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By : RD a ' Attractive Tea | ‘One of the prettiest of weason Was given yesterday by Mary Dudley Watker at the home of Sher aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs Thomas M. Green. Miss Walker is & charming southern hostess and the | ) Affair was in compliment to Miss Tals Reynolds, the house guest of oMr, and Mrs. L. B. Stedman, and Miss Emma Anderson, a student at Wellesiey, who is spending the sum > mer with her parents Miss Dorothy Ewing th MeBwan and Miss Dorothy McEwan over the tea tables, assisted by Miss Judithe Gibbs, Miss Doro thea Sharpless, Miss Helen Walker Alice Ives and Miss Kathleen ~ Donohoe. Presiding over the punch table was Miss Marion Soule, ‘A glass basket of dainty coryopsis, bachelor buttons and Canterbury 1 centered the tea tabi whil Nyhocks, rose and white, were in profusion about the rooms. of blue hydrangeas were in About 75 members of the younger ‘$et called during the afternoon, 8 ; Dinner tor fr. Stefansson | | Mrs. Milburn was hostess last 4 at a prettily appointed dinner nenting Mr. V. Stefansson, is visiting Mrs. Milburn’s Mr. and Mrs. Moritz Thom- A dainty basket of old-fash- flowers centered the table. were placed for ten. ee ie at Norval Hall country home of Mr. and} N. H. Latimer will be the} of a gay party on Sund by Mr. Chester Latimer. | young people will spend the Norval Hall, where swimming, and tennis will be indulged guests will be Miss Betty who is visiting Miss Elma | Miss Elma Collins, Miss Archibald, Miss Patricia Foth- » Miss Mary Dudle: er, Miss Ruth Hulburt of Ever Miss Ada Hulburt of Everett, | ‘Lilian Michaelis, Miss Lucile | Miss Elsa Michaelis, Miss Heffernan, Miss Dorothy) Miss Dorothy Lindsay, Miss Cooke, Miss Helen Huston. | Marion Soule, Miss Katharine | of Everett, Miss Leura Par-| | the Miss . and Mrs. Ross Wilson, Mr.| beach under the direction of Albert | mond ee Arnold, Mr. Rodney Pren-| ‘Mr. Robert Hurlburt, Mr. Gay sham, Mr. Jim Archibald, t Ware, Mr. Charles Copp, rd Robertson, Mr. Dietrich Mr. Eugene O'Neill of gerett, Mr. Harold Huston, Mr., frus Campion, Mr. William Ur-} hart, Mr. we Colesworthy, Mr. | Owens, Mr. Floyd Ellis, Mr. ‘thur Latimer, Mr. Earl Latimer . Chester Latimer. Mr. and H. Latimer will chaperone . A number of the guests over Saturday. A eee Fete Charles Paul will demon- ten or 11 of her chil- h she has been teaching at a lawn party given at of Mrs. D. C. Bard tonight . A good many people | interested in Mrs. anting, as she is a deciple Duncan's natural dancing, “Bard will sponsor the af- 50 guests have been in- to the home of Mrs. Bard. a ‘will be the latter part of ember before I can move to location at Third and than store my stock, T ded to sacrifice my high- jewelry stock for my cus- benefit. ng the seventeen years that ive been in business in this , this is the first sale I have er had. customers know what to ex- when I say— Offering Great Bargains” ‘Manufacturing Jeweler laza Hotel 4th and Westlake | given by “Sing Alleluta Forth” BRAINERD ! BETTY House Party Miss Olive Lec ber of girl friend on board the Olive,” for Pc r home of yard with a num left Fr morn Leonar yacht rt Madison, the and Mrs. A, W They return home evenin Her Oldham. Glorta tay ing the mn Leonard Saturday Miss Frances Baxter, Miss yilis Blak rtrude spend will guests are Miss Harriet rink, Miss Miss Alice Blake, Miss Miss Nellie Felger Elser of Milwaukee. who is g the summer with Miss I Blizabeth Hurl burt, M thar Agen, Mi Virginia Sheahan and Miss Irene weeks at the wena THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1919 Copyrighted 1010 by tha ride b= DR. CERTEIS’ BRIDE RECEIVES HER | view the Mrs. Etta Keith } and Kelth, of Los\ Angeles, arrived lay morning, and will Washir r ridge formerly lived in Seattle. scridge son, | Fri Mr Mr and Mrs, Claire Farnsworth, and Mrs, C, K. Poe, Miss Ro: Washburn, Miss Clara Emory and Mrs, John Ryan, Mr, John Ryan, jr, and Mrs, Ellen Poe White left Friday for Mount Rainier motor trip, to be gone until Monday Mr on al Fisher | i} Luncheon and Swimming Party Ross C, Morford ay who was the guest Mrs. Geo FE. Morford from Sunday to Friday, was the guest of honor at} a luncheon and swimming party on} Tuesday ven by her hostess. Bix | guests enjoyed the affair eee | Luneheon for Visitor In honor of Mrs, Marshall Demott Gates of Lincoln, Ill., who is visiting her aunt, Mrs. George W. Soliday Mrs. R. A. Ballinger will give a luncheon to a number of the young matrons on Wednesday at the Seattle Tennis club. | i+ | Musicale for Dr. and Mrs. Sulzer Dr. and Mrs. Abner Greenstreet entertained in honor of Dr. Hans Sulzer, the Swiss minister to the United States, and Mrs. Sulzer at an informal musicale on Wednesday evening. A delightful pregram was Miss Edith Rodgers, prano; Mr, B, BD. Kingsbury, tenor and Mr. Clyde Rodgers, pianist. Mrs. George T. Hood to Entertain | Miss Francis Irwin of McCloud, | Minn., and Mrs, Charles Jordan will be the guests of honor at a tea t be given by Mrs. orge Thomas Hood at her home on Saturday after noon, Band Concert at Alki Adams’ band nd orchestra give a program on Sunday « Mrs, of Minne | | will Alki P, Adams. The program will be as) follows: | roh—"Solid Men to the Front” | Sousa Jaxone Luders Yradier by G. B Waltzes Selection Serenade— Community Chichester, Overture. “La Serenata” “King Dodo” La Paloma” singing led Joan of Arc Soderman Slater | gins | Hace | Humoresque—*“Piceolo Pic” Ballet Exyptien Selection——""Maritana Mediey—‘The Hest Yet 7 | “Star-Spangled Banner.” . 8 Wisteria Club | The fifth dance of the summer series of the Wisteria Dancing club| will be given at the Leschi pav | on Saturday evening, July Dancing will be informal. o« Music at First Methodist Church On Sunday there will be three peoely arranged programs, one at 11 a. m., one at 7:30 p. m, and one at 8 p. m.,eat which the following programs will be given: It A. M. -++.Dudley Buck Sopranos, Edna Aliwynn Craig, Alice| Pinckston Maclean; alton Geneita| Prudence Weaver, Ruth Kernen; tenors, C. Ernest White, D. C. Knibbe, John L. Hall; Bass, A. Kirkpatrick; baritone, Montgomery Lyneh. Offertory Anthem—‘“Rock of Ages” ‘ Dudley Buck Above ORGAN NUMBERS ival Hymn” ..e........ | Homer Bartlett | Chorus in D"..,... William Spencer Montgomery Lynch 7:20 P.M, recital by Mra, Postiude—“Grand Mrs, Organ Lynch Invocation | Adagio in D Barearotle in [In Moonlight ival Piece Montgomery -» Salome :Henry Smart | + -Fautkes Kinder Stebbins & Minor of Chicago and two ehildrer jeral Mr. and Mrs, Edward Morgan Mills udys eral The and them re- Dorothy, weeks at the Mills’ formerly Mrs. H. A. Fla cently in Chica and are spending s Washington hotel. lived in Seattle visited Mr, and Mrs k Odell motored over to Wenatchee last week with | several friends for the week end. Mrs. A. Stuart party of five to Mount the last week end. | chaperoned a Rainier over Mra, EB. P. Jamison and daughter, Mary,returned Wednesday night from a week's outing at Lake Cres cent. see Mrs. James Trafton Keena and three daughters returned Wednesday night from spending the summer at Lake Crescent sme | Mr. and Mrs. J. F. family returned Thu week's motor trip to Douglas and jay from a ‘orth Yakima Mrs. Anderson and Clinton of Tulsa, Okla., ling several weeks at Banff, Mr rson and Mr. Moore are on a fishing trip in British Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Moore arrived a week ago to visit the Andersons, Mr. and Mrs, J. F, Chamberlin, | Miss Isabel and Mr, George Cham berlin are spending the summer at} Wast Sound Mrs. eee Mr. and Mrs. J. Hayward, who] have been visiting at the home of Mrs. J. C. Hammond, have left for | their home in Rochester, N.Y. Mrs Hayward is a sister of Mrs. Ham nd of Mr. Philip EB. Fisher of this city Ces 9 Mrs. George Purcell is in Victoria, | B. C., for a short visit. | eee Mr. Joe Wilkes and Wilkes® who have been entertained by Dr. and Mrs. FE. C. Brier during | their stay in the city, left Wednesday for their home in Dallas, Tex. On| their way they expect, to visit sev. interesting places, including | ellowstone National park. Last k they motored to Vancouver, Victoria and points of interest on Vancouver island as the guests of | Dr, and Mrs, Brier, On Thureday Dr. and Mrs, Brier left for a brief motor trip to Mount Rainier. eee Mr, and Mrs. O. P. Engelhart are temporarily located at The Newberry on Mercer st. Mrs. Engelhart was formerly Miss Ruth Benton. o £8 Miss Anna Fisher, dean of women at the University of Arizona, ts visit-| ing at the home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Philip E. | Fisher, Miss May} ene Mr. R. D. Pinneo, who has been | spending the past ten months in the Orient, is expected to return on Tues- day. eee Mr, and Mrs. Peter Bettinger have as their guests Mrs. George Dunn and her children, Elizabeth and Paul, and her niece, Miss Helen Peters, of Yakima, Dr. Roberta Wimer-Ford has re turned from a month's trip to the East, where she was in attendance in Chicago at the 234 annual conven- tion of the American Osteopathic as: sociation. Dr. Wimer-Ford was 3PM. “The Soft Sabbath Calnt’..... | Barn ley Craig, Alice Geneita Pru |Sopranos, Edna Atiwynn Pinckston Maclean: alto | dence Weaver, Ruth Kernen: | PD. G. Knibbs, John 1. Hall; ‘bass, A | Kirkpatrick; | baritone, Montgomery Lynch; incidental solo by C. Ernest — | Duet- 2 > Wherever you go—whatever you do— “Kodak” your impressions for memories’ sake. Our Kodak man will show you ry) White, tenor. Fast Falla the Eventide” . Lansing C. Ernest White and Montgomery Lyneh, Oftertory, Anthem—"Calvary 7 +es+. Paul Rodney ble Quartet as Above, ee Miss Bruns Honor Guest | Mrs. rwell P, Lilly and Mrs. Hehry Sander entertained at an in \formal bridge of four tables Friday 4afternoon in compliment to Miss | Nellie Bruns. The affair was give: jat the home of Mrs. Lilly’s parent |Mr. and Mrs. Fred ander. The ‘honor guest was given a surprise lof a collection of jams and fellies, | oe) . Dance for Miss Anderson | About 60 members of the debutante and debutante set red at the home of Mr, and |}H. P. Anderson at the dance given by Mr. and Mrs. f H. White to |honor Mrs. White's sister, Miss Emma Anderson, Friday \The house was artistically decorat jed with the season's blossoms. delightful buffet supper [later |White Elephant Shop | Miss Eleanor inhart, violiniste, ‘accompanied by her mother, Mrs {. Meinhart, at the piano will give the musical program for Monday at the White Elephant Shop. Mrs. Lane Summers arranged the pro- gram, sub- gath Mrs was § o* Alpha Gamma Deltas Entertained Miss Hulda Kckart — entertained Thursday evening her Alpha Gam ma Delta sisters at her home , in honor of Miss Esther Van Valey, of Everett. “ae Informal Dance Invitations have been issued by Mr. and Mrs, Henry Broderick for an informal dance to be given at their home on Saturday evening, August ? evening. | prominently identified with the child welfare department of her organiza tion, which is putting on movie films this'year. She was re-elected nation: | woriq tenors, | #l chairman from the six Northwest | | states of child welfare, woman's bu reau of public health | eee | Mr. and Mré. Arthur Wagner and children, of Chicago, will be the | house guests of Mrs. K. Grunbaum until August 15, via California for their home in Chj cago. | soe ral| the stillness of when the pale slept |the proper amount—but like every when they will leave | PEARLS—A PINCH ( {1 point of | 2 The nent and gayety filled From 1 house was with move that of an unseen little mouse, | , a bitter contr the preceding day Queen of Smiles” had | r 0 quietly in the grand parlor, | f Chris had retw from her trip} to the Lorimer home in t Weat She excited, volcante, 4 any|¢ girl would be, I suppose, if her flance | ¢ were about to present with of historic Dinner to be an elegant and) formal and I was broken because I was still to play the shy little mous ull I had heard about the pearls, and after all I had endured| é on account of them, I was simply | wild to see them taken out of their wrappings. It to me that 16 Marvelous softness ought to « come over them, once they to the hands of their rightful owner, bustle made was her rope wa affair, After | * as Certels claimed to be. eyes with her It certainly would have given me | vast pleasur the glorious glo: | bules find a fitting resting place on | Chrystobel's white shoulders. What would do with them, when the donor turned out to be a foreign spy plotting revolution, was an excite ment for the future, She ought to them, I thought, and devote the money to rebuilding a devastated vil ce in France us IT meditated in the quiet of | my own room while the dinner pro. greased. Certeis’ gift to Miss Lori-| mer might arrive at the last mom 0 Certels h And it did room I saw a messenger carry a long. thin parcel to the French window of the dining room, and then go away carrying a long, flat p: fancied, And so—the pearls we Hamilton Certeis’ hands! Since I couldn't see him clasp them about Chrys’ neck, I ran lightly to se at last in down the stairs and out on the lawn, | of the ruined Mary! t on my way to my favorite nook on the sands. But as I hurried past the open dining-room windows, the talk ing at the table was suddenly hushed, | st tO) at least for heart: | the doomed | mingled in a Riminiz | the string of mottled, brown beac returned | and broken pe them powder from his fingers tioned to I silently fi stroyed ceived th | magnificent 1 explained to Mother,| 1 saw them From the baleony of my | y sured, you shall not loxe gift which you will value bills—I | once turned and wént back thinking )F WORTHLESS DUST paused in the outer darkness, héld | vy the seene witht | i rteis was standing by Chrys Dr, ¢ les, If not for happiness, | hair, all his own success Chrys was holding a slender white ‘oll between the tips of her pretty | orefingers, | “Open it—please—yourself!” she | ulling back at the elegant and | listinguished gentleman who leaned over her | Nobody spoke as Certels performed pearls. | the ceremony | ‘Then in an instant each person In { on his feet Voices hubbub! And I went the window and ¢ strang which was staged around that dinner table Certeis was suspending before the bride-to-be a dull dried room was traight t zed on | neene astonished eyes of his lark beads which looked like shrieked and covered hands. Lorimer stepped the pine and away Chrys forward. one of dark | Daddy touche ra | stones blew some Jim lighted a cigarette and mo. »b and the two withdrew »m the room “Himmel!” exclaimed Dr. Cert “Mr. Lorimer: They have been di by acids! Miss Lorimer—a apologies! Madame! 1 re m by special messenger, as you have seen, I had not the time to examine them—alone. They were absolutely perfect when last—in Vienna, five I have been tricked, Mr. My dear Chrystobel, be as a weddir I go thousand rs ago. Lorimer t itt" teis Then (€ nd room, rushed out to my 8o that's why Jo Bach didn’t run with those pearls! He had ned them himself and found that | J chemitals in the U-boat them! Poor Chrys way Poor (To be continued. ls widening had | amount importane way, is Does Parasol l| Trim the Suit? sje BW BY BETTY BROWN Whether or not it apanesy parasol, of shade drooping width of hat jauntily over maid in suit of Kum: | height of That same suit, by the comfortable-looking the bioused | jacket, with its many rows of encir Soft, rolling collar and too, hat it be carr houlder of th i-Kume mad nd graceful, chiefly ling tucks cuffs, merit. BY BIDDT HOW MUCH MON Ef How much of the annual family s income should be spent for clothes? | Students and experts of family budget making allow an average of 15 per cent of the total income as| other item in the budget, the per ent varies to suit the social and family. It is hard to estimate the clothing | budget without keeping a record for one year on which to base estimates the next year. The total expense for clothes one year will be a fair index by which to judge the monthly clothes allowance next year. A good plan in beginning a study | of the family clothing cost is to| make a careful inventory of the| clothing on hand. Have a special book in which the clothes revord of each member of the family is| kept on a separate page—leaving several blank pages for ‘each record, Add to the list of articles on hand | for each member an estimate of its cost, its date of purchase, and pres ent value or wearing quality. Ry such lst the budget maker ts | able to degide which articles will! expenses she K) curred, either this year or next. conomic position of the individual | 4nd setting aside a definite sum each | | month for clothes purchase gives the | stolen the | buyer a purchase plan, and money on hand to carry it out. store has a »Y BYE. EY FOR CLOTHES? on wetr out and must be replaced | next year, \ placed this y indefinitely, gin to pls ar and which will wear | r As a result she can be-| fi at once for the clothing OWS will be Knowing what one wishes to buy, | With that she can take advantage of special] t sales and thus increase her econo: mies, A great Boston department personal service de- partment which helps customers in the selection and purchase of | clothes. ‘This department has made | an estimate of an average clothes budget for a family of four persons The family income is assumed to be $3,000, ‘The budget allows $450 or 15 per cent for clothing. The mother's clothing is allowed an an nual expense of $165; the father's, $125; the boy of 9, $60, and a girl of 13, $100. Next week in this department will be printed an estimate of the clothes the average woman needs for a year incluting cost estimates, ! "Keeping an Eye | on Womenfolks || —m "New Brands | of Lemonade | a a The French Federation of Wom- en's Trade Unions has included tn its program for legislation in the national chamber of deputies a de- | mand for a weekly rest of 48 con-| At. present the | of women workers secutive hours, in teachers |are the only persons enjoying this privilege. The recent convention of the! Woman's Trade Unton league} pledged its efforts to the orrantz tion of domestic workers, lattempt to standardize work standards. The tests against th . 8. nd to domestic league pro- census cle Mr. and Mrs, Fred Mr. and Mrs. Dudley |left for Lake Che! gone a week, | Stimson and W. Burchard n Friday, to ‘be eee | Mrs. John Eddy, with her guests, Mrs. Keith Logan Bullitt, Mrs, Ed | ward Garrett, Mrs, Nathaniel chall and Mrs, W. 8. Peachy re. turned Friday from a cruise in Brit- ish Columbian waters, where they | have been since Monday. rae’ | Miss Anna Fisher, dean of women of the University of Arizona, is the perce of Mr, and Mrs, Philip Fisher, * . |. Mrs, William Le Roy Batra her daughter. Mrs, Annette Baird |Fyler, with Mr. and Mrg, Clarence |o. aham, have returned from a and week's motor trip to Portland and| the Columbia highway. [Cimbs_] CLUBS FOR SUNDAY Railroad Train otherhood of Railr nd the Ladies’ Auxiliary will hold an ail day basket picnic at Wood land park Sunday. amilles of the Brotherhood and auxiliary are invit ed to attend, id Trainmen Ladies’ of Woodcraft Seattle Circle No. 549, Ladies of Wooderaft, will give a pienic at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Snow at Zenith on Sund Members are di- rected to take Des Moines stage leaving Seattle at 10 o'clock. cee Ladies of the Golden North Auxil jary to the Yukon Order of Pioneers will hold a picnic on Sunday in Wood: Mand park, All Alaskans are asked, Pas: | sification of home-makers as wom- | }en of “no occupation,” declaring | women who do their own house- | work as much workers in industr Jas factory or shop workers, | Charles B, Stillman, president of | |the American Federation of Teach- ers, has framed a declaration of in- dependence for school teachers in- | volving three points: | 1, Teachers demand a. voice in| the government of the public! schools thru representation on | | school boards; 2, Thru t hers’ councils in| each school consisting of chosen| | representatives who shall be con. | sulted by the school authorities on | |all questions affecting toachers | pupils; | 3 A demand for the election of boards by popular vote | farm motors school of the Kansas, Agricultural college has four women graduates this year! |and 30 women students will take| | the summer short course in farm | tractor care and management The portrait of Susan B. Antho- ny, painted by Sarah Eddy, and long hung in national suffrage headquarters at Washington, has been presented to th National History museum in Washington, Anot treasu presented to the museum is the tablg upon which the call to the first suffrage con- vention was written in 1848, owned | in turn by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, | Susan B, Anthony and Dr. Anna| Howard Shaw. Under glass.on the | |table is an engrossed copy of the| federal suffrage amendment, and| |the gold pen with which it was| | signed by Vice President Marshall and Speaker F. H. Gillett, | Let’s go buy Boldt’'s French Pas try. Uptown, 1414 3rd Ave.; down town, 913 2nd Ave, or school The By BIDDY BYE riations of the old stand-by, lem- onade, are welcome to the household | drink-dispenser and the summer} hostess. Just a slight change in mix- ing or flavoring adds a flip of nov- elty. Try these: flint Lemonade—Pick off and wash a handful of fresh mint leaves, bruise them gently in the fingers, and put} in the bottont of a tall glass, Add the juice of one lemon, bruise again with a spoon, add sugar to taste and fill up the glass half full of crushed ice. Add water to fill, Ginger Lemonade—Add the juice! of one-half a large lemon to two tea-| spoonfuls of sugar and one-half tea-| | spoonful of chopped candied ging Add two tablespoonfuls of pineapple | Juice, fill*the glass with crushed ice and er, and sprinkle the top with | chopped ginger. Garnish with al lemon slice, Raspberry Lemonade—Take two blespoonfuls of the juice of crushed red raspberries, add the juice of one lemon, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, ed ice, and water. Garnish with mint leaves, | Currant Delectable—Cook one quart of stemmed currants with one cupful | of sugar until the fruit is soft and pulpy. Strain off all juice and add to it one cupful of water. Cool. Half | fill tall ¢ s with ice, squeeze in the juice of half a lemon and add the currant Juice and more ice. Serve | with sweet wafers. A delicious Fruit Cup is made as follows: Pour two quarts of boiling water over two tablespoonfuls of green tea t steep five minutes, then strain the tea over two cupfuls of sug: add the juice of o and two lemons. Cool and let stand in a cool place for six hours. When ready to serve add one cupful of currant juice, and serve in glasses over cracked ice, garnished with a leaf of lemon ver- bena, rose geranium, or mint. Registered Dentists Ont of the high rent district, per- sonal service and moderate ndvert ing enable me to make you this offe: Go to any dentist, get his pr come to me and get 20 per cent cut from his figure, with careful, painless methods and personal attention, Dr. J. Brown’s New Office ORPHEUM BUILDING ‘Third and Madison, and which, must be re-{ when Me | CHARGE HE TRIED TO GET MAN'S SAVINGS who was arrested | recently in the Dexter-Horton bank,| of the two letters printed in your | procure | paper of the 21st ins Tacoma, | R. A. Palmer. he money thru a rom W. Friday. C. and Walter Rile ny Detectives Erne er Ps o Palmer ‘Theré isn't much hope for a man/ of it, and think for a moment of so deaf that he is unable to hear the| is ever opened 4 thing of small moment this | the the But} considering insured seems to be its attempted pass RBramovich, was charged with first degree forg- | in-| ery 23, H. teh | @ By CYNTHIA GREY Mis elf “A I would ¢ Happy, Sad Girl” all Three years I want to help her with my own expe indisereet girl, a life I had been a very when THIS blinde IAN came by hi myself, for into my easily innocence excuses for As the the there were time drew nearer was not but a false impression that he ha postponed the wedding Finally night seems horrible 4 choked now like a volce and there funeral knell me, words were my and he That night I felt that my whole | life was crushed, but never bnce was I sorry that I told him, for a great | weight was lifted. The next he told me to marry me. I protested vigoroualy, for I was |afraid that would always stand be tween us. But b told me it forgotte far as he was that we would make our stronger because of the pit | falls of the past, and that he re-| | alized that I had paid penalty enough | in the hour of my confession. A year later he and was away He returned to > was going was | already concerned, future | We were married. | felt the call of duty |in France a year | the thapplest wife and the sweetest | baby in the uni with never a | doubt or fear as to my loyalty and | devotion, | Happiness, my dear, that I dreamed, and certainly never | served, if I should have kept silent, | | Tse never de- | re mine, The story to me now| seems like a dead leaf, but the telling | | of it to the only man I ever loved has made me stronger, and I only | | tell it to you now because I believe | it will help yerd to make an import: | unt decision in the right way If you want happiness, real happl- ness, don't base your new life on| | deception, In a way that he may | see your penitence, tell him all. If you marry, feeling that terrible lie in your heart, and the truth comes to light later, as it surely will, then | there is no possible chance for hap- pines. | If he is the right sort, he will appreciate the sincerity of your con- trition. It is your only way. Two | wrongs never made one right. Be a Woman and win A HAPPY WIFE. | oocest | Dear Miss Grey: Advice, perhaps, lis the cheapest of all commodities, | and surely the least heeded, but any | way, I am going to state my opinion lant. First and foremost, the two cases | presented, are in no wise parallel. | One is the crime in violation of the | direct and all-important bearing on this question. It is apparent that | vice suitable for one, will not do| | for both, and yet, the outstanding duty is very clear in both cases, Each must confess in full. Only a coward would sneak out refraining. In the man’s case, he has nothing much to b to my kind that would make us happy I decided to tell him the whole horrible truth. was no response able to say to the girl wi that lies in my heart. 1go I faced the same decision which she faces todays] rience; but my language is not ofly, nd my reputation was fading rapidly 1 cheated for his love, and he wap I do not try to make worldliness. none for our marriage, I realized that our love for he loved, not me, at all, acquired of me, and so I constantly Oh, that awful Each sound of my I felt that the ay without a word, ream to me. from et me w him, Ik # His is not a crime againet dness of marriage. It is a rt from marriage. No girl, need mind, would let incident like that stand between and the man she loved, if her were worth while. iven should he lose the girl by his honest confession, he has still kept his self-respect, and has at least done his duty. ‘0 fear. In the girl’s case, duty is none the less clear, but is even more urgent She would never be truly happy with a secret like that. Always her conscience would cry out, “Why didn’t you tell him at first? Why don’t you tell him now?" And each succeeding day would find it harder to tell. She would re- alize she not the good and pure girl her husband thought her, that h as living a , and would brood despondently over this. Any- way, her sin would “be sure to find her out.” In this case the girl is not to blame. Perhaps God knows her ex: cuse was good. Many a stronger: willed, older girl than she was has trod shady paths of respectability when confronted with starvation, |and alone in a large, strange city, _ If the man be a true man, and loves her as he could love only the girl of his heart, then he will undere stand and forget, knowing the true circumstances of the case, where, if he should chance to hear of her ex periences from some stray lips he could never appreciate her courage and the struggle she made. To each, the man and the girl, I say this—better to do your duty and lose out, than to win and lose your self-respect. EDWARD M. Removes Wrinkles and | Refreshes Tired Faces As the skin tends to expand in ther, causing ‘wrinkles to Martindales, | criminal laws of the state; the other | forrm a co “3 arrested | ig a sin in the eyes of God and man. | st Yoris and | The first has no real bearing on the ser, are alleged to have! question of marriage; the other has pass book and a w from Bramovich's room in Tacoma, | and to have given the bank book | to secure The pass book showed a $300 de- | posit. form, a good astringent-tonie lotion should be used these days. Dissolve an ounce of pure powdered saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel. Bathe the face in this and see how quickly the wrinkles and furrows will dis- — appear—and how much younger vee a Will look! | There's nothing better 1 for sagging cheeks or double chin, or for enlarged pores. Use this simple lotion cox the heat of the day and you will fing it wonderfully refreshing. You lose that wilty, tired look. The redients, of course, are perfe ‘armless, Be sure to ask the 5. gist for powdered, saxolite—Advt. ASALESLADY has to have ‘ energy and vitality Sell- ing things is a science; those who succeed keep themselves healthy, for physical fitness aids mental alertness, “We are what we eat,” and that is why you should eat Krumbles. It is made of all the wheat. It holds the valuable mineral salts of the bran, as well as the nutritive, energy-making elements of the kernel. Properly cooked, temptingly shredded, appetizingly toasted, pe comes in our “Waxtite” package, protected against moisture and outside influences, fresh and fine, packed right from our ovens. Ask your grocer for Kellogg's Shredded Krumbles—the only Krumbies made, Krumbles is made in the same kitchens as Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE CO, Battle Creek, Michigan LAs eLLHAaRaLErAnLALcETLUnoLITaRaasiiaienenassmttareyioD