Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TN PRE An Bai se AGE = Mc Two Pictures of Murdered Girl; Accused Man Commits Suicide Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS = The Purpose of Love Dear Miny Grey: I have the young woman to whom am engaged has had an affair ith another young man, which was most Aistreming. She says abe wan not to blame and I believe her, Yet I uncertain whether let this separate us or not. She seems heart broken and I pf I do Please give your advice o.3,D What does mean and what is It for, if not to help the and the broken heart will not am her me | her. love repentant ed ndrift the at some tim took advantage of Surely cant girl you you love Aune In the past some he ie She man Innocence. will make a devoted wife than a girl has never known trouble, You should be very tender toward her and try to fil the remainder of her life with happiness Country vs. City Dear Mise Grey We came to the city from the country two years aco In apit ater amount pr money my husband haa made, he insists we are po better off than when we were on the farm. He | thinks the country in more health | ful and a better place to bring up our children. I have heard that farm people are more subject to certain diseases than etty people. | am ready, of course, to do what ts best. Kindly advise us MOTHER OF THREE A home in the country pos neasex all the conditions neces: sary to good health: Fresh air good food and isolaUen from con tagion, That disease ie com mon among some dwellers on farms ts because they not make use of these alds to health Some farmers shut out the sunlight and pure air, eat greasy, heavy food and neglect proper drainage, In cities these matters are regulated somewhat by public work and education. lt t* certain that every man who likes farm work and un derstands it should return to the farm. There is ample oppor tunity for social life and the education of your ehfldren in most rural communities now. And the need to utilize all farm lands in the United States is great f the « These pictures of Frieda Wiechm an, of whose murder Milo MH. Piper was accused at Muskegon, Mich. were found in the girl's trunk in a Chiraga. boarding house. Relatives of the girl said that the lower picture, shewing her 1 a winter pose, was taken by Piper himself. Piper ended his alleged connection with the tragedy by committing Sfomach-| Headache, Indigestion! Instantly End Stomach Distress Souring food in stomach forms acids and gases which cause headache. Ingratitude Dear Mins Grey: I have raised my boy without a father «ince he was 9 years old. He ix 18 now, but he does not care whether I hungry or not. or what becomes of me. He surely does break my heart. What can I do? A TRUE MOTHE It in not too late to change your son's atutude toward you. Poasibly some outside Interest has come between you. Try to overcome it by telling the boy fully of your life, the hardships you have endured and the sac rifices you have made, thru your love for him. Surely his heart will respond to your appeal for his love and aasistance. An Author's Life Dear Mins Grey: Please tell during what years Charles Dickens, the author, lived ADMIRER Chartes Dickens was born near Portamouth, Eng. Feb. 7. 1812, and died at Gadshill, Lon- don, June 9, 1870. Just as soon as Diapepsin reaches your sick, unsettled stomach all the misery stops. No waiting! Instant relief ! Indigestion, acidity gases, heartburn and dyspeps: go. Upset stomachs feel fine! le—-Any drug store. veser? Pape’s Diapepsin St OaYour Ft | Exechien | School Opportunities Dear Mins Grey: Please advise us | whether it is right for high school | girls and boys of the same age to | sated a club. Would it be best to omit the boys’ The club we are planning is not to be held at school It is much better to devote your extra time and attention to the clubs and activities pro- vided by your school. Much time han been lost by the closing of the schools, and all of you have extra work to accomplish, He wide that, with the literary clubs, cooking classes and gymnasium activities, you can have recrea- tion enough. Your interests should be confined to homes and schoo! MINUTE MEN HERE TO STICK Despite the fact that word has |gone out from the headquarters of |the American Protective | Washington, that the nation-wide nization ia to disband Feb, 1 nd that peace conditions do not call for its services, the minute men's organization in the state of Wash ington will continue ficials. | State Inspector 8. J tate Chief investigator W. A Blackwood, announced that the ac tivities of organization would not that the work of “pre the government jerty in the state must continue ‘The statement al organization 4 for organized and that the situ ation has away with the need for the minute men, This statement was issued, following conference with department of justice high of ai i ne ficialn. A driv work was men your | i state curtailed venting crimes and protecting prop: of —IN— ‘ISay So I'll Say So” furnishe $ unique talents. He DAYS ONLY Starting Sunday be FInST RUN IN SPATTLE issued by the na tio lares “there is 3 no lace citizen Geo Walsh with an admirable vehicle ph R ogee ise to display hi s carried rapidly from one amaz- done ing feat to another still more daring Fatty Arbuckle IN ONE OF HIS FAVORITES. C *PLONTA TH. BET. PIKES PINE for funds to continue recently made by who, at that organization in continue indefinitel Princess “Pat” Is to Become a Bride LONDON, Dec Pr Pa tricla of Connaught ix betrothed to Commander Alexander Ramsay brother of the earl of Dalhouste, ac cording to a statement in the court circular Friday night, King Geor has “gladly consented” to the agement, the circular states The princess is the daughter of the duke of Connaught, former gov Jernor general of Canada cousin of King George. Sh known as Princess “Pat,” orary Lin-chief of the |Canadian regiment of that their local time, the minute stated state would bet ter hon name Dr. M, A. Matthews’ subje Democratic club's luncheon day was, “Loyalty to the ment.” at the Satur- Govern ao) me} ® en: | and al famous | THE CONFESSIONS of a WAR BRIDE “4 | Copyright, 1918, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association BOMANCE AND ADVENTURE PURSUE MODERN BULLDIN DATTLE * A mddern office the last place mantic adventure buliding | about for a was on earth This my aa T entePed the ro comforting thought Lorimer building next da Here at least, I self, for 1 had become the dread of an And here T am from danger This famous buildir orn @ city block each way ument to the energy the Hon, James D It ts Jcovered with glase tile, in wide and outside, ar » ite bath oftener than som The top floors, with windows looking over half the county, ar exclusively to the offices of the Lor imer Chemieal company. Priv preas elevators serve these per floors. A very contented lot of men women make up the Le |force. As Christman with ite prompect of Daddy's system of dividing war divi dends with hin « thin cheer fel bunch werked carly and late get ting ft reports in sbape to finish off quickly just before New | But this year the best laid schemen of this great one company might have gone ag fn ao | count of @ strike which tied up th | street railroads), except for the fact ltnat the president of Lorimer ompany Woukin't let even an earth quake disturb the routine of hin of Daddy hired autos the Lorimer care to get his employes back and forth to work On the night of th subdued Am secure,” | aanured my half stek with een uer an f wa » imaginer which cov is a men about as mind ¢ and genius ¢ humans. kiven over ato ex two up and oftice approached, nunes (that ta! the Year mun floes and used lant strike, 1 and tired. a much cupation than Moreover, that of being followed nerves. Several times I had start urn the pa per in my ring 1 simply fused to hun to be | the impulse. It was a Saturday n of the staff had be ine at a hotel, and, t worked late late cared to rink home Aa the filing clerk, with a pile of stuff to put away, | wae the last to lock my I entered the dreas ing room as the | hurrying out of it jing the my hat them, but down before I could ¢ Thus, I was left the top floor of thin 30-ntory struc ture, The cleaning work | there Sunday», instead of Saturday nights. I felt creepy as to my skin and jumpy as to my nerves, but a#till| I did not care to run down those endless flights of stairs | At last the white light flashed as the elevator started up again. I stepped In quickly when the car topped, for I hated to keep an auto |load of tired girls waiting for me in the cold of the December evening. | But, as I stepped into the ear, the | operator stepped out of it He was jmot the day whom I knew) well. He turned and blocked the entrance, then he faced me, and his mile was insolent “You ought to remember me,”* | maid, | On his left cheek was th slash running from mouth He was the man whom \ described with such awful b but, more than that, we that, he had been the chef | waiter at the luncheon I had «he with the U-boat's comman jer a bottom of the sea! (To Be Continued) unusually if done strenuous = ¢ property, in more | most persons think | mysterious horror | was getting on my ror loaing an auto ride waiting at 1 and . vator had snatched and followed the « tropped alone on women man, he scar of to ear! oise had rror than and the ared the DISMISS PORT SUIT service commis ietion over the port district ording to an an |nouncement of the commiasioners Friday, when they diamissed wult jbrought by the Seattle Grain com any and the Fisher Fic Mills ee the port of Seatt! | The state jxion has no 7 CLEMMER | / N.- SEATTLE'S BEST PHOTOPLAY AOVSE DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS’ GREATEST NOVEL THE GRAIN OF DUST PUBLISHED IN THE SATURDAY EVENING POST “ SCHOOLS WILL OPEN THURSDAY . ools open Thursday according to an. fot The in January an nouncement by the school board, lowing @ conference Friday fluenza menace in believed to be according to Dr. Ira C. Brown, nepector over school medical Sergt. Bruce EB, Arnold, son of Mr. and Mra. Albert Arnold, of 6509 Second ave. N. E., writes that he expects to soon be discharged from Americ and sent an nm hospital near London. home on a convalescent ship OH RETURN OF DECOLLETE pepe league at) awcording to of Lombard and | against | Washington” | Three Kiddies in One Family Dead | ‘The Margery Prosser \4% bodies of years; Dolores Prosser, aged 2% Howard — Prosser daughters ars, and months old Mr. and Mrs. William Prosser 719 Thomas #t., will be day at Washelli cemetery influenza victims, buried & They a TY BROWN passing of war's shadows 1 evening go tirement and the f more in high f t two full wea lisplayed some form ¢ upper arm, tho on vetled din nd q@laborate orr aments w our national days our national days c out past ar are blossoming again New evening gown of gold colored baronet satin and gold silk gauze cing from the shoulders, This is of the new Moyen straight band around the bed! a close, straight-hanging skirt Seven Preachers Among 18,201. Arrested Here During 1918 68 gallons of liquor the ording to the police total of Seven preachers were 1918 3 actors, one artist, two newspaper men, 116 schoolgirls, 193 soldiers,17 architects and 866 chauf feurs Twenty-seven were arrested for at tempted suicide. One of the most Interesting static ties In the book is the production of 48,410 pounds of vegetables by the During 1918 more persons were ar. stockade inmates rested for federal investigation by linquent juveniles to the num the ieo department than for any 010 were handled by the ju other cause, 1,963 arrested in was seized in attle by ary squad in 1918, ace department annual report, submitted to the mayor Friday During the year 18,201 arrests were made, while the police court collected $114,094.94 from those convicted and finded. being He’s Out Again With His Second Million Dollar Picture STARTING TODAY And for All Week The One and Only Charlie Chaplin INES SHOULDER He sought to win her that he had won financial in the same way success, power dience to his will, by using his to force obe- but a pretty stenographer puts end illusion. an to his GUTERSON’S RUSSIAN ORCHESTRA “The Bartered . Smetana Overture, Bride” “Nocturne” . Chopin CHRISTIE COMEDY LITERARY DIGEST THE 416 LITTLE *™* THEATRE JOS. DANZ, Mgr. >» THREE = STARTING pays suNDAY “Clara Kimball Young tN Gi CLAW’ A GREAT STAR AT HER VERY Bist AND War News Weekly ADMISSION 20¢ Nights 10¢. Adults, 156 Ma Children,