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i By BETTY ne Joys A horse! My kingdom : says Richard the Third immortal tragedy bearing his When the first grass peeps spring turf, when the first ‘out from its winter cov it, when the carol of the) a the firet sunny dawn, eh Men and women awake to the for the open riding is a wonderful “stimulant, a great outlet for papirits and a force for health a» as it is inspiring. Many Women have discovered the @f the bridle path. Among ¥ nent matrons and maids B are frequently seen enjoying are Mrs, James 8. Gol¢ “Mrs. A. 8. Taylor, Mrs, David Mrs. Elbridge Stuart F. Goss, Mrs, McEwan Tom Anna Thomsen Milburn ius Manning, Mrs. Morits MrsvClinton Douglas, Mrs Wbrick, Mrs. H. A. Kyer ‘Waterhouse, Miss Mary Miss Gena Peters, Miss Collins, Miss Marion Mc “Mixes Bispeth McEwan, Miss faterhouse, Miss Helen Fos Derothy McEwan, Miss Oldham and Miss Ellen Mes Bow Party beth Wilcox gave a box) Moore theatre Saturday : Her guests were Mrs Mrs, Corey, Mra. W. A and Mrs. John Wright. r eee d by Illness t Mrs. Henry Colver, who tly married at Atlanta, expected in Seattle of March, have been serious illness of Mrs , Mrs. Alvis. Mr. Col , is on his way home, business, and Mrs. Colver a soon as her mother's et by the 5 oe ay eer iven Croix de Guerre and Mrs. Claude C. Ramsay ve} from their nepnew, Lieut. ee G. Ramsay, that he has re | the Croix de Guerre. Lieut. ® member of the 37ist in- Care PRE oe ES ¥. Brown, Mrs. Frederick | 4 .| Jumble Shop Dance BRAINERD | Mrs. Paschall \Christens Ship Mre. Nathante! | stoned the West day afternoon, for th building and Drydock ¢ her om the platform, Mre. H. ©. Potter of Tacoma, her aunt, Mies Jesste Kershaw of Ta- | coma, Mr. and Mra, Robert 8, Brink- ley, Mr. and Mrs, Dantel Kelleher, Miss Frances Tupper of Vancouver, Mr. and Mrs, Car! F. Gould, Mr. and Mrs. Prescott Oak Mr. and Mra. Bernard Pelly, Mr 1 Mra, Robert o, Mr. and Mra L. R, Colt, | i Mra Keith Bullitt, Mre, W, | hy, Mr. and Mra, G, W, Al- | Mr. and Mre. T. A. D, Jones, Mrs. Joshua Green. A Strout, Miss Rebecea Colltr Mrs. J F. Terry Mr, & Mise L. Watkis of Vancouyv John Erickson, Mr. 8S L. Russell, Miss Wanda Erickson, and Mr. Nathantel Paseh: Paseh wateh, set Mrs. Fuller Mra. Anetli y Mrs. F. M the noon bh Jumble Shop ton and Mrs as hostes es . In Honor of Mr: In honor of Mra, W. S. Carey, who lleft today for New York, Mra, Win lock Miller entertained 10 guests at the Sunset club Saturday at lunch: eon. | *-* | Claypool-Mix | Mrs F laypool announces |the engagement of her daughter,! Jean Douglas, to Lieut, Erskine E. |“ Mix, of Camp Lewis, whose home is |in Ottawa, Canada. The marriage | will take place in the early part of | April. Paschal, io Imbro, Satur- mes Ship- . had with her mother, | the elved a 5 with diam: to ship, Mra tinum wrist is nsoring wall red Sing " H companied by avage, w sing during ur at the Red Cross morrow Mra. Single Fred Fischer will act Carey Grace Above—Miss Mary Delafield, « dexterously. Below—Mrs. James 5. equestrienne. | Arrive From Overseas | Dr. Mabel Seagrave and Mrs. Flor. | fence Helliker have arrived in New | York, from duty overseas. After a ten-day stay there, they will join Mr. and Mra. RH. Denny and Mra George Lamping, Mrs. Helliker’s | mother and sister, who are motoring | in California. } (Copyright, 1919, by The Red Cross Jumble Shop will | give another dance tomorrow night, | Miss Elsa and Mise Lillian Michaelis USTER BEAR was thin and hun ig ole es iB gry and cross. He had wakened | from his long winter sleep a litte bit Informal Tea | Jeartier than he wished he had. He Mra. Jay I. Durand entertained at | Would have liked have slept a an informal tea, Friday afternoon at | Week of two longer. You see, while the Sunset club. he slept he knew nothing about hun ee | ger, but now that he was awake, all |he could think of was getting some thing to eat, and that wasn't at all easy. The ground was still fromen, to Little Stories for Bedtime BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Seattle maid who handles the reins Goldsmith, an lotrepid and graceful | T. W. Burgess) Buster Bear Becomes Interested his lips and then started to look for another old stump. Then it was that he ones more heard the scream. ing of Sammy Jay. Sammy was nearer now, and Buster knew by the sound of Sammy's volow that Sammy was very much ®xclited, Onoe more be stopped and eat up to listen “Now, what ails that blue rascal?* grumbled Buster, “He is terribly By CYNTI Who Can Help In This Good Work? Dear Miss Grey We are coming to pu in our trou It is no love affair, but for work that is helping boys and girle to become better men and women Nearly ized a Sunday schoo! in a home home was small, but for a few months It accommodated the Sunday achool nicely Put now it has grown until there is not enough room in the home, and we must have something else, Our Sunday echoo! began with several children, Now we have 70 on roll, and the average attendance in 26 We would like to have some ground on which to build a chapel, and we feel sure there in some one who must have an idle plot of ground | that they would be willing to donate for our school, We write this unique request to you because we believe most everyone reads your columns, nd in this way we may bie to reach the ones who will help usa The officers and teachers of this school give their time gratia. Prov 26:6 says, “Train up @ child in the way he should old, he will not depart ‘from it” We would like a piece of ground 20x24, anywhere between Ford Mo tor Co. and Eastlake, and from Aloha to the lake, if there should be a houseboat or barge. We have money to build, but no land. Thanking you we remain, rempectfully, officers and teachers of LAKESIDE SUNDAY SCHOOL, Tel. Capitol 1481, or Kenwood 1466 How to Obtain Soldier's Address Dear Miss Grey; Will you kindly | mary two years ago we organ: | ‘The | ILA GREY tell me where to write for the ad- dress of a soldier who uned to be stationed in Texas? It is very neces that I} him as quickly | as powsible, RB. Mack, Write to the secretary of war, Washington, D. C,, stating the company and branch of nervice your friend was in, and the mp he wns #tationed at when last beard from him, and for his present address, | you ask Raise Funds to Help Boys Miss Grey: I am a of your letters, and I would like for you to help me reach the people in this «tate in regard to our returned soldiers. Why not raise a fund for our boys just the way we raised money for | the Ted Cross? It would be easy, and the boys wouldn't bave to wear second-hand clothes, and wouldn't that be a good way to show that 22 penny-ante representative buneh what think of them, espectally the Judas? A READER. | Condemns Sympathy | for Girl in Case Dear Miss Grey: I have not seen | a ningle expreasion of sympathy for | the family of the victim of Ruth Garrison's cold-blooded murder, or | any pity for the young woman cut | off in the prime of life, The usual sickly sentimentality is being shown the murderess by visits and presents, ote, Murder is certainly worse than | other crimes, and yet, the jal quar- lters are not good enough for the | murderer; yet it is for other womeag) | who commit minor crimes. ij MRS. R. M. C. Dear Letters to Miss Grey on Public sympathy for Ruth Gar | it case today. Even more, hood, in the gist of a number of le will encourage foolish the Garrison Case BY CYNTHIA GREY | rison is endangering young woman tters yeceived on the Garrison Storrs young girls to seek the company of married men and influence them to follow in her foot | steps, nays one man correspondent out fine arguments 1 Dear Misa Grey: It weems extraor- |dinary—the amount of commen that has been made on the sordid case of Ruth Garrison, and the amount of sympathy expressed by | certain people for the guilty one. A |man or woman, who lives in this | country and breaks the lawe of the jand, should #uffer the full penalty | for their crimes without favoriti«m, | Nomenforcement of the law breeds | | vice and lawlessnens. } | I know, personally, of one case in | Seattle recently, where @ man, 4 Mr. R. D. Merrill left yesterday afternoon for California, to join Mra. lerrill, Eulalie and Virginia, who have been in New York, and who go 0 California to spend the Easter hol: | H : ' = x i : i i cit sf & ? E see Eéward Williams, who has visiting his mother, Mrs. A. M. liams, and sister, Miss Florence Williams, the past week, left Satur-| day night for Portland. Mr. Robert ‘Williams, who likewise has been vis- iting his mother and sister, will re- Main indefinitely. : a F if i t aie Hi i § $f 33 F i ul g = 3 | ! . | Hy iy ih Mr. William Urquart, who has) been stationed at San Pedro, Cal, spent several days in Seattle last week, on his way to his home at Che halis. ses Mrs. Frederic Struve left yester. | day for New York, to attend the clos-| ing weeks of opera. She expects to be gone six weeks. oe ' EY ! | i Mr. and Mrs. George Nickerson, | after spending a month at Del Monte | and other Caltfornia resorts, have re turned to Seattle. ae © 2 | Pes |i E g attle for New York, April 1, to meet | her husband, who is on his way home from France. I. Mattson has been | stationed at the base hospital at Bor deaux since last September. Dr. and Mrs. Mattson will spend a few weeks | in the East before returning to Se-| attle. | : : : i pee we Mrs. Ralph De Voe and son are leaving Seattle, April 1, for Pitt | burg, Pa, and Washington, D. C., after which they sail for France | Mrs, De Voe’s husband, Col. De Voe, lis commanding officer of the hospital | group at Nantes, France, a i & iF : The Suffrage club will meet Wed nesday, at 2 p. m., at the home of Mrs. M. J. Carrigan, 1723 Harvard | av 0 that he couldn't dig up any roots. ‘There was still ice covering the Laughing Prook, so that he couldn't get any fish, and it seemed to him that all the Wood Mice must have moved away So Buster Bear was roaming thru the Green Forest in a very bad tem per, Off in the distance he heard Sammy Jay screaming. He stopped to listen, but Sammy was so far away that he couldn't make out what Sammy was saying. As he sat there Ustening, he discovered off at one side of an old rotted stump, Buster's little eyes glowed with sudden hope. Dropping down on all fours, he shuf fled over to the old stump and began tearing it to pleces with his great claws, The heart of that old stump had rotted away to a crumbled masa. Buster tore it all apart, and in it he found what he had hoped to find— certain grubs which live in such places. They didn't amount to much as a dinner for sucha big, hungry | fellow as Buster, but they were bet: | ter than nothing at all, and Buster raked over that mass of rotted wood until he was sure that he had found every grub in it. He had been so busy that he had forgotten all about Sammy Jay Mrs. W. W. Mattson is leaving Se | When at last he was sure that there | More than was nothing more to eat in what was left of that old stump, he licked Why Stay Fat? You Can Reduce ™’® voice that there was no dan The answer of mont fat people is that it is too hard, too troublesome and too dangerous to force the weight down. However, in M mola Prescription Tablets, all these difficulties are overcome, | They are absolutely hi ntail no diet and have the added heapness, A 6 1d by druggista at 75c able, they can be obtain e direct to the Ma ndward ave., Detroit, w that you know this yc excuse for being too f but can reduce two, three or for pounds a week without fear of bad after-effects, THE MASTERPIECE » Factory Price $70 Dealers’ Price $275 Difference $205 Who Gets It ???? Not the Local Dealer Nor his salesman Nor the wholesaler Nor his salesmen Nor the distributor Nor his salesmen Nor the factory Nor their salesmen And certainly not you— But they all (except you) get their share of it. << a To Protect Your Guarantee ‘We earnestly request all our former patients having had work done four months or more to call and have their teeth and plates examined. If any of our work is not satisfactory, we will gladly make over or repair, free of charge. excited about something. Probably | supposed friend, ran off with an he han discovered Reddy Fox hunt | other man's wife, and bragged thet ing and ie tormenting Redd it was all right, because he knew a He cocked his small cars and lie! iawyer who could fix the judge. toned intently, Buster learned when! ppe woman gota divorce, fixed he was just a little fellow that Many) uy thru fraud, and also got custody | things are to be learned by taking | o¢ 4 minor child. The husband at heed of hia neighbors, and that $4mM| once entered suit and the case was | my Jay ix especially worth heeding. | tried. He showed the court that the | i lebild was belng brought up with | fallen women, and submitted written | evidence proving the fraud and the » H facta In the case, This evidence | was also to be used to disbar the \attorney. The woman pleaded she | would marry the man she ran off As | with. Their pull was #0 strong that | the judge has not yet rendered a | decision, and has so far refused to even return the files and evidence given at the trial, making it impos | alble to either carry the case to the | ; ; supreme court, or continue the case against the attorney for practicing @ 4 te fraud. In addition, he has ved There wns still ice covering the unsigned letters warning him@ot to open the case again. This is a plain Laughing Brook, so that he couldn't get any fish, ) 1 oe statement of facts and ix known to many people I SAY, ENFORCE THE LAWS OF THE COUNTRY, IRRESPEC- TIVE OF PERSONS Cc. B. B. Dear Misa Grey: I have been | reading of the Storrs-Garrison mur- | der case, and must say I (and I pre- of Sammy Jay, and more than once| sume there are many others who {had he been led to int | feel as I do) am thoroly disgusted coveries by that same voice. with the sickly sentiment the public, | knew now by Just the sound of Sam-| including the police officials, are be stowing on this murderess, | I would like very much if you | could enlighten me on why she is | being showered with flowers, books |and candy, and why she ts being | pitied, and spoken of as a child, while there is not one word of pity (in the papers) for the poor wife who was betrayed and cowardly murdered by this same “child,” This doting of the public upon a self-confessed murderess, makes mo once had Tuster been warned of danger by the screaming ger. Sammy waa coming nearer. At late Buster made out what Sammy was saying: “Prickly Porky has | lost his little spears! Prickly Porky | has lost his little spears!’ In an in- stant Buster Bear became interested, Next Story: Buster Bear Asks Questions. Make These Good Things to Eat Out of Dried Fruit BY BIDDY BYE While fresh fruits are scarce and high, use the dried fruits, They are extremely wholesome and high in concentrated food value, averaging from 1,300 to 1,600 calories per pound, while fresh fruit by the pound averages only about 300 cal: ories, Here are good dried fruit recipes: ‘To prepare for cooking such fruits | an raisins, apricots, apples, peache figs and prunes, first wash them carefully in warm water to remove dust, then set in a cool place to soak |in cold water for from three to six jhours. This restores the moisture |and tenderness, Cook fruits in the | water.in which they were soaked, and simmer until tender but not broken. Apricot Pudding—stew and sweet: jen slightly 2 cupfuls of dried apri cots, and when tender rub sieve or colander. To th add 1 cupful of thick boiled custard| She was not discouraged, but set or of creamy boiled rice. Place the| about to remedy the situation by de mixture in a bowl and set next the| vising her own system of training lee or outdoors to chill. Before serv-| the girls to be more efficient in their Many years ago a Boston woman engaged in social betterment work problems of the working girls whom she regarded as her charges. She had organized clubs for them and provided recreation for their leisure hours, but these efforts did not alle- viate their financial condition, for the girls were miserably underpaid She nt about securing better wages for them, only to be confront ed with the undeniable fact that the girls were paid what they earned. ‘Their earning capacity could not be increased, because they were poorly trained and could not take advan. thru ajtage of any opportunities given fruit pulp | them. took upon herself the study of the | You pay. the shot. BUY DIRECT AND KEEP THE DIFFERENCE ae $47.50 instead of $150.00 iA $60.00 instead of $200.00 $70.00 instead of $275.00 _ MASTERPIECE PHONOGRAPHS Seattle Sales Store ee, 1214 Fourth Avenue—Near University % Six qualified Indy attendants, We specialize in all diseas the mouth, Pyorrhea is the of systemic stomach troubles All work guaranteed 15 years, discount on of use Reasonable peoples United Painless Dentists t HEMott 1633, 608 Third Ave, Hours: 8:30 A. M. to 6 P.M. Sundays, 9 to 12. to union ing, beat in the stiffly beaten whites of 2 eggs, Serve on squares of fresh ke and garnish with ean Tries or nut meats, Cocoanut-Raisin Pudding—Mix to: gether 1 cupful of white flour and % |cupful of rolled oats, and stir in 1 teaspoonful walt and 4 teaspoonfula baking powder, Work into the mix. ture % cupful of shredded cocoanut and % cupful seeded raisins, Moist. jen with 2 cupfuls of skim milk, Pour the mixture into a greased mold and steam two hours. Serve with cream jor custard sauce, work, With this group of working girls as her nucleus, this woman, Mrs, Lucinda Wyman Prince, inaug: urated her now famous system of training girls for retail service. In 1905 she established the Prince School of Education for Store Serv ice as a department of the Women's Educational and Industrial union of Boston, and later it became affiliated with Simons college. Mrs, Prince's methods have won glowing tributes from merchants and over the country. educators all | The letters are all good and bring | kick. Let them save a little of that wympathy for the bereaved relatives of the murdered woman, rather than waste it on a woman who can sit in her cell and joke and smile. I may be wrong, but I do not think {t half so pitiful that she may have to spend her whole life in prison, as that the other woman should have to go to an ecarty grave, a vic tim of a woman's illicit passion. A MARRIED WOMAN. Dear Miss Grey; Just a few lines regarding Ruth Garrison. Since when, Mr. Sheriff, ia she any better | than any other woman who would | murder a woman, and live in adultery | with her husband. To my notion, a woman of the streets in far her su perior, She belongs in the county | jail, and the people who make the laws should insist that she be put there. Are all the police going to | Jail for her, too? 1 wish that I could \be on the jury, I would give her fe, and he should be made to share her shame. | ' It te @ nice example to set up be- fore young girls. They might think | they could do the same thing and) reader | | should discover the hoax, but I was | buoy. get away with it. Her letter to him don't sound to me like an innocent | it reads more like a hardened | woman of the world. Get busy, Mr./ | etrt' | Sheriff, and put the murderess where | she belongs, and I hope she gets the | Mamie of the law. A READER. | Dear Miss Grey: Why should Ruth Garrison get all this pity? She broke up ® home and spoiled the | poor Little wife's life, then killed her Why kill her? Hadn't she already | done enough wrong? The idea that |any girl of 18 does not know right | from wrong! Why not? She, Ruth | Garrison, had a nice home and many friends. Does her act show a very intelligent brain, that all the officials lare raving over? If she didn’t know | her deed was wrong, then she is not bright, and there is something wrong with her mind, | And the man in the case should | go to jail, Why didn't the poor wits | get a little credit? Her heart achec for the man that was hers. Hav: | girls the right to break homes anc | epotl lives in such a manner? Hus jbands are becoming more and morr | unfaithful, And the wives, have they no rights to protect and defend | themselves? I hope Miss Garrison’: life will end as did that of the poor E woman she killed. P. Would Train Girls to Earn Better Salaries the federal board of vocational edu cation, she will speak in Seattle for four days, arriving April 6, at the special request of the Chamber of Commerce, Teachers’ institutes, a general assembly of university stu dents, and a meeting of the mer chants of Seattle will be addressed. at which times she will present the needs, the means and the plans for store training, She will also hold personal conferences with members of educational institutions, stores and clubs in the etly, ‘There is not a hant in Seattle | who does not know of Mrs, Prince's successful system of training, and the teachers graduated from her school, known as educational direct: ors, can be found in two of Seattle's | large department stores, The Seattle girls who have gradu: | her teachers’ school at e Guild Griffin, . Prankie Close Schmidt, Mrs Helen McCabe Curtis, Miss Abbie Drew and Miss Winifred Coe, Mrs. Griffin is at present identified with this educational training at MacDougall & Southwick's and Mrs. Cassie Payne Small, a graduate from the Bast The Prince system of ship training hes already been estab: | Mshed in 11 universities and 12 col: | leges of the country, The schools of Los Angeles and San Francisco also As a “dollar-a-year” woman with have adopted this course, HIDDEN IN DIVING SUIT, I WATCH CER- TEIS’ SEARCH ’ All that saved me from dishonor | almost too frightened to decile what to do next % con.|_1 dared not go down the tretiis. | ‘There was a would expect r | however. one I could, wag to my | | advanta * 1 rolled out from unde® the bed jand put on my old cloak. going to bed, I had laid oat mi; clothes to be handy for parture at dawn. of my “mules” that night was a white lingerle rib I had arranged a funny ance in my room-—it was an tn known in college dor haa the well I mitorles run some lingerie ribbons fastenings of the French windows nearest my bed. By pulling one ribbon, 1 eould open the windows, by pulling another I could) them without getting out of a freezing night | An Hamilton Certeis turned to put | S!PPers girls love out the lights in my room, I pulled |_ @°4 1 dropped the hard on one of my ribbons and the | ‘he floor in front of the trellis, ‘The other windows were flung wide open, let | je “nlie, Ame | ting in a frosty blast. Only because wo : the broad belt fi I was “quick as a cat,” owing to my 4 persistent practice of gym es “as | dropped it so that it would hang did 1 manage to toms both of my pil-| lows over the narrow pottery peer | pended from the rosebesi beaaches. with the same impulse, throw my-| “S0 far, #0 good,” T welf softly onto the floor, keeping |™yself. “But the really the bed between Certeis and myneif.| thing to decide is—how am I ever ‘The night waa very dark, else my | 6lng to dispose of m: ruse must ha failed. Whether) The man—angered by my Fruse— Certeis turned about in time to| would be merciless—when, or if, he catch the flash of the waite pillows | found :ne % I do not know. He felt the cld| 1 started thru the closet contain: wind from the open door inumediate | ing the diver’s suit. If I eould hide ly, and he acted as I had hoped he| under Certets’ bed, I would. With @ horrified “Ach Gott!" | his door ard into the ball, he ran in mad haste to the baleony.| cided to search my frOum 1 could only guess what he saw—| crossed the closet, my hand 4 still white heap in the mud below! | the chilly surface of the divers muit. The man stood motionless gazing at| The uncouth costume was of ex- the white mass in the darkness|traordinary wize. It had : while I rolled quietly under my bed!| pended to keep the 1 got out of «ight In the nick of | wrinkling. I put all my ume—I had scarcely disappeared the thing. ‘The cord when Certeis tore back, dashed thru) strong. After that the closet, and then out of his room.| took me but a moment I knew that he had gone down rear stairs to investigate. self securely therein, ag I had a great deal to do before heed mariner perches if & Of course I couldn't the garment from the inaide—I to pull the edges of the Opening ¢ gether and held them so while thi sleeves of the garment continued sag flat and formiessly, Hardly had I adjusted brought the garment rest, when Certeis room. With exactly | watched him. Would | granted that I had left the |by way of the trellis? When this home-made lemon 1o-| | Or would he hunt the tion is gently massaged into the | for me? “he ogg A a (To Be Continued) A CREAMY LOTION MADE WITH LEMONS Prepare a quarter pint at about the cost of a email jar of common cold cream. face, neck, hands and arms daily, the skin naturally should become | soft, clear and white, and the com-| plexion dainty and attractive. What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove com-| rlexion blemishes; to bleach the} tkin and to bring out the roses, the | freshness and the hidden beauty?| But lemon juice alone is acid,| therefore irritating, and should be | mixed with orchard white this way. | Strain through s fine cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing about three| ounces of orchard white, then) shake well and you have a whole) quarter pint of skin and complex-/ jon lotion at about the cost one us-/ vally pays for a small jar of ordi- nary cold cream. Be sure to strain Superb Prima Donna of York Metropolitan |the lemon juice so no pulp gets into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure id fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, neck, arms and hands, it nat- vrally should help to whiten, clear, smoothen and beautify. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer has the lemons. Jn this sweetly fragrant | convenience for lemon lotion ladies can easily pre-|and full particulars pare and have 3 inexpe: THE oO toilet aid which perfectly satisfies THE McC (MIC their natural desire for a beautiful, soft skin, Re Cee ee FRANCES ALDA in her recitals is accompanied by the STEINWAY — the Piano used by the World’s great artists The Steinway is the highest achievement in Pianoforte making toward which all others strive—it is the standard by. which all other Pianos are judged. : ALDA APPEARS APRIL 4 AT THE METROPOLITAN THEATRE Sherman ay & Co, Third Avenue at Pine, Seattle Tacoma—Spokane—Portland