The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 28, 1919, Page 8

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© @F the committes wittily said; needle By eau of the Children’s opedic Hospital A large Chinese gong on the front) ‘Was the first intimation callers | yesterday afternoon at the Little House, Fourth ave and Pine that they we: mtal to the Oriental Chinese rice curtains in varied de screened the windows for those and invited those without to further and see farther. Spring were there in profusion and stores had sent evidences of good will, Chinese dragon stops” of green and gold, cun little bird cages to hold yarn pt the sweater knitter to @ bird of a sweater,” as one “te of all sorts was on display to gold for the benefit of the hos Barrels of bread and French gent by Hazen J. Titus made sales. Mrs. C. D, Stimson, in a Mandarin coat, poured ‘and this opening of the basaar Most successful The children of the Orthopedic hos- are made to feel that they are © be cured and it is this hope that the little ones always bright Ad smiling. The proceeds from the) te White House wil! help many to his feet and become the | of many a waif who but for noble charity would be a burden . al Luncheon Marion McEwan gave an tn luncheon at the Sunset club 8 Wednesday in compliment to Mrs. Hamlin. . . es Simpkins Entertains} ‘Ward Simpkins entertained | at luncheon at her home, at West Seattle, | or Honor Luncheon 0. D. Colvin gave a luncheon to step from the} tained Mr. B ETTY BRAINERD Tylers to Move Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Tyler and two children will mov Summit ave, To Sponsor Boat Mrs, Nathaniel Paschall ing & number of her friends on Sat urday afternoc to witness her launch a boat for the Ames shipyard Mrs. H.C. Allen Hostess Allen enter Meador and Mr. Mra, H.C. Leaghy, Mr Mr, Hartman, boys of the U Vicksburg, at dinner last Sunday Mrs. J. 8 Gibeon will move from the Washington hotel the first of Aprit to her summer home at Crys tal Springs. and Mra. Joseph MeNaught, of Har miston, Ore. who has been the guest of Mrs. De Lorne Harbaugh for a week, is now at the Highlands, with Mrs, A. B. Stewart eee Mr. and Mra. D, W. Hartzell will return tomorrow from a six weeks’ trip to California. see Mr. J. D. Lowman, who has been on his ranch at Ellensburg for the past week, returned home last night. se. Mra. Henry Suzzallo left Wednes day for North Yakima, to be gone a week. Mr. Valentine Ma: East last week RED CROSS WORKER IS BACK IN SEATTLE ‘The first Seattle Red Cross worker y left for the who was on duty in Italy to return | ditions of both women and children | home, Miss Florence Estelle Fitts, is invit:| 8. 8.| SOCIAL SERVICE LEAGUE WILL | HELP TO BANISH MISERY HERE |, BY CYNTHIA GREY ‘The Ia valid needs Theodore Roosevelt once avery man of us, at times, a ping hand stretched out to him, and shame to any man who will not stretch out that helping {hand to his brother, if that brother needs it But if the brother Hew down, you can do very little in carry ing him. You can help him up, but | he must walk for himself.” There are sympathetic, broadanind. ed, publiospirited citizens in Seattle who have precisely the same sent ments about charity. They have got ten together with the purpose of stimulating this ideal. S80, as « part of Seattle's great, constructive, after the-war plan, Uhis city i* to have a social welfare society, patterned after that of the large cities in thin | country. This organization, with | Reginald H. Parsons at its head, has taken over the work and charter of the Associated Charities. | The league has been fortunate in | deed in securing as its executive seo [retary Miss Evelyn Gall Gardner, |moted astern welfare worker. | “There are no unworthy poor,” is Miss Gardner's staunch motto, Year in Europe graduated from Vassar in 1904, majoring tn soctology and eco- nomics. She then «pent Europe, studying social conditions In jelht different countries, Upon her return, Miss Gardner took a master’s degree at the University of Micht | Kan, speciylizing in sociology, eco jnomics and municipal administra: | ton. She was called tmmediately to Washington, D. C., to take charge of the central district of the Associ ated Charities. When the United States ment of } She depart it began an investiga labor, sbe was detailed to probe the working and social con: thruout the Eastern states, Com at her home in honor of *ushter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fitts. | pleting this work, she organized the Tulle Field, daughter of Com.|°% Three Tree Point, arrived in Se) chitdren’n bureau of Detroit and Mrs, Field, of the navy ttle Thursday after several months’ | yeary were spent in this service, ‘an@ Miss Catherine Butler, who | SP0nt overseas her engagement last As a worker at the Italian head Four 4 ministering, organizing and direet- ing the work of 52 separate agencies Ten girls of the younger net WATters in Rome, Miss Fitts had) having to do with the welfare of chil ‘entertained, and after luncheon ‘B® Opportunity of witnessing the | dren ‘went to the Moore theatre. Inde goes Operation le General hospital, where he under. &n operation for appendicitis a| February 20 on the Dante Glighiert, sone to Grand Rapids, where shes welfare work. after a voyage of 24 days, during | of days ago. ee day Party E. C. Wagner gave a birthday | for her little three-year-old , Peggy, last week. The lit-| | 7 Buy Direct 35 to |from the front | of the Austrians, also the celebration following the signing of the Itallan- Whittington ts at the Seat. Austrian armistice. return of King Victor Emmanuel fter the surrender Miss Fitts arrived in New York which there was much suffering from influenza among the passen- jgers. En route to Seattle she visited friends in Florida for several weeks. Miss Fitts was formerly a # OR: .|Papher in the office of the prosecut- “ling attorney for King county. BRINKER ON WAY TO EUROPE Capt. J. BE. Brinker, who left Se attle as master of the Easterling, in en route to Europe as master of the steamship Western Ally, according to « letter received by his friends among the members of the Wash- ington association No. 12, Masters, Mates and Pilots. The United States railroad admin- istration has given assurance of spe- cial summer tourist rates, announces the state development bureau of the Chamber of Commerce. and Save 50% Every woman who buys here knows that she gets the latest in Spring styles at prices 35 to 50% lower than at o er stores, We manufacture all garments shown in our immense stock, here in the city, and sell direct to the wearer. BY SEL! LING DIRECT WE ELIM- [NATE THE MIDDLEMAN AND ALLOW YOU THE LOWER PRICE INSTEAD. Undoubtedly there has been too much profiteerin, stores in orbitant to-wear c! by other this city—selling at ex- prices women’s ready- lothing inferior to ours. Your co-operation is needed to lower prices. Show that you are interested in our plan of selling direct, and we'll keep prices on the downward trend. You may be sure of correct Spring styles, of care- ful, honest, high-class tailoring. We stand back of all sales with a guarantee Suits just received of satisfaction. from our factory Special for Saturday $25 Made of Tricotine. Colors—Navy, Copen and Taupe. Lined with flowered Satin Box Suits and semi-fitted | de Chine. Belted models. ines, in sizes 16 to 44. We carry a complete assortment of Dresses, Coats, Capes, Dolmans, Sport Skirts, Sweaters and Waists, at lower prices. | curin, j x the passage of the Michigan child labor law, which is one of the best in the country Helped Write Charter From Detroit Miss Gardner was ad the unique distinction of being called upon to write into the charter for a commission form of govern: ment, @ municipal social service sec: | tion, which automatically operates in | the administration of the city go ernment in regulating and supervise ing welfare work. There is a broad field for social welfare work in Seattle; but the new league will not infringe upon any of cleties. It in the chief aim of the league to cooperate and work in harmony with these organizations, Lawyers to Help Among the new features the So- celal Service league will adopt. are: Legal aid bureau, composed of 12 \or 15 lawyers, who will give their services free of charge; medical aid “BAYER CROSS” ON ASPIRIN Always Ask for Geauine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” ; Only Aspirin Tablets with the safety “Bayer Cross” on them are genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspiri: owned and made by Americans and proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent Aspirin Tablets were sold recently by a Brooklyn dealer which proved |to be componed mostly of Talcum | Powder. | “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’ | should always be asked for, Then look for the safety “Bayer Croas” on the package and on each tablet. Ac- |cept nothing else! Proper diree @ year in| She was instrumental in se | | the work being handled by other so- | Should Ruth Garrixon, the 18-yea be punished just ke a common crt have written to Cynthia Grey taking this stand recognizes that some bureau, organized practically mame aa the legal ald bureau Jolal atresy will be Inid upon diag | nosis, as the experience of all well | fare agencies now shows that many | people are paupers because of some physical disability; a nursing service, to be developed thru the advice of thone now inte in such work; a visiting house ing force, which general public the | jelled this young girl to commit her Spe- | Following are some of the comme Dear Mina ( There is but Jone way to punish Ruth and Dudley Storrs, in my mind. Unite them in marriage and force them to live in Seattle for fiv If, at the nd of that tim not perfectly happy, sen to five years more of married life Turn them loose and leave then to the tender mercies of thowe name | loving friends who came t> t | to see the girl, with their flowers and kinner lawyer maya, in that i the nad tte | Poor Ruth, as }“only a baby.” Yew | dest part of it, only a baby brur | with ‘all the brunette traits. ven Webster, I bel have traita. Only a baby years hence eh would have been | able to have mdied hi cane #0 adrottly that Mrs, Storrs would either have taken her own life, or divorced Storrs, and a dowen Sher lock Holmes could not have placed any of the blame on Ruth Mrs. Storrs would have labeled a foolish, jealous wife, and Ruthie, the loving, sympathetic friend of Storrs, When a brunette makes up her mind she wants an other woman's husband, you might just as well yield and the struggle, for, if she n't get him | she will surely get you or your goat. After all the trouble they went to, it would be a shame to deprive them of the happiness of each other's society, 4. ¢. Five | Evelyn Gail Gardner will consist of experienced econom. ints, who will visit and teach the in- experienced, unsuccessful housewife how to cook, care for her children, exercise proper sanitary measures and prepare a budget to aid in con-| servation of the family income Evelyn Gail Gardner is sympa. thetic, enthusiastic, superbly Intellee tual, and, above all, plainly human. When she was in her teens, she chose welfare work as her life call- ing, and #0 well has she succeeded that the Welfare league in Detroit is the best organized, most successful |bureau in the United States, Mins | | Gardner, in fact, every member in| this new league, is surely deserving | of the help and co-operation of every one in Seattle who is interested in | Dear Mins Grey: I know you have a kind heart and sympathize with all of us; I, too, am sorry for any one who, in a fit of anger commits murder, and I am still more sorry for a burglar or an outlaw, for they have been driven to thelr wicked life. But, tell me, who can be sorry for a sneak thief, one who would Kill another girl for her own base selfishness, with the sweetness of Judas? Why do the papers make a heroine out of Ruth Garrison? Why uphold | with your brother's wife.” ¢ Then, other woman's husband. Does not the commandment, “Thou shalt not kill,” Include both sexes and all { § Little Stories for Bedtime BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) Prickly Porky Feels Disgraced FTER leaving the little sugar|a feeling as came over him when he house, Prickly Porky made straight for a certain tall tree in spears were, gone, He felt di» | Which he felt at home, Straight up graced. Yes, mir; he felt disgraced. it he climbed, and be wasn't a bit You know, most folks feel disgraced slow about it, either, Not till he was if they have been whipped in a jelear to the top did he feel safe and | fight. Prickly Porky felt that he had |draw a long breath of relief. | not exactly been whipped in a fight, “I don't know what that thing was | for he felt that whoever had attack: | that jumped on me, but I guess by | ¢d him had fared worse than he had; this time it is pretty sorry it did it,”| Nevertheless, he felt that it was a mumbled Prickly Porky. Of course, | disgrace to lose nearly all his little | he thought that that thing was some | thing alive, but it wasn't, you know. | to feel di j1t was simply Farmer Brown's Boy's | lold sweater. Not knowing im, | Prickly Porky took a great of | j satisfaction in the thought that it) 1 } \ | faced, but, just the same, was filled full of his little «pears and probably was wishing it had let | him alone. | Prickly Porky muttered away to himself for a long time before he noticed a queer feeling. At first he couldn't understand just why it was | | he felt queer, or in just what way he |felt queer. He just felt queer, that | | was all, But by and by it came to him that there was something wrong | with his coat, and that that was why he felt queer, You know, Prick ly Porky has a fur coat of quite long | hair, and in this hair he hides the | thousand little spears which are his rotection from his enemies, When he Is in danger or angry, he makes | He Felt That He Didn't Want Any- all those little spears stand up on| bedy te See Him Without Those Jend, and they point in all direc-| [ttle Spears, ; Hone. |he did. He felt that he didn’ in't want He tried raising all those little anybody to see him without those speara now, and suddenly discovered iittie srearn that he hadn't any little spears to Y raise. "That ia to ay, he hat only a|.At first this waa all he could think fow acattered here and thas nly ml about. You. know, always he had sa acne re than ere tent | taken @ lot of pleasure in rattling Garrison | », mays they | been | §} { discovered that nearly all his little | *pears. Of course, he had no reason | ur coat. He knew then why it was |tlons and dosage in each Bayer|he felt qu You see, most of | package. | those little spears had stuck in that Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer | old sweater, and were still sticking Paanurageare of Monoaceticacidester' in it | of Salicylicacid. Never had Prickly Porky had such | Quality Service The Lessons Flowers Teach Gloom and depression not only much out of life, but detract gre from the happiness of others. Mowers teach us to “keep smiling.” They always look toward the sun, whether it is shining or not. They teach us to be bright, cheerful, hope- ful and contented. Study well the lessons flowers teach. Why not buy flowers tonight your way home from the WOODLAWN FLOWER SHOP 1410 Second Avenue FLOWERPHONE NEXT TO YOUR ORDER MAIN 663 on || eom those little «pears, and it always had tickled him to see his neighbors back away and take care not to come too near him, Now he hadn't enough spears to rattle, He tried and tried, but all in vain, Prickly Porky had been as proud of those little spears of his as Sammy Jay is of his fine feathers. That ia why the loss of them made him feel disgraced. Next Story: Prickly Porky Learns What Real Fear I FRANCES ALDA WILL SING HERE APRIL 4 Seattle music lovers will have the opportunity of hearing a number of Metropolitan stars in programs the |same as presented on the operatic and concert stage of the New York ‘opera house, | Mme. Frances Alda, the wife. of | Gatt!-Cassaza, will be heard in recital lon Friday evening, April 4, at the Metropolitan, under the local man. agement of the Ladies’ Musical club. Mme. Alda is one of the greatest operatic sopranos of the day. By reason of her great and generous service to the recent great cause, her name has become a clarion call to patriotic endeavor, An idea of the jextent of her activities in this direc: jtion may be had from the fact that |last season she appeared in 37 ben- efits, the most noticeable being the famous one at the Metropolitan opera |house on June 10, 1918, which she jorganized and managed. She suc- ed in getting together on that casion the world’s five leading ten- |ors, and in raising the sum of $47,000 jas national chairman of the music nitteo of the woman's naval IIA GREY r-old murderess of Mra. G minal? Only a few peop Yor the mort part, the ace Storrs, | thus far strange, circumstances im What do you think? neanny deed | nts on the ease found in today’s mall: | ) amen? 1 am 18 mywelf for two | 48 & young woman, not as a child Yet I haven't the wisdom of Ruth Garrison. If I wanted to kill some IT would meet them with a gun or an ax, and find myself clasned | with the criminals, and the victim might have @ chance to escape. I thought we sweet young girls should, by our modest bearing, be examples to our brothers and the uplifting of other men. I am one who will not wtand by « girl to her sex A WOMAN OF 18 Dear Mins G Ruth Garrison 18 under hypnotic influence, Her pleture shows it, her attitude toward her victim, everything points to that fact from start to finish, The plea, “She's only dab: does not sound good. We must go | very much deeper for a plea. Any | woman knows that at 18 years of }age she in no longer In th | with bables, morally, mentally, | physically, unless she ix feeble mind- | ed. | But not so with rather has she dixpla stoiciam of a very matured woman. Being more or less a natural psychic, sh | wax easily hypnotized by a stronge: will power than her own, and, be jleving it to be love, self-hypnotized | herself into a condition of non-re-| | Mistance, and became the victim of | 4n unscrupulous man, who dominat- | ed her completely. All her normal | self sank in abeyance afd the ab- normal, or animal qualities, came above the threshold of conscious: | news | When the spell is broken and she | learns of hix cowardly actions to |wave himself—well, thereby will | hang a tale. Storra has shown the white feather | of cowardice, and has practically left his victim alone to float or sink on | the throw of public opinion. | Diagnosis of hin picture is any-| too, supported am treated and have year Ruth Garrison; ja creature who stole another girl'®/ thing but flattering—cowardly when | stay in It husband? “It is not lawful to live) Storrs in in danger, not particular! myself and go back to about the absolute truth, just so he neither is it lawful to live with aM | carries his point, and he might hunt|me when he got ready— | for hin good name in the rubbish of | a lhertine | Ruth is, at least, holding some of her friends, tho ft may be mixed | with sentimentaliam; but as for the man in the case, he has built his | funeral pyre for all time. Question, who is the real mur- |derer? According to ncientific dem onstrations, the one who sent out {the suggestion, even in thought, or | harbored it in his mind for a sensi tive or paychic could catch the | thought and become the instrument thru which the deed was committed. But the prosaic world would say Ruth Garrison is the murderer. As everything is measured these days) scientifically, even our religion must | agree with science, and, if found wanting, must be turned around. | | Let us go deep enough below the | surface to see what we find before | Passing judgment. DAD. | | Fears Insanitary | | Restaurant Conditions. Dear Miss Grey: In several restaurants where I have eaten late ly, there is posted a certificate of in- spection, and in all of these places they serve coffee in cracked and chipped cups. Is a cracked cup, after it has been washed in dirty water and placed on 4 drainboard to dry, sanitary? READER. Dishes used in public eating houses are supposed to be scald- ed in water so hot, after they have been washed, that the heat will dry the earthenware with: out going thru the process of wiping it. For the most part, I believe, this rule is strictly ob- served, MOTHERS TO BE Should Read Mrs. Mony- han’s Letter Published by Her Permission. Mitchell, Ind.—“Lydia E. Pink- | ham's Vegetable Compound helped ing it to other expectant mothers. Be- days I with | some suffered neuralgia 80 badly that [ thought I could not live, but after taking three bottles of Lydia B. Pink- hams Vegeta- ble Compound I was entirely re- leved of neuralgia, I had gained in fore taking it, |) “WAS IT MAHOMET THAT MOVED?” "You certainly have got yourself stay aw: into a fix, Jane Lorimer,” I admon iwhed myself as I sank into to 4 cory window of “But of your family have died tragically per haps you can hope that it's written in the #tare that you eball survive thin ordeal.” It wis a comfort to count over some of my former escapes from tight places, but my record didn’t help me much to shape a plan for leaving Certeis’ house; however, it watinfied me, for the moment, to get away from him. Presently came a maid that luncheon was serve Dr. Certeis expecially requested Mile. Vanderlyn to come down. I couldn't be kind enough even to an swer the girl politely. 1 only shook my head. A few minutes later she returned with a splendid silver tray of delicacies which, she said, Dr. Certeis had arranged himself! No woman could have done #0 well, | had to acknowledge. The man was an sesthete, While he might spread the dreadful doctrines of the Bolshevik for the nationaliza- tion of women, he would choose for hin exclusive possession—a ttle Puritan! 1 watked nervously from window to window of my room. It was beautifully located at the end of a that it had windows on sides. From the long French windows in front, I could nee that chair clone a my room nol saying and that the lawn had Been trampled to mud | by the crowd which had watched the fire. From the window at the jend of the room, 1 could reach out and touch a rose trellis. I wondered if an athletic girl would find that trellis strong, in case of need. Then | I sat down at a rear window. The ground had been plowed into a morass by the fire apparatus. Only the motor drive was smooth and hard. 1 watched the garages. Prob- ably Certeis would leave the house in the afternoon. So, also, would I My adventure of the morning had proved that the world was much too wild a place for me to wander around any longer. I would better get into a really safe corner and I would better resurrect darling Mother let Bob love Lorimer, and OR THE MOUNTAIN y--an the fates should | termine 1 was perfectly sick of the and 1 didn't mueh if 1 saw Bob or other man again in my life Plenty of splendid women to go along quite eomf happily without any ound,” thought LL “And th have perfectly stunning time, {Men are not really all that life worth while. Goodness, hate them! I simply hate repeated, just to be sure that I | By and by els’ car pas down the drive. I prepared to jout of his house very quietly, the corner drug store I would to a Lorimer chauffeur, And ‘once more—Mother Lorimer’s proving smile and Daddy's teasing! ‘Tears fell as T turned the ta my door, It stuck tight! I and pulled at it At last IT that I was @ prisoner! “Oh, Ya! lat’ 1 sala with risive shrug. “As if it wouldn't more than a key to keop me Once more I studied ee age nd ae i at the end of the house, windows opened on narrow in @ very foreign fashion. was my comment, but of couldn't escape unseen before fail. Darkness brought another mons to dine with Certeis, | shook my head positively. And in place of a tray, came . with a table and all the aphernalia which Certeis have at his meals. j Finally, came Certeis himself, his charming smile and bis bow. “Was it Mahomet or the that moved?" he asked. forgotten, mademoiselle!”* (To Be Continued) AIRPLANE FACTORY BE MANAGED BY Wi SAN FRANCISCO, Mi Mrs. Hilda Hewlett, woman flyer and airplane here today on her way to tend erection of an airplane for the New Zealand | During the war Mrs. H | Plane factory built the uy or let himimen two planes a day, "If Better Phonographs Could Be Made, We Would Make Them” — Several hundred men and women in Seattle will now tell you that better phonographs are not made than the Masterpiece. See them for yourself— whether you know or not. any of these people — The machines are the last wort! in phono- graph making, but prices very low. direct selling makes $47.50 Instead of $150.00 $60.00 Instead of $200.00 $70.00 Instead of $275.00 See them in the window. Step inside and hear © them play all records, Easy Terms Arranged MASTERPIECE PHONOGRAPHS. SEATTLE SALES STORE 1214 Fourth Avenue—Near University : strength and was able to go around and do all my housework. My baby when seven months old weighed 19 pounds and I feel bet- ter than I have for a long time. I never had any medicine do me so much good."—Mrs. Peart Monx- HAN, Mitchell, Ind. Good health during maternity is @ most important factor to both mother and child, and many letters have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., telling of health restored during this trying period by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com- pound. service, regularly as the creator and inter: preter, each season, of the new op- eras, Her frequent scheduled ap- pearances with Caruso are always the signal for sold out houses, At the Metropolitan, Alda appears |. and RENGO wearing Rengo Reducing Co: since lastAutum discard themno because the § Season presents all ing new “Rengo” to conform to a decid- edly different sil- houette. ae Strong Ren Belt, Doub Watch-Spri Steels, Steelas- tic Webbing are exclusive . features that co bute to the grace and comfort these wonderful cors sets—earning for th the enviable BELT tion of “the most FEATURE ELASTI WEBBING Model No. 320 Rengo Belt Parte mical ever devised for 4 men of stout medium build.” Cc Re Pd has a tamous, eleven years’ reputation for long service hard wearing qualities. They retain their original b in a manner truly unusual in the experience of the st woman who is proverbially “hard on corsets,” Prices of Rengo Belt Corsets range from $2 to $10 Crown Corset Co, 170 Fifth Ave, New York

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