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go Carlson Guest Sand Mrs. A. H. Sor! « © at dinner Thursda, evening ot Mr. Hugo Carison, vice ‘of the State bank, who ex ® to leave ‘for Europe the latter Pet mext week. Covers were laid |tional bank, of Oakland, Calif, Me is a nephew of Mrs, Francette P Maring, assistant to Judge Dykeman, of the Seattle juvenile court, and of Mrs, Stephen J. Chadwick, wife of tice Chadwick, of Olympia, grandson of the late Dr. 0. Plummer, of Portland, Ore. | and of the late Thomas M. Gatch, a former president of the University of | Washington, and of Mrs, Thomas M. | Gateh, who, with her two daughters, fH, H. Sheets, who left for & Aire, Wheeler and Miss Grace Gatch, gg alagare foc Hoods Live on Queen Anne hill, Seattle.” today, ner ia informal dinner last night ),. by Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Et Give Dance Bight guests were enter) Mise Thelma Barbour and Mr. William Hanson gave a dance last ee se night at the home of Mr. and Mra. Stewart Hostess J. W. Barbour. of Mrs. Joseph Me of Harmiston, Ore, who & of Mrs. A. B. Stewart, Mrs. i fer was hostess to nine ie at the Golf club for luncheon ir. Sheets to Rest Luncheon Given ae Mrs. M. Rozema gave a luncheon of eight covers at the Sorrento hotel | on Wednesday and afterwards two tables of bridge were at play, | ° ° Children’s Recital | Elbridge Stuart en-| Miss Margaret Olson gives a re| Guests at dinner last Cital tonight at 745 o'clock at Odd) the birthday of | Fellows’ hall, presenting her chil dren and junior classes in recitations, monologues and two one-act plays. le Birthday Tea . eee ‘Perrot and J. J. Blackmore | Quartet Here ‘& studio tea at the Mokel.| The Camp Lewis quartet will sing metments on Sunday afternoon, *t the twilight musicale at the Wash hemor of Miss Agnes Berry, for. 'gton hotel tomorrow afternoon. Nat the Chicago Opera com. |Thitquartet haw received a regular | Wwho appears at the Moore |ovatiorvevery time it has appeared | bing Sunday. Sixty The selections are happily chosen. | been invited. fi oie + tlie Garden Club Meets } Born The Garden club, which was or “arch § number of the F8nined before the war and dishanded Navy Journal appeared |t© £0 into Red Cross activities, met ftem of interest to the Yesterday afternoon for the first time pioneers: in two years at the Little White| , Nancy Weems Gatch, | House. The proposition of tree plant: | mim to Lieutenant Commander iP Was considered | pe Leigh U. 8. N, and! * = ¢ i hd home of Mrs.| Pntertain Men Annapolis, Md , fe a granddaughter of Back from War Constructor Robert B.| Returned soldiers and sailors of Ng a niece of Com: the United States and allied forces |. Dashiell, U. 8. | ving in the West Seattle district. | will be the guests of Division No, 12 S.\ of the Minute Men at a “Welcome € 1.8.| Home” entertainment and dance Sagat Commander Gatch ix Saturday night at the Hiawatha 8. 8.| Heidhouse. om the West coast. | The “Welcome Home" has been Commander Thomas) planned to show the appreciation of Js the son of Mr. and| the West Seattle people of the serv-| ‘Rée Gatch. Mr. Gatch is | foes performed by the fighting men. Ment of the Central Na. The celebration will open with an hour of entertainment, beginning at $:15, followed by an evening of dancing. Refreshments will be pro vided the wives of the Minute Men and served by a corps of girls. All service men residing in West Seattle south to the city limits and) east to the waterways are invited to attend and bring a partner. Committees in charge of the en- By BETTY BRAINERD | | Saeco | | oH ~~~ ~~~ BY EDITH HYDE “The Girt of the Golden Apple.” Very few women know how to wear jewelry All women instinetively love Jew elry, but few have developed taste in its nelection and wearing. History does not record a time when women did not decorate themselves with tinkling ornaments, finger rings, and even toe rings, armiets, and anklets Modern women seem to feel that the more jewelry they can pile upon themncives the more artistically they are adorned. The Opposite Is True Very few women can wear more than one piece of jewelry to advant ake. If women would make this a bracelets | “Girl of the Golden Apple” Says - _ }) Simple Jewelry Most Artistic By CYNTHIA GREY Dear Miss Grey: | We have been having a discussion. |The question is, are most couples happily married, or are most of them seeking or thinking of separation and divorce A little club, to which I belong, has had this under in- formal discussion at a current topics session. We have talked a lot, but did not come to any conclu- sion, Some one suggested asking you for an opinion. CYNTHIA FANS. It, all depends on what you mean by the term “happily married,” If you take it in its broadest sense, I believe you can safely answer in the affirm- ative. ° The average couple, with an income sufficient to make leisure something to be desired, is usually happy the greater part of the time. Too little or too much money is the chief cause of home disturba neces. All couples have their perplexities and problems to solve. The wise ones realize this to be a accordingly. universal state, and act If most couples were not happily married, three or four divorce courts would not meet the demands of the unhappily wed. If most couples were not happily married, there would not be city upon city, wit! of residence sections. street upon street As some one said, when speaking of the ap- parent ills of matrimony, “We must remember that it is only the unhappily wed of whom we hear. No one sings the praises of the happy ones.” That's true. mind. Pans Press for ! Garrison News Dear Mine Grey: It seems strange to me that all of the newspapers. and I have read « lot of them thru- out the Northwest, paint Ruth Gar this self admitted murderess, ak an injured saint. ‘They devote front pages to a deliberate propa- rinon, \qanda to free this woman, and on !hard and fast rule, they would do a good thing for beauty. A dozen ornaments all worn a: the same time give the effect of vulgar display. Each subtracts from all the others, and the net result in mediocrity One good plece of jewelry in better than a dozen, Its very simplicity lends dignity and charm. A simple string of pearls with an evening gown is better than a startling ar ray of brooches, lavalieres and pins. One ring is much better than a dozen. Who has pot seen the! woman with three rings on the same | finger, and looked at her with dis gust! Select simple, artistic, beautiful Jewelry, even if it in inexpensive, and wear a little of it at a time | Little Stories for Bedtime the last page we find a few lines an | nouncing the funeral of the victim, no Word of sympathy or sorrow for the broken-hearted mother and sin ter} not even an expression of the wellmeant alma of breath.” Surely their sense of justice in warped. They speak of thin girl's lendid courhge.” Good God! They must admire the courage of a rattlesnake and the courage that made the Ger- man submarines murder inhocent women and children. If this woman is freed, the press will have made of her a celebrity, and, in all probability, she will be offered a porition on the stage. If this ts a sample of American justice it in ttle wonder that an alien thinks twiee before he gives up his citizenship in a country that knows right from wrong, and where justice is not bought for a price, to swear allegiance to a “whited sepulcher,” c.0. P. Suggests Names And it’s a good thing to keep in Soldier Tells of Unfortunate Case Dear Miss Grey: 1 ba’ « number of your letters and answers, so have decided to come also for advice. 1 was discharged on the 13th of December, 1918, and there was some sligitt mistake made in connection with my name on the final pay roll, which necessitated sending my name back to Washington, D.C. I ead of retaining me in camp, they asked me to sign the discharge, which I did, and they kept it, saying it would be kent to my home address. I was in Tennessee, and my home was in Seattle. I received no pay and no transportation, ax I was in Tennessee at the time of enlistment I hoboed” my way home. ‘That part did not bother me, even tho it was over 4,000 miles by way of New| Orleans, over the Southern Pacific and in the middie of winter. But I have not received my firial pay, nor my discharge, therefore I am unable to obtain my bonus. Please advine me to whom I should write concern ing the matter. ce The American Legion of Lib erty, general headquarters for returned service men, Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club, can assist you, 1am sure, Or, perhaps the local Red Crons would take the matter up for you Does Not Compel CERTEIS VIOLATES THE BARGAIN FOR MY SAFETY “Do not sulk, ix, as the servants completed the details of the dinner he had staged lin my bedroom, He motioned the men to go before he seated himself oppoulte to me; then he continued “A man can admire a woman in but only when he is way to show it,” 1 protested, “Hut, — sweets naid Certain, “there are no gentlemen in our busd ners At this I cried out like an angry child “Your business, not mine, Hamil ton Certeis! I am not a epy™ | Then Cert reached across the table, patted my hand softly, and said with convic tion: “Well, if you are you afe going to corking good spy toor” “That's what you've come to talk over?” I inquired. “surely. 1 expect to make a bar gain with you.” | “What are the terms?” I asked | eagerly: | “I suppose you realize, Mile. Van |derlyn, that you are my prisoner? To have—and to hold—until death do us part!” Uke sacrilege “Perhaps,” I said, trol my features. “Very w I am your slave. You know that I love you in 4 hun dred ways, You cannot guess all the waya I love you “But you are not proving your de votion just now, Dr. Certeis,” I ob- jected "Yes, Lam. Wait. I am going to make @ great sacrifice to prove it You are mine—to keep. mins Jane Lorimer, for she is dead. And Mile. Vanderlyn is supposed to thave sailed Belgium.” | “You have spread that story | gasped. | With a careless shrug, Certels continued with the topic which was important to himself not one now be one—and @ trying to con “Ll need your ingenue way, I need) | process of fermentation at It is a dangerous! your cleverness in my—let us call it business. put I was born for it, and ~ Stomachs Put in . No Indigestion, laughed delightedly, you will make, | His mockery sounded | No one will | little girl,” maid Cer-, reared for it, and ite reward wi be worth all the risks.” “Helping you means —just hast” I demanded. “Nothing more than carrying mes mye about the country—letters which are unsafe in the mails, Yeu are wonderful, my love, at ® up. Simply marvelous, I¢ wil Be any.” “If I did not agree?” “Unless you do, you become mine tonight. And 1 hope,” he a@ded, “that you turn down the offer of wafety I have made you.” “But I do not refuse,” I aald past tively, as I rose from my place a& the table. “Then—mine is the lo” He bowed abruptly. “You will start to morrow morning.” Then he went away quickly Just after midnight I heard eome- thing moving in my r The lights were switched on and T saw—Hamilton Certeis standing by my bed! “You are too beautifal,” Be aad. Even as he spoke, my mind working with lightning rapidity. tefs had not come in by the door, Back of him, I could see a long mirror was swung open a door. Beyond it was the with the skeleton in armor, the div- er’s sult. Beyond that, wae Certeis”’ I die, 1 hope that I may be able to forget that amile. GAR, Then he turned to switch-off the lights. (Te Be Continued) CHARGE WOMAN MADE — CORN WHISKY HERE Mra. L. Doran, of 2425 Dearborm st. is held for the Unii grand jury on the charge of corn whisky on her kitchen ‘The distilling outfit, seized nue agents, is said to ¢ three-gallon milk can, with” densor soldered on top, © \a copper coll to a wooden Bu Revenue cutter agents cl 15 gallons of cornmeal of the arrest. The wo leased on $1,000 bail. Order—Instant Gas or Hearth % Lumps of pain—that’s in- digestion ! Belching sour food, acids and gases—that’s dyspepsia. Instant relief awaits you! ! (Copyright, 1919, by 5 May McKevitt, Misx Tedford, Eins Schutt, Jeannette Hainsworth, Esp | erance Lipsky, Elizabeth Simpson. Refreshments—Mrs, Clara MeGow- | ' iH was that of disgrace. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS | Prickly Porky Gets Into Trouble RICKLY PORKY the Porcupine | leaves, matters would have been dif had lost nearly all his quills, | ferent. the little spears he carries in his|at the very beginning of spring, be-| font, you know, ahd his first feeling | fore the leaves had come out, and) He felt very only in the pine or spruce or hem- much as you or I would if we had/lock trees could Prickly Porky be| | for Societies Dear Mise Grey: Will you please suggest several appropriate names from which @ne may be selected for | private dancing club of married | couples? c. | How do these suit you: Jennes But. you know, it was Just! Esprits, meaning young spirits; Reau Eaprita, fine spirits; Bon Vivants, good fellows; Bidea- Wee, Larksters, Casaallera, or T. W. Burgess) Residence There | Dear Mine Grey: Would you be | 80 kind as to settle an argument be | tween my friend and me? This party claims that persons having married in Canada must reside there. I feel | quite assured that this is not trie, but what do you say? INQUISITIVE. You win, Marriage in Canada The moment Diapepsin reaches your sickyupset stom- ach all distress stops. No waiting—Stops at once! Costs so little at drug stores, Put an end to stomach misery! = Pape's Diapepsin 21500 does not Fem the pafties to UPSET? Fan wg CLEMME Today SEATTLES BEST PHOTO PLAY HOU Ht an (chairman); Mra. L. W. Held, Mra. P. P. Blias, Mrs. F. Scott, ' appear among our neighbors half-| hidden. Even there, he was not hid- Margaret Mrs. C. F. Stafford, Janice Cole, I: | Greased. At first this was the only/den from the sharp eyes of certain jeen Benedict, Helen Keck, Barbara| feeling he had. Because of it he) of his feather ighbors. | widson, Kathryn Lindsay, Mary | Wanted to keep out of sight of his) Sammy Jay was the first to dis-| ris, Edna Harris, Annabelle Ken: | neighbors. cover him. At first Sammy didn’ nedy, Grace Hanson, Edna Hanson, But keeping out of sight of his | notice anything wrong. He didn't) Peggy Harper neighbors wasn't an easy thing todo. notice anything wrong until he flew! Decoration—C. L. Tedford (chair-| Had it been mid-summer, when the right over into the tall hemlock tree ); C, & Ryan, Theresa Held, Myr-| trees are clothed with millions of/ where Prickly Porky was, Then) Noble, Dorothy Pratt, Constance Sammy's sharp eyes noticed that | Beisinger, Ruth Welderhold, Eva' For safety sake ask for (‘here was something queer about | Welderhold. Margaret Matthews.| ,, oy {Ptickly Porky. At first he didn’t un-| Louise Wendt. Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’ | derstand what it was, Then, all of a| \s TALCUM SOLD AS | were only half a dozen or #0 of) Mrs. Walter’ McEwan Tomkins is | those sharp little spears peeping out| spending the week end in Olympia, | the guest of Mrs. Vaughan Tanner. Mrs. L. G. Muller, of the Sorrento from the fur of Prickly Porky's| ;coat. Sammy's eyes opened very) hotel, is moving the first of April) to Port Madison, the home of Mr.) Courtiers? uy Our Windows 11 exarnples SI Two Words on Phone—“HELLO, CORA” AND THE SHADOWS FORM—SOMBER AND LOWERING— SCUDDING FROM THE PAST LIKE DARKENING, ANGRY CLOUDS, TO OVERWHELM AND ENGULF MURIEL BARNES, NOW HAPPILY MARRIED |GERALDINE FARRAR ‘ SHADOWS | | came to Prickly Porky that if Buster | Hear should be awake and hear this, | RU SSIAN CONCERT NUMBERS | this would be a good time to get a porcupine dinner. He had a feeling “SECOND RHAPSODY” .........0++0+++++-LISZT “BLUETI” ..cccccsesodssseres ..+. DRIGO “What under the sun have you! | done with all your little spears?” he Me. and Mrs. W. 8. Carey and two : Sammy made out that Prickly Pork: daughters, who have been occupying sentenced to three years in the peni- was tolling him that it waa none of - Mrs. Frank McChesney is in the from Headache, Neuralgia, 5" of he ow | .++ » $8.00 to 105.07 jelty visiting her mother, Mrs. George 7 Presently Prickly Porky heard g oom ago, is a guest at the Otis {dps G@ hotel. insi . | lowt his little spears! It suddenly ? a sir| always insist upon the gen. ad i = u wide. | demanded Prickly Porky mumbled something | jwhich Sammy couldn't understand, | Millions of tablets sold to dealers He repeated his question. Agali and Mrs. Marvhail Peterson. iiparrs dmaibananintonaias spre Prickly Porky mumbled, This time ete Kerry home on Queen Anne tentiary for selling talcum powder his business. In doing this, Prickly | hill, leave Monday for New York, | tablets a» Aspirin Tablets—Beware! Porky made a great mistake. summy | where they will remain unless they day hecame offended right away, | a 1 in getti to . je waid a few sharp things, such as, pe Fe AB to geno fi emt m eine sor | Wher, you seek relief nt Tnory sory wen hw’ tm B. Kittinger, for a few days. Earache, Toothache, Rheus ieee ey aie veces ee | ‘ Mra. W. H. Daub, trom shanghai, matism, Lumbago, Colds, | what sammy: Jay was. screaming | eon | me |, who was in Seattle about six Ginsce Infl fly or 4 ae | wa this: “Prickly Sorky was. toe : rippe or Influenzal Colds | hie rittic spears! Prickly Porky has Miss Tupper, daughter MAIN 78, Keparseod Tupper, of Vancouver, B.C, UINE {a visiting Mrs. Daniel Kelleher. | | @Aspirin® | P iy , The’ Bayer Cross'on Genuine Tablets | Some Cabinet Maker | Proved safe by millions eS a sping norma pornogranh cabinet made ‘Adults—Take one or two! ey ry, 20, , in a modern factory, should | tablets, anytime, with water.| Better Phonographs Could Be Made, We Would Make Them” 4 ; | If necessary, repeat dose three! 2 Some Worker in Delicate Mechanism | times a day after meals. —a watchmaker, for example, what the best | phonograph parts, in 10,000 lots, should cost. dd together, then add a fair profit—you'll get a | 4 | figure mighty close to the MASTERPIECE — || American Owned Entirely! | ene, peice. | Aapirin is the tr WHY PAY MORE? | ture of Monoace $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 20-cent package—Larger sizes also, | Buy only original Bayer packages. “What under the sun have you mark of Ri M: done with all your little spears?” jester ra nes ary he demanded. STOCKS BONDS LIBERTY BONDS ANY AMOUNT—ANY ISSUE ROUGHT—SOLD—QUOTED MACFARLANE & HALL Killott 1324 505 Lowman Bldg. GRAIN COTTON HI YU SKOOKUM POW-WOW LAPUSK @ BRUCE SCENIC that if Old Man Coyote should hear | him, he would wateh for a chance to [catch him on the ground. Prickly | |Porky knew that he was perfectly | | helpless wtihout his little spears, and | [for the first time in his life he un- oO L DS | derstood what real fear is, | Next Story: Buster Bear Becom Head or chest— | tnterented, bg eal are best treated Yeu Vere CHRISTIE COMEDY Kent LITERARY DIGEST | Miss Marion Lilly, who is attending |the Oaksmere school at Mamaroneck, | New York, will spend her Baster cation with Miss Loomis at Atlantic and Miss Louise Sun, at Spring: 29 field, Ohio, cai