The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 2, 1919, Page 8

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BRAI ,ERD i, Let us help,” At this tea there! Dinner at ° ; will be no offering of any kind University Club » |The public is invited that they may ersomad Mr, John W. Eddy entertained | inspect the home and be interested at a dinner on Wednesday evening |in its prosperity Mrs, Lawrence Bilis and little at the University club, prior to the 7 © daughter will leave tomorrow for concert given at the Metropo'ttan | Vietory Club Bellingham, where she will remain theatre by Miss Mabel Garrison. | “ag victory club will give a series |* month. Miss Hazel Landes will Covers were placed 1 Mr, and Mr of dances commencing Wednesday m pany peg wil eg for Robert Greer, Mr. and Mrs, Edward May t the Leech! pavilion, x weeks Mr. Ellis has been Mh © Garrett, Mr. and Mrs. Paut Henry,| WY. Tien are eapecially invited led Hast by the sud illness Pun a co aire age = yg agen The music will be taken care of Of Dis father, | i ir, Lyman Colt, and the host). Campau's nineplece orchestra ME © Later most of the guests attended | 1) “CN in charge is com |, Mf. Thornton Hamlin has gone i the concert, posed entirely of former service | '° Pasadena for a twe weeks’ trip. on eee . 4 men, The patrons and patronesses| 4+ j Misa Lillian Jones and Miss Marlo i pper vill be nd Mrs, J. MH. Smith | Su i, Gavtinon — hot 4 MT Newnan sty, [Bernard will spend the weekend at Miss Mabe bei ail and Mrs. A. W. Cleavey and Mr.|Yeomalteamp, | , An exceedingly charming sUPPeT | ang Mra, W. D, Carpenter : +p party was given after the concert) ec phe Poe ues By gt Segoe) ane ‘ on Thureday evening at the Wash:| nave moved to Denny Flaine, FE taxton hotel with Mise Mabel Gar| The Dansant where they have purchased the oe Fison as honor guest. The party! The pupils of Madame Piess’| beautiful residence of Mr. George Hee included Mr, and Mrs. Trafford | school will give a the dansant to-/W. Dilling. Mr. and Mrs. George Huteson, Mrs, Harris, Miss Isobel| morrow afternoon at the home of W. Diiling left Tuesday fi Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M>| Miss Helen Schwager, instead of Cavanaugh's ranch in wan, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gir |the play which was to have been| Washington, which they will ¢ rett, Mr. John W. Eddy, ahd Mr.| given at the Press club Saturday for the summer. Thomas Merili, of Duluth. evening. Miss Nellie and Miss Dorls fst cy |Hanson will dance during the inter:| | Mre. Walter Bowen will return Farewell Dinner | mission from Portland in & couple of days In honor of Chevalier Paulo! Brenna, Judge George, Donworth| Children’s Party gave a dinner last night at the) ary Albert Gr eight months ‘They played eee tesa McAbee, soprano, will sing, and ber piano recital which prom-| Driscoll, of Vancouver, B. C, ragtime fees to be exceedingly entertaining. . Dinner at Golf Club ‘Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson will) qpry 29, entertain at a small dinner at the i: Weditz-Wheeler riage of their Mary, to Lieut. daughter, dinner dance tomorrow night at the Golf club. The dinner will be in| ompliment to Mr. and Mrs. Rob} ert Greer, who have recently re turned from a trip of | | months thru California. [OL Wheeler. , eee | The bride was a teacher Miss Butler's Wedding Party Miss Catharine Butler, whose en- it to Ensign Elliott Dean eictinatoc, U. 8. naval air service, ‘was recently announced, has set June 12 for her wedding day. The will make their home, ne wi Be pevteensd in St. | ee "| Green and Black Club ‘The maid of | nounce the marriage of the! charge from the army jserved 13 months In France. evening, May 10, at the Oldman, Miss Alice Hole, Miss Anna York, Miss Phyllis Blake and Miss Alice Biake. A reception at the Sunset club will follow the cere mony. Black club. eoeg Correct Errors in Dinner for Mr. Sheets Mr. and Mrs. Frederick K. Ad| WASHINGTO! The first movement in the direc: | ™issing, 4,299 tion of welfare work was started by the pioneer women before the| Seattle fire and it was called the| “Ladies’ Relief.” This movement, ‘Which became the Seattle Children’s | a@ rechecking of army records. value to Seattle. dependent children. It is on Ninth) nd McGraw strs. Mrs. W. N. Red-| ® field has been. president for many | G4 Years, and Miss Ann Mather secre- tary of the advisory board. Trie is the matron. weak or disordered kidneys. writes: Children's home on next Tuesday, to which it is hoped that all friends of welfare work will come. ‘There are 65 children now being cared for at the home, which ts indeed | @ home to the little children. | ney or bladder trouble. Sold everywhere. Armstrong gave for Italy, and will be away seven rom. About eighteen children were | mes in the| week from an East orchard ahd hunted for Enster een. e8 for merly of Seattle, announce the mar. Mr, and Mrs. John J. Weditz an daugh several|ter, Mary Agnes, to Mr. Raymond| in the Port Angeles high school, apd the; groom has recently recetved his dis He was a |first Meutenant in the artillery, and| ting, who were overseas with Mirx Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler are motor. ing to Pineville, Oregon, where they | eee The Green and Black club will ,|eive a May-time informal Saturday | Mount Baker club house. The annual in| i.44 ‘6, Roberta Hoge, Miss Eleanor Keith, formal for new members on Satur. " ‘Miss Rowena Washburn, of New| 48y evening, June 7, will complete the dances given by the Green and Casualty Reports May 2.—An addt-/ ‘ams gave an attractive dinner on| tion of 476 names was made to the | ‘Wednesday evening in honor of| list of soldiers killed In agtion, died | Mr. H. H. Sheets. | of wounds and disease afd died of cee | accident, bringing the total to 75,820 » | killed. Seattle Children’s ig > ee a Home Tea | brought to 201,847; prisoners, 4,786; ‘The new figures are the results of |the absent members. SUFFERED FOR EIGHT YEARS | ports will be ned, Rheumatic pains, lame back, sore | home, has been and is of great, Muscles and stiff joints most fre ‘The home is for | quently can be traced to arerworked. | mainy Bell, R. F. D. 3, Box 234, Savannah, | | “I was suffering for |eight years from pain in the back Mrs,|%nd could not do any of :ny work, but since I have taken Foley Kidney | Pills, T can do all of my work.” Fo- emeeerin be @ tea at the Seattle! Kidney Pilla have given rellet to thousands who suffered from kid Try them. ‘There is no work greater than| that of caring for a child, and its| @levation into the realms of kind-| Bess, goodness, truth and knowl-| edge. For years this home has | striven to help the dependent child. | ‘That the good work may carry on, Jet the people say to’ one another,| — byes CHARLES SCHWARTZ Optometrist and Mfg. Optician Examined and Glasses Fitted Prices Reasonable. | Mr. and Mra. Reuben Jones, have been making their home at the a) Terry hotel, moved across Lake Rainier club. Covers were placed) gejienttul children’s party last Fri) Washington today to their summer for eight. Mr. Brenna will leave! aay afternoon, April 25, in honor of | home. Seattle within a couple of weeks in sixth birthday of her little son. see Dr. J. 8 McBride returned last n trip. Bridge Tca |The table was most attractively) Private W. J. Wood, who has Mrs. Wiliam Henry Glortus will | decorated with apple blossoms, pink | been for ten montha overseas, has give a bridge tea on Tuesday after. | decorations and Easter favors been honorably discharged from oon at her home | . . [service and arrived in Seattle, He e+ | Award Commission of * with wie parents, Mr. and Mre. White Elephant Shop tne|King and Kitsap Counties; — eee During the noon hour at the) 1...” award commission of King| Mr. and Mrs, C. Allen Dale left fpraite Wiephant Shop neti 4 and Kitsap counties would like all |!#st night for Indianapolis, w! Mire. Frederick Wade Hargrave Suan the women who have not recetved ‘hey will make their home. Get as hostess and has arranged | icic badges to call for them within e 9 9 @n attractive program. Miss Eva| is next few days at Red Cross} Mies Mary Theaker arrived in |headquarters, There are about two Seattle Monday night from a short Gister, Miss Grace McAbee, will be oor Ge oe ee . hundred badges and awards still on amily of Judge ¥ at the piano. | beer ~— sey, of Yam Hill, Oregon eee ece Red Cross Jumble Sh . Mre, James H. Burton, formerly Tomorrow during the Baegg ote Driscoll-Corbett of Seattle, who hax been making Miss Kathleen Harker wil! give a! Mr. and Mra. Thomas Edward her home in Great Falls, Montana. for two years, has rgturned to Se attic and taken a cottage at Donna! Point for thé summer. Ross Hope Corbett, | 38th Canadian infantry battalion, on eee Mra. Newton Leithead returned Yesterday from a short trip to Cab ifornia. Her mother, Mre. Barker returned with her and will spend the summer here Mrs, George W. Allen and sister Mrs. Ogg, will leave Monday for io East ee Mixes Katherine Kittinger will re turn tonight fr New York. Mins Hazel Archibald and Miss Elma Col | Kittinger, will remain for a visit in New York before returning home. from a several weeks’ visit to North Yakima. eee } Mrs. C, B. Lamont returned Mon. |@ay from an eastern trip with her Mrs. Delia Gearin, of Port regon. She will be a guest of the Sunset club until Sunday, when she will go 'to Portland to spend two weeks with her father, | Mr, Hahn \{— Cihaber CLUBS FOR SATURDAY CLASSIC CULTURE CLUB The Classic Culture Club will hold Luncheon will be served at 12 o'clock. During the social hour toasts will be made to In the after. |moon the annual election of officers | will take place and the annual re NORTHEAST IMPROVEMENT CLUB AND TENTH. AVE. N. E. IMPROVEMENT | CLUB An important meeting is called for | Saturday evening at § p.m. at the Fairview school, at 76th and 10th ave. N. E. All members of, the Northeast Improvement club and the 10th Ave. N. BE. Improvement club, |and all others interested in the ex |tension (of car service to Fairview hill, are requested to attend, All | petitions in circulation will be called in at that timt. * ee ELDERBLOOM CLUB The Elderbloom club will meet at K. P. hall, All ladies over 50 are Coats that commands respect. What’s What! In Coat Values There’s a certain dignity about our new Spring Choice materials in Velour, Broadcloth, Silvertone and Crystal Cord. These Coats sell regularly at $65. Saturday your choice at $42.50 SEPARATE SKIRTS Exquisitely tailored, materials Baronette Satin and a few numbers in Wool Plaid. Regular price $18.50. Saturday, Special Price, $12.50 > 38 Rub the forehead parts on the dining board. bled eggs with dried beef, ‘toast, 221 and temples with Use as many spring fruits and| coffee. Pine vegetables as the purse can buy.| Lunch: Vegetable salad, cottage Haat They are better than medicines|cheese sandwiches, canned fruit. yy ICKS and almost cE reay a8 @ vacation.| Dinner: Planked fish, with car one fi INDAY rots and onions, baked potato, cu Elliott YOUR BODYGUARD” -SO%604%29) freaktast: Fresh sliced pineappte,|cumber and lettuce salad, fresh. gin a poached oees on toast, cottes. gerbread, caramel! sauce, coffee. ‘i ieee tl er: Boiled beet tongue with| WEDNESDAY | | Buy a Victory Bond and help | | "ew potatoes tna carrots, parsley) Breakfast: Stewed dried apricots, | bring back our heroes to us. | saraish, creamed asparagus, sliced|botled rice and milk, toast, goffee, %- nnn) Tadish and cucumber salad, French’ Lunch: Asparagus soyp, toasted welcome. Meeting from 10 until 4 eee | CAMP FIRE GIRLS | All Camp Fire Girls of Seattle are | to give a reception for Miss Kemp- thorne, national field secretary, at | Frederick & Nelson's auditorium from 2 until 6 p.m. There will be a musical program, and Mins Kemp- |thorne will speak, Refreshments will be served in the tea room. All active Camp Fire Girls and guardi ans and disbanded camps who would like to reorganize are urged to at- |tend. Those who wish further par ticulars are requested to phone Mrs. |Jack Little, Bast 2033 cee PASTOR’ SAID SOCIETY | The Pastor's Aid society of tho First Presbyterian church will meet in the parlors of the church at 2 o'clock. Mra, D. Clifford Reid will sing. Mrs. L. Kelehner will discuss the subject, “Choosing Wisdom.” The consultation cabinet will meet gt 1 o'clock, oe . RAILWAY AUXILIARY Ladies’ Auxiliafy to the Railway | Conductors will give a card party at Foresters’ hall at 2 p. m. URALGIA or Headache— who! Alki) Mrs. Fred Hanson has returned ; its annual meeting at the Federation | of wounded was | Clubhouse Saturday. By BETT RBROWN Joan tell the silly old car compan Street car companies complain | that if their schedules are held up that the new tight skirts tie up traf-|tt's the men's fault—not ours. For fic and disrupt their car schedules | the first time in the history of street because women take longer to get | cars the men don't push and crowd | off and on the care jus off and on the cars. They all “I'e not sof" flames Dame Fash: | stand jo and let the ladion first! |fon. “The new tight skirts and the | So now! jailk knickers we wear with them) “I'll may the street car companies help us get on cars quicker than | are finding a poor excuse when they ever, No petticoats to gather up| biame tt @nto clothes women wear, jand pull aside—we just hop on. Weleays this modern vision, boarding | ‘They're at it again! RESOLVE TO SEE MY HUSBAND | | The night was given to tears. I) shock could have destroyed his mem:-| |wax so exhausted by the day's or |OFY of me. | | deal that I should have rested, but! Shell shock had kitled in him the! | | desire to love and to be loved, so the! j instead” of dogs. ae. Gens personal | experts had agreed. If he was ever sorrow took, possession of me 44/5 recover permanently, the need ot} had its yray at Inst. It seemed an the love of woman must be born in eternity since Tommy had reported him again / | the startling change for the worse! And what joy, what happiness to! jin my husband's mental condition, | me, his wife, to awaken his soul—to| land yet less than ten hours had/ put him once more in control of his | elapsed and been absorbed in pur-| clever mind—to fill again his loving! suing Tommy while he trailed Cer- | heart! tein. | “And Katherine That dreadful succession of inel-| what ails Bob—and how to cure| | dents was closed. I returned to my him.” There was a world of reason |own grief almost as eagerly as if tt back of my jealousy, “Katherine were a luxury Miller, who nursed him in France, | “fob! Dearest! I'm so forlorn?’ 1/ will take care of cases of brain di | murmured into my pillow, And my ease for Dr. Certeis. And as long lerief thrived on my thoughts. I/as the detectives permit Certeis to shook with sobs, remembering that| go free, he will doctor Fob, as sure the pillow was every bit as re-jas fate. And that beautiful Miss eponsive as Bob would be were I to| Miller will nurse him. And I can’t whisper the same words into his ear. | get a place in the Lorimer house, ‘Tob Lorimer ain't crazy, ma’am, efther af daughter, nurse, or serv: he just gets confused.”. That had/ant, as long as Certeis goes there— Been Tommy’s last repoft. Learning | uniess—I am willing to betray to about my husband's condition in|daddy and mother and Chrys all 1 that roundabout fashion was torture. | have told the polica, | And yet, until Daddy Lorimer should| Such thinking did not promote re-| procure Bob's discharge, it was aa| pose. Instead, it increased my wish | good as another, But I realized that | for news of Bob, If I could see him| after Bob came home I should have |—just for a minute! to devise & more direct method of “You've managed harder stunts, getting information about him. |Jane, Why not this?” I said just to The temptation to go at once to|encourage myself. “Move in a dear Mother Lorimer tormented me. | straight line, It's always shortest.” What was there to prevent my im-| And then the idea I wanted came mediate resurrection? to me. A straight line would lead My own stubborn will—I had to|me to Bob, wherever he might be. admit it—backed by my equally|The calendar suggested a way to stubborn wish. get to him, As a special messenger, I was determined that my hus-| carrying an aster gift, I could min band should woo me a second time. |gie with the soldiers guests. The I wanted to prove in my own ex-|camp was half a day's journey perience that there's only one girl|across the state, but that was the for one maf in all the world, and I| least of my obstacles. wanted Bob to be sure that I was] I would take a step at a time—al- the only girl for him ways in Bob's direction—and trust I still doubted that our marriage |to chance. I was glad I had not had convinced him, I felt sure that|given up the little job which re- quired the uniform. : (To Be Continued) | | Miller = knows if Bob had been perfectly satisfied with me for his wife, not even shell " BY BIDDY BYE, sponge cake and orange Isn't it fun to go to market|sauce, coffee. these days and behold the gorge | Supper: Cream of peas soup, ous ‘boquets and “flower-gardens” of the new spring vegetables! Imagine anything gayer than red toasted cheese wafers, strawberries and cream, MONDAY radishes and new lettuce! Orcooler| Breakfast: Stewed prunes and than cucumbers, and the dainty|raisins, oatmeal muffins, honey, new green and white onions?| cocoa, There's the glorious red color of} Lunch: Baked cauliflower with fresh strawberries introduced among|cheese, head lettuce _—salad, the iiiar yellow and gold of| cookies, oranges and bananas, and prickly; Dinner:, Cold boiled tongue (left fresh pineapples. There, too, is the crisp pink rhubarb and the firm blue green of new asparagus and soon new beets and carrots, and all the garden stars come to play their over), creamed new potatoes, canned peas, fried apple slices, corn muf- fins, marmalade, coffee. TUESDAY Breakfast: Stewed rhubarb, scram- MY OWN GRIEF OVERWHELMS ME AND I |) .a ' “Tight Skirts Tie Up Traffic,” Says Efficiency; “It’s Not So,” Says Dame _Fashi on Emphatically | os the car In her “hobble skirt.” “You don't see me wasting time gathering my skirts up around me before try ing to get on the car, do you? No wkirts to step on. Nothing to do but jusnp right on the step and inside. For convenience I'm for this outfit in getting on and off cars quickly. The men don't know.” “And for me,” says Mise Wide Skirt, “it's absurd, it's silly to blame it on the shape of the skirt.” ———___-___--__——--"} een $$ $$ * KILLING OFF INSECT PESTS x By Ellen Beers McGowan Instructor Household Arts, Columbia University Spting weather rouses the insect It is time for the war of exter- mination. Country house. wives must con tend with flies and moths. The city dweller must look out for bed- bugs and cock: roaches. The weapons against them all are sun, air and boiling water, with insecticides and = = fumigators ELLEN BMSGOWWN as first aids. bor Moths—Clean clothes closets and attics early, Air and brush win- ter clothing, clean off spots, and pack it away as early gs possible. Une cardboard boxes, with edges sealed with paper, or large, sealed envelopes of paper. Tar paper, moth balls or naphthalene, scattered in the folds, keep moths away. Clean clos- et walls, floors and ves with gas- oline, Use gasoline along the edges and under surfaces of carpets. discovered, squirt gasoline into all crevicey where they hide, repeating every day or two. Two ounces of pint of water, and one pint of alco hol is a cure, but is polsonous and must be used carefully. It is Mable to stain fabrics, Cockroaches — Cockroaches lay their eggs in dark corners and like warmth and moisture. To combat, close cracks in woodwork and around plumbing with putty and paint, Kill every roach seen. Keep sink sur- roundings dry and clean. Leave no food about. Mix borax with sugar and scatter about to 1'' roaches, Keep a squirt gun filled with gaso- line handy, to use on cracks where roaches are seen. Fumigators—Sometimes conditions are so bad it pays to fumigate, Fu- migation kills all insects, but not their eggs, The most efficient fumigator ts hy- drocyantic acid gas, It should be used only by an expert professional fumi- gator, ee bread sticks, apple, nut and date satkd, oatmeal cookies, Dinner: Kidney bean stew with onions and tomatoes, graham rolls, lettuce and green pepper salad, French dressing, rhubarb pudding. THURSDAY Breakfast: Sliced oranges, creamed codfish on toast, coffee, Lunch: Corn pudding, vegetable salad, sponge cakes, Dioner: Rolled round steak with bread and onion stuffing, creamed asparagus, biscuit, strawberries, coffee. FRIDAY Breakfast: Baked apples with cream, rice waffles, sirup, cocoa, Lunch—Egg croquettes, creamed carrots and peas, canned fruit, Dinner: Fried fresh fish, baked potato} creamed caulifiower, steamed spinach = with ~—s eggs, chocolate taploca, SATURDAY Breakfast: Sliced bananas and or- anges, soft boiled ezgs, toast, cocoay Lunch: Green peppers ‘stuffed with rice and choppe@ meat, white sauce, rhubarb sauce, cookies, Dinner: Mutton stew with vege. tables, fried parsnips, \ cucumber and onion salad, canned peach shortcake, coffee, Bedbugs—When these pests are) corrosive sublimate, dissolved in a/ By CYNTI Dear Mins Grey | this and refunes lor is sho right in this matter | Doubtierws the | interesting only to members of tistic value, ings. home. | | Marriage Should Mean ] | More Than Support | Dear Miss Grey: I am a widow, | 42, with four children. My two old-| | est daughters are old enough to help with thelr support, but it hard for us to get along comfortably on what | make. Ihave a number of | |chances to marry again, and some | . 1 think I should do #0, for} children’s sake. Do you think it would be right to do this? ' DOUBTFUL. Your letter implies that your chief object in marrying again would be to give your children a better home and to lift the bur- den of support from their shoul | ders, Thin is not @ fair att | tude. Unless you really care for | the man who asks you to marry him, you should not accept his | proposal, Any man, knowing | your circumstances, who asks you to marry him, expects to re- lieve you of many financial bur dens, but he would not be pleased to know that his accept: | ance was due entirely to his abil ity to provide. He Backs Up “Sergt. R. L. W.” Dear Miss Grey: Just a few lines | lrelating to @ recent letter from | | “Sergt. R. L. W.." of Camp Lewis. | | I notice several weak, lame attempts | of women to reply to the sergeant. ) To all such I would respectfully say: You cannot successfully refute | | the sergeant’s statements concern- jing the lowered tastes and desires and the shallowness of mind and [heart of the great majority of | younger girls and women of the | present time. | The sergeant’s outburst of despair and disgust at the scarcity of clean- hearted, wholesome, self-respecting, | sensible, intelligent girls is wholly and absolutely justified by existing }fucta. And there is nothing more [immovable in this strange old world of ours than a cold, hard fact. And since this painful, distressing fact of which the sergeant complains, really does exist, the only proper | thing is to try in some way or an- | other to correct it. An article appeared in The Star about five or six weeks ago from one of the most prominent women writers of our country, on “Social Ethics.” In that article, the writer reluctantly edmita that feminine morality at the present time is at a lower ebb than it has been for sev- eral decades past. She goes on to give the reasons for this as revealed by the most careful and searching investigations conducted over the jentire country. | I would suggest to the sergeant |from Camp Lewis that he should |go to The Star office at his leisure, | look over the files of back copies of |the paper, and find the article to j which I refer. It will support his. j letter, and then some. The article | is iMustrated with a photo of the | authoress, 8. A. D. Apron Faded; I wish to bave a group photograph of my \/and sisters framed to place on our Ubrary tabla My wife ob rs to let it stand there. reason for your wife's stand in this is the fact that family photographs weldom are displayed now in living rooms or Ubraries for the reason that they usually age A picture for « living room should be carefully selected, and should have « definite place in the room's fumish If you insist, however, in having the photograph in this particular place, your wife should let it remain there. Netther of | you should permit so small a matter to become an issue in your | was telling an untruth, and way | be delighted to spend Roasts Laundry Dear Miss Grey: I would like to ask you a question. I sent some washing to a laundry and had new underwear shrunk so that it couldn't be worn; also had a new apron faded. a” eS ioe Sprit time, whenell the {athionable worl see king slenderness, still more slender- creating an instan- taneous improve- ment in one’s appearance. Ab- normal abdom- inal lines are gen- tly straightened placed until discarded for an CROWN Cors 170 Fifth Avenue Model No. 323 out; heaviness and size are reduced. figure is coaxed back to charming and Rengo Belt maintains its perfect style lines under the wearing conditions. Rarely need a “Rengo’ Prices of Rengo Belt Corsets range from $2 00 $10” IIA GREY 4g SoS \ Am I Justified in tnsleting on FRIEND HUR, PHYS the family, and have Hite an When I went to them about tt, the manager just as much a told me very ungentierianly, Now, are laundries allowed to spoll clothes and charge you for it? A There are exceptions to ail rules, of course, But I believe, as @ rule, laundry companies are quite fair to thelr patrons, of necessity they must be, or lose that patronage. You really should have shrunice the underwear at home before putting it in the laundry. And, 4s far as the faded apron iwcon. cerned, none of the dye stuffs are guaranteed now, and you are not the only woman who must wear a faded apron. It is quite probable it would be badly faded had you laundered ft yourself, pee gh ZS 82S EE SS EE OSS LF From Some Girls . Outside the Bunch Dear Mins Grey: I note the printed in your column from RnR L. W.,” stating that all women of the working class the public dance hall or cafe ilar entertainment. t sHitE This is not true of ALL of even the MAJORITY of us. There are quite a number of us who would fF i leisure time in good, ment, but we would unattached beings of persuasion to have take a little more interest in us, would not be becoming to our nity and propriety to line up make a drive on you fellows. In order to make ® success of | failure, we'll an tack, tho, fn 1920. jie i & cold all alone, to the bunch. ag PERiEq eae i eee ERREETEE £ v Ao fai eS STS ame CE style. entirely new ET COMP. New Yo

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