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iteteeneecieten hain ae ee A cconeapnanated os ; * THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1919. By BETTY BRAINERD b Cavanaugh Guest Son Born JD. B. Cavanaugh, who recent} Capt. and Mrs, Edmund R. Bow: | “ ¥ den are receiving congratulations from France, where he} 00 “th, birth of «son on guaday, | “You cute Iittle thing! With a the 18th Engineers was iy San Francisco. Capt. Bowden 1s | a age, tolls how her training prevented her from stumbling over the rock | Melicate finger under my chin, Cen. | fir a moment tie ited aaa aed @inner last might by the /at Camp Grant, near Chicago, and which proyed fatal to Ruth Garrison. # | as. ra my face toward bis own h i, vy, en et ae oe ty club. Covers were placed | his wife has been spending the win . | and looked boldly into my eyes. “Do| pushed the man away ‘ | ter with her mother, Mra, Darcie, @. . ¥ » no, darling,” be went on.|ing with a show of resignation: | | ” Keep still, for you are going to| “I am going up to my room, Thus | hear something important. You fool Certeis bowed very nicely, and our con.|¢d me this noon with your very| wondered if the devil had ever been felt } geniality, How easy and how! Clever dinguise. But that is nothing | famous for his fine manners. aracter has been | (To Be © natural for us to © become in-|t the way your « eee RED CROSS AWARDS By CYNTHIA GREY Letters from men and women, discussing every porsible angle of the to pour in. brings out some interesting and instructive | points in the training of young girls CERTEIS REVEALS HIMSELF THE PRIMI- Aristocracy Judged by the NES ik Feet, Says Golden Apple Girl Garrison Storrs case continue One woman, who has acted ‘iy chaperon to young girls Another woman, now 70 years of The wish to slay him made me weak, owing are the letters | leaders opponite thrown together, we Cavanaugh has been kin ‘ the | py et Mr. and Mra. Charies wit. | Forceful Talk | for two weeks. Ho will| The talk given yesterday during fe shortly for Tacoma, where he| the noon hour at the Red Cross the guest of Mr. and Mbs./ Jumble Shop by Mr. H. H. Sheets, PMimpson before leaving for the | secretary and treasurer of the Na Other Girls on the Road Dear Miss Grey; 1 feel that I | munt say a few words regarding the | sii, it was simply my inbred | fooling for months.® You sweet | condition of the minds of some of . condition of the imine ny. Tt have| ROrror of feceiving attentions from | little ingenue! Why, you are the Rigo icky & married man that saved us. n 1 have ever seen who is vim that mare the the him who heard him | Uonal Association for, Military Train. ay Steele to Entertain Pheoph Steele, wife of Major Steole, U. 8 A. will enter @upper Saturday evening. | wien Prccag Thornton Watson, who b Giamaut thak sal My come to Seattle to be IN| nie disarms people in the face o! Of the Recruiting station, | ginger ‘And Mrs. Patten, Major and and Mrs. J. ¥, Pratt oe. out Improving qmany friends of Mr. & A Mt are glad to know that he is Amproving and is now able and wome get back 0! mad indorse bh Mrs, Vietor A. I who has been in Seattle, expec rento next week will leave for home in Spokane. and week after that | . and Mra. James Campveli Mc i of Vancouver, B. C., are be- Tom P: n int | ing was delivered with a punch and) people think and t Those carried away yught that a gov ov to arm & peo | | ton, of Spokane, | ing the winter | be at the Sor: who was recently | been chaperon to young «ithe for weveral years, and have heard some very unpleasant conversations | among them. Not lo ago I heard two girls talking, and one maid she guessed she had flirted with over a dozen married men that day who had their wives along with them, and one had pulled hin handkerehiet from bis ket and dr ed his ecard, and she Was going to call him up. Very recently 1 overheard this conversation between two pretty len't Ruth Garrison having ? Bverybedy is making! over her, I suppose she will become a famous movie star ¢ we poor dunces remain at “Oh, well,” said the other girl, “I, too, am in love with a married man, Dudley wrong to become interested In each other to the extent if it had been ground into them, na it wae tn our family have she never would have permitted it When it gets so far Insane infatuation, will of man te Mins Grey at all and have similar to ever end in love repulxion and hatred cleverer than I am! I have permitted | you to follow me around, I have let you into my house, and never once 'have [ dreamed that try ing to trap me! My dear, you sur pass any BPY I have ever dealt with With that he held me at length a» if thus he could bett mire the fine specimen of which he had caught! ‘Then, with all my strength, I struck him across the mouth! I tore |mynself from his grasp and sprang It certainly is not love | toward an opening which the ex- I have had many confidences | plosion bad broken in the wall of observed keenly in cases the office. this one, and it rarety 1 ang away from him with all mearly always in| the energy | had ever put into a | gym s#tunt—but I quite forgot about my new style narrow skirt, and #o [ | staggered and would have fallen flat Of course, Storrs Huth Garrison knew they and were you we they did; but ss 1 would never ung over desk,” and rm's Oh, the pity and the ruin of it all! an to be an it is not in the stay it You gave a very true diagnosis, a spy Looking back from nearly 70 years | ARE BEING DELAYED The Red Cross Award Commission of King and Kitsap counties are having a little delay in the matter of questionnaires relating to the 800+ hour work badges. Mra W. Ay ‘eters is chairman of the award committee, Of the 22,000 women who have done active and strenuous | Red Crows work, only 500 or 600 questionnaires have been awarded so far, The questionnaire invites the Red Crom workers to designate what time and how much time and |in what field of labor these $90 hours since April 1, 1918, have been | spent. March 31 is the last date upon which questionnaires may be turned in. It eurely seems a pity that after the grand work the Red Cross has Se . tulated upon the birth of Jast Sunday. This is their sec MeDonald was Miss | fellow. \ the army. | eee eee | in Home | Mr, Cameron Whitelaw lett yes | Heary Glorius, who | ‘tay for New York, where he will ° “ |make his home. Mra. C. H. White-| EP with an tnfroted foot et | aw and Miss Marjorie Whitelaw will | accompany him as far as Chicago. Mrs. R. H. Parsons and daughter, . Green Hostess | Mias Rosamond, returned Inst week 7 ie 3 Green entertain: | from California matrons and eee | army, arrived hingten, D. of life, even 27, the age of Dudley Storrs, seems youthful, I do not be Heve tg te evil or a brute. He sim ply Jet his passions race away with him instead of he, himself, being the perfected in Seattle that we show only be credited with 600 or vorite little word had | awards oyt of the 22,000 able and 4 triumphant Dearest, 1 rt workers who gave thelr talents told you not to struggle. It is use-| 4nd toll to further this greatest and master, Boys need training as well| lee. Do you know, I am really | noblest movement ia the direction of ry harity toward all men and the an girls. I taught my boy it was|Cleverer than you are after all? You|® © : nity and ignoble and unmanly to tolerate | oA © to trap me—and kindly ob- uptift and success ali familiarity from a girl, and it was|*erve how I am holding you in my still more ignoble and unmanly to|“!™s, sweetie!’ With that he drew himself seck famillarities, In other |® caressing finger from my shoulder | words, [ taught and trained my boy | down the length of my arm. | just an I did my girl, and altho they|, “Tony!” I implored. “If you ever | they. have|lved me honestly, let me go! Cail AY. F. | me ‘Jeanne’ again, as you used todo, had “so?” only his wife has a baby ontha to wait home Tuesday from W C., and ts honorably diveharged from | | | ? R y old, #0 I gucen I will have * 4 “ awhile.” I'll wager there are any number of romantic (7) young girls in Seattle F who would do anything to have the | Mg © writeups mn the papers as has Ruth i Garrinon Why does the public permit it? And why don’t mothers take care of their daughters? MRS. D, F. B. ‘ — lare men and women, Teaching | never made a misstep. youns [at the Sunset club musicale) Mra. Mark Crane, of North Yak-| afterncon in honor of Searles, whose Lieutenant Commander ts doing duty for several junior at Smith « Mrs. George Dowling. eee her Easter vacation in New York, visiting two classmates. ore Lieut. Barrett Green, Capt. John A. O'Brien, one of the! Northwest's best known shipmasters | and a resident of Seattle for the past | 40 years, will leave for San Fran: | greatest attractions, European judg-| ing, a warm soapy bath, and arubin| futuré/ ment of aristocratic Uneage rests! scented water or rum is excellent. If| ten guests informally at din- night, and afterwards!ciseo Friday, to make his i attended the hockey game. home there. ers the Torments of Pain, Ache, Fever “Bayer Cross” on Tablets. EP PAIN QUT YOUR HOME! **Proved Safe By Millions”’ Lame Back Colds Lumbago Grippe Joint Pains Influenzal Colds Sciatica Stiff Neck Gout Distress Neuritis Pain! Pain! ‘Take one or two “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” with If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. | Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” American owned—Entirely! 20 cent Bayer packager—aleo larger Bayer packages. Buy Bayer packages only—Get original package. the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Momosceticackienter of Salleyticectd __ If Better Phonographs Could Be Made, We Would Make Them” _ Let Us Put a MASTERPIECE _ PHONOGRAPH in Your Home We'll deliver it free. Keep it a week. Use it all you wish. Treat it as tho you owned it. After . that return it if you are not satisfied it is worth three times the price you pay. No explanations, no apologies, are necessary. All we ask is a trifling deposit and this i turned to you immediately if you do not oth the je, $47.50 instead of $150. $60.00 instead of $200 $70.00 instead of $275 See them in the window. Hear them play all records. Easy terms arranged. MASTERPIECE PHONOGRAPHS SEATTLE SALES STORE 1214 Fourth Avenue—Near University They must be neither too short, ima, is visiting Mrs. J. L. Hall and of the French artillery corps, arrived home| yesterday morning. and is with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Green. tt es | ff | BY EDITH HYDE “The Girt of the Golden Apple” A beautiful foot is one of woman's | largely upon the shape of the foot if it in tiny, perfect in shape, has a high instep, and ts beautiful in con tour, the assumption is that the owner is of the aristocracy | | & man looks first at a woman's face, and next—at her foot. Amert-| lean women in general pomem ns | | beagtiful feet as any nation in the | world, but no women treat their fect | so badly, except perhaps the Chinese, | land they are learning! First of all, bay shoes that fit. Of vanity, Ught it to know that she shoe fits, she will Little Stories By THORNTON (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. lenough and not too high The ob | Ject in to have the toes ntraight 404) toy stores nor too tight. The very narrow sole in as harmful as the too pointed toe. ‘The feet must be able to “breathe.” The sole of the shoe should be broad enough and the heel broad shapely aa# nature intended them to be, so that the naked foot will be as beautiful and expressive ° naked hand. Frequent bathing is necessary to keep the feet beautiful. Have as many pairs of shoes as you can af ford and change them frequently |it is beut for both feet and mhoes. | Ae After a long walk, or much stand there ts pain in the foot, ® bath in a weak solution of carbolic acid will help. For feet inclined to swell, « hotsalt bath is excellent. Here is a that is very good dissolved in the foot bath; One ounce of alum, 2 ounces of rock salt and 2 ounces of borax. Rubbing a cut lemon on the soles of the feet will help them when ured, and for feet that have a tendency to perapire or swell, after the bath this powder may be ap plied: Three drachma of lyco podium, 1 drachm of alum, 30 grains of tannin ‘The oftener you bathe and rub your feet the better and shapelier | 4 rock of defense. they will be for Bedtime | Saved Her | | Dear Mins Grey | Ponition to reach | Want to tell you how the teaching of my parents maved me from Just | such an ilticlt love ax has been the undoing of Ruth Garrison and Dud I did not realize jt at the time, | but looking back a few years after: | ward, it wan clear to me what saved | me. I was a mina of 19, he was 26 and unhappily married. We were | thrown together in @ literary club. | |Our tastes and our abilities were) much the same. We were very con- He had married at 21, 0 Pretty doll, and was paying for It. | My parents had taken it as 4 mat | ter of course that one of the biack- | jeat of biack sins was for a married | |man to show attention to another | \airl, or for a girl to accept such at | tentions, wife to pay attention to anoth woman, i# just ax apt to deceive the the same manner.” have any self-reepect and forget he has @ wifet” with her if she will accept the at-| tentions of a married man?” Theee the room to talk with him. When) be approached me, I was most re) j| served. We debated on the same/ wide of & question sometimes and had to consult. Sometimes we were Burgess Prickly Porky Loses His Spears ‘OT since the time that Buster | Bear got into trouble there had | Farmer Brown's litte sugar house in| | the Green Forest known uch doings. | | People who go where they have no | business to go quite often get into |trouble, Prickly Porky the Porcu: | | pine had no business in that sugar | house. He was not supposed to be in| (there. Of course not. But he was in| | there, and all because of his inquisi-| tiveness, and he was in trouble. He | | was in about the worst trouble he ever had been in, Certainly, he as badly frightened. You see, quite by accident he had pulled down an old sweater of Farm er Brown's Boy, and it had fallen so that ft quite covered his head. | The thousand litte spears which he | carries in hia coat were sticking | thru it in ajl directions. In trying | to back out from under it, which, of | course, he couldn't do, he had knock ed down a lot of sap pails, and these | |had thumped and bumped him, to} jay nothing of the fright the noise | | they made had given him. You see, | he didn’t know what they were. | Now he was rolling over and over, clawing at that terrible thing that blinded him and stuck to him. He lashed about with his tall, but all| he succeeded in doing was to hit a/ tin pall now and then. The Iittic spears sticking thru the sweater in | all dtrections held it for a while. By and by he managed to get hold of it with his claws and pull. The old sweater came off, but with it came THE IDEAL WOMAN The great Napoleon once said |My ideal woman ia not the beauti tulfeatured fociety belle, whose | physician tries in vain to keep her in repair, but the matron who reaches middle age in complete pres ervatton—that woman is rendered | beautiful by perfect health.” To at- | tain such health in middle life, a woman must guard against those ills which drag her down and produce nervousness, headache, backaches, | sleeplessness and “the blues.” The standard remedy for such conditions is Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable |Compound, which for forty-five years has been restoring women to health and strength. Liberty Bonds Bought and Soid at Market Rates The Seattle National Bank |! Bond Department Serand Ave, and Columbia St. | | couldn't remember ever having ne | all the little spears that were stuck in it. You see, those little spears came out of Prickly Porky's coat very easily, Whenever he rubs Prickly Porky Took One Look at That Old Sweater, and Then H Started for the Door, against anything, some of them are sure to come out, but never before had he lost more than a few at a time. Now, however, that old sweater lying on the floor looked like a regu- lar pineushion, Hundreds of Prickly Porky's little spears, which are called quilis, were sticking from {t in every direction. If you could have seen Prickly Porky, you would hardly have recognized him. Only a few scattered little spears were left in his coat, Prickly Porky took one look at that old sweater and then he started for the door. He was a hun: dred times more anxious to get away | from there than he had been to get in, He was just plain seared, and that was a feeling that Prickly Porky knew very little about, He is a slow-moving fellow, ts Prickly Porky, but you wouldn't have known it could you have seen him come out of the door of the little sugar house, He grunted as he ran, Those grunts were funny little grunts of pure fright. As yet he didn’t understand what really had| happened to him. He never would | understand what the strange thin, 7 was which he was sure had attacked him, Next Story: Prickly Porky Fools Disgraced. EK A PURE IGHT IN CONCERT Accompanied by Charles Gilbert Sproas, noted composer, Anna Case, New York Metropolitan soprano, made her appearance before a Seat: tle audience for the first time Wed nesday night, at the Metropolitan theatre. A capacity crowd accorded & favorable reception to the artist, whose voice was demonstrated as technically perfect in a varied pro- m of classical and popular songs Honest Advertising My set ley in my business of advertising has been to advertise the truth and claim only what all reputable men in dentistry can perform. Price To All I advertise my prices and live up to them. It may be interesting to note that I claim to give the best dentistry at my prices. their dental bills. nd ballads. ‘The recital was ar ranged by J. W. Sayre. , |. nis | Magn ach form of five |der in sealed | other woman, were she his wife, in| confuse with “How can he | milk of magnesia or citrate o! Hag: neaia BISU- ; RATED and get How can she expect | DHUGGISTS EVE: anyone to respect her or associate | —- Were expressions wo were wont to! are ro hear from our parents, and it proved | from Pisos Stops irritation; sooth- | spread their doctrines! on | ing. 1 would not cross | 0G old. No opiates in ee You must know that I did not come here as a spy, Tony! Think—I came You are in a) } parents, und Gas on Stomach ii." 7%" %* Pet setinst your “No woman ever fooled me be fore, honey. And you will never fool me again! As for warning me, |why, I am well used to plots to eatch plotters. Don't talk any more about the girl called ‘Jeanne.’ She has joined the dead Jane Lorimer!’ He spoke solemnly, ominously. For the first time since I had been “buried” I felt that I might never be resurrected. The man’s hidden crueity, the Hunnishneas which he had concealed from ali of his friends so successful- |ly and for #0 long a time, was be trayed again in his next words: “I guppore I never could have got | you any other way, sweetheart. But jnow—" His eyes were half closed | as he looked at me. I shut my own jeyes to keep out the sight of bis ie gloating face. oe This was not the Hamilton Cer- ow = sae eee ed Pom; | tel I had known. It was not Dad- commercial magnesia, | dy Lorimer's friend. It was the Bol- shevik! The primitive exploiter of women! And part of his great plot I guensed from what I had read in the files—was to nationalize wom- ent Sour Stomach Indigestion Heartburn Instantly Relieved by IN 5 GRAIN TABLETS AND POWDER FORM TED MAGNESIA te acidity Loo! word ‘enuine from WHERE. Persistent Coughs Get prompt reliet|and his kind were permitted to Effective and safe for yount) Never in my life had I been ob- weased by the wish to kill. When I bad swept the U-boat with a gun, from hate. But I could have killed Hamtiton Certeia, the Bolshevik! The Demand of Today Is Sanitation. Keep your hair young, soft and lustrous. If your hair is gray or | faded, use Never-Tel, the world’s greatest hair restorative. perfumed and easily dissolved ip = little water as used. Not a dye ang | does not stain. A real dressing that jdoes the work so gradually own friends can “Never-Tel.” your druggist’s, 50c, or direct fi | Never-Tel Laboratories Co. Dep. Kansas City, Mo. The tortures and diseom! weak, lame and aching bac i t and limbs, weakn nausea, as a rule jin kidney trouble, Pecldney and bi of idney an well known—so is the remedy. Next time ain in the ia, irritation in the the loins and lower will find quick and sure GOLD MEDAL The fate which threatened me | ments would befall all decent girls if he Pais it was to save the troopship, not |sules are » + h Sa eee 41S See At SE ITLIES IT A, PEI AS MY ONE BIG AIM IN DENTISTRY Has been to satisfy. I have been too long in business and my success proves my methods are correct. I use graduate and licensed dentists and they are men of families who are associated with me to make this office a monument for good dentistry. It is easy for us to prove that we use the best material and in combination with the recognized stand- ard ways in performing the work no dentist can offer more than this. I wish you to study my price list, which is always published. I am a strong believer that a good managed business has a cost price and in handling a large volume of business I can set a very reasonable price. Best Bridgework ........ . $5.00 Best Plates (Rubber) .. -$10,00 Examination Free. Remember, I am no company, but advertising under my own name. I place 4 responsibility back of your work which is as valuable as any dentist’s in the city. I am well aware that Seattle people are paying twice as much and even more for their dental work in other offices, but a visit and trial at my office will convince a skeptic of 1 | my superior advantages. I am proving every day my value and am saving dozens hundreds of dollars on I invite your patronage. Obey that ever insistent impulse and visit Dr. Wilson today! Lady Attendants. 810', First Ave. DR. J. T. WILSON Opposite Colman Bldg. 225, 0 Sean with headache, indigestion, insom- —