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STAR—TUESDAY, 1918 Woman’s Year Her Conscience and Affections Combined in Service and Sacri- fice—Economic Privileges Are Realized SATISFACTORY TERMS ALWAYS THE ROTE-HANKINCO. OTTO F. KEGEL, President BY WINONA WILCOX Your “Lm glad for once that I'm a| Volunteers studying Red Croas woman We women are not in the | Methods, and millions of modest en war i housewives bent on saving © speaker was a beauty and sho | 0°" tg Mi gig Mee a orivate in th great home guard, but children would | s each assuming her sha n conspicuous all her Ufo 98 |e hurdena without complaint Sar fF shane her ortion of |man, had not the war come alc srood work well done to reveal her selfishness and shal. | FP work wall Hone ud 1918 the greatent 1 year ago she belonged | & 5 ae ladies Jew she dese cout | tent to trust her Ife to ch at aul The beay world tant paying let things happen to her. the least attention to her petty per. wonal v ith She moves, "Bh Sed he plan—but it Is still man's pla She and her kind |p = out of touch with the She stops buying beef on Tuce-| 1918 days at the nment suggeRtion with woman not while food profiteers are deaf to nment pleading and warn’ offers thousands of unnamed no she eh with w of was ly ory country fine now, Acer NAN OF MUSIC MOUNTAIN From the story; filmed tn the Sierra Nevadas; starring WALLACE are altogether | time, for the| WOMAN'S | only year YEAR, much in the war, but in every other | # human activity | She knits millions of socks for The economical privileges and | diere—while greed balks the duties which feminists have sought | ton and distribution af much-need: for thetr sex for years ha army supplies. | to them trary to all prophecies of what Upping Id do with greater free an a does not array great we ed with swirl of world events. It is a truly a atic revolu with equal honors for equal en- | are, women who show others how to do big/ thing®—the humorous Dr, Shaw, ked by the women of the voting tates; Mra. W. Ko Vanderbilt in the vanguard of the rich who fin: wonderful system of war relief; Mra. George T. Guernsey, regent of the| DA an organization devoted to Many Unusual Values—Many Opportunities to Save on Fine Furniture in the J ANUARY \F urnitureSale Woman's year finds her meeting Continuing the January Furniture Sale with assortments of Furniture at greatly the mont ute needs of the world's | reduced prices. atriotiam, ned ne Cleve ‘ex ‘Tar. | Crucial hour with her conscience and! 2 A 4 “ ey Ube comenginin bos Maeae In the preparation of this sale we kept in mind the many people who make bell, who can explain home econom.| her affections combined in service | Pony ids - A r their homes expressive of their own individuality—-who take great pride and enjoy- LETTERS | Unmarried § <=: ee A the tariff clear to a congress) The woman who f ment in the ownership of furniture of lasting quality. We invite the closest comparisons, quality for quality, and price for price, of tinneds the “ia not in the war” somehow might mission: eon Gaaen re Top Wil 1 [Aaron for every Mater, the as well not be » living | at all in 1918. | n t » 1 ies Over There ————|]] the Furniture in this sale with other furniture. | pera a RE r The Savings Are From coves ‘ Cris ae 4 bes 20% to 50% Reusennnnant A VoIce FROM THE PAST { 2 eo Dear Mins Grey I am worried and means with Alice for get | The opportunities to save during this sale are numerous and varied. TRY TO INTEREST HIM When I got home, after disc cussing because my husband is so indifferent ber me. I expect a little to be ting Harvey out of his ape, and|added to our family soon, but my} i ling him where he would have| husband, tho he earna n good malary, | Furniture for the living-room, dining-room, bedroom, hall, library or den are in- “1 care until the end, I found that| gives me no money for the 1 eluded at special January reductions. very come | inan Bach woman ts | into } n special aphere matter of cou: no that a is being accomplish: ripple on the | ce woman w dom, # against n much decides almont unanimously Jevotedly for man She is bent on completing his| work, now as always, since the be ginning of time, “As unto the bow the cord is, So unto the man is woman; she bends him, she obeys him, plution scarcely a us DOROTHY she me labor deaver, Leaders the nee & fon that she | ALLACE URLITZER First at Pike—Contino- ous Il to 1l—Admis- sion 20e—Children 10c. 6 reels—first run—a comedy from the play “Molly and I." Foarth, Pike & Union —Continvous 11 te it —Matinees Ie; even- ings 15e—Children 10c, one OOR. FIRST AVE. and PIKE ST. Phone Main 4965 “IF [HURT YOU, DON’T PAY ME.” ‘This is my message of deliverance to you from the fear that accom- panies Dental operations. 1 EXTRACT, FILL, CROWN and TREAT Teeth absolutely without pain in all cases but acute abscessed conditions. Lowest prices tn your city high-class guaranteed for STERLING DENTISTRY |: Thorouginess our methods in accorded every cou: tesy consistent with sound bust- Bess judgment. 4% Paid om Savings Accounts ‘Accounts raalis* to Check Are Cordially Invited. Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST. De 4. 1m miNYOR Free Examination BEST} 2.50 GLasses i On Earth are one of the few optica) stores in th Horthwent that Foally lenses from start to finish We are the only one in SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVENUE amination free, b: duate op- fometrist. Glasses not prescribed Unies , <a lutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO.| | powder. BY CYNTHIA GREY Some of us have been camoufiag- at ing a bit on our wheatlems day, tenting ourselves with one wheath meal, or proudly serving whe wheat bread or bread tn which th con wheat allowance is reduced or partly substituted. This will not must not dodge the issue, There has been a food deal of protest that it is almort impossible to find any bread except pure rye or straight corn bread that does not demand at least a little wheat flour admixture, and that surely the food administration would have no objection to 1 or 2 cupfuls of flour. But it does, just that. Vheatless ix wheatless just as pips is and some inquiring correspond ents of the food administration re-| ceived this uncompromising defint-| tion of a wheatleas day: “A wh lens day is 24 hours of absolute stinence from use of wheat flour in any form or quantity.” And there ef Of cc there is not ing obligatory about living up to the letter of the food conserver’s law but nelther is there any doubt about the letter. STEAMED CORN SPOON BREAD One cupful cornmeal, 1 cupful mo lasses, 2 cupfuls sweet milk 2 teaspoonfuls baking powder. the corn meal. Beat the eggs until light and_ then beat the milk into them. Ad4 the molasses and baking blending thoroly. If me lasses is not practical, % cupfal of sugar may be substituted. Tie mix ture in a pudding bag and steam ter three hour > in a very hot dish with a 1 sauce or hard sauce. This dish is sometimes called spoon bread and is used as a pudding RICK WAFFLE One cupful botled rice, milk cea, 2 cupfuls rice teaspoonfuls bak powder, 1 TOMMY MAKES UP | do—we 1% pints of flour BY J. W. PREGLER United Preas Correspondent WITH THE AMERICAN DITIONARY ARMY re Mail.)—Here the writter perpetrated by a Brit ha EXPE France, D ya real song of Sa oned h Tommy. It th the the They the F They enre from They march, they are etime cannot cannot | shoot | What blinkin’ use are the ut when they get to I The kaiser -he will veh! He Vot a bi Are 5,000 SHIPBUILDERS WORK IN NEW PLANT VANCOUVER, Wash., The G. M. Standifer inaction poration’s big steel shipyards are to be built here, it is announced to- day. In order to fulfill its contract r Construction of 10 steel ships, of n called by the rt of Van ouver to vote on bonding to buy the S0-acre # WHEATLESS DAY | DAY WITHOUT EATING WHEAT | Well-greased trons. | flour (new), SONG OF SAMMIES || 1116 FINST AVENUE \firm. At least and lease it to the 6,000 men will ve] Hour Seneca St. Phone Main 1880 | e1apioyed. I did not have five thousand dollars in the bank. My last dividends from the book con n had evidently net been paid into my account. In fact, I only then rememberrd that, altho I had reoelved the formal notice that they were to be paid at a certain date, I had not received the check. I called up the bookkeeper and asked hitn to send me a check immediately. In a few minutes Dick called up and sald: “Margie, IM bring home your div. idends when I come, and I also want Il and add to it the whites of the|to talk to you about a splendid in- aten stiff. Add rice flour to| veatment of them.” thin batter and bake in| I was bookkeeper have about %@ divi any more than jhe would have done had I been a pure buckwheat | stockholder unknown to Dick? 1% pinta milk or water,} {[ do not ask Dick how he invests % cake compressed yeast, % tea-|hin money, and I don't want him to spoonful malt. Place milk or water in|be anxious about my investments. earthen veasel and slowly stir in th ot « I'd be glad to tell him flour and salt. Heat until smooth|o¢ my own accord, but I don't want and when there In a stiff batter, add/to dé tt until I am good and ready. the yeast dissolved in % cupful warm} In the present instance, I know water, Heat until smooth and set to|that Dick will be very curious to rise overnight. In the morning add|;now what I want with | %@ teaspoonful baking soda and bake| «and dollars, and furious when I on greased griddle don’t tell him. But, you see, little i (3 |book, I cannot give away Alice's se leret, can 1? this afternoon. Alice is right—the boy in dying. I could not help feek for him. Waverley, T want you to jknow that Alice is the best woman Jin the world, altogether too food for worthless me," he said, “and I want |you to know that I am very, very glad that she has found peace and happiness with a good man. I don't want to make her the slightest trou: ble; in fact, I would never have let her know I was in town if I had not been drinking one night. After you | have had a cocktail or two, things | look very different. In my drink befuddied the thought that I must see Alice and tell her my troubles, I will nev- er forgive mynelf that I went to her | home “Fortunately, when T arrived she was alone, and before I had come to f I had blurted out all my dis graceful past IT had lost her. Now that I have made her perfectly I do not know what to do. a clean breast of it to my k to me that 4 to look upon my again ad he had alw | been he He knows better than | that, for he knows he swore to a lie I know | going to die Jin prison onate malt, 1 tableepoonful butter. "rena the boiled rice thru a sieve, beat the yolks of 2 light and add to rice and next powder and milk. Why should consulted Dick furious WHEAT CAKES— Three cupfuls DOUBLE VISION G The two Sights, WEGNER OPTICAL CO. DR. R. B. WEGNER, MGR. 2RLUMON Syezt Single Lens with ain: ne never ¥ Mrs. ¥ that T am but f don't want to die If 1 could get a letter to jmother, she would help me, but I |have Just found out that mother ts | erley iM and father will not let me come home and her.” ‘The man was shaking with a nerv chill, 1 told him that would me his father's addres: would sec I could do In the meantime money to settle with the bank take you to a Southern resort.” “I can pay Mrs. maid “In six » I'll be 25, and my grandmot me $250,000 to be gt to me when I am 25, and I'm to give every penny of it to Alice, if I can, My father would not even lend me $5,000 when he this money “Well, I'll # money tomorrow, promise me that in} stances will you ¢ first, | known to Alice again A new light came into his fever- | brilliant eyes, and I hastened to add doesnot care for you a dream long past. or husband devotedly and her ver made h trouble don’t you think? Surely she all the content she can pos: have in the future, and you, joople in th one to sar it.” will not, Mra. Waverley—I will ous and you he eagerly but under you must no cireum ake yourself E. N. Furman builds business personalit ie udents from the why they are in de- ean Shorthand Bookkeeping Advanced Grammar Northwestern Shorthand Reporting School | Arcade Bidz. wibly all the} five thou-| I went to nee Harvey | brain there came to me| if he| a1 I'll lend you the} months | knows ‘I'll have that you have the of | world, should not be | outfit or my personal needs, He often stays away for days and leaves | me alone. I have no relatives or friends here, no ask you what I can do to make him realizo my needs ANON, Your husband tacks some of the finer appreciations of life which most men possess, ‘This may be the result of his train- ing or environment. Make an effort to appeal to his pride in | becoming the head of a family nd to the love which he will for his child. Get a few of the many good books on the sub- ject of parenthood and try to interest him in them. Make an estimate of the sum you will | need for the little garmenta and | show ft to him. Really you are | entitled to the utmort consider. ation at this time, and it should be your husband's chief desire to treat you affectionately and supply your needs, If there is ever a time when a man should show his considera. tion and his kindliness and his | love, it should be wnen the stork | is hovering near the doorway. & matter-of-fact way. Any man who fs a REAL man proves himself such then. It is also a time when the wife should do her utmost, in | spite of ill-health and nervous | ness, perhaps, to keep an optim istic outlook, and do her best to keep her mental equilibrium So if your husband will not measure up to the standard, you must, for your child's sake, en- deavor to meet the situation in & matter-of-fact. ANKS FOR PACKAGE Dear Miss Grey: It gives me great knowledge with sincere Christmas package of the| Seattle branch of the Red Cross | © thin means of extendi might an the Red Cross know that the above mous verdict of every Sammy in this fort. A SOLDIER FROM FT. WORDEN CANDY REC Dear Miss Grey: My brother is in the and I try to send him a box of candy once every two | My trouble in that I run out of recipes, Can you give me any m gestions? CECIL Ritter sweets form an attract ive variety of candies. They may by dipping sweet fruits in bitter chocolate, Use for this pur dates, citron, candied | orange peel or crystallized fruit Melt unsweetened chocolate in a double boiler, Keep the late just vent solidifying fork, drop pieces of fruit in chocolate that each piece ompletely ¢ 1, then re. to waxed p harden. nervice, weeks, enough to pre. With a silver warm I have a lease on but now I have army. Can you} become of my} A. A. M. recent st |some state been drafted in Il me what lease? According to a | ment made by the state Innd | commissioner, es and ¢ | tracts on state 1 held by men who have either enlisted or been drafted will be protected to the _full extent of the law will | not “he said earnestly, leave town tonight.” | t is not necessary for you to be so precipitate as that,” I said. “I'll » here with the money tomorrow. | Good night.” | i} As I left the rather sordid board ing house I ran into Pat What was he doing book? “and I'l | there, little | fl (To be continued) | SALE OF RUGS Making Room for the New Spring Stock All broken lines, discontinued patterns and lines that we will not carry this Spring, make up the largest rt of the Rugs offered in this sale. Wiltons, Hartford Saxonys, Velvets and Brussels in the various grades, are in- cluded. Finest Royal Wilton Rugs, size 9x12; regular $89.00. Sale $54.00 | price .. (One Rug only) Finest ay ‘al Wilton Rugs, size 6x9; regu- lar price $55.00. Sale .. $43. 50 price .. (Nine Rugs only) Wilton Rugs, size 9x12; Cerenaarcre sess: Ss Oa (Three “Rugs only) Hartford Saxony Rugs, regular sae Sale price . Finest Royal regular $89.00. price size 8-3x10-6; $54.50 We ive “Rugs ‘only) Finest Royal Wiltons, size 9x12; regular | $89.00. Petit eee $73. 50 price .. (Six Rugs only) Hartford Saxony Rugs, size 6x9; regular price $53.00. Sale $39 50 bays ° . (Six Rugs only) size 8-3x10-6; $50.00 (Two Rugs only) Fine Royal Wilton Rugs, regular $82.50. Sale price Lakewood Wilton anes, size 9x12; regu- lar price $43. 50 fee ‘i (Four Rugs ‘only) Finest Ro regular price ee Rugs, size 8-3x10-6; D9 5, Lakewood Wilton Rugs, size 9x12; regu- lar price $62.50. Sale $49.50 | price * only) (Seven Rug: (Four Rugs only) | | | Lakewood Wilton regular $52.50. price size 8-3x10-6; $67.50, only) size 8-3x10-6; $37.50 Rugs only) ‘.... $43.50 Rugs, regular value $82.50, for ......csseccccsecscecess PBATS Rugs, regular value $35.00, for reer rere yk) regular value $40.00, for $29.75 regular value $42.50, for $34.50 Axminster Rugs, regular value $37.50, $26.75 8-8x10-6 Axminster Rugs, regular value $39.50, for ..........22.22+022+- $29.75 8-8x10-6 Axminster Rugs, regular value $$42.50, for ....... $34.50 9x12 Velvet Rugs, regular value $37.50, for . ithe $27.75 9x12 Worsted Wilton Rugs, regular value $79.50, for . : seeeeeees $67.50 8-3x10-6 Worsted Wilton Rugs, regular value $73.50, for ...........-..-. $62.50 Rugs, Sale Finest Royal Wilton Rugs, regular $82.50. Sale price RG (Si (Bight Rugs’ 8-Bx10-6; akewood Wilton Rugs, size 8 regular $57.50. Sale price... (Seven Rugs only) 9x12 Axminster x12 Axminster Axminster 2 Axminster 8-3x10-6 Grote-RanKin——PIHE AT FIFTH Grote-Rankin |