The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 1, 1919, Page 4

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TO PLEAD, Karhu, mill worker, self-con murderer of his 22-year-old arraigned before Presiding Boyd. J. Tallman Friday, was fone week to plead hie case, . Barnhart being appointed as Funeral services for LOSS OF FOR: ‘woRtp-wive (REALISTIC STORM AT SEA — ROMANCE OM A DESERT WSLAND HONOR: the BileiteRafferty parlors, razor Wednesday | a maid, IS TWIN RECORD lage claims a new record. pounds each was the net of Mr, and Mrs. John Lewis, Now Playing bsolutely First Run DIRECT FROM ONE SOLID YEAR—BROADWAY, N. Y. COMMON LAY FEATURING FANNIE WARD Seven Grippingly Interesting Reels. “Common Clay” shows that all mankind is | of one origin and moral weakness is not the share of the poor and lowly alone. ~a.- | JOUN HAmnicK | Reed Twixt Pike ana Pine Starting Sunday at 11 A. M. WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS SOME BIG MOMENTS: ‘TUNE THROUGH A FALS@ FRIEND PURSUTT = — DASHING OF SHIP OM ROCKS will be held at $ p. m. Sunday, from inter. ment to be at Mount Pleasant ceme- tery. Mrs. Karhu was killed with a morning, at the home of Ernest A, Wanamaker, 120 Kinnear place, where she worked as DUQUOIN, Il, March 1.—This vil Eleven weight credited to the new twin daughters | Phoumonia, my friend and I met at 4 i 1 4 THE LITTLE THEATRE Starting Sunday— Positively—First Run A FIGHT FOR JUSTICE ANDA FORTUNE WILLIAM FARNUM Jhe MAN HUNTER Strenuous Greeting Peeves Old Friend Dear Miss Grey: My dearest girl friend and I have had a serious arrel over something | cannot up derstand, It came about thus: After I bad a four weeks’ spell of a small club to which we belong, and I impetuously rushed up and Kissed and hugged her—so effusively that | the other girls joked both of us My chum became very angry, and | when we were driving home in my lear I tried to joke her out of it | She was really sarcastic and finally said, cuttingly: “If you ever repeat | that performance you and I are for- ever thru.” I was surprined out of my senses, for we have been the most intimate and enduring friends for two years, | Ordinarily she is very kind, yery | witty and entertaining, During my | ilness she sent me flowers, candy, books and really lovely letters, This, and all of her other generous | during our friendship have made me want to show my affection, I also know she is extremely affectionate with her mother and some of our mutual girl friends, | Now she avoids me in every way, refuses to let me take her home in my car aa formerly, is brevity itself |on the phone, and when we meet at | friends’ homes, dances or theatres read your letters, and now I como for help. man for over a year, |T am 19, ways have a nice tim we get hore he will say things, only kidding, that will make me m afterwards. Ot Over one of those # a horrible temper. ried we would not last a da don't get rid of my temper I will for that I have been going with a young He in 20 and We attend places and al- . but when , and my temper and may things | ean, Of course I am sorry The other day, after I plies, he maid "I will never marry a girl with such If wo were mar Now, Miss Grey, I know that if I joxe him, and I love him too much Please tell mo what to A TEMPER, in precisely do, The young man "REAL THING An the lock of the door clicked be hind Tommy, I realized that I was absolutely alone, and free, and inde- pendent, and not responsible for any one in the world but myself, and better yet, nobody wan worried by any responnibility about me! From & feminist standpoint, the situation seemed ideal, I was “on my own” to Kree which many an ambi and exactly right in his asser- | tious woman would have envied tions. Your battle is more than I hummed a popular air as I sur- half won when you realize that he speaks the truth, And the fact that you love him too much to give him up, ought to prove the winning factor in the elim: ination of your temper, If you Will conscientiously study and | moe digest the great principles upon Finally I decided upon a classic which Christian Science 18 | feast, one which has been popular founded, you cannot help from | the world around since man lived succeeding in a measure, at I would have some bread, | least, in the task set before you, You cannot make over your disposition in a day or a week, | upon it. | cheese and fruit veyed the shelves of the grocery store and aqt myself to choose a lit tle supper from that grand array of carefully selected viands—the best In the town. I felt an if a hotel bill of fare waa being “demonstrated” for only I took crack ern instead of the wheaten loaf, The cholee being off my mind, I ae ae a she is distant and cool, Why, Mim way? she is so likable and so sincere an | kind, jed my trust. | miserable. Friendy say it will com | many responsibilities; 1 | afraid ft will not. but How can I show her I am very sorry? FRIENDSHIP, It ts easy to interpret girl's attitude, She is sensitive, level-headed and has a fine sense of loyalty, She could not but re sent your seemingly sensational display of affection. And in polite society that is ax it should be. There are a hundred Uttle ways that you micht have more effectively and fittingly express ed your appreciation of her friendship. But what's the use to ery over spilled Milk? If-you have apolo- «ized and shown that you are deeply sorry for your overim pulsiveneas, there ts nothing else to do except to t until such time as the girl gots over her pique. & Love Versus Disposition Dear Miss Grey: "Horlick’s. he ORITINAL \ Malted Milk A Nutritious Diet for All Ages Quick Lunch; Home or Office. OTHERS ore IMITATIONS 3rd at Pike SUN.—MON.—TUES. Gertrude McCoy And a Powerful Cast THE DRAMATIC TRIUMPH WHICH STIRE N YORK DURING ITS BROADWAY RUN ALSO CHRISTIE COMEDY And Our Usual Scenic—First Run—Certainly! Grey, do you suppose ahe acta this I am terribly hurt over it because She has been my confidant in so many-things and never has violat I am unhappy and out all right, and that she has too am T have always CLASS A THEATRE| or in @ year, perhaps, but do not lose heart. The greatest achievements of life are gained only thru a slow, steady prow ess, Stiffen your backbone and exert every ounce of will power in an effort to ward off these temper at) ke. Now it's strict ly up to you to play a winning hand, and here's success to your venture. | The Making of a Radical? Dear Miss Grey: When I read the article by “Reformer,” I almost | collapsed, {t tickled me so much. | Then I realized it was a serious sut> ject. } Reformer” has most certainly hit jthe nail on the head. If parents |loved their children as they should, and as they say they do, they would keep them off the streets and keep them clean, clothed and fed to prove | thelr love was genuine, No one can may they love from | mix to a dozen filthy little brats that | they turn out on the streets, {l-clad, Ubfed and dirty, in the care of their older brothers or sisters. Many a time I have sat down at |@ table in a restaurant to a good | meal and had these poor little un- | fortunate children stand and watch jme thru the window, as if they wer nearly starved to death, | And more than once I have neen {a boy snatch something from fruit | stands, not for fun, but to eatiaty [bis hunger. Perhaps this was, and |in many cases is the starting of “a | crimipal. During the Mu epidemic, when the |achools were closed, there were so many children on the streets that | they almost stopped the traffic. | large per cent were {ll-clad and dirty an street dogs. They were the very |mark for the flu, and they carried it from the streets into the homes. When these children grow up they have been no used to theft that they look to their richer countrymen who have been given an education and a chance in life, and demand that they divide up, and there you have your I. W. W's. REFORMER NO. 2. Meaning of War Term | Dear Miss Grey: Will you please tell me what the meaning of “prior ity Mat" is? AP. 8. “Priority list™ is a term which originated during the present war, and pertains to transporta tion of certain articles consid | ered as necessities. | geoccccocovcccccooococes : Far and Near News by Telegraph and Telephone | Coeccccccococcccccece | Mise Birdie Campbell, federal om- ployment bureau agent, will address the Rainier school ent-Teachers’ association at a meeting to be held in room 17, of the Rainier school, at 3p, m. Tuesday P. H, Watt and BR. 8. Boynes have | been elected chairman and vice-chair | man of the members’ council of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce | “The Church and the Industrial | Situation” will be discusseed by the | Seattle Ministerial federation, at a meeting in the Plymouth church at | 10:30 a m. Monday | Congregational ministers meet at 2 p.m. Monday in the Plymouth church, |_ A lecture on “Intimate Touches of | Life in China” will be given at the Boylston ave, Unitarian church Sun day evening by Dr. William L, Hall, | seven years in China as medical mis- sionary. Dedication of the rebuilt Mount Baker Park Community Presbyter- lian church, will take place with spe | clal services Sunday, “Was Jesus a Revolutionist?” will be the open forum debate of the Y. M. C. A. Sunday club, in the audi jtorlum, at 3 p. m A set of Washington state law [ books, comprising 600 volume: worth thousands of dollars, b added to the University of \ ton law lbrary, thru a beneficiary | clause in the will of the late Irving T. Cole, attorney. 'Cancel Papers of Eleven Norsemen Tirst papers of 11 Scandinavians | were canceled Friday by Superior | Judge Everett Smith, on the motion jof Chief Naturalization Examiner John Speed Smith, The first papers jof the aliens were canceled under the law providing that any neutral | with first papers could claim exemp- tion from the draft if he forfeited | his declaration of intention. CALLED TO CAPITAL R. M. Garrett, professor of Eng: sh at the University of Washing of the Jurior Red Northwest district, Cross of directors, construction policy of the Red Cross and relief work in fore; country ’ The} ton, as director and representative the has been sum- moned to Washington, D. C., to at- tend a meeting of the 14 national ‘The conference will decide the re- Junior) noticed that I waa singing “There's & Long, Long Trail” and I stopped in the middle of a word, That's such & depremsing wong. It always makes me cry. And belng perfectly inde pendent and the master of ope's fate ian't always as fine as it sounds. | “Oh, lal” I sighed as I aktrm | ished for my provender. Under the counter of the creamery department | was 4 huge black cat. I gathered Puss under one arm, carried him up to the rest room, and deposited bim on the couch. He seemed to like ‘company, 1 waa glad he did. | After my lunch, I considered my attire, Plainly a sleeveless chiffon | frock trimmed with spangles was! not appropriate for setting up| housekeeping in a grocery store. And I knew {t was quite unneces sary when I considered the giris’| lockers, Having worked downtown | myself, once upon a Ume, I knew| |very well what the lockers held. | Many girls have a habit of shopping &t noon, and changing old things for | new in the office dressing rooms, ex | pecting to take the discarded gar. ments home—some tme! I didn't. linvestigate—I knew 1 could find| anything in those lockers—anything | except an engagement ring. 1 cuddled down on the rest room | couch. It was very comfortable and | the black cat purred soothingly be | ide me, But of course ) couldn't) sleep. The ghosts of disagreeable |thoughts crowded each other and rained @ turmoil in my mind. I was haunted by sorrow for Eloise, har-| rowed by my husband's neglect, con fused by Certeis’ devotion, alarmed by a new dread of him, distressed be- | caure 1 couldn't tell Tommy of my gratitude. 1 dozed off wondering |how 1 was ever to get the jewels out of the hold of the U-boat now| that 1 was “dead to Jimmy-boy | and all the Lorimers, } And then I dreamed of burgtars, and saw Bob grappling with one, and they went down together, and a box of gorgeous gems was shattered | on the floor, and then I saw Bob un-| mask the man—and it was Dr. Corteist 1 wat up in bed suddenly and lst- ened. ‘Then I crawled to the small | windows which opened from the rest room on the mezzanine floor, and gave a view of the store below, I lifted up a corner of the gray linen curtain. My dream waa partly true!| A trap door next the soda fountain was opening in a mysterious way. Thru it came a man’s head and) shoulders, He came up so slowly, looked around so cautiously—it was terrifying. His mate followed him. | | | | They moved rapidly and without a | sound toward the stairs, As I thought of the money-box hidden under my cloak, I regretted the «illy impulse which had made me take charge of it. If the thieves could get a little money they would go away quickly. But without it—what? (To Be Continued.) iSTOCK MEA WILL HOLD ANNUAL SPOKANE SHOW SPOKANE, March 1—Stockmen attending the convention of the Northwest Livestock association, voted last night to hold an annual Uvestock show here. The! |motion was taken at the con-| |chuding banquet of the convention | attended by about 600 stockmen.) The city formally accepted the pro- posal of the stockmen and a commit- tee of stockmen and business men was named to arrange dates and de- tails Court Lacks Power to Censor Y. M. H. A. Courts have no power to compel an association to strike names from its membership rolls, according to the decision of Superier Judge J. T. Ronald, Friday Philip Tworoger brought suit to compel the Young Men's Hebrew association to drop the names of Abe Slutaker and Victor Deutsch, who wero alleged to have claimed exemption from military service on the ground of being aliens. Two- roger staged that he would appeal the case to the supreme court, TO MOTHERS! Whatever | feverish head or sore throat, reme: sour stomach and constipated bowels of ‘the congested waste and toxin poisons. candy Cascarets. Children’s Colds --- Danger! | a [| N | | WOOL USE DROPS | WASHINGTON, March 1.—Wool! consumption in January dropped 286,000 pounds below the same period) a year ago. Hurry!! Hurry Today and Sunday Only Left MICKEY That Gay Whirlwind of Fun ’n’ Everything That Everybody Everywhere Is Talking About Mabel Normand CLEMMER | SEATTLES BEST PHOTOPLAY AOVSE in Which to See Don’t Miss It with Pain slong the back, dizziness, headache and general languor. Get a package of Mother Gray's AKROMATIC-LEAF, the pleasant medicinal tea Use it at first sign of @ cold. When you feel all run down, tired, weak and without energy, use this remarkable combination of na- ture’s herbs and roots, As® tonic laza. tive {t has no equal, Mother Gray’ Aromatic-Leaf is sold by druggists sent by mail for 60 cents, Sample sent FREE. Address Mother Gray Co, Le Roy, N. Y. Dist ety the stomach and stimulate |the liver with a course of | it Clearing. Il. QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION else you do for your child’s cold, mber to always rid the bilious liver, Always give Cascarets candy cathartic first thing, Even cross, sick, cold-clogged kiddies needn't be coaxed to take Cascarets never disappoint the worried mother. Each 10 cent box of Cascarets contains directions and dose for chile 6] dren aged one year old and upwards, Dorit worry about that skin trouble Resinol will heal it Only those who have really suffered from malignant skin disorders can un- derstand the mental and physical dis- comfort that such affections bring People avoid you—your best frien are ashamed to beseen with you—and in general, your life is made really, miserable. little Yet it is a consolation to know that even serious and long established trou- bles of this kind are generally overcome ]¢ promptly and completely by the use of pad Resinol Ointment. head: Quicker results as a whole may be pated, you’ | obtained by first bathing the affected Beret parts with Resinol Soap and hot water, YF. Edwards’ | and Resias! Seap may be per. 9, Pousands Restnol haved at

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