy. There they stood! | One with her jeweled arma out treteched, the other snuggling her hild to her breast for th time. Thetr eyes met, for one In nt. In the eyes of one gleamed unsuppressible joy; in the other burned hate softened by sorrow Quickly the child-mother laid her |prectous burden into the white |outstretched arms and ran from | the room. When a girl comes to me tn such {a plight I have always endeavore¢ |to show her @ way to keep the lit |tle pink and white bundle of hu- manity which she is partly respon- | atble for. Girls, stand by your mis- take, and, though your footsteps grow weary, do not falter, for per severance conquers ali things. Our st glory ts not in never fall- Fire Destroys dison Factor The disastrous fire of last even- ing has crippled the Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph Factory. This means a great shortage of Diamond Disc Phonographs. We have a very large and complete stock of ma- chines and records on hand, but the evident shortage will make quick buying almost a Select your necessity. Christmas Phono- graph TODAY while the selection is large. We will hold it and deliver it Christmas eve, if you desire. We’re open nights for your con- venience. Our Parlors are on the Ground Floor. Third, Between Pike and Pine. VICTOR, EDISON AND COLUMBIA DEALERS. | have a larger than ordinary stock | STAR—THURSDAY, DEC. 10, 1914. PAGE 5. around to the other side, look about and nee if there are not | some clothes or books or pil lows to be picked up and put in the clonet or on the dresser on the other aide of the bed | As you move across the room | place each article gathered up In ft» proper place. } tn, | ft but tn rising every time we sajna | | read the letter | In which she | |that married women should not) work. | am @ married woman and| | wert #0 let me tell my side of the Dear Mise G from “Anxlou " ‘ been married three years and have worked ever since | wa married and for several years be- fore. Of course, when | married | thought | would have to work only getting | worse each year, and the past year 1d hae had less work than lo 18 a sober and industrious boy | and le very good at his tine of bus! ness, which le one of the better me chanical trades. He gete 25 cents an hour a ight hours |day, and we are thankful for that email wi But let me tell you, “Anxious,” my salary comes in pret |ty handy. We live very plainly, but |we do not get much saved In a| month. By the time we have paid) the rent ital billie, euch as light, (which In our case Ip a necessity), $100 does not go very far, and, if | jhad to live on the $40 or $504 month my husband makes, | be-| Hleve | should have to give up en- | ee do not be too hasty In con- demning the married girte who work until you have looked into each par: | tleular case thoroughly. | long for the day and hope It Is near when my | hueband will receive the wa j and future family. A law prohibiting married women from working would work a terrible | hardehip in my case, It would mean| that | would have to get @ divorce| or live In want. ! TWENTY-THREE. quandary. The oth- 1d a letter from my mother, saying to come and make my home with her. My folks are well off now, and | know they would give me a good home, But when | wi compelie feave home make my own living, as they sald! they could no feed and| clothe me. t home | came to the coast, found work, and stayed in one place three years, and In another two years. Like most of other girls, | found a nice man friend and we were marri My husbend |e almost tw! age and | am not yet 25. We h Goodyear Co. Has Pre-inventory Sale ‘The Gootyear Raincoat Co. tn! now holding tts Pre-inventory #1 This sale ts an annual feature with | this large house, in order to reduce {ta stocks to the | it porsible level before taking inventory, the first of the year. This time they are offering even bigger bargains than usual, on account of the fact that this has-been a very backward | season, and for that reason they | to dispose of before inventory. More complete details of their bar-| gain offerings will be found in their ad, which is on page 7 in today’s Star. YOUR OLD FURS Can be remade into beautiful etkptoces, Muffs and Fur Tur- ans. Model Millinery Co. bth Fleer, Second, at Pike re ys Bask Bidg. GOLD-FILLED SPECTACLES) And Byegiasoe, Fitted With Spheriea! Lonece, 98.00, Rsamination Free. BINYON OFTICAL 1116 First Ave. Customers bring shoes here from every part of the city, be- cause our work Is different. it's a bit better, REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP First and Seneca. Main 4196. One lot of Fancy Calendars and Beautiful Pictures. Also some Statur For sale cheap. DEDEDE IID HERONS Quickest, Surest Cough 5 Remedy Is Home- j Made Enally Prepared ina Few Minutes, $ Cheap, But Unequated FBG FO DDDOD Some people are constantly annoyed from one year's end to the other with « sistent bronchial cough, which ts ly unnecessary, Here Is a home a remedy that xete right at the 4 will make you wonder what bec ot it Get 2% oune Pinex (60 cents’ worth) t, pour Inte a pint bottle ttle with plain granulated Mtart taking ft at once. rely you will notien the pear alto that you and fill the auger syrup. le painful cough with remarkable rapidity, Ordinary coughs are conquered by it In 24 hours or less, | Nothing. better for bronchitis, winter jeoughs and bronchial ssthma. Pinex and 6 Syrup mixture a full pi yh to lant @ fam Jong tlne—at m coat of only 64 Keepe perfectiy and tan red, yver for ite eaae, certainty and in overcoming bad coughs, | husband, but they cannot buy love ‘Woman Stops Husband =| SAVE MILES OF STEPS, MRS. HOUSEWIFE, BY PLANNING YOUR WORK tematically and with fore if dn, thought, you will save hundreds of steps, your work will demand so little thought that you bi find your mind free to other things, to think your shopping, about meeting or somethin. frees you from the worry keeping houre Before leaving the room gather up the things that may belong in the room nearest the bedroom, take them there and put them in thelr proper place, #o that you will not have to handle thone articles again If you work tn this way, ays Then finish making the bed. x ‘elu of CYNTHIA GREY’S LETTERS AND ANSWERS been married over two y P mother wants to part he Is too old for m Grey, he Is good to me. | have ev erything a girl could wish for. Do| you think my mother Is doing right to Influence me to leave my husband and marry « rich man?| We are pi pie, but my hue | band works every day and we en- Joy our little home. Give me your best advice and | will follow it ANNA. A.—Ordinartly, parents would do well to keep their noses out of | Proposition? their married children's business.| Work or employment of any! Your parenta might buy you a rich|kind le eo extremely hard to ob- |tain at the present time, and, al- |though | am capable’ of doing oth- ler things besides this, | am willing more could any girl wish for? to work at this until something bet- The “almighty dollar’ proves|ter turns up. | have an idea It quite « temptation to some of us|would save some people quite an at times, but cold gold ts a poor | expen | know @ number who substit for warm love. When | throw away a pair of stockings on!| your is botled down, it is| account of one little hole in ti purely that of gold versus love. In| toe, which they hate to take the your love of gold greater than that|time to mend, and some of them) lof husband and home? You must| don’t even know how to darn at | decide, all, It seems to me as If It would | save them all the way from 25| vents to whatever price the hose) ————— | happens to cost them to have them | mended, and do you think 5 cents! a pair would be reasonable, and| 10 cents for the ones that require more work? | want to be honest) fand reasonable and not overcharge An Ohio Wife Broke Her Husband any one. ANXIOUS. | of the Tobacco Habit With a | 4—yYour plan sounds good, and Recipe She Gave Secretly lit will cost nothing to try it out.| I know there are a number of bus! Ghe Tolle What Ghe Used ness women who could economize | in this way, and your prices are very reasonable. EGYPT'S KHEDIVE IS | YOUNGEST WAR KING My, made In Sweden. tell me aya how to polish and ke them Miss |shine. | try many things, but they |turn black In one day. &. Ww. A.—Clean thoroughly with ox alle actd, and then keep bright with Bon Amt or other good polish. | Bhe but, Q.—1 am contemplating an idea by which to make @ livelihood and |would Ilke your opinion. Do you| [think It would be « sensible Idea to take In stockings to mend, and do you think It would be a paying for you. If you have a good hus- band and a happy home, what Q.—1 have many copper utensils From Using Tobacco A well-known Ohio woman, whose husband has been a heavy | user of tobacco for years, broke him of the habit by the use of a/ simple home recipe that she gave secretly, She very gladly told| what she used, but requested that | her name should not be made pub- Iie, as her husband does not know why he quit using tobacco. She sald: “The recipe is inexpensive and can be obtained from any drug store, and given secretly or with the patient's knowledge. To 2 o#. of water add 20 grains of muriate of ammonia, a smal! box of Variex Compound, and 10 grains of pepsin. Give a teaspoonful three times a time, in the food or to the coffee, tea or milk. This rect- pe is perfectly harmless and has no color, taste or smell, and will be found effective for the tobacco habit fn any form,”-—Adv. Abbas IL, the khedive of Exypt, who has joined the Turks agai the allies, is one of the youngest rulers engaged in the “great wa! Although he has ruled in Egypt for 22 years he is now only 40 years old. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Linings for clothes baskets in- sure the clothes being Rept clean. These Mnings are of unbleached | muslin, Just the shape of the bas-| DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. Every Nervous Woman in Seattle Should Read This A most remarkable testimonial to our painless methods: “Gentlemen: After just recover. ing from a epell of sickness, | core, | I had eight teeth to be pulled, and,| being in a nervous condition, dread. | ed it very much—tn fact, from all previous experience I thought that | painless extracting was impossible. | After reading many of your testi-| monials, } concluded I would try | Heoomd Ave. and Pike st To Cure « Col a Coid in On in One Day Take Loxative ROVE'S ~; McDougall - fouthwick Ce Store A the Orristmas Spirit Y K. B. GAGE, Receiver Store Open 9 a. m. to 6p. me Pyralin Ivory Toilet Sets At Very Special Prices These most popular Holiday gifts have base! repriced in such a way as to bring them in easy reach of all. Ivory Ivory Ivory Mirror, Brush, Comb, regular regular $3.50 regular 50c. Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory § Mirror, Brush, regular $2.50.. regular $2.50, Comb, regular 50c, File, regular 35c........ Powder Box, regular ae 50.. Salve Jar, regular 50c. Mirror, regular $3.50... 3rush, regular $3.00... Comb, regular 75c, File, regular 35c. Cuticle Knife, regular ‘Se.. Button Hook, regular 35¢ Tray, regular 60c Mirror, regular $4.50... Brush, regular $3.75... Comb, regular 75c.. File, regular 35¢. Button Hook, regular 35c. Cuticle Knife, regular 35¢ Tray, regular 60c.. Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory ivory Ivory Ivory ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory Ivory 0608s First Floor, 1,000 Men’s Ties, 3 for $1.00 Reduced from 50c, 75¢ and $1.00 35¢ This reduction sale offers an excellent assortment of Holiday Neckwear at a very low price. You will find here scores of attractive, handsome patterns in big open- end shapes. The number of ties which were reduced from $1.00 is less than those which formerly sold at 50c and 75c. Any purchase of three of these ties will be put up in a handsome holiday box ready for gift giving. 80 Bath Robes at $2.95 Regular $4.00 We are continuing this sale of these excellent Robes, which came in on Wednesday. The patterns offered are handsome ones, in such shadings as gray, brown, navy and maroon. Well tailored, roomy, comfortable gar ments. A great value at $2.95. $10.00 Auto Rugs $6.95 —Just Inside the Pike St. Entrance = yma, “In the Land ey the Head Hunt Daily Healthogram The very first need of the body is good food. Not ex- pensive food, but nutritious, wholesome food. Food is the fuel which keeps the body warm; It Is the source of the body's heat, and the maintenance of bod- lly heat at a uniform tem- noon and evening at the Moore this | week, and the engagement will not — close until Tuesday night of net week. Mr. Rogers, who ts the tor of the Red Front Clothing has bought the entire stock of Lindstrom's high-grade Hats, Caps, Clothing, Shoes and | furnishings, and will place them. Food renews the waste caused by constant demande made upon the body, and It supplies the working power, a. m. at his large clothing estab- lishment, at 1510 First Ave. ad- Joining the new Liberty theatre, standard merchandise. For further particulars, see in — tomorrow's Star the advertisement of the Red Front Clothing Co. re Brome, beta Jalan seamen fale ny epre ‘ignature le on each box. your method, which I highly reo- ket, and tied into place with tapes. ommend to all thore having tooth| ajways empty out any water left! troubl I honestly can say You hefore filling the kettle. Very fre- aid not hurt a bit. quently the fiat taste of ten is MRS. W. A. LEMKE, caused by using water that already “1319 56th Ave, N. E,, City.” | has been bolled. | You ¢an’t imagine any one being | more nervous than right after get-| ting out of the hospital, can you? ; ‘ame we we Hl ed |{oothy with nbmolutely no iheonvem | ® fork and dash it quickly into the fence to her, We can do the same | Ylling water and out again for you. Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, MGR, 1405 Third Ave. N. W. Corner Third and Union. Big Deal Consummated Busin: at 1312 First Ave. to H. M. Rogers. It 1s with regret that the large number of friends of H. Lindstrom, A prominent Seattle clothier and hatter, who for the past eight years has been located in the Ar- cade building, will learn that al p large business deal has just been | consummated and that he has sold his entire business establishment to H. M. Rogers of this city. Mr, Rogers, who is the pro prietor of the Red Front Clothing Co, when interviewed today, re. garding his purchase, said: “High- grade merchandise at 40 cents on the dollar was too tempting a price even in these hard times, so the! J deal was put through, and I have) moved the entire stock to my large clothing establishment at 510 First ave., adjoining the new Lib erty theatre, opposite the Public market. “Our store will be closed until Saturday while we mark down this stock for fast selling. Men's Hats, Clothing, Shoes and Furnishings will be sold both wholesale and re- tall at prices lower than ever be- fore offered for standard mer- chandise.” The stock will be offered for sale Saturday morning at 10 a. m. to ecgnomical buyers who want to save—to make every dollar do for three or four—tt will be your op- portunity Saturda: For further When frying doughnuts, tt is « | splendid scheme to have a dish of To save time when cooking, mix) pepper and salt (proportioned to taste) and keep on hand in a shaker for seasoning vegetables. | If silver is to be stored away for! some time, pack ft with dry flour, | and {t will remain untarnished. WAR HAS HIT SEATTLE mov-| ing picture theatres inthe “war tax” charged in accordance with their seating capacity. Here's the way Seating capacity up to seating capacity up to! seating capacity up to seating capacity over] | Thousands | of i Youngsters. foes with thie ‘The Pinex Go, #t. Wayne, Ind. particulars see the advertisement of the Red Front Clothing Co, in tomorrow's Star, Leadiug urvvcere all Over Pacific Coast Sell It, MRS. M. A. PORTER SEATTLE Careful Screening of Coke Necessary To Good Results HE superiority of Coke over other forms of hard fuel is well known to all who have used it for any length of time. Its clean- liness, efficiency and economy are self-evident. To get the best results from the use of Coke, however, it is necessary that it be carefully screened to the proper size for the use intended. Each particle in the separate grades must be of practically the same size. ' This character of Coke is being produced at our Lake Union Station, where the equipment for crushing and screening is of the most efficient and type. For the Coke is screened to three sizes, designated Lump, Nut and Pea. domestic different modern use, Oven Coke is sold at $6.00 per ton at the yards, plus the usual charge for delivery and carrying. Bench Coke, unscreened, is sold at $5.50 per ton at the yards. Don't neglect this,chance to arrange for your winter’s supply of splendid hard fuel. SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY PHONE: MAIN 6767. d ers,” is being shown every after i aa ” on sale Saturday morning at 10 | This fine stock will be sold both ” | wholesale and retail at prices low- — er than ever before offered for