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HARDING T0 Pauline Frederick, motion ple They squabble delightfully, |); argue playfully, and coo. + ause | happened tn erford family mt at the rday after ident Is Planning Visit in Northwest and Voyage |» to Alaska I know # ne famfy had just arrived trom but had already made it Hardt re Western campaign trip and ae t excursion to Alaska next # can wae , it was stated at the White) ring ol Mrs. Rutherford Pauline Fred-! ‘ in Washington arranging de | these people who have husbands and , fom the way West fn June, Prewt | near a window knitting a sweater | “Oh, 4 Of the 100th anniversary ot} “eriend” husband leaned back lux pe: thee. Western United | cigar, and look content with himself on his way to Alaska A00) and the workd. : Hel, Among the cities likely to P*) arg 1, i, Frederick, Pautine's im hin itinerary will be Seattle, Port:| mother, who had traveled with her San Francisco and Los Angeles, daughter and son inlaw from Call ites of the Northweet. "| rornia, beamed on her children from Butte, Cheyenne and possibly a rocker on the opposite wide of 4 “Dwin Cities.” rose-laden center table He will leave Washington probably | “He,” Pauline said, aay! Somers ‘June, taking a battleship at Seat-/the davenport where her hushanc + |e the cigar in contentment for Alaska. After a tour of ex: chewed the ; te . he will return to one of the | “was my ‘firatest’ beau. You see . she explained further, “we're second cousins, and lived when we youngsters in the Bast. in Waddington, New York, and I . KEEP WELL lived In Boston, but the summers were spent by both generally in LUE |Madrid. That's in New York state ; FOOD VA And that’s about all there ts to the story; we were terribly in love, and : simply never got over it.” BY DR. FR. F. BISHOP THE HUSBAND ARIOUSLY @l»-| ¢ tributed im all GETS RESTIVE kinds of YEE) ing sofa was table. food are| {ne nfs found the three)”; remember the firt time IT mw their substances that! py... serve a8 DdOdy/ and he calle her Bee) the husband ang fuel — protein. | contributed, arising and stalking fatand carbohy-| thoughtfully about the room. “I Grate, | The vegetables was just six months—" aye having the lar) “ty a baby bugay?” MMT, think: rie est amounts of ing [ might assist bis train of protein are the thought. P beans, lentils and) Whereupon Pantine's mother en wuts. In fact, all nuts have & tered into the conversation with a amount of protein ele the twirt points and begin bis overland y to Washington. | beginning to shift “No tndeed.” she put tn smiling. ‘ext in tmportance are the cere | put inristent, “not a baby burr with wheat, corn and oats at the No child of mine ever rode In one Of the list. lot those forging affairs, They're Carbohydrate in a pure form ts pad for children’s brains.” ma im sugar, refined from the| So we learned something tise of the beet and sugar cane./about Pauline Frederick. She's if is likewise found in the juice | ——————— ‘eweet fruits and vegetables, as| oranges, grapes, apples, corn and evan Wi | pens, | ; | ] Another form of pare carbohydrate} is starch, found in wheat, oats, corn. g | potato tubers, tapioca and In lenses i 5 eae amounts in many kinds of fruit and Get at the Real Cause—Take | Vr*tsbies. S# bananas, peas, Beans . Edwards’ Olive Tablets z coabeans and other seeds ts ob ‘That's what thousands of stomach | tained pure fat. It is found in abun- are doing now. Instead of | dance, too, in nuts. | tonics, or trying to patch up| While plant foods might be con-| digestion, they are attacking | sidered the oririnal source of human the real cause of the ailment—| energy, animals, too, supply us with liver and disordered bowels.| each one of the three body foods Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse; In anima! food, ax we eat it, there Mthe fiver in a soothing, healing way.| ts little carbohydrate except in the the liver and bowels are per-| milk. Scallops, oysters and clams are their natural functions,jalso exceptions, Fat is found more ¥ §0 indigestion and stomach jor less intimately sasociated with lean in all kinds of meat. you «@ ted taste, coated) Lean meat affords fuel in the form poor appetite, a lazy, don’t: of protein. Milk and eges are valo feeling, no ambition or energy, able for their protein content. Cheese with undigested foods?) consists chiefly of the pr: from Olive Tablets, the substitute | milk, with or without fat, according calomel. | to the kind of cheese. White of an ‘Dr. Edwards’ Olfve Tablets are a egg has all tte fuel in the form of vegetable compound mixed protein, while the yolk contains part ‘live oll, You will know them protein and fat. their olive color. They do the without griping, cramps or) NEW YORK —With 1,056 soldiers from the area of occupation and the | Take one or two at bedtime for bodies of 270 war heroes, the U. § yk relief. Eat what you like | transport Cantigny has arrived from and 30c—Advertisement, | Antwerp. ON % BUSINESS AND SENTIMENT Withdrawing your savings to lend to relatives and friends may be “good sentiment,” but frequently it’s “poor business.” Always get security. Per Annum Compounded Semi- Annually Is the Least We Have Ever Paid Transaction in personal credit is a highly spe- cialized business and belongs to the expe- rienced banker. Why should you take chances with your small capital that a banker, with his large capital, will not take? Accounts received in amounts from $1 to $5,000. Call or write for our booklet, SAVE.” MUTUAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION OFFICERS: WILLIAM D. COMER; President THOS. S. LIPPY, Vice President EDGAR E. CUSHING, Secretary “HOW TO 815 Second Avenue ‘Star and Her Hubby| | COME HERE ‘Regular Newlyweds By Aileen Claire never been perambulating The doctor's wife, however, con tinued to speak roman oe that has brought us together j ture star and stage favorite, and - , usband, | Pauline A | Dr, Charles Alton , snd: Gabvered the tistio Obes 3 | Seattle, are just Hike any other | pp. | newly wedd’d couple. . | EXPROT ONLY A WEEK | “Speaking of time,” aid 1, not iy comfortable in their Knowing what else to say, being as dense on the latter subject as on others, “how le remain In Seattle “Just one week,” replied the doo Por. Scott C. Bone of Alaska ts)’. awful to know what to call| tor’s wife, | Gov. “Then you're golng to keep on tn lare famous both at once) was seated | plotures?* | courne. to play any more vampire roles, No more ‘Zaza’ or ‘Hella Donnas.’ When town, He will make numerous | iusiy on the davenport, chewed &)1 return now to Los Angeles I'm going to do pictures that are played | for kiddies as well as grown-ups.” And the bachelor physician for 15 years, who « planning on practicing near Rev: erly Hit beautiful grinned luxuriously and continued to| That's the way most newlyweds act, isn't it? ‘wv ive SHIPPING HERE GETS IMPETUS > GRIP. Humphreys’ “Seventy-seven” . Grip, Influenza, Catarrh, Business and shipping tn Seattle! has been given added impetus b: announcement of the railroad. ship and dock companies t quest of the Chamber of Commerce for more liberal | In the meantime the gentleman on |lewes has been granted. rates and the absorption of @! term) | nal charges, importers can keep their was nine years ol. I think, and she | eoods In Seattle for a year and still! ate markets for the articles brought into this port, and alno permit Bast era merchants to store, recondition md repack here, and distribu’ possi rectly to thelr branch factories and tree HEADSTONE GIVEN only a “regular equally well ar’ headstone t me tell you something,” Venry Prederick leaned forward an tem, telling how ree on whieh from cremation It 18 ancold-time ro ainly isn't the modern kind. 4 men don't understand ro. They don't know what It ts e in too much of a hurry ve time.” © STAY | bors, marvhaled by Dr, Frank Loope. mated, when Dr vened following letter, encloaing ping of the Item, from Uden of the Art Marble Weatlake ave, N do yourexpect to genuine reverence expre the dead in the enclomed artic concern ert, by his mothe to contribute = & stone to bis memory. sentiment ts I asked to make certain yea," she exclaimed,” of Only thie I'm not going nultable deserves a reward.” Seattle's own |Confume Aoctor, uti tre shipping point the California home of Pauline Frederick, | the hat for Col “in transit” privl-| Cough, Sore Throat. arrival In Seattle to be entitled it may take longer. (her name ix Pauline Beatrice to the benefit of preferential import! export transcontinental —ruil| “40” INDUCES SLEEP Airtetiy Homenpathic itled to the preferential rates. | will enable local brokers to to Me maroetia Price 208 and on reewipt of te ai| amore © oF | wiitiam » parcel 0. Medicina Co Tork, Medioal “HAIL the Woman!” Away With Man- Made Bigotry Stern, relentless, bigoted, smug in man-made self-sufficiency, Oliver Beresford turns out his daughter! Though he is ready to condone the greatest faults in his son David’s char- acter, he does not give his daughter even the benefit of the doubt. He con- demns her outright, not for what she, innocent, pure, womanly, had done, but for what he, in his narrowness, believes she has done! But Judith Beresford has the strength of char- acter of the new woman—lovely, but unafraid! Hers is the cry against the stoning of the woman by man-made tradition! Hers is the cry for a new era—a fjner womanhood in a more humane world! Pitted against her, pitted against the strength of the truth in the cause she espouses, bigotry must fail. In “Hail the Woman,” Thomas H. Ince, one of the three greatest photoplay directors in the world, has achieved his greatest triumph. “Hail the Woman,” which is to have a memorable showing at the Strand theater, beginning Friday morning at 11 o’clock, has an all-star cast, includ- ing Theodore Roberts, as the grim old Puritan father; Florence Vidor, as Judith; Lloyd Hughes, as the son; Madge Bellamy, as the unrecognized wife; Tully Marshall, Mathilde Brun- dage, and little Muriel Frances Dana, Seattle baby screen star, as the cast- off grandchild! Remember, this pow- erful picture begins Friday—at The Strand. MOTHER WHO ASKED FUNERAL FOR SON Henry Relchert will have pot funeral, but an Last week The Star published cripple since birth, had been saved mother, also a cripple, dreaded by the generous action of neigh He had died destitute, and the body had been about to be ere Loope inter Today The Star received the eltp “phere ix so much feeling and weed for the desire for a real lor her aon, Henry Releh- gol r, that we desire head This fine growing rarer every day in Beattle and a case ite this To get the beet results take at the) Instead of being compelied te ship! firnt sign of a Cold. imported goods within 10 days after; If you wait till your bones ache, THE SEATTLE STAR RINGSIDE NOTES ON ev ]| CPTY COUNCIL TURSDAY Introduced the fi tion of nickel rides to the people, for submission to f struction of the Studi Harber inland in the outlying districts Approprti for passing on sion bonds. Ie. several other things to vote on be siden candidates, ‘There will tw the carfare question, for one thing. And there will be a $650,000 bond insue for the Montlake Stadium bridge, And there will be the problem of taking the dog pound out of the hands of the police de partment and giving it to (he King County Humane society. re thruout the United States, | ae ee ‘Thus Seattle will become a distrib) yan conter instead of merely 4 ) probability, Counellman itewerald’s Scent carfare ordinance __ | will Ro before the people at the May | There naiderable op position to the subminsion of this elections, COUNCIL ont fare ordinance, which will submit the ques Referred to the streets and sewers committees » resolution calling lar vote of a $650,000 bond imue for the con » Montlake bridge Referred to the public safety commition and the finance committees An inithtive ordinance transferring the duties of poundmastr from the co department to the King County Humane society. Approprimted $4,000 for repairs to the bulkhead at the north end of Passed an ordinance giving the streets and sewers department $5,000 to furnish work for the unemployed in grabbing and clearing streets $4,263 to Chester B. Masslich, New York bond attorney, he legality of recent sales of Skagit and water exten the little black tags, they will have | Washington canal has twioe been de | bi by the advocates of Couneiiman | | Erickson’s S-cent initiative ordinance on the grounds that the ranks of thowe favoring Jower carfare will be split between the two measures, and neither will be able to carry } | | | i | poet 1 book possible. TERE Women’s Women’s and SHOES THE AMERICAN PEOPLE SAY SO! Convinced that further price deflations will hit the shoe industry—not at once, but within six months or a year—this store is going to set about at once and get ready! We propose to make a clean sweep of all merchandise now on our shelves—turn it into Cash—that we may be always in the mar- ket as prices decline. floor under present conditions, therefore will close out entirely our Base- ment Store and sublet the basement, thus cutting our overhead to the min- imum. This calls for the quitting of Children’s Shoes altogether. I'm Told to Sell the Shoes! and have priced every pair in the store for immediate disposal. Profit is not expected. We must take a loss and know it, so will have it over as quickly as Every Shoe must go regardless. Closing Out Basement Store French Boots, values $8.00 to $15.00, sizes 4 to 8, mostly narrow— $1.90 _ Women’s $7.00 to $10.00 Boots, Oxfords and Pumps— _ $2.70 feated when placed before the people, there is a strong feeling now that | the bridge will win out lishment of th nually by the bring the necessity of the home to the people, it is believed. STORM WARNING A southeast storm warning was ordered displayed at 6 a, m. Wed needay ly approaching the Washington east to southeast winds, becom- ing strong gales th’ and tonight, Warn ordered displayed at all Washing ton and Oregon seaport stations, Heel Growing Girls’ $7.00 to $10.00 Shoes $3.70 John for Dead Sailor v0" wr: 4Ones Hurd at Mt. Pieasant per Het 7 church will pr code the gra % 0, MURD wide ceremony lin ave | eciatica, sprains, aches, Dairymen to Meet “Faron in B. C. Thursday families, The entab- adium, attended an nds of people, will bridge | Delegates from all over the North weat will attend the annual threeday meeting of the Pacific Northwest Milk Dealers’ association and the | Association of Dairy and Milk In wpectors, which will open at Vancow ver, B. C., Thursday Dr. Ira C. Brown, Chartes B. Tish ler, Martha Koehne, Dr. ¥. 1. Smith and Stephen I. Miller are among the Seattle speakers who will address the convention. A severe storm in rapid It will cause increasing afternoon have been | PROF, ROBERT W. JONES wilt j be acting head of the department of journalism at the University ot MUST COME Another thing——we can do all our business on one Closing Out Children’s Shoes ENTIRE MAIN FLOOR STOCK ON SALE SALE STARTS THURSDAY Boy’s $4.00 School Shoes One lot of Men's Shoes, made up of several broken lines, small and large sizes only, values up to $12.00— $2.90 _Men’s $7.50 Tan English "$3.40 Men’s $10.00 to $12.00 Shoes, all sizes and all styles $6.70 Misses’ $5.00 School Shoes $3.40 Children’s $3.50 School Shoes, 8% to 11 $2.40 Misses’ and Children’s Felt Slippers Study the prices, fe | Second and University Women’s $9.00 to $12.50 Boots, Pumps and Oxfords— $4.70 Women’s $10.00 to $15.00 Boots, Pumps and Oxfords— $5.40 See our windows, compare values. Big lot of Men’s $12.00 to $15.00 Shoes, broken sizes— $4.70 Big lot of Misses’ and Children’s Shoes, broken sizes, values up to $4.00— $1.90 You'll recognize the difference. Cs Second and University 70c Women’s $1.50 to $2.25 Felts Men’s $2.00 to $3.00 Felt and Leather Slippers, $3.50 to $4.00 Spats $1.00 C. W. SHIVELY, for WW Maasai 1220-22 SECOND AVE. Seattle’s Best Shoe Values Always SSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1922. | nyeye ITJE’S “AT HOME” Military Honors HY yor 10TH TIME “Home. worked muscles, lame Phed For forty years Sloan's has been the liniment im thousands of ik your neighbor. At all druggiste—35c, 70c, $1.40, DOWN weet ed on @ charge of drunkenness, yee eae “tee ere nin J i J united Btater revenue cuttor| Washington during the epring quar bs Unaiga will fire, tr fe sees “cts ACHES AND PAINS ~ VOID the misery of racking 4 A pais. Sloan's gets right down ' to the aching spot and relieves your pain and you wonder why you did not use Sloan's first. bottle of Sloan's Liniment handy and apply when you first feel pain. Use freely and don't rub, as dt Have @ ‘ eee Hurd, who was 19, in 1 > | On May 2 when Mr. and Mra. Seat-| Altho a bond ismue for the con: |marine hospital last Mon He sonavens and er yp be rg the walk up to the polls to pull do struction of a brid ‘one th had previously served on the U. &.| to find how quickly it eases the pain je wa up th P to pul down | struction of bridge acrons the Lake cadhar aan ar Giese aad Oi and ‘cael feeling of warmth throughs and Mra, H.C, Hurd, 1613 Frank-| the aching part. Fine, too, for rheumatism, neuralgia,