The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 4, 1919, Page 8

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i} | ' By BETTY Compliment to Mrs. Perry Te y. Mr M wil give an informal «on Met In Honor of Miss Mackay Miss Janet Mackay, Vancou ver, B. C, who ts visiting Mra. Charles H, Furnett, has been the honor guest at many toformal par ties during her stay here. u T. Op Tuesday Gtesting had an impromptu tea and) Mrs, George Terrell, sister of Mrs Giesting, shared honors with Mise | Mackay. | This afternoon Mrs. had a small tea Tonight Miss Katherine having several tables of honor of Miss Mackay oer White Elephant | Miss Irene MeDermott will play | popular music tomorrow at the White Elephont during the noon hour and Mrs, A. 8, Nickerson will play the violin, The musical pro} grams have been exceptionally | good and unexpected surprises have been enjoyed by the listeners to the varied programs this week. oe Red Cross Jumble Shop Tomorrow noon at the Red Cross Jamble Shop, Miss Jean MeMorran RS. Hawley Howe bridge is in will sing. She is a sophomore 4 tending the University of Washing ton, and has been chosen to sing the leading role In the student op- eretta, “The Debutante,” to be given at the Metropolitan theatre) this spring. i For Mrs. Wight Mra, Anna Thomsen Milburn en-| tertained informally at dinner on) Wednesday evening for Mrs. Wight, of St. Paul, who is the house guest} of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Tidmarsh. | “ee Plant Crimson Poppies The crimson poppy, #0 gorgeous in its bloom, is the flower selected | by the Lady Maccabees to commem- orate the mefMory of our nation’s heroes who have made the supreme sacrifice in France. April 6 is to be the first birthday of the piant- ing of this crimson glory. All gar- deners are asked to plant or sow these red blooms to remind our selves of the poppy fiekis of Belgium ‘and France and to remind Belgium France that the red blood shed them is “in memoriam” in the “heart of every true American. a ee Son Born ) $ Mr. and Mrs. John C. Pierce, of Olympia, are receiving congrat-| ‘ulations upon the birth of a son on ‘Wednesday. Mr. Pierce, who is an ensign in the United States naval reserves, is at present on the East| coast. Mrs. Pierce has been stay.| ©. Pine st. Good music is promined. | ing with her parents, Hiram Hadley. ee Judge and} Camnmittees for Dansant \ more committees have been -chogen for the bridge party and tea naa to be given for the benefit the French war sufferers by the Amerique Relief association. ‘The affairs is to be held at the ‘Army and Navy club, April 22. _ Mrs. Thomas Bordeaux, Mrs. J. ®. Douglas, Mrs. Alfred Battle, Mrs. A. I. Bouffleur, Mrs. 8. N. Hedges, Mrs. Bert Farrar are on the t committee. Mra. James | . DeVeuve, chairman, and Mrs. G. “W. Purcell, Mrs. Alfred Rollo and Mrs. H. H. Birkholm compose the table committee. } é 7. formal Ball | ‘The Green and Black club intend an informal ball on Satur. evening, April 26, at the Mt. park club house. May 24 will be* the Maytime informal, June 7 the annual final in- Elaborate preparations will made for this last ball New ibers for next season will be then. The committee in charge of the many dances given) the organization of the club years ago consists of Mr. Riemer Phillips, Mr. Leon Dover,| Mer. Hamilton Olin, Mr. Arthur Con-| jell and Mr. Wilftam Dover. ee ‘ Plan Musicale | * Under the auspices of the Na tional League for Woman's Service, | twilight musicales similar to the Program given by the league at the| Washington hotel during the win- ter will be continued at the Sol- diers’ and Sailors’ club beginning | Sunday, April 6, from 5:20 to 6:30| Pp. m. These will be continued in-| Pefinitely. © Andantino } . Allegro con fuoco....Gn4i | Mrs. Alice Sherman | Miss Bernice Neil | Miss Leone Langdon | 2. Soprano solo. | cle of Life | (b) € ney. Mrz, Ruth G Plano solos. (a) Lento pote | S79) Scott (b) Brunet .Farrata ’ (ec) Rhapsodie «-Dohnanyi | Miss Leone Langdon 4. Violin solo, Hullambo Balaton ., ambo Halaton . ..... .1tbi rs. Alice Sheri: B. Soprano solos, | (a) I Plucked a Quill From Cupid's Wing,....... Hadie: (>) Inthe Dawn 5? an‘In= dian Sky ........,.8tephons (©) Murmurinig Zéphyra. Jensen | Mrs. uth Gillespi 6. Pinte solos. 44 a) oncertino -Chamin . (b) Buttertly ¢ Teohter | § resallt de Forest Anderson j Andante Religioso ...... ‘Thorne Mrs. Alice Sherman Miss Bernice Nell Miss Leon: Accom Miss Langdon. CLARENCE THOUGHT HE’D SPRING A JOKE | ALDERSON, W. Va., April 4—| Clarence Wikel, of Germany, a su-| burb, is off practical jokes for life. | In an attempt to scare his wife, who Was at home alone the other night, | Wikel opened a window and poked| his head thru. ‘The ambulance arrived a few min- utes later and took him to a how-| pital, where he is now recovering from serious wounds in the head| inflicted by a fire poker in the hands of his wife. She thought he was a burglar. ; BRAINERD Seattle Elsewhere Alice Fay is with the Y. MC. A hat service, stationed at Le Mana She in head of the library there, and writes that it is pathetic there are © few books and magaaines for the boys, She says that there are 40,000 new men a week in camp, and about 3,000 men come to the day, as there is really no other place go. As three-fourths of the army have to go thru Le Mans, there tr about 150,000 men to 40 girls, so we over here can imagine what kind of a time those 40 girls have. Miss Nettleton, sister of Mr, Clark Nettle ton, is doing splendid work in the same group with Alice, that 3,000 more girls are needed. She bas been asked to align up for two years, there is such a shottage of workers, but she would like to go to Oxford the end of October to study She is soon to go to Coblents for three montha. Clubs Notices for Saturday The Classic Culture club will & meeting at 2:30 p. m. at the real. dence of Mrs. Clara Hartle, 4404 Burke a Mrs. & F. Moyer will assist in the entertainment of the guests, This will be an open meet ing and Miss Neliie Sterritt will speak on “The League of Nations,” followed by a general discussion. A musical treat, provided by the host eas, will conclude the program. ‘ee Alumnae chapter of Alpha Chi Omega will meet at the home of Mrs, A. MacAuley, 2 Smith st, at 1:30. ‘Take North Queen Anne car to Mo Graw st. oe Gamma Phi Beta Alumnge associ ation will meet at the home of Miss race King, 220 14th ave. N. . Alpha XI Delta sorority will meet at the home of Mra, T. J. L. Ken nedy, 7618 44th ave. 8. W. Lunch eon will be served ip. m oe ‘The Overseas club will give a @ance at the Douglas hall at 9 p,m. Proceeds from these dances are used for war relief work. At this dance will be introduced the new march of the ist division, and which will be played when the d+ vision returns, The march is being . | sold for the benefit of returned sot diers and sallors. eo. . The Homesteaders' society will en- tertaln with a dance at 9 p. m. at Odd Fellows’ temple, 10th ave. and Mr. Park Weed Willia, jr, who has received his honorable discharge from service, arrived in Seattle Sun- day, and ix with his parents, Dr. and Mra. Willis. He returns to Phila deiphia today. soe Lieut. Norman Gibbs arrived in Seattle Wednesday evening, having landed in New York from France two weeks ago. . Capt. Peter Ottosen, U. 8. A., ar rived at Newport News from over seas, and is on temporary duty at Fortress Monroe, As soon as he re- ceives his permanent orders, Mrs. Ottoeen will join him. see Ensign Russell White and Mra. White arrived in Seattle several days ago. They plan to make their home here, At present they ore visiting Mrs. White's parents, Mr. and Mra. James Kiefer. eee Miss Mary Ann Shipman, of Spo kane, who has been In Everett at- tending the Stuchell-Carpenter wed ding, arrived in town todaygand will visit Miss Katherine Jerome for a week. . Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Newell, of To oe ledo, Ohio, are the guest« for a fow | days of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ames. Mrs. Newell is an excellent golfer, holding the championship of Toledo. “ee Mrs. M. M. Bruce, who has been spending the winter in California, re- turned home Monday, and is at her summer hore, at Alki Point. one Mra. Morita Thomsen and her daughter, Mrs, Frederick Sundt, have, as their guest in Altadena, Cal, V. Stefanason, while he is lec. turing in Los Angeles and nearby clties. eee Mr. William C. Kieth returned home Wednesday evening, after a six weeks business trip to New York and Idaho. oe Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ristine and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mandel Henry motored up to Mr. Henry's ranch near Everett over last week-end. see Mrs. Robert M, Clarke will spend the summer visiting her sisters, Mra. 3. Lyon and Mrs. 81 Veb- ster, ad Iieut. Harold Burchard, of the 363rd infantry, arrived in New York Monday from France. He expecta to be sent to the Presidio for dis- charge. - eee Mrs. A. W. Tidmarsh left yeater- day for Lake Cushman, where she will remam a week, Miss Helen Hunt Walker, who is a junior at Smith college, fs visit- ing her friends in Boston and Middle burg, Mass., during her spring vaca- tion. o-. Mrs. William C. Heussey and ughter Charlotte left Thursday for Victoria to remain until Sunday. see Mr, and Mrs. Harold Stimson and children have given up their town house and moved to Hollywood Farm. Mr. and Mrs. John Spargur have moved to the Washington Hotel An nex. library every | Alice says | | } h | To Bind Up Her BY BETTY BROWN This is to be an open season for ribbona Never were the fluttery things more popular—or lovelier than this spring, Eubbons for the nair, for the girdle, for the gown, for the hat-—for every conceivable use on women’s dress—are decidedly the vogue. And especially for I'l inissie’s curls are ribbons in fi Here are sketched some delicid lots for the hair, The very fil * Dink picoted grosgrain ribbon, fu» oid | teed With a pink silken rose. Above is a delectable bow of canary yellow soft satin ribbon. A flowery wreath of sitk ribbon roves tn exquisite pas tel shades is ideal to accompany the small person's party frock of organ die, and another lovely and smart band for the hair is made from bi grosgrain with white edges and p finish. | How to Force Hyacinth Bulbs BY BIDDY BYE Plan to have a pot of blooming hyacinths upon the breakfast table by the Ist of May. No, it isn’t too late! Once it would have required six weeks to transform the uninteresting brown ball that looks so like an onion tn the marvel of fragrance and color which is #0 like a poe But now hothouse and garden experts have perfected some ample methods of forcing bulbs which will bring them to the blooming stage in four weeks. | ‘The new way to put a little pep and speed into dear Dame Nature's stop in easy and intrersting. Firat select a good, carty blooming variety of hyacinth. Red and pink varieties of thin type are the Gari baidi, King of the Belgians, and Lord Macaulay @ royal set, you nee. Good white bulbs are Madame Van der Hoop and La Innocence, and the dark blues are Charles Dick ens, Marias and King of Ftues. Think what a patriotic potful one might make with a bulb of each color—red, white and blue Only the largest bullran the moet perfect condition should be chosen: The new way to force hyacinths is to grow each bulb separately in a tall glass vase full of water, The base of the vase should be ax larce as an ordinary tumbler, and nar rowed at the neck no that the bulb will just fit into it, the root end just Clearing the water by a quarter of an inch. Put a few pieces of charcoal in the vase to keep the water sweet, fill it with water to within one-quarter Inch of the bulb. Then make a small cone of dark, heavy paper and use It to cover the top of the bulb until the roots have grown half-way down into the vase. ‘The vase should be set in the sun shine where the roots have a chance to grow, but the covered top is pre vented from sprouting. When the roots are well developed make a dark paper cover for the vase and fit over it. Remove the cone from the top of the bulb and let the sun touch it to bring up the shoots Keep the roots darkened and cov- ered with water, Add fresh water withont moving the roots. Bulbs thas treated will flower tn four weeks. At night “protect the vase and bulb from cold by covering with a stiff paper bag. i PES ne m | Dishes Delicior | | and Different || BY BIDDY BYE Asparagus With Nut Gravy—Cut young, green, small asparagus diag- onally into equal lengths (tke French beans), tons these lightly in fat; when slightly crisped, season with white pepper, salt, minced parsley and chervil. Add a little vegetable stock; simmer gently cooked, Now add a «poonful of nut butter and serve. The great secret of this dish is only to put in enough stock in first instance to cook the asparagus, for it should all be ab. sorbed by the time you add the nut butter Bread Pudding a la Caramel 1 pint of soft bread crumbs with 1-2 cupful seeded raisins, 2 tablespoon- fuls of sugar and 2 eggs. Stir in 1 cupful of milk. Bake in a well buttered pudding dish until brown. | Then boil 11-2 cupfuls of brown sugar with 1-2 cupful of milk and 4 tablespoonfuls of chocolate, Stir un- til smooth and spread hot over the pudding. Divinity Fudge—Two cupfuls of granulated sugar, 1-2 cupful corn sirup, 1-2 cupful cold water; boll to- gether until it snaps in water; slowly stir it Into the beaten whites of 2 esse; beat as long a» you can with- out its becoming grainy; pour into buttered tin and crease. Salmon Mould—One envelope gela- tine, 2 tablespoonfuls cold water, yolks of 2 egg#, 11-2 tablespoonfuls butter (melted), 2 teaspoontuls salt, | 1 teaspoonful mustard, 34 ocupful milk, few grains cayenne, 1 can sal- mon, Soak gelatine in cold water 6 minutes. Mix egg yolks, salt, pep- per, mustard and butter together. Cook until mixture thickens, Add soaked gelatine and salmon; separate salmon into flakes. ‘Turn into fish mould; remove to bed of crisp let- tuce. 08 | When you think of advertising, | think of The Star. | young | |person wears a double fillet of rove | till | Mix | THE SEATTLE STAR Cathie Grey By CY Girl Fears Loss of Faith L Mine Grey Tam 16 years i have been at ding Sunday pl and church regularly for the t nine years, Lately | have ten doubts about the Holy Scripture Into head, which I dare hat 1 I can’t: pomsdbly leave the church becaune believe what is in it?) 1 would apprecia@) your opin A SINNER. Your very nom de plume. is ambiguous, unlew, per chanch, you might be Ned « sinner for harboring theee doubts, instead of chasing them out of the dark into the light of some broader intelligence than you possess, ‘Tell them to your minister, your Sunday school teacher, your mother or father, or any older person you have faith and con fidence in. Don't be a plker; | don’t discard your religion until | at least you have made ‘ery ef- fort to clear away the doubt | Romy of Mrx, Grace Storrs and Mins which now exiate in your mind, |Jtuth Garrinon. Take the picture of leach; put your finger or place a ar os tab card just below the lower part of | Seeks Definition | the mouth or face h pleture, for Word “Love land Judge human nature, See whieh | Dear Mins Grey: Can sive! you think had the best true, loving |me the real definition for If| kind heart, the one who would be | not, please sta in your paper.) true unto all she would meet in life. | ‘Thanking you in advance I remain,/i¢ my judgment of human nature is | A LONESOME SOLDIER. | correct, it would be the one just Fach person, I believe, places | hurried out of thin life, Ldttle is a slightly different Interprete, | maid about her, tho, her splendid tion upon love, according character, her great sacrifi it dividual desires, To n is the beautiful Mies Garrison only nignifics ali that is good and true | that we hear about. May God's and beautiful in the entire unt | verme. | old Adage Wrong I Mine Grey reading criticlams of Ruth n, enpect ally thome in the issue of March 31, I wonder how many ages will be re- quired to really civilize the human race. Some writers, after condemn ing violence, hope the girl herself will be the victim of violence. Violence is always wrong, and the | sooner we realize the error of the {Old Testament teaching, “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,” the faster we shall advance. I am ina to position hear all sorts of remarks concerning this ase, and this iv what I have noted |The people who talk rabidly are thous who are great believers in the J old teaching above quoted, or who jhave, at least, grown up in an ex coanively religions community. The people who are with Jing judgment | are the thoughtful ones whe ving j read and observed, have done some | thinking on thelr own accourt. ‘The real truth is thie: Unde actly the same conditions and en vironment, any one of us would do exactly as other wrongdoers have | done. So many are vietims of their | parents of grandparents. When we learn that marriage too often means legaliaed prostitution, i that gen erally children come into the world lentally, with lees thought at moment of conception than is to high-bred animals, the won Lee Is that we don't have more Ruth | | Garttxons ]} If doem’t cure and rave about {t. the evil to rant Instead we must look for a remedy. The greatest need in the world Is intelligent mothers and Wathers, In thin day, | when fathers teach their sons by lexample to smoke cigareta, and | mothers permit Gometimes teach) their daughters to daub on powder | im imitation of women of the under: | wortd, there is certainly great need for us to study marriage an we would a business, so that sonia may be brought into the world under right conditions. MRS. X. Dear Miss Grey: As a render of your daity, I have taken great ir terest In your part of the writeu on the case of Ruth Garrison, whe now is about to face a court trial! time and commit murder. for the murder of Mra. Grace Storrs. | | Little Stories for Bedtime "| keeps company with a married man not | | be interested to study A GREY © thing I would like to anewe und that is, the letter of March 24. “ 1 DD, A. DD. as e#tating the thought of ot yve Huth Gar rison to perform much a deed as he did They it sclentifi demon | etration. T call it bunk stuff. 1 | know of Ruth Garris way back in the month of Octobe 1918. She | got fighting mad at a dear, honest ttle mother, f 4 » who wants to be « mother to all in nee our of trouble, Miss Garrt and said, she would have . Dudley M. Storrs, no mat ter what it cont, for loved him Let me say one thing, Huth Garri son haw been at this Kame for some | time, to her wants fulfilled. It did not happen all at once, Miss Grey I feel about the whole thing lke the girl whe sicned herself “A Woman of 18% Why ts everyone making ® heroine out of Ruth Garri won? Perhaps your readers would the physiog biessingy be upon her soul, to guide her & better road in lf Oy may her young #oul be led into new ght in her future life, and let God to commend the subject, and wish |"A Woman of 18," and also the party | Woman,” | jast in not good enough for her, s } are signs herself “A Married aa they express my senti- ments exactly | What I want to know Is that why th why the sheriff mays she ix only a baby, and belongs in a hom In it because he in getting a little is he looking for | money out of it & little publictt Ketter people than she put there, who have committed smaller | crimes, and I nee no reason why she | should not pay the penalty as well aa any one elne As far as eympathy ls concerned, I have Lone for her, an any girl who are jand then has the nerve to ask hix | wife to divorce him, belongs behind the bara, as they are nothing but home-breakers, and cause more um happiness in the world than they worth Ruth Garrison did not commit the murder on the impulse f the mo ment, but ahe planned it all night, and then took the life of her victim aa xly fox, and the way she pretended ber Innocence ia enough to l#how any one she is not a baby. And the idea of sending her flowers and when she should be xnubbed, as she is a disgrace to her sex. Mra. Storrs and her family are the ones who deserve the aympathy, as I can only | imagine what a ead life his wife has had, and the mixery and suffer ing she has had to endure for a worthlens man, If any one in the cane was entitled to a dose of it was Ituth Garrison, or Mr. and not the Innocent wife, and I hope she ia given the limit of the law and made to suff: as much aa she has caused the innocent ones en tho she pleads tem orary insanity, it is dangerous to ave such a person at large, who s apt to love thetf mind at any involved. A BELIEVER IN JUSTICE BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by HEN Prickly Porky heard Sam | my Jay screaming the about the loss of his thousand litte had known for the first ning of real fea You those little spears he felt helpless, very helplesa, indeed. Ho knew that if Buster Bear hap- | pened to be awake and should hear the news, it was more than likely that Buster would take it into his head to try and get a dinner of fat porcupine, He hoped that Buster wasn't awake yet He knew Puster had been asleep all winter, jand he hoped that he was still asleep. Up in the top of a tall hemlock where he w trying to hide | Prickly Porky shivered as he thought f what might happen.’ He h news spears, he | time the me eee, without tree Then he jcouldn’t hear {t at all, because Sam: |my was so far away. Somehow he | felt better then. For a long time he leat there doing nothing but trying to think what it would be best to |do until he should get a new supply jof Uttle spears. Thinking is hard |work for Prickly Porky. His wits jare very slow. ‘Thinking is about | the hardest work he can do. Hy and by he heard Sammy Jay's | voice again, He felt like © |up his ears so as not to h Jeourse, he didn't do anything |fainter. in the distance, like | that, but he did his best not to listen. wmmy's voice sounded louder be: aus Sammy was drawing nearer. Suddenly Prickly Porky realized that |somehow Sammy's voice sounded different from what it hed. ‘Then |he listened, You know what Prickly |Porky heard, It was the news that Buster Bear was awake. Just a8 soon as he stood what Sammy Jay was scream ing Prickly Porky began to have lt tle chills. In spite of his thick, warm coat, little chills chased each other all over him until he was fair ly shaking, He wasn't cold; he was afraid, You see, his very |fears were realized. | was awake, and no doubt he had heard Sammy Jay screaming the | news about the lows of those little | spears. “Whit shall I do? ‘What shall I really under: | worst | Buster Beary that | ard | ammy Jay's volce grow fainter and T. W. Burgess) Prickly Porky Doesn’t Know What to Do “What shall I do? What shall I | dot” whimpered Prickly Porky, do?” whimpered Prickly juster Kear surety will com ing for me, and he ». Oh, dear, what But there was no what to do, and he was too fright ened to do any real thinking, 80 he |did nothing but cling to his perch in | the top of the tall tree and whimper. “What shall do? What shall I do? Porky. look shall I do?” one to tell him Buster Bear Finds RAISIN AND FRUIT SALAD: ranges; 2 bananas; 1 ruit; 1 of tat grape cupfui seeded spoonfuls of lemon juice, Mix the raising and sliced bana and cover with the lemon juice. Cut the peeled orange and grapefruit into cubes. Combine the mixtures with mayonnaise dressing and serve in nests of lettuce leaves be her fter man and courte have jud t M, L Dear Cynthia ¢ Iam a dally | reader of your and have! taken considerable wt in the Kuth Garrison case, wl have read the many letters recelved by you on poison surely will find | ( "Taught Pershing i the Latest Steps ” o | | | | Sivs ZL lizabe Waittes | Gen. Pershing hadn't been doing |much dancing for a year or two, be Ing oceupied with other things, and had almost forgotten how. It feil to the lot of Miss Elizabeth Witter, }mociety girl of Berkeley, Cal, and| Ted Crom worker the Western front, to help the general regain the |lost art of onestepping. It was at |the Victory’ ball in Coblenz, just Jafter the armintice was + 1, and | Miss Witter wrote to her friends in erkeley of the pride a she felt when Amer leader asked her to dance Dark Men and White Women Thin last war surely world that men “made s peer leas showed tb» in Americ are the real goods, 36 inches to the yard, and warranted not to shrink. | N k At our 92d regiment of black boys, returned heroes, cheered and welcomed by our united nation any old Bourbon in Virginia, 60 years ago, even with his regard for | his petted ex-slaves, and hin protect: | | ing affection for his ignorant but ef-| | ficient black “mammy,” ever imag: | |ine that the Germans’ subordination | of fidenity, faith and future to the slogan of “Rule or ruin” would give | birth to the evolution of the negro | patriot? | And yet today we wave our ker | ens in if we are called sox y bude, je jood for you, men of black skins and loyal hearts,” if we are | xt women, plain and unadulterat-| Jed, and if are men we shout | they pass, “All hail, fellow country |men, we have beeu thru hell togeth er; let's rejoice in the land of the | free and t me of the brave.” | This country has learned that the i an candy, aa tho she were a heroine, | negro is n good fighter. He is loyal,{ her. B he is brave, and the white men have | realized and admitted the fact that} where the fight was thickest, the | negro held his own and faced the en-| emies of his country with the stol- cism and endurance Inherited from African jungles, and the courage | and cheerfulness imbedded in a race born under the Stars and Stripes, Then the women, heaven bless jthem! See what a start they have |given their’ husbands, sons and | brothers. The Red Cross, the great est religion of humanity the world has ever known, owes its nurses, its sewers, its knitters, its historians, its workers in all branches of service, to| woman. The Red Cross, founded in this country by a woman, Clara Bar ton, and fostered by women of all agen, of all stations in life, of all col- ors, of all creeds—the Red Cross has given the women an opportunity to show the world that heaven is not somewhere hidden behind clouds, | but heaven is brought down to earth when the crimson cross on the field of white ts seen on the battle ground, in the hospitals, or anywhere where | famine, pestilence, fire, Mood or war alls for help, There are wo many wonderful and unexpected things that women have done in the way of heroic sacrifices, daily hard work and steady endur. ance, One of the nicest things that has come out of this war is that the society lady, the club woman, the serub maid, the clerk behind the | counter, the cook, the nurse, trained or raw, the wife, whether rich in money and poor in brains or rich in brains and poor in money, they have started to learn a line in poetry | which we hope they will enlarge upon | and frame to hang over the lintel of the door of their prayer closet. This | line of poetry is by Rudyard Kipling, Jand it says that “Julia O'Grady and | the Colonel's lady sixters under their skins. | Many a woman otherwise good and | |clever has eaten her heart out be-| cause she was silly enough to desire | to go over the top when she was | stationed in trench No. 8. AN this| war work has induced the Colonel's | jescend a step to meet Julia » Who is stronger and quite | as she is, when Julia/ ady runs up the. steps with al surgical bandage to save a life, or a cheerful word to sgve a soul It has not hurt the Colonel's lad) to Iet her poorer sisters look at h frills and flounces, It has not low: ered her opinion of the image she | sees in the mirror several times per diem, And what a thrill it has given | Julia O'Grady to feel in her heart | the downfall of prejudice and the} lowering of the standard set up by woman against woman, when idle- ness bred prejudice and ignorance bred intolerance. | The war has begun your emanei-| It pation, girls. called “fair” is up to the sex} either fair or un fair what the fellow id the best policy; 1 nught to know, wuse I have tried them both,” We have all showed our hearts and hands in war work, | We have « 6 motorists or in oth er manlike positions, shortened our | skirts. We are now called upon to lower our skirts, We have been cov- ered, uncovered, discovered and re- covered. Now let us begin a sister- hood of woman to help the brother- hood of man, We have showed the Copmhted IOIO ky tha |per on Certeis’ table, 1 was moved! here what we can do e ) ( i ° | ay ailbreidle ts fel Mewerprpper Eniterpe ioe Assorsatin I DETERMINE ON A REAL ADVENTURE A LADDER TO B St “Where do you suppose it ge > pin a note au BREE FRE TOERRATE to?” was the anxious query which | writ Mile, Vanderlyn put to ne Lori Why didn't 00k for the ake mer, while I, the embodiment of | eton | our cle both, stepped from the diver ah Fortunately, | reflected in bpd } the clonet floor know that I had seen him in him digs Jail “Ot courne it's up to you to find) guine, And at 1 perceives out, Jane Lorimer,” was the sugges | what a great advantage J had ag ion made by my mont venturesome | quired; | would recognize Tony Cent, a oxo. “That in, if you really care at/the fruit vender, anywhere and gg ut fighting Hoshevik propa und he would never gues ganda new him! There might bp Then the fter side of my nature er lore c mt ons protested that 1 didn’t have to care Verhap an the thought o all about important things, but| them, or perhaps it was the coffes, rn about my own ease and com) which restored my energy. 1 hue Ml Sg fort. ried to my own room and dread, Hl tog I wan a young and very pretty|and I had to smile as I put on, J woman, and as such society accord-| hoped for the last time, that oe ber Jed me every luxury ax my right,|markable pink feather turban, ‘oe and made no demands whatever Hack once mo n the closet, rt upon my intelligence and energy. 1| raised the trap r and look a @ could be as lazy as 1 wanted wo down into the black well below §t, and arouse no hard feelings At the top I could see the rungs of women and uglier women migl a ladder and 4 handrail, but the expected to xo in for reforms, might | depths of the well didn't look one 1 responsible for failing to, bit inviting f they had the chance llowever, I had no reavon for hen but & charming and beautiful girl,|itating. Where Certeis could go I like Jane Lorimer, could be pardon wuld follow ed for playing the fool under ali cir ‘Good-bye, old dear,” cine | cumstance even for throwing] to the diver's suit, ‘trot down a disagreeable job of tracing a | ber glove a friendly wl Bolshevik praised for In fact, I would be youth and After 1 had descended the ladder a few steps, and had let down the ue saving my SERESS beauty—and for flying with it to the | door in the floor, I stopped, out @ wafety and luxury which awaited me | breath from sheer nervousness. The at the Lo mansion. or wtarted at the second floor of “And 1 might just as well be a|Certeis’ house, but where it ended pink jellyfish in an aquarium with-| was a mystery st out 4 mind—without @ soul! said { I should come out in @ myself to myself. “I think I'll | dei Isheviki? That ought to LIVE while i'm on earth. I'm go cording ta any plot which ing down that trap door—just to see) } to form what will happen.” | I poised carefully on # Having m the ive, I forth ladder in. that cold, dagie fied mynelf with coffee from the sil thought of something F ver urn in Certeis’ room. I knew] dreaded worse than conspirators. It that his valet would at the moment] was 4 horror I was quite apt to find be gossiping with the maids over | below me in the abyss. his own breakfast | What if I should step on a rat af At the sight of my little pink slip-| the foot of the ladder? (To Be Continued) boys over there and the men over Don't drop the game because the | | | 'Catarrhal Deafness ‘ khaki is off. Don't let down the bars and Head Noises because the skirts are ger. Don't! sluff the canteen because some On lypELS SAFE AND SIMPLE WAT mals have hydrophobla. Keep up TO TREAT AND RELIEVE AT HOME the game. It is the woman inside 7 the Red Cross apron. | ‘h, catarrhal 2 by It the Red girt at tame; |symptormna may be entirely overcome in in many instances by the folio treatment, which you can easily pre- ened pare in your own home at little cont, we must |Secure from your druggist 1 ounce | have of Parmint (sous Se ae arms |this home and add to it nt & hot water and « little granulated This |sugar, Stir until dissolved. Take | tion, jone tablespoon four times a day. 5 dares |improvement ix sometimes not after the first day's treatment, | Breathing should become easy, while the distressing head noises, laches, duliness, cloudy thinking, ¢1 April 4—|snould gradually disappear under returned | the treatments sioU Ja. When John Peterson, nic action of the | Lows of smell, taste. defective h soldier, yesterday met at the North- |iig and taucus droppin eg of the throat are other western station the woman he | Wyich suggest the presence’ ot Gan thought was his wife, she intro-/tarrh, and which may often De overs. duced the man who accompanied fP'® by, his, © ee ay Ph ny — ©, Woodward, as her hts-/all ear troubles are cau by ¢ band. Thereupon Peterson attack- |tarrh, and there must, therefore, be — ed Woodward, Peterson was plac- | S02, a ag whose heat may ed in the city Jail, a tored this simple, home treatment. NATIONAL DRESS-UP WEEK April 7 to 12 We are offering unusual opportunities for every woman in Seattle to save money, who desires to be well dressed during this week and Easter. Here’s the Secret We are manufacturers of women’s Ready-to- Wear, located here in the city and have opened the Pauline Shop at 221 Pine Street; selling di rect to the wearer in or- der to eliminate the mid- dieman and allow our friends the saving in- stead. They’re All Wanting Them for Spring An exquisite showing of the latest in SUITS, COATS, DOL- MANS, CAPES, WRAPS They’ve just been re- ceived fresh from our factory, together with a full line of Sport Wear in Baronette Skirts, Vel- vet Jackets and three- quarter-length Coats. Special for Saturday New Arrivals in Georgette Waists. Another interesting lot in all the favored shades for early spring wear. $5 values. Attractively priced for Saturday . $3.95. 221 Pine Pine Street Street Phone Phone Elliott Elliott 2883

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