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By BETTY BRAINERD |Dance for Miss Treat in every de by Mr ave last night compliment to a eharm ub-debutante Shasta lavish given Handsome and tail was the dar and Mrs, Frederic iss Emma Anderson * An attractive informal dance will given this evening by Mrs. Fred a ae wate H. White in compliment to her| i. 0 priscilla, Treat aister, Miss Emma Anderson. Miss}iie ang gracious Anderson is spending the summer] co a aragons, Nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. He) in. in fact all the Anderson, and will return tol oon. vere used in TWellestey College in the Fall, The) )anoing the loveliness of the Bvitations have been confined (0) ) cutiful interior of the ike unmarried friends of the honor] ) ome and the affair will be given Punch was served on and Mrs, Anderson's home. |,,q attractive retreats . | ranged about the grounds, Bridge Luncheon One hundred .and twenty-five of | Miss Treat's friends came to pay Two Vancouver visitors were the tion for a pretty informal her homage and enjoy the affair, which will long be remembered in sheon at the University club.|the minds of the young dancers. by Mrs. S. V. RK. Hooker yes The honor guests were . Frank Elkins and Mrs, Rod| bell, jr, who left Seattle y after spending sgyer fat the Washington hotel. The tht guests later played bridge eee Ur. Stefansson “Honor Guest Mr. and Mrs. James Macfarlane hn ed a few friends informally dinner last night at their home| ‘ limenting Mr. V. Stefansson. . y Mr, Stefansson is the guest of Mrs.|Osage Picnic farlane’s parents, Mr. and ail teas dnt” plohte mee : dents of Osage, Iowa, % |day, July 21, at Wo formal Luncheon The occasion was Henry Winter entertained /0ne. Mary of the t friends informally at luncheon|met for over £0 jcess of this first me. |by the fact thet it was unanimous ly voted to make it an annual af. ncheon at |fair, at whisk a dinner will at served in vening to allow more stal Springs [served in the evening to s 0) L. C. Gilman entertained |?¢™mer Osagers to attend. Dowagers” at luncheon on|_ fhose enjoying the occasion were After the luncheon two|Mr. and Mrs, C. Hunt, Mr. and of bridge were at play. Mrs. Lewis Dreke, Mrs. Orpha Jores eee Cole, Mrs, A. M. Walker, Mrs. Hart ridge Party, Walker, Miss Ruth Walker, Mr ond Mrz. Hapry Moek, Laverne and Rob anese Style Naomi Morford was hostess ert Mock, Mrs. J. Benson, Miss Ella M. Benson, Mrs. Arthur Cole, Mrs. charming bridge party on| ay at the home of her par-| Chas, Morse, Mrs. Ada Morse At wood and baby.daughter, Mrs. Faith Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Morford, f compliment to Mrs. Ross Mor-| Lovejoy Bee, Harriett Marie Bee, Mr. Herman Knudson, Mr. and Mrs. of Minneapolis, who has been a week with Mrs. George) Geo, Frazee, and Mrs. Sloan of Cal ifornia, sister of Mrs. Frazee; and Three tables of bridge| MTS: Winn, of Montana, a niece of played on the lawn and the|/<™!8 Drake. tions were all delightfully} out in Japanese. The prizes won by Mrs. Ned Davis, Mrs.) Carpenter, and a gift to the guest, all of which were Jap-| Refreshments were served and the dining room was with Japanese lanterns and| | table appointments were like: ‘carried out in Oriental style. eee ” 2 tle Tennis Club ‘Thomas Green and Mrs. y Blake presided over the tea S on Thursday at the Seattle s club. ove Elephant Shop Clarke has arranged a for Saturday noon at the @ Elephant Shop, which is in nt of the Leary building. McCutchen will sing and utchen will accompany the piano. eee ing Plans fay, August ist, has been set wedding of Miss Nellie B and Mr. George Elms ‘The marriage will take place home of her brother-in-law er, Mr. and Mrs. George W. in East Seattle, at which d Hilton will officiate. p Virginia Albin will be the de’s only attendant and Mr. Her- Foster will act as best man. eee most dat season's blos: profusion, en Iready Struve roses, lawn ar the were House Party Dorot? Smith gave a party over the weekend at the country home of her parents, |Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Smith, at |Joemma Reach. Her guests were Miss Betty lewis and her guest, Miss Virginia Murs, of Miss Mabel Donley, Mr Smith, Mr. Douglas Wallace, Winfield McLean and = Mr | Garva, Miss house hee vit Dwight Mr. Otto oe of former resi. was held Tue land park. a very happy guests had not years. The suc pienie is proven Jumble Shop. The habitues of the Red Cross Jumble Shop wil hear Mrs. Francis Taylor Schaubbe, contralto, during Saturday noon at the Jumble Shop, and*Madam Keesing will be at the piano. Mrs. Charles T. Boyd will be hostess. eee Luncheon for Recent Bride Honoring her niece, Mrs, Douglas Secor, who was recently married, Mrs. J. V. Patterson will entertain on; Tuesday next at a luncheon, ee Beach Party and Dance A beach party and dance this evening at Three Tree’ Point will claim Mrs. Jewett E. Riley as host- ess. The affair is in compliment to Mrs. Riley's nephews, Mr. Earl Riley and Mr. William H. Riley, just recently returned from over seas service. » & ‘When a man does his work weil he has no time to find fault with the work of his neighbor. limenting Mr. and Mrs. M. h and daughter, Mabel ch, of Washington, D. C.; Miss Shafer, of Falls Church, Va., tad Mrs. Torryson, grand matron pf the order of Eastern Star of Vir- Mr, and Mrs. C. E. Houston ined at a dinner party Tues- evening. Ke AVGVST, 1919 RECORDS “SWEET HAWAIIAN MOONLIGHT” An appetizing feast of the most attractive vocal and instrumental successes. There’s ing for every | taste; from Hawaiian seductiveness to rollicking ragtime. 6 . 2210 “EYES THAT Fried eg YOU,” Lewis James, Tenor, 85c. “ALABAMA LULLABY.” Lewis James and Charles Hart, 2113 Accompaniment by Sherbo's Novelty String Orchestra. ayy “CHONG,” Premier American Male Quartet. { “ON THE OZARK TRAIL,” Collin and Harlan, 22114 ¢ “HEART BREAKING BABY DOLL,” Billy Murray, Tenor Sie 10 1 “EVERYBODY WANTS 4 KEY TO MY CELLAR,” 22118 Arthur Fields, Baritone. q “WILD HONEY,” Toots Paka Hawaiian Troupe. Sig | TILL WE MERT AGAIN,” Toots Paka Hawaiian Troupe. 40171 { “MY CAIRO LOVE,” Fox Trot, Joseph Samuels’ Orchestra. Sie? { LIMBO LAND,” MedleyOne.Step," “ : “THE ALCOHOLIC BLUES,” Fox Trot, S Band. Figg 30 { “LASSUS TROMBONE,” Ose-Step, Syece lox Bock, “PLL SAY SHE DOES,” Medley Fox Trot, Green Brothers’ Zi { CopLOFEY RUFFLES?” One-Step, Green Brothers’ meso” dione Chcietines.” Pee re, ae FOR SALE BY— Boise & Powers 1107 Third Ave. Du Portland; | *° be! | = Personal Mr. and Mrs, M, F, Backu their guests Mr. and Mrs, | Lowman and Colonel and Mrs ham, who are visiting the Low |mans, left Wednesday for an auto |mobile trip to Harrison Hot Sprin; They expect to be gone a week route they stopped at the home Mr. and Mrs. E, W, Purdy, at lingham, who entertained them dinner on Wednesday night | . Mr, and Mrs k Converse ar rived in Seattle today, Mr, Con- verse has been attached to the sig: nal corps since the beginning of the war and was two years in |He recently married Miss Acwms, of Massacnusetts, jdoing Red Cross work in He received his honorable reo in New York, eee Delafield returne: ednesday night from service over: s. Mr, Delafield received his hon- ble discharge July 15, and was a major in the sanitary corps. He Joined his wife, who has been visit jing her parents, Mr. and Mrs ace C. Hardy and they wil] remain & month before returning to New | York | eee Mrs. H. J. Fetter and daughter Betty returned Wednesday from a week at Brentwood, B, C. eee | Mrs, Vernon L. Crow, of Tacoma, |spent Saturday with Mrs. Mason Hawkins, with D. Clap En of Bel at J France. Melina who ¥ a rance harge ly Mr. Hare Miss Agness Inglis, of Newark, New Jersey, who is a house guest of Mr. and Mrs, James A. Haight with her two cousins Mr. James Haight and Mr. Pierce Haight spent the weekend with Miss Edith Red }field on Bainbridge island, eee’ | Mrs. J. Lovell Smith, of San | Francisco, arrived Tuesday and is the guest of Mrs, A. L. Hawley at |Enetal. Mrs. Smith formerly lived lin Seattle. ee Miss Dorothy Dempsey, of Taco |ma, arrived Thursday to visit Mrs McEwan Tomkins for several days, see Mrs. Fred Masson, of New York, is spending seVeral weeks with her niece, Mrs. Prescott Oakes, at the Country club. | eee Mr. and Mrs. Homer C. MacDon ald and family have moved to their home at Hunt's Point for the sum mer. Mr. V. Stefansson was the guest over Wednesday night of Mr. and Mrs. Fred White at their Port Madison summer home. eee Mrs. F. C. Johnstone and Mrs. J. L. Mohundro are the guests of Mrs. Stephen C. Cook at Wing Point, Eagle Harbor. eee Mr. and Mrs. E. C, Ward have returned to their home from a three weeks’ motor trip thru California. eee Next Sunday Mr. and Mrs, Wal lace Green will return from a stay of several weeks at Brentwood, B.C. eee Mrs. Quinn Farr, Mrs. Charles Pye Burnett and Mrs. Alfred Battle were the guests of Mrs. Frank Fred- erick at Wing Point last Tuesday. eee Captain Frank R. Armstead, U. S. Marine Corps, of New York City, with Mrs. Armstead and their son Robert, are visiting Mrs. Armstead's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Car keek at their Mercer Island home. Captain Armstead is on a month's leave of absence. eee Mrs. Marshall DeMott Gates, of Lincoln, Il, arrived in Seattle yes- terday with her two children. They are visiting Mr. and Mrs. George W. Soliday. eee Mrs. Raymond Dabney Miller ar- rived in Seattle Thursday to spend a month with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Winfield R. Smith at the High- lands eee Mr, Roland Dill, of Spokane, has been for some time the guest of his aunt Mrs. R. E. Hibbler. Mr. Dill has just returned from France. eee Mrs. George H. Bellman left earty in the week for Delano Beach, |where they have taken a cottage |for the remainder of the summer. eee Miss May and Miss Kathryn Hen neken have gone to Los Angeles for a stay of several weeks. eee Mrs. H. C, Truesdale, of Minneap- olis, has returned to her home after Ja visit of several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Horace C. Henry, eee Mra, F. M. Arnold, of Albany, |Oregon, and Mrs. M. C. Gill, of Scio, Oregon, are guests of Mra. R . Hiller ee FB. Patton | | . | Mrs. © terday for California |be joined later by |T, Wanamaker, daughter, arles left where she Dr. and Mrs. son-in-law yes will A her and . and Mrs. afford, Huteson Wednesday Vancouver, B. C,, to attend the debut of Miss Mar. | garet Stewart, daughter of n |John Stewart. Mr. and Mrs, Hute | Mr. | | |left son will remain until Saturday, . . F is Y Capt. G Patten {from West Point, N lspending several days jbrother and sisterinJaw, Ma. and Mrs, William 'T, Patten. Col, and Mrs. William R, Eastman, who are on their way to Camp Lewis, where Col, Eastman will assume duty in |the medical corps, is also spending |several days with the Pattens. Mrs. astman is Maj. Patten’s sister, o- on leave and with Capt. Wallace Drummond, his sis | ter, Miss “Mildred Drummond, and his guest, Capt, Porter of Chicago, left Thursday for Los Angeles, The two men will be stationed at Camp Funston and Miss Drummond will visit indefinitely in Los Angeles. waa his | a pte THE SEATTLE | ae Wie | Hor: | | | | | i im Wo CERTEIS GETS HIS PE From the deep recess of the hood: | ed chair, I watched Certeis saunter | slowly down to the water. The man| It was Jo Bach! | “Now, just what does this mean?" | I asked myself, “I guess I would better find out.” | And I pulled a steamer rug up to my | neck, and prayed that I would not suffocate, “Hurry, you fool! growled Hamil- ton Certeis, He stood with one foot on the motor boat, and snapped the ashes from his cigar, posing as if he had stopped casually to inquire about the engine trouble. “I can't stand here forever.” he went on in the superior, imperative tone he always uses to those whom he regards as ‘his inferiors. “Speak, man! Have you got them?” “Sure I have,” was Bach's reply. I noticed that he omitted the usual “sir” and I thought that Certets must have been awfully irritated by the man's impudence, “Hand them over—quick!” ordered Certeis. “Nothing doing,” replied Bach with insolent composure. “Not without I get another ten thousand dollars! “The devil! I paid you once for) this job!” “You have. take another check. yours———" Certeis held up a forbidding palm. “Damn you!” be exclaimed. Then he controlled his temper and spoke calmly: “Just so. Then you ought to know it's dangerous bualness for me to make a check on my New York funds—at present.” “Cash will do all right.” Bach re-| plied. “Since you haven't got the} sum in your pants, I'll come around | for it—at dusk-—tomorrow, No cash | -nopearis. You understand? An no bride!” With which Insolence, he | pushed off his boat and jumped in | But I've decided I'l That plot of ARLS—ALMOST —THEN IS MENACED WITH EXPOSURE) , A genuine German invective float- ed after him. Then ered back to the house of my the cool stuffy sand shore, I slipped out beach chair on to | where the wind could blow over me) To neither | —and restore my reason. of those men was my life worth a penny. I rejoiced to find that I hadn't been discovered by them Much relieved to be alone with the wea and the stars, I thought over what I had heard “Bach could sell those stones for many times ten thousand dollars,” I thought. “And I can't understand why he doesn’t go off with them and do it. No trouble at all for him to get awny—for nobody on that tug had the least idea what was in the tube-—nor that it had been looted.” But, of course, the papers next morning had corking stories of the U-boat which the divers had discov. ered at the city’s front door, and pa- thetic accounts of the woman diver’s death, The U-boat would be raised, and exhibited, ete., ete. ‘That the craft still held a magnifi cent treasure of Hohenzoliern dia- monds nobody suspected. who knew the fact were not betray- ing it. All day small craft made excur. sions to the point where the U-boat was supposed to be. But even tho | divers should investigate its interior, they weren't likely to meddle with| boarding place, and who likes to be} better than} the torpedo shells immediately. Nevertheless, I saw Hamilton Cer. teis walk the beach for half the day He had reason to worry.. ‘Tiny couldn't help him get up the Hohen zollern stones, “Why doesn’t Certeis go down him- self?” I wondered. “Surely the man who invented that remarkable diving dress ought to have sufficient faith in it to put it on!” (To be continued.) Current News About Currants By BIDDY BYE Currants are ripe in backyard gar- dens and on the market stalls. The price is high this year, but the temp: |taticn to make just a little currant jelly for use with meats and salads is still strong, and for who have a currant crop of their own, boast a full purse, proper recipes: Currant Raisin Jam—Wash and seed one pound of large raisins and put in a preserving kettle; to the| raisins add three pints of currant |juice made from stewing red and white currants together; to the fruit juices add three pounds of granu lated sugar, mix all well, and boil | slowly; cook the fruits until the mix ture is thick and smooth, skimming it |often; cool, pack in sterilized glasses and seal Gooseberry Wash, stem those or here are some and Red Currant Jam id stew red currants enough to produce two cupfuls of juice; to the currant juice allow four | pounds of stemmed gooseberries and three pounds of sugar; make a syrup | by dissolving the sugar in the cur-| rant juice, add the « simmer slowly for 40 minutes until | the berries look clear; pack in sterile | pint glass j al Red Cur elly—Pick red cur. rm and wash, and cook in a boiler until well scalded, then boil for an hour over a moderate fire; pour the cooked fruit into a clean jelly bag and let drip overnight; next | day put the strained juice in a pre serving kettle 1 boil for 10 min.} utes; lower the fire and skim; return to a boiling point, and as soon as it boils add the heated sug: one pound of sugar for juice; the mixture should jell within | five minutes; put in sterile glasses, | seal and let stand in hot sunshine for several da nd | double lowing ach pint of | stem and without crushing, stew gen- tly in a@ little sugar; spread the | thickly | Members cooked currants on platters, sprinkle with granulated sugar and dry in the sun; serve as a confection with desserts. Spiced Currants—To five pounds of ripe currants, washed and stemmed, measure three pounds of sugar, one pint of pure elder vinegar and one ta blespoonful each of whole cloves, cin namon, ginger and allspice; add one teaspoonful of salt; simmer the mix ture slowly for three hours, then bot- tle while hot and seal. George Washington Circle, G, A. R. n, George Washington lies of the Grand Army of the public, benefit dance at Carpen: ters’ hall, Fremont. Proceeds to. be used towards the asses*ment for the maintenance of the home at Puyal lup. Circle, Li t oe Dancing Club club at . Wisteria Wisteria park at 9 Dancing o'clock, Leschi L'Union Francaise To honor its students of the back from E will hold a basket picnic from until 9:30 lock at Lincoln This will take the place of the ular meeting. An invitation tended to friends of tudents to attend. members Pre urope, 1" and war the Classes nion Francaise is ex members and . Overseas Club The beach party, luneh at with an Overseas club will bonfire and Magnolia Bluff, concluding old-fashioned barn dance. and their friends are re to take the Fort Lawton hold -a savory quested at 7:45 o'clock, Transportation will be provided at the end of the line, Certeis saun | Bach's craft in the motor-boat rose to his feet.|was lost in the line of craft off| bachelor of 40—and what 1s more | tine record within the last few y ‘The few | Do Pfe @ ofden $ t | 4 PEE Se A *| out Edith Taliferro and Ernest Truex, starring in “Please Get Married.” “Man likes best the type of woman who believes in children, who expects to make a home, and likes to be kissed by her husband better than anybody else she knows.” BY EDITH TALIFERRO Starring in “Please Get Married” Men like best the type of woman, Intellectuality, beauty, and all the other qualities are not so {mport- ant in attracting the male of the | species as “domesticity.” | By domesticity 1 mean ability to | cre a homey atmosphere fen are just grown up children they graduate from their | mother’s care there must be some woman to take her place. What {s more pitiable ‘domest en than terrible than the kind of “den” hi keeps for a home? A good woman of the domestic type would have saved him from his fate. | And men like this type best, |don’t mean that a woman should |spend her time in the kitchen, | make a slave of herself, or be for- ever “tidying up” and_ keeping things “in their places.” Men hate that sort of thing. It is just the leompromise between the old maid | notion of a place for everything | and everything in its place, and the| hopeless mess of a bachelor’s rooms jthat makes the “domestic type" of |woman valuable and attractive to ja man. The average man wants a wife on whom he can depend, whether Jit is for hot water for his shave, Jor his slippers at night, or some- | body who knows how to tie his |best white tie when he wears it. A wife has got to be all the things that a mere man is NOT, She |has got to supply his deficienct And that is w I mean by the “domestic” type. It is the type of | woman who likes men in general, |but her husband in particular, It | anyhow and —one or two to make a home and expects not a mere kissed by her husband anybody else she knows, and thinks |he looks “just great” in the new sult that he can only afford to get once a year, It never occurs to |her that she needs a “boudoir” and while she hopes some day to af- ford a maid, in. the meantime |she's not too proud to do her own | housework She's the kind who likes to reach out and hold hubby's hand in the tense ment in the show they go to see together, and who kisses the baby as he lies asleep in his little crib when they come home that night after “just the dandiest little after-theatre supper,” as she describes it, a the type of woman who je America what it is and the tyr the men like best. Let's go buy Boldt’s French Pas- try. Uptown, 1414 3rd Ave; down town, 913 2nd Ave. 'REPLAGES “THAT TIRED FEELING” WITH VIGOR Hard work, produc | which make fifty per o restore your jity and vig of Proud's a_ beneficial products w tit 1m at has ma that's worry, lack a run-down condition many men and women nt efficient. You can em to normal activ. r by the systematic use Portolive his is emulsion of nourishing h improves the appe aids digestion and promotes the | »per action of the internal organs nd bowels, © It is a splendid, cor-| rective of constipation. ' Purely veg: etable, dry it for thirty s and note the increase in’ weight, strength land vitality. Bnergizes immediate | Strengthens permanently, Endors |by physicians. Sold by druggists. | Doctor Tells How To Strengthen Eyesight In a week's | time, in many in- | stances, |and quick relief brought to inflamed, aching, Itch= ing, burning, work-stratned, watery eyes. | Dried Currants—Pick red currants,|car leaving the foot of Madison st,| Read the doctor full statement soon to appear in this paper, Bon-Opto is sold and recommended everywhere by drug- Gists, the type who believes in children | of exer-| By CYNTHIA GREY Each da girl, “Happy and § brings more letters of ad.” Ha to writ © you ad it is not too la ur oy of the } * Following are some my —— Will the | wrote to signed her dress? ‘There letters written in re letter, which appeared columns a few days ago, sympathetic people who wi get in touch with her and tr make her life more happy tYNTHIA GREY. little C lame nithia 1} ure J fr send her t Ke ponse in 1 a | never been Vil wa who, at Dear Miss Gre I've in the penitentiary, nor, have 90 per cent of those myself, are trying to arriv a 80-) | lution of this man’s diffic After jall is said and done, he will have \to make his decision himself, here's hoping it may be as wise the one he made when he was leased from his punishment and made his way UPWARD instead of allowing his discouragement to drag him down. like Just one woman's viewpoint may help and so, if it my question | |to decide—supposing I were en gaged to married to this man would be to make clean breast of it all. He sincerely her and has shown that he wishes to start his married life fair and square. How could he do so if he were continually shielding and hiding something? He | would always have to endure the thought that he was not what she | |thought, and her thoughtless re marks—that we all make—would cut him to the quick until it would grow intolerable, | But, n suppose he were able to carry this burden for years with a suspicion her part and then, eventually, it should come out? , If I were that woman, I should | find it hard to forgive him. ‘To re alize that after years of loving and trustfulness that he had not only committed the crime, but had de ceived me day by day deliberately, | would,break my heart and shake my | faith in him thereafter. It wouldn't | be the crime so much; we can ways find it in our heart to forgive | if the desire is great. A poet has | Jonce said: To err is human, to for- | give—divine.” But to know that de- | |ception had been wilfully planned | and carried out, and to,feel that he |had considered me unworthy of his love to the extent that I couldn |be trusted with his secret, would be | the crowning touch of sorrow. | Suppose, on the other hand, the | big enough to forgive even when she knew his ars, jand should turn from him in con tempt. Would that be worse than |having to endure the pain should |she suddenly die before their wed-| ding? No, because if he knew she | was of such small caliber, then he wouldn't want her for his wife, Far, far better for her to be ap- prised of the true situation and| make the @hoice herself, than to have ja skeleton bobbing up in years to come. If she is big in heart and sou} and see it in its true light, she will be glad and proud to marry him. What a perfect understand- ing would be between these two, even tho the subject is never reopened again, and how surely she can help | him by her silent sympathy and un-| derstanding, and her constant watch | that no thoughtless words of others | wound him. I, personally, think this man fs worthy of any woman's love, and never yet has anyone been found | willing t6 “cast the fire stone,” and I'm hoping that time will show him | the right thing to do. | JOHN'S WIFE. were loves this man, Dear Miss Grey: In answer to the | two letters of inquiry, I think I |have found a sensible solution, and lone that, in our case, has worked beautifully. | I had heard of young wives who | had married the man they thought | was above reproach; but as soon as | the knot was made firm, made a | confident of friend wife, and robbed | her of almost all the romance, love afvice | with | and confidence she had in mankind, | and hubby in particular, | That's a cruel way to treat a] young wife, so I said, “I'm not per- | fect myself, 1 don’t care for your} | past; I love you for what you are | now, and what I have confidence in fhat you will be to me in the future. | | wut if we have any confidences to| | make, let’s make them now, or for-| | ever hold our peace.” | | And he said: “We'll hold our! to the man, “Anon,” and the ? If not ed these young t nion received peace.” from en “There's no which {# our keleton und to t b our very it's Dear Miss Gre he lett hone le In , I wou t opinion panors, be nd response to 1 hereby of this I would circumstances taking ev jon, I he “felon. n's 0} m man’s term alter into m it, a 8 ve conside brand the word net of forgery. 1 way born in the East tasted of this so-called high life Dame Fortune favored me er had much fascination for me I looked ut me and beheld ults of such a life, perhaps it was my Christian mother’s advice ringing in my ears, for no man boasts of a better mother than I, I have been the winner of many a hard-fought battle with my- self, overcoming gigantic evil tempta- tions that flare up in front of all of us some time fn our lives, So I say, Mr. Man, if your ideal is @ real woman, one who under- stands human nature all the way thru, she will forgive and forget your past after a straight-from-the heart: talk with you. YOURS FOR A HAPPY LIFE. Dear Miss Grey: In reference to your troubled lovers, I had just writ- ten the following for my own private consolation, should I ever enter the loving business: Love me as I am, dear, With all the faults you see— Then listen; will you love me, If I tell you all I be? Of faults I have many, All these wrongs I bring to you; 1ere shall be no secrets hiding— Will you bring your faults to me? Love me as I am, dear; Then I'll tell you and you tell me; All our wrongs we'll take together And leave alone for eternity, Then I'll love you, I know I'l love you, The better yet, for your honesty. But listen, dear, will you still love me ; When | tell you all I be? N. B. W. | FRECKLE-FAGE Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily Here's a chance, Miss Freckle face, to try a remedy for freckles the guarantee of a reliable concern that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles; while if it does give you a clear |complexion the expense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of Othine— double strength—from any druggist and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beau- tiful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worg case. BF Be sure to ask the druggist f the double strength Othine as strength is sold under guarantee money back if it fails to remo’ freckles. ‘OTICED the beautiful Blouses Being worn on Seat- tle’s streets the past few days? NOW where they are coming from? : The Market Blouse Shop 107 Pike Street Is creating a sensation with styles and prices the same as are seen on Fifth Avenue these day: ON"T fail to vis morrow. it our store to- | “CREDIT GLADLY” Choose a SUIT And after you’ve worn it for a weekly amount GLADLY. You can’t make a better Suit vestment and our easy, digni Credit Terms make it such EASY investment. 1332-34 Second 211 Union Street BRADBURY and pay as convenient few | weeks and begin to realize just how good a suit it is you'll pay the small In- fied an