The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 17, 1919, Page 8

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hould Man to Maid cog Miss Grey: Please proper for a man to do . in male attire? Well, here's a new one. ~ Now will someone plaase Is a man doffing his hat to the ¢ | Pte, oo || “Fine athers Make Fine Gov e—_————_——_ —_—_ Doff Hat in Overalls? inform me thru your column | ff his hat or cap to a woman TOM L, D. | answer? | lothes or the woman? | vns | Is she any less the woman in khaki shirt and trousers | in flowing silk dress and diamond tiara? | Answers to this query will be published. } Readers, please help me settle this new and knotty point i - (Hk SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1919. 10 yo A STRANGE TRICK OF F, Te SAVES ME FROM SE) | DESTRUCTION | —— a | jon in the glass held long time, Finally the | 4 closing door brought me jout of it. What if Certeis had come | home unexpectedly? Seeing me—as | 1 saw myself in the mirror—there | was no question of what would hap- pen! Onee upon a time, Certels had | appeared suddenly and had saved |my life. That wae in the episode of | the U-boat. I stood an motionless as | a statue and looked not unlike one |at the wound of the closing door, | hoping—dreading to catch a glimpse | of Certeis over my shoulder. Hut—nothing happened. A ser | vant must have slammed the door. explosion shook the air and destroy ed the connection. But that was not important. Passeraby would race to call the fire department Not for months had | been so calm, #0 sure of myself, It was as if the goddess of the pines had heard my prayer for guidance and had saved my life and had gent me back to face whate hard future stretched before m and, best of all—had made me un afraid! (To Bo Continued) Mass Rally for ‘ Girls Who Work Tuesday Night In order to assist in working out " |ionged for a real recipe for the fa-| #04 credit with a bank " - It In a matter of common knowl | Recipes From ledge that the more prosperous and | Sy Teles |thrifty, business men, professtonal | | China’s Bowl men, and high-ealaried workers con »=—— ~———--- 4 | duct thelr business affairs thru | 4 : | banks, and use charge accounts at | BY HIDDY BYE stores and shops, phying all bills by | Every man and woman who ever | check dined at a Chi In other words, they tablinh a | pd with | their local merchants and do not mous cep auny “pay cash” for every purchase or Here's the real thing, contributed | expenne. by a famous native Chinese cobk to| Contrary to the popular notion, an American friend, The ingredients, | the reputation for “paying cash” in auch an are not eastly obtainable in| not so valuable to ily or indi- any food shop, can be purchased at| vidual as is the possession of unlim any Chinese or Japanese importing | ited and unquestioned credit ren and at most Chinese restau-! pven several years of cash pay toes ie, gh from importing | ments for goods does not always | shops in the large cities. serve to establish good credit with a| yee restaurant has) in keeping cash and change om hand. They do away with the for the personal handling and care - of the money exchanged for goods, 4. To the argument that charge accounts encourage extravaganee may be returned the statement that | persons who are to be trusted with handling cash are equally to be thusted with checks, and that if articles are actually needed they must be purchased, whether paid for in cash or in checks. If not -If they are a real extravagance— the time required to fill out a check, and the figuring of the deduction from the total account often serves am that best “second thought” which will prevent the extravagance. Back-to-Farm “after the war” etiquet. their own reconstruction problems,| To make chop suey, cut 1%| merchant. On the contrary, it some- | and to help in the extension of the | pounds of the white meat of a chick | times rouses his suspicion that cash war service spirit, all emptoyed girls) en into small pieces, and brown in a| ix paid because the customer's credit in the city are urged to attend 4) small frying pan with two table-|is not good--and may prevent the! masa rally to be held in the Hroad:| spoonfuls of the chicken fat. Toss | extension of credit in the customer's | way high school auditorium, Tue* | and stir constantly, so it doen not | people of the household were all jin a hurry that day, One of their | number was to be married, and I [had let all of them go to the wed | ding, explaining to the protesting |buuer that 1 wae absolutely un: Movement to Be Continued The “back to-the-farm” on & peace basis will be presented Who has some baby they will be willing to share with & mother, very much in | need of them? Anyone who can elot Mies Grey: May I say a few to “Daughter of Eve" thru ‘column? “Daughter of Eve.” where “you born, and under what flag you grow to womanhood? Sec A, what do you mean by the “iron = Moppressed, starved and mal Certainly, any one knows given by Webster, but applied to the AMERICAN such words and phrases Ro Meaning whatever. & daughter of the middle the wife of one of Uncle ‘poldiers in France. Since my has been in the army | fe worked for a weekly wage, the ie f a F EF = bo 34 i ? LP ‘i 13 i F he g ai: i i i i s i UI if; HF ff eEEY il it Eh Hj 32 i Hi H help her, kindly leave the bundle at the Associated Charities, Cen- tral building, Third ave., near | Columbia st. CYNTHIA ( ———— . nies | Seventeen-Year-Old | Deplores Chaperong Dear Miss Grey [be #0 good as to tell me how old }you think a qirl should be in order | to go out with bey friends unchap Jeroned? I am nearly 18, but am not permitted to go out unchaperon: ed. Don't you think that is wrong? } MILDRED. / The custom you deplore ts | observed quite strictly in polite | soctety, and to me, it seems a wise one. The friends you lose now because of it, you will have no need for in later life. They are not even entitied to the ap pellation “friend,” they are mere passing acquaintances, A girl under 18 years of age i too young to choose her friends without guidance. By the time you are 24 you will realize this and appreciate your parente’ in terest in your welfare, as you cannot possibly appreciate it now. (Copyright, 1919, NDER the great pile of brush, deep in the Green Forest, Peter Rabbit sat without moving for the | | [longest time. Somewhere under that Peter sat there waiting for something to hap pen, and nothing did. ‘Waa less interested in Mr. Hooty than in Buster Bear. he feit perfectly safe from Mra. Hooty as long as he under that great pile of But he didn't feel pérfectly Buster Bear. For a long expected any minute to hear of Buster hunting for him. were no sounds. There least teeny, weeny sound. i that Peter could hear, he fave been the only living under that great pile of brush. by he began to think it queer made no sound. “If I him with my own eyes ually touched his fur coat, I think it Was all a bad dream,” Peter to himself. “I won- anything can have happened H FE He H i ‘ial | ¥ z rine anyway. He ought to be 34 slept last winter.” I wonder how he happens to | Witt you please | BY BETTY BROWN Ostrich feathers are no longer sacred to hats! One of the smartest gowns seen in Paris recently was an jevening costume of orchid silk, | artfully draped, and its orehid chit. | fon sleeves were cuffed with double bands of violet purple ostrich flues, | hela in place by bands of purple vel- | vet. The top of the chiffon bodice ts outlined with amethyst “jewels” and lthe «ilk girdle top is finished with lanother fitted band of the ostrich, | A buge purple velvet pansy at the waistline completes a costume of | unique charm. Little Stories for Bedtime Curiosity Gets the Best of Peter. By THORNTON W. BURGESS by T. W. Burgess) {it wax driving out fear, The longer he sat there, the more he felt that he just simply muat find out more about Buster Bear. He had been close to Buster once without any ppening to him, so why y, | bomb, and let my death seem an ac | | ‘ |He Crept Very Slowly .and Very | Carefully couldn't he do it again? The more jhe thought about it, the more it fn that ledge of rocks, where seemed that he just MUST have an-/ lother look at Buster Bear, By and |afraid. Thus I managed to be alone. | But ghe noise of the door had jehaken tiny nerves dr My. It was only by an effort of the will that I regained my poime and forced | myself to walk slowly toward the office wing of the establishment, On the ground floor were the offices, on the second floor the laboratories, on the third floor the #mall hospital where I had spent a few days, ~The lower part of the office wing was detached from the house by the motor drive, but the necond story was connected with the residence by | a glass areade. Thru it 1 could reach the chemist’s closets, I could | | put my hand on the poison in the! dark for I had already taken pains to locate it on the shelves, I paused before one of the win-| dows of the arcade, paused to look | once more upon Mother Earth, and to bid Nature a ailent good-bye, even ae DP had said good-bye to myself in| the mirror, The moonlight shone on the snow clad pines. I was «iad that the trees I loved above all others were #0 clone to me at the last. A lovely group of them stood in the rear of the offices. I held out my clasped) hands to them as a white-robed |dryad might pray to her protecting | trees, | And as I looked, I naw a heavy | shower of snow shake loose from | the branches and leave the tree dark on the side toward the house. It) seemed very odd, because the night was absolutely still, It looked as if the tree were trying to signal an an “ewer to my prayer! | Suddenly « human hand shot out from the branches! What looked [like a binck ball whirled In the moonlight and crashed thru the of. | flee window! A figure fled awiftly way, leaping from shadow to shadow of the tree trunks on the lawn, then it disappeared over the top of the alley wall! I knew that retreating form at a | glance. It was the amart thief who had talked #0 much in Tommy's grocery, the man whom Certela had cowed with a word! Plainly, Certets had an implacable enemy! T retreated involuntarily the way I had come. I didn’t stop to reflect |that I bad gone forth to seek means to die, and that it ought not to matter to me whether I died one way or another, and that if I were Jogical I would hurry toward that | | | cident to all the world! No, indeed! I was controlled by . 1 recoiled from sudden death. Instinctively, I fled back to the hall of the main res- idence. There I picked up tho near eat phone—but at the moment, an NERVOUS PRIUSTRATION day, at 745 p.m, This meeting will inaugurate a movement on the part of the war camp community service to give the girle in industry whole some recreating, inapire greater civic loyalty and develop community spirit A council of 30 leading club wom en of the city has been organized to promote this work, and playground houses and schools have been offer ed by Mayor Hanson as community centers, Mra, Ivah i. Deering, com munity organizer for the girls, and Mrs. E. EB. Haskell, chairman of the wirle’ di oy committee, are in di rect charge of the work, Volunteer leaders are needed for recreational activities, such as music, athletics, in ties and art work, and all those willing to undertake this work are asked to communicate with Mrs. Deering, room 701 Soldiers’ and Ball ors’ club, or telephone Elliett 1371 Ensemble Chorus to Sing Wednesday In compliment to students and friends of the university, the ensem: ble chorus of the school of fine arta of the University of Washington will appear in recital at Meany hall, Wednesday, at 4. m. Selections by Mary Weeks, plan: iste: Bruno Chilinski, violinint, and the unfVersity string quartet will in tersperse the chorus singing, Miss Frances Dickey is directing the re cital, and Miss Etha Cook is accom panist 4 ® — When yo ertising, | think of The Star. —_—_—_—_—_—_— nn time of emergency need. If, instead of paying cash, a man | opens @ checking account at a good jocal bi and pays all bills by check, he obtains, in some degree backing and reputation of that | , and a standing in the com-| munity as 4 substantial and trust: | worthy fellow who uses up-todate business methods ka burn, Have peeled and sli | pound of mushrooms, #« pot firm, white celery, anc | Chinese water chestnuts Ha % pound of bamboo shoots ar pounds of bean sprouts. Cut up t | small white onions, Mix the vege’ | blew toxether and add 1 tablespoontu of melted chicken fat und % U spoonful of #you, a Chinese sau The fact that the prosperous Add the vexetuwles to the chicken! members of all communities do use meat, Season with cayenne pepper. | the bank checking account and cred: | Add the bamboo shoots after stirring }it mystem for their personal and) jin the vegetables, Iry glowly, and! family finances lends prestige to the | add the beau sprouts just soon | custom, and actually helps to estab-| enough to heat them thru before | lish the credit of all persons adopt- jserving. Serve with boiled rice and | ing that method, Furthermore, this “& garnish of fresh radishes and pare custom of paying bills by bank | ley. This recipe makes enough chop! check makes the banker familiar | | suey to serve 10 or 12 persons | with his customer, and is most use- A One Dish Meal ful should that customer desire to| jobtain & Joan from the bank itself. | Chow main—a Chinese restaurant | It is unquestionable that because dish almost as popular as chop suey | citizens of undoubted financial in- in @ true one-dish meal, for it con. | tegrity and standing uniformly use jtaifw as many nourishing ingredi-|the credit syste it must have cer. i ents as an American square meal in| tain definite advantages over the several courses, According to the | cash payment system. One who un Chine@e cook, it in made by cooking | derstands these advantages would % pound of noodies in a pint of pea-| explain them somewhat in this man- nut off, When cooked, the oil in| ner: drained off and the noodles are plac 1. Bills paid by check instead of ed in the bottom of a lurge, deep|cash insure the customer mst | dish. Then % pound of pork, the | loms of the sum involved by mislaid, same amount of veal and a cupful of | or stolen purses, or by unavoidable bits of ham are mixed together and | errors in making change. | fried in fat for five minutes, then al-| 2. The check stubs retained by the | lowed to simmed in @ gravy of but customer furnish an easy and accur | ter. To the cooked meat is added % | ate method of keeping accounts, and | bunch of celery, cut fine, 1 onion, | are, in effect, a receipt for bills paid. \chopped, % pound of fresh mush-|In a possible dispute over an ac-| ‘coma. When all are cooked tender, | count the check stub can be used in | the meat and vegetable mixture is| tracing and verifying the date and) | poured o the cooked noodles and | amount of payments, | the top is garnished with slices of 2! 3. Charge accounts eliminate the | Leggs, boiled hard time spent _and the trouble involved | of the Nation” | thie movement. fad vane 7% Seattle women Monday, at 8 p. 1D, the members’ hall of the Ye Women's Christian Association, Dr. Ida H. Ogilvie, director of cruiting of the woman's land army America, who is spending days in Seattle. ‘The woman's land army was @ emergency institution, but c of the efficiency displayed by its 20 000 members last summer, it won a recognized position in activities thruout the country, Teachers and college stud women with seasonal musicians, office workers and brides were recruited during the and have come back to city life lighted with their experience. It is Dr. Ogiivie’s purpose to vive this interest in farm work, to recruit a similar number for year's planting and harvesting. employment service of the ment of labor is co-operating Art Exihibit Open for Public H The fifth annual exhibition of works of Pacific Northwest artists on display at the Fine Arts 1213 Fourth ave. The oils, water ors, studies in black and white, miniatures, will be open to public spection until May. War activit are conspicuously displayed, men who walked into Harry tis’ room in the Eagle hotel, 4 Main st., 10 p. m. Saturday and m% Heved him of $120 at the point & revolver. To the thrifty people comprising the population of the Western States can proudly be given the title “Savers of the Nation.” Authoritative statistics show that dur-' ing the war years—1914 to 1918 inclusive—Western- ers more than doubled their average savings deposits, while citizens of Eastern states increased their aver- age holdings only 10.7 per cent. From May 31, 1914, to March 4, 1919, the deposits of the Scandinavian American Bank—the greatest savings institution in the Pacific Northwest—grew from $10,848,467.37 to Aa the minutes slipped away and | by he got his courage up and began | pped away, and nothing happened, |to creep back toward the middle of | uriosity began to grow. You| the great pile of brush. He crept! May be Overcome by know Peter's great weakness Is curi- | very slowly and very carefully, stop £ Pinkham’s V: osity. The more he thought about it | ping at each step to look and listen. | s = z 3 ago I received statistics in regard Lakes station and quotations m Lincoln, Washington and Wil- ¥ supposed this was merely honorary certificate, but I Moticed that the lists fe called “Honor Rolls.” Does this that he is dead? If so, why @ we received no other notice? . MRS. X. Without doubt the document the more he wondered how it hap pened that Buster Bear waa there. | It waa very, very queer that Buster didn't move. Could it be that some- thing had happened to Buster, and that he was dead? Supposing this were true, what a wonderful piece of news he would have to tell all the other little people. Peter's curiosity was growing very It was growing so fast that Phinney Car Hits Unidentified Man Struck by a Phinney ave. street car at Westlake and Roy near mid- night Sunday, a man about 36 years old, as yet unidentified, was taken to the city hospital, severely injured He wore a black sult and overcoat. [His injuries include two broken ribs, fractured collar bone, cuts and gashes and possible internal hurts. The street car was in charge Motorman J. M. Labaugh, 908 W. 65th Coming Events Prepare Now to Withstand the Crisis ering nt of childbirt paring your system and put self in splendid condition to meet tim For just this purpose women the land, in every walk of used for over half a century honored and famous remedy, Tt is prep ir yours thi nd ‘Thun ati ie avoided, and an a result nervounness, nausea, benring-down and stretching pains are ‘The abdominal mu anily and gently when baby i al pain ts lene and the houi f ‘The system te prepared ai crisis Is one of mitch lees danger. Write the Bradfield Regulator Com- pany, Dept, M, Lamar Building, Atianta, Georgia, for ‘their helpful Motherhood Book, obtain a bottle of Moth Friend from the druggist today. It ts just a standard as anything you can think of. And remember, there {i take the place of MOTH | a pear a When you think of advertising, | think of The Star. nothing to ‘8 FRIEND, Deep down inside a little voice was talking to him. | that he was foolish to run such a |risk. At the same time, curiosity was urging him on. Peter preferred to listen to curiosity, and ro he kept on, creeping nearer and nearer to | where Buster Bear lay. | prising Discovery Celebrities to Join Two notable musicians, Bennett, the celebrated French and = Kubitsehek, world-renowned basroon player, have been recruited | for the Seattle Symphony orchestra, as a result of Director John Spar- | gur's recent trip to San Francisco. Leopold Godowsky, the famous piano | virtuoso and pedagogue, will be the soloist at the opening concert of the spring symphony season, in the audi- | tordizen of the Masonic temple, April 10. | ‘The sale of guarantors’ tickets, for |the guarattors to the orchestra | fund, will be congucted from the or- | chestra office, 44% Henry building, at |a time specially announced to them, while the general sale of season tick- ets will follow immediately. Tickets also will be sold at the box office of the auditorium during the days of | the concerts. The general admission sale for the week will take place at |ShermanClay's music store, Third ave. and Pi Flyer Addresses the Kiwanis Club Lieut. Norman 8. Archibald, re- cently returned from service with the 95th aera squadron in France, spoke at the regular weekly meeting of the Kiwanis club, sixth floor of the Bon Marche, Monday. ‘Aeut. Archi- bald was shot down from an eleva {tion of 10,000 feet, and was later scheduled to face a firing squad, but | apenees, SIBERIA HAS HUGE SURPLUS OF WHEAT (Special to The Star by N. E. A.) VLADIVOSTOK, March 17,— | While Europe is crying for food, &i- beria is said to have a surplus of t 4,600,000 tons of wheat. Neverthe- pltneg prices in Siberia are very It kept telling him | Seattle Symphony | horn player, | Letter Proves It. West Philadelphia, Pa—"During | the thirty years*l have been mar- ried, I have been in bad health and had several attacks of nerv- ous prostration until it seemed as if the organs in my whoie pound and it made a well woman of me. I can now do all my housework and ad- vise all ailing women to try Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Compound and I will guarantee they will de rive great benefit from it.”—Mra, | Facs« Frrzormatp, 26 N. 41st St. West Philadelphia, Pa. There are thousands of women everywhere in Mrs. Fitzgerald's condition, suffering from nervous ness, backache, headaches, and other symptoms of a functional de- rangement. It was a grateful spirit for health restored which led her to write this letter so that other women may benefit from her ex- fines and find health as she @, For suggestions in regard to your condition, write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, . The re- sult of their forty years experience {s at your service, acerereeinntaterensensriomewtaeeetsaaatataeeete Give Way to Soothing Hamlin's Wizard Oil Hamiin's Wizard Of} is a safe and effective treatment for headache and neuralgia, Rubbed in where the pain in, It acts as a tonic to the tortured | nerves and almost invariably brings quick relief. Its healing, antiseptic qualities can always be relied upon to prevent in- fection, or other serious resulta, from sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just as good, too, for, wore foet, stiff neck, frost bites, cold sores and canker sores. Get It from druggists for 30 cents, If not satisfied, return the bottle and get your ctnoney back. Ever congtipated or have sick Second Ave. headache? Just try Wizard Liver ‘Whips, pleasant little pink pili, 20, conte. Gi teed. — Advertisement, Cargest Savi Institution fn the Pacific Northwest & Cherry St. 3) ‘ | = SS = ' Member Fedéral Reserye Bank Seattle, U.S. A. $18,608,670.65, an increase of nearly 72 per cent. Thrift must not be abandoned. You must build and conserve credit, prepare for opportunity and com- mand it. Start saving today—here. SCANDINAVIAN — AMERICAN BA NK .

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