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THE SEATTLE STAR--WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19, 1919. WOMAN'S IPAGIE ine | Chabs_]) | 3y CYNTHIA GREY | Historical |Tea by Camp side ot the Bacbane frame aces | CLUES FOR THURSDAY Milestones birthdays occur in ‘eg - Jchureh, whore Dear Mins Grey: Wha " Fire Council aber and Decemb: Galion on the waliaslonsn th tha: ae The executive committee of the | hostesw at a dinner to b f a Bride . | velopment of popular government in Camp Fire council entertained with | te church parlors Friday |, by the News: || England? a tea at the home of Mrs November 21 6 Be Berd The English Beck yesterday afternc The hostesses will be Mra, R. 4 n with the stimulate inter Van der Las, Mrs. J. G. Met Mra. sn. c growing Camp Fire org 3. WM. Schafer, Mra, J. I, Overman eonulay Pink chrysantt their | Mrs. William Howard, Mra. 8. Inch. . ragged beauty were the| Mra. Edward Cook, Mra, Connors, | halls and musle re Brags, Mra. ‘Reynolds, Mrs |was gay with yellow ones. Carlvon and Mrs. Miller Ophelia rosea centered the tea} A committee has been e over which Mra, Albert Charles | to asuist the hostesses 7 Phillips and Mra, Edward 1. ¢ ‘ett | Consisting of Mra. D. A. MeDonald, presided, assisted by Mrs. Carl| Mra. Maloolm Mos ee, Mra, B. F. Ivy, i Mra. J. J. Braun, and Mra, George Relmont, An attractive program n arrang o given at the| lon of the dinner, be present | mbers and their By REBECCA STEVENSON Office Phone, Main 600, | To Give Piaihagtihia ing | Dinner Confessions Remedy for Chapped Hands Dear Mina Gre | housewife and I ha oping my } me how I may remed an I play the pia it is embarnse appear rough and red HOUSEWIFE. in the win who |riage In these days any one who gives up t neann of making his |bread and just to humor the whims of another's foolishness will regret it. If you do, what have you to depend on for your support? Your husband's “ralary,” and then will be dependent on nis aguries for ppiness, also as long bly” jea ous, what assur you that he will be cured his when you ater to him’? If you drop out of busl- |ness you will find it mighty hard to let back In again on the same foot- ing. 1 would suggest taking your [husband in partnership with you if that were ponsible. If not, you |might Just ax well settle the matter | with him at once before your “peace jof mind has been destroyed.” A hus band once was jealous of his wife to the most unreasonable degree. She gave up everything to please him Little by little, as she gave back, he encroached upon her personal liberty until finally she had no friends of jeither sex, nearly lost the power to verse with other people, and after | he had thus beaten her down, jealous |hubby suddenly expanded personaliy jand became a sociable man, a “regu- me|lar good fellow,” making himself popular with the ladies, seemingly © forgotten all about his for- usage of his wife, while she, . knows she can never ner by p and Mrs Seeley f Mrs. 10 Malcolm See: be hosts at a dinner for at their home this evening ee Lamson Luncheon ine Mra. John Brander, of who is visiting her sister Mra. Otis Floyd # at an interest thheon of twelve covers at the | Ys University club this after T am ® young © great difficulty becoming will be given tn evening bas Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Brother. f Locomotive Engineers, iveal heon lowed by a card party [hall at 1023% ean w tuation and nds Copyr! aper Kntorprine fol nolely your um he is #0 “ h record you inv of Cre The first step | government was | Liberties, granted | nry Tin 1100, The Magna | Charta, acknowledging the rights wigned by King John, I was very lonesome after my nice | , next long step. The | brother-in-law had returned to the of the viation field, I nent Baby Babs | ded | back with her nurse, Mra.) Yffy Thursday Musical Club, Chapin, Probably I ought to have reas toward dem Will meet with Mra, Frank Good-| gone with them, but In epite of my-| breads hue at 12:46 o'clock, at 2111 Seventh | pei¢ 1 “wtuck .a Went ¢ A und” that wretched | en An 4 aa | border town waiting for my husband | Information About to come back, Just 4 Jim, Jr, had i | prophesied that I would do | Hawaiian Islands Would I have stayed In that lone-| Dear Miss Grey: I am a Hawaiian some, uncomfortable place had Bob | Samirer they oe ore by ere been off on ordinary business? Cer-)to the Islands. My object in writing | jtainly not. I simply couldn't #9) to you ts to find out where I can ob north and leave the other woman }tain literature on the Inlands in re-| Plant Fertilizer nd my husband in the same vicin: | gard to their climate, industries, anal Dear Miss Grey: Can you tell ity! | possibility of work for men from the |of a good fertilizer for house plants? When I put the case plainly to my. | States. HAWAIIAN BILL CE: ome qi ake If you will go down to the ref. home-made f it weemed wo absurd! I hated! yeelf for being tangled up in a| ence room of the public library dissolvir = ; ij and tell the librarian in charge Vulgar nex triangle. 1 had never] What you wish, she will be glad |dreamed that I, the bride of Bob Lorimer, could porsibly have to live to help you }thru an experience of that kind. Bob had me because T was) | Diffe rent Types intellectual and educated, he maid An Of Motherhood lentsbies Cus ot the Women of|a gir! I had been what is usually} Dear Miss Grey: Apropos of the! Mooseheart Legion. described as “spiritual.” And Bob | professional mother versus the nat-| WUl meet with Mrs. Mabel C. Gol-| had pretended to adore that in me, | “Pal mother, I wish to add my opin fon at 2422 Kast Thomas atreet, with] Arter | was married 1 wan shock. |!0% based upon experience of living | Mra, O, M. Morley as hontess. among “ ral” mothers for years Be Built by U.-W. which all animals ponsens, and ©0n-| 4 1.100% Another Under the direction of the exten And my own husband waa) found that with mother love and the me down, Thru him it was| wisdom that should be possessed by! Dear Mies Grey: Answering “F.'s" 4 common creature-—Katherine|@ woman in order to raise @ child jetter in last night's istue, | would t could touch m yersonal | Properly llike to may a few wo Do not ‘and Mine Kath Farwell Putnam Lilly before return-|sion division of the University of ie m9 |" 1 can cite hundreds of women who| «ive up the means of your livelihood Edward |ing to their home. Washington, a typical cottage and sia . have a few children and become fat just to h r aman who is a slave rrett, Mrs. Harry Whitney! abies . aaah cadena wth scx abe ee unthinnks se 1 lazy, feeling that their obliga | to jealousy, especially if you were en- Miss Waterhouse, Mrs. Donna; Mr. Frank McDermott . 3 jupreme insult of my life tion to society is discharged, and al-| gaged in business before mar- | Baker, Mrs, Robert Mills Evans, Mra.|a few days at “Faraway,” in the rear of the public Mbrary| Undoubtedly the girl was @ moron ——_— — Thomas Stimson, Mrs. Donald True-|try place, building at Fourth ave. and Madi blood, Mra. George Littlefield, Mrs ° fon st. JohnH. Piper, Miss Dorothy Shank,| Mr. and Mrs. Harold Purcell ar-| The cottage ix to be used for rived Saturday to be the guests of |demonstration purposes by the do low their children to be dirty, their | —a beautiful adult female with the| manners untrained and their charac ss Aimina George, Mra, Carl F- Gould Sirs. culrtord Kent Mr. Purcell's brother and sister-in-|mestic science and arte department Re law, Mr. and Mra. Hugh Purcell, for /ie wit be under the direction of mind of a girl of 12 years. She and|ters warped |I were an different as darkness and| Thin type of “motherhood” ts about / Donation Day j® week on thelr wag to California, | Mine Dorothy Shank of the exter At the linen shower and silver tea. on division, Classen and practical L h ¢ relation to true motherhood daylight was ignorant and | the sam: “ passionate, I wan educated and re | that of a hen or @ cow, and, Miss t 7 |. Mise Dorothy Allen will return} which will be given it the heme 4 Wednesday, from the Annie Wright | Work will be carried on there and) | Mra. John Collins, 702 Minor ave., an opportunity given the houre rey, there are so many of them. rerved. I compared myself to her be launched from the | morro: der th Bor carey the | ™¢minary where she is in school, to ‘od morrow, under the auspices of all spend the Thanksgiving holidays| wives of Seattle to come in closer| that rical in order to teal | | | Daughters of St. Geo Alexandra \d | *| WHEREIN THE BRIDE DIS- in in om and the Mbrary | Mrs. Lodge, No. | WI meet in Soottish Rite hall, on Piret avenue, at 1:50 p. m. he yes Queen Anne Fortnightly Club, Will meet at 2 p.m, with Mra, W W. Reed at 343 Kinnear place, oe Exxpectally the we housework has a b keep. ing her hands in good condition yttle of mixed lemon and glycerine on the kitel: en shelf ar freely after each dishes hands ar At mit in rub with a ounce of honey, of rome wate witch hazel tens made of « Simple Home- Made ® appointed | in werving with the Reforma- home . e clea night ¥ . ain With al Dinner and Mrs. Larry Martin enter. informally at dinner at their Monday evening in honor of j@Ad Mrs. Thomas Coleman, of Wisconsin, who have been a few days tn Seattle, at the Hotel Washington. Bullitt Hostess menting Mrs. Julius Har-|? pot Yakima, Mrs. Alexander |), Bullitt entertained with an in-| Tuncheon at her home at the | 4¢ this afternoon. | eee . K. Hart spoke of the uses |W acy has been }and practical application of the Camp | bas b | Fire organization and told of its | conoly jsoctal qualities of companionship, fundamental to happiness since the dawn of history, and how it provided | a wholesome and natural outlet and oH ante | eceupdtion for girls from 14 to 16] | which is not to be found in the arti TP al || Raiilie went to! returning yeater-| flelal town life of today Following him M Ruth Brown, | to be the guest of her daughter, Wiliam Rug | eee avenue, aded to all m | divine right of | K by | | | | The Sunshine Guild. WU! meet at the home of Mra. Jane Nichol, 6956 Eighteenth north- jenst, atila m. oe The Nineteenth Cater Clab. Will meet at the Y cA. at! }9:20 p, m. Hontens ‘Niten Alma Meacham and Miss on Everett & teacher in the Greenwood school, |described what the life meant to the| ates. 75 Bluebirds—girla from six to 12, | -Tacon 1 the 40 Camp Fire girls, those | aay m 12 to 16, whom she had with | \trs Alexander a Monday St. Cecelia Club. Announces a series of formal |dances for the coming season, the) nes D. Hoge left yesterd Mt where ahe will be Joined | fFst of which will be at the Knights | . |of Columbus hall Hoge ‘s vee | Mr. and Mra, William Edria, who! yy, Quarante Cm. |have been spending few days in| Will mest with Mise Clara Hazel San Francisco, will return Friday green at 4213 Alki avenue at § p. m A very simple x in made ranks are to be gained by | orvice, and beads are the! of merit and duty well done. t bead of one color means one ; ar task properly fi hed, a g Trip apether’ color, another die and Mrs. C. H, Lilly are enter-| fs nection. And each girl is intensely their guest, Mr. George Ran- | proud of her honor decorations With a short hunting trip at/" Miss Elsie Campbell, a member of | ly where Mr, Lilly has &/the Latona council, spoke informally | lodge. Jof the organization from the girls’ point of view. Assisting the afternoon were t Camp Fire council! Mrs. Keith Logan Mrs for th later by Mr pression of natural her for #o long. Bo on one woman's experience to you, that you may profit thereby. of ammonia . oe When the mixture is thoroly dis- | wlved bottle it and cork tight! When using in water for plants teaspoonful to three f lukewarm water. Keep it labeled “pol and wet out of the way of children or where it may be mistaken for medicine. ee love ), v | WOMEN WANT TO BE JURORS NEW YORK, Nov. 19—The Brooklyn Women Lawyers’ associa | tion has come out in support of the new jury bill which provides for the amendment of the present statute | so a8 to permit women to sit in the state as jurors. Every assemblyman in the state will be asked by mem- bers of the association to support the measure. Lecturés on the ques- tion also will be delivered before women's clubs thruout New York. Capt. and Mrs, Elmer Theodore | Foss left yesterday afternoon for | San Francisco where they expect to | remain for two or three mon' Elsa and Milas Liitlan n a wil rive Saturday from vie tor ta to be the guests of Mra. C. Whitelaw over Thanksgiving. Later | Hanson, treas will spend some time with Mr» and Bre, Moran Give Dance their sister, Miss Nellie of Rosario, as honor guest Mrs. John Moran will give a @ at the Tennis club Saturday ie Novernber 29. . lay the stones yosters e officers of awny Bul pres vice *| that Miller on Douglas, was was the Before Dance the Broadway Ortho- Guild's dance at the Army and y club this evening, Mra. James De Veuve will entertain @inner of 10 covers at the club. Later the party will | . | Mre. Charles EL this az, There should be some remedy with Doubtless Kes and that of the prof every the same | mother seems sound. thing | AN OBSE ‘The worst of my hurts was not) eo: 9 which touched my personal) Columbia Basin smug natinfaction jealous wife haa di (Bring this ad with you) WITH A PURCHASE OF yards Saturday aft-| Guilds in the cit & Eddy at half past three. oe * 7 Hill Guild ains the auspices of the Capitol of the Orthopedic hospital, was given by some of the of Alpha Chi Omega soror it the home of Mrs. David Ed- yesterday afternoon. im, which is given below, ‘was unusually varied and d interest. tea_was|At the Women’ 8 Thomas & table beautiful with its of roses, chrysanthe- f and carnations in shades of arranged in a . broad. | low fn serving were Mew. Yo fowne, Mrs. Harold Scott Me- , and Mra, Clinton Douglas. @ program is set forth below: in Damascus” . Woodforde-Finden Mine Claays Cole. “The Gitt of Mag! Mies Margaret Breasier. cello and violin. -Rachimanoff Bolo — ‘Miss Maxine McArthur. eee Club ‘many people are planning to the dinner dance at the Ten- tonight, so many parties | © m made up with that idea in that it does look as though is one would be one of the most | dances yet given, which enough. ° ce Engagement and Mrs. W. H. Hahlo an- the engagement of their Out M. Bamberger, son of Gov. Bamberger and Mrs. Bamber- iT, of Salt Lake City. No date has m set for the wedding. y afternoon from 2:30 until 9 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Hahlo and Hahlo will be at home to their at their residence. Seow] has just returned from visit in Butte, Mont., in "Spokane, . Dance and Bazaar charge of the different commit- for the tea dance and bazaar to Biven by the girls of Madam aha school Friday afternoon from | until 6 for the benefit of the| thouse for the Blind, are: Miss Swalwell, tea dance; Miss rine Inglis, general chairman; Grace Epperson, fancy work Mi: Miss Nellie Hanson, dolls iiss Barbara Meister, auction booth Kathleen Harker, sheet music; Dorothy Schubach, grab bag; Eleanor Mehnert, candy, and Frances Oldham, jelly and pre- fruits and conserves. eee ception at The Rosemary club held an in- reception yesterday afternoon club rooms—704 Ninth av those who are ait ate = and wish to it it. Rosemary club, which, by the fs entirely self-supporting, is b slightly more than a year old, provides a home and ita con-| comforts for girls of limited | of its marked | and its limited capacity—it | wint for only 28 giris—the women | be @ of it hope and plan to start | And becaut one to make some place | average of three girls a day they now turn a k of room _ Mrs. Manson of the er, secretary; att! treasurer: woe a F. Rosemary clu! Mrs. Mrs. ackus is presi- Miss M. A EB. board of trustees includes: John W. Eddy, Mrs. C. D. Stim Miss B.C. Humphrey, Mrs. J pan, Judge King Dykernan, |'° EA A letta’ Hamilton, Mra. Masoti, Dr, Cora Saxe, Mra Collins, Mrs. Frank Water- Mrs. A. By Stewart, Mr. Law- Colman, Mrs. A. 1H. Anderson, Allen Phillips, Mrs. Porte Discontinued which have been given Red Cross Teputation and a pup! of Luigi Pull, , Edith Marguerite, to Mr.| *|members and friends are invited. cee in} know more | Mrs Orthopedic a musteal program will be given, ar- ranged by Mra, Langdon C. Henry. with Mra. Martin in some songs and Frederick Clark at the piano. The supply of sheets and pillow bed spreads and table cloths Children’s hospital is sadly and it ix hoped to make up a this “Donation Day” we ove who do not care bring linen may give a silver of « which will go toward the pur of material, chase University Club Friday afternoon, beginning at 3 o'clock, there will be a recital at the Women’s University club, by Miss Nora Smith, of Tacoma, Miss Smith a concert pianists of extablinhed of Rome, one of the two foremost pianists in Italy. ‘c |For Mrs. Patterson Several luncheons were given last week to honor Mrs. J. W. Patterson lof East Sound, who has been a vis- litor in Seattle for the past three| weeks. Among the hostesses who entertained for her are Mra. M. J Servay, Mrs. W. L. Gwinn, Mrs. C.| M. Frye, Mrs. J. H. Thomas, Mrs Flechart and Mrs. Albert Logan. Mrs. Patterson left for her home Monday evening Informal Dance With Mr. Gerald Webb, who is a visitor from Portland, as honor guest, Mr. Jerome Stiles was host | at an informal dance at his home Saturday evening. Tho guests were| Miss Grace Williams, Miss Emma Collins, Miss Frances Swart, Miss Lucie Fisher, Miss Katherine Kurby, Miss Elinor Matthews, Mr. Harry Hanson, Mr. Walter McLeod, Mr. Roy Ormond, Mr. Victor & cee To Entertain Annie Wright Seminary Club Mrs. W. T. Davis, 739 Rose st., will entertain the Annie Wright Seminary club with a buffet lunch- eon at her home Thursday. The |afternoon will be spent in sewing for |the doll show. Members will meet at 10:45 at the Tacoma Interurban station to take the Sodth Park car for Mrs. Davis’ home. . University Extension Service The class tn advertising, which has been the University regular meeting Friday, 21, at 6 o'clock in room 10 building. Registration is still open, ‘urther particulars may be obtained at the office of the extension service 1044 Henry building, or by calling up Main 2293. oe Ladies G. A. R. Sewing Club The Ladies’ G. A. R. Home Sewing club will give a dance in Eagles hall, Seventh and Pine, this evening. All |\Victory Club The Victory club gives its weekly | they | panied From Havana | Washington, with her parents, Mr. and Mra. J Howard Alien, Jr se. Rev. W. H. Bisa and Mra. who have been in the East since Sep: tember, will return Saturday Their daughter, Miss Jane Bilas, who is in school at the Annie Wright 1 return Wednesday to | r after Thanksgiving with them | Mr. George Rand been the guest of Mr. and Mre H. Lilly for the past ten days, will leave Thursday for his home in Cleveland, Ohio. ph, who has! ri Mra. Richard Thompson and her! two daughters, Miss Rachel and Minn Margaret Thompson, left today for the East where they will make their home If the future. They wil! spend some time with Mra. Thompson's son, Mr. Rice Thompson, at West Newton, Maas. -. and Mrs. Harold Wintermute last week for Montana where will be at home in the future eee Mr left Miss Bacon, of Bellingham, been spending a f¢w da: brother and Mrs. Cecil H. Sorrento. has ya with her | sister-in-law, Mr. and | Bacon at the Hotel eee Mr. and Mra. Alfred Millard are | leaving next week on a voyage to| Australta, | . . Mr. Clifford Horle has returned from Centralia where he has be for the past week Mr. William Clyde pia, spent the w ‘own, of Olym end in Seattle. Mrs. Farwell Putnam Lilly spending a few days in Yakima eee Mr. and Mra. \ Saturd: be gone a fe Ch y fe v Ww . lex H. Frye will San Francisco to Mra. W. H. Parsons left yesterday for Hoquiam to visit her daugh Miss Rosamond Parsons. Mra. Park Weed Willis turned from a two months’ Boston and New ¥ ing her to Sentt Miss Cornelia Maltby, of Waterbury Conn., who will spend two months her guest has re visit tr Accompany was her cousin, 1° ra. Hi. T. Bred iow left Cleveland, and Mra. Harry yesterday for visits Boston and uary 10, accom Mr. Earl Biglow, they will | for a tr Vent Indies Florida | spring | lifornia, in the winter continue their tr . Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Stimson, companied by Mrs. Alexander Bullitt, will le Friday for st. M Mra, Stimson will k city and Mrs her husband in ac the in v Bullitt will D. oe Mrs. W. D. Winters and daughter, Miss Bernadine, left Sunday for Loa Angeles, where they will spend the winter . Mr. and Mra turned yesterday trip to Spokar Herbert Condon re. from a six weeks’ nd Moscow. . dance this evening in the Masonic temple. At this dance there will be an announcement made which wil |be of interest to the friends and patrons. ay because | steria Dancing Club next of the Wisteria club's tonight in Christensen's Broad y hall. | First Hill Guild The First Hill Guild of the Ortho pedic cH Friday afternoon Cc. ns, chairman of the house com | Aglee Bistors ‘There will be a special meeting of | |the Aglee Sisters with Mra, Scott | White, 1604 43rd ave. N.. tomor- | 1 o'clock, Business of ira} - ——__—_—_—_—_ | SHOES AT PENNY A PAIR! Canvas shoes were sold at from| penny to #ix pence a pair at a sale of army boots In London. Dis carded army boota were offered at $2 a pair and grade 2 boots, need: | ing only minor repairs, brought $1.25 @ pale, one tand Washington, club's many | © | Monday and is for Mr. Ralph J. Kelley of New York D. C., private secre- United States min arrived in Seattle | few days a guest | Hotel Washington Annex. y to the late to Denmark at series of informal dances will |i MARY THORNE the new and petite ingenue of the Wilkes Players won her way into the hearta of Se- attle’s theatregoers in her firet appearance here this week in “Upstairs and Down, contact with the university cook ing and homekeeping experts Not a single American movie film could be seen in Bouth America be-| fore 1914. They were mostly French | then MABEL] Will Be With You | SUNDAY | Night—to Remain a Week IN THE SAME BIG LAUGHING SUCCESS THAT HAD THE EAST IN | CONVULSIONS | pride | was right when he | woman,” It was Bob's fall from his own high plane which made me weep most bitterly, I had always held my Bob to be quite superior to the ordinary vulgar pulls of sex. My orst horror was the ponaibility that the girl might add my husband to her conq and drag him down! Keven if he no longer loved me, 1 in't want to mee him degraded to her level! ‘That was a maternal feeling, I sup. pone. In wifely love of the finest kind there is always Uils maternal element. I raged for a day and a night over! the hard condition which I could not control. I collected ideas enough to make @ large book. Its proper title! might have been “Other Women Husbands.” And its theme the sad fact that women are themaelves blame for much domestic miser; Women in general blame men—wives invariably blame husbands for every upset of the matrimonial cart. Adam has always been scoffed at, but he put it onto the I believe. Any permanent reform in the morals of matrimony must begin with women them- | solver. married men alone would help a lot,” |1 heard Mother Lorimer aay once A.HWOODS presents UP IN| MABELS The Play that started NY. on 1 WITH THE SAME ORI 4 YORK RODUCTION Tomorrow! The Seats Will Be on Sale— So get them early As All Seattle Want to See MABEL Before She Leaves will NIGHTS: 50 to $2.00 ABEL” MATI | Thursday (Thanksgiving) | and Saturday 50e to $1.50 || Plus War Tax | | METROPOLITAN Advice and treatment from regular eensed physicians, and the highest grade medi eines. The ving is made possible by having all pa. Uents come to me—I make no house calls. DR. WHITEAKER’S DISPENSARY 906 ‘Third Avenue | with the | poultry, upon a time. I rather fancy that if all women would agree to leave properly mar ried mbn to the sympath and under. standing of their respective spouses, the world would be a more decent * to live in. Women, when t become rivals, are the worst ener of the home Honor between women—is there such a thing?” I asked myself. And I thought that the cheapest wor in the world are not the poor, rouged, young creatures who dress only with with an eye to attract the men These girls are at feast honest—they do not attempt to conceal their in tention, The cheapest women in the world are the smugly respectable women who infest every plane of social and business life and slyly filch the in terest of other, women's husbands |They desire to appear respectable and innocent, but they are the every day vampires who work subtly and unseen. Like dangerous dis german, they potson society and de stroy domestic life. Katherine Miller was an every-day I wondered why I had ever e any attempt to save her rather hoped she would elope bandit chief. It would be a comfort to let Don Manuel's wife }do the rest! (To be continued.) Clubs organized in the south by the state colleges and the department of agriculture, have made it possible for southern women, who are raising to market their produce co operatively, Last year thi more than half a million eggs in this way. | - Be Sure You Are Richt Then Go Ahead and Save All You | Can in Buying | You should see the beautiful line | of BLOUSES CHERRY'S (207 Rialto | Building) are now offering for your acceptance, The goods are all of the} very latest, new, no seconds, nicely tailored and of the best materials For the next 10 days, select any on: you like; it i# marked in plain fig ives, and you can deduct one-fourth from the price, A wonderful saving for you if you are needing something special for the Holidays, or even for immediate It will also be interesting to you to look over Cherry's line of suits coats, dresses, furs, ete., whether you are needing any now or not, In making your purchases, if you have all the money, all right. If not, you can take advantage of their Con fidential, Easy ment Charge Ac-| count system, tut don't fail to visit Cherry's | Rialto Style Shop, 207 Rialto Build ing, over the Pig'n Whistle, betwe Madison and Spring. CHERRY'S, Phone Wiliott 4418 | | “A union of women pledged to let | ' | | | Irrigation Dear Mian Grey write you concerning basin irrigation project ‘They are surveying the land now | water chan and everything looks bright, tn e that Wash opportu: and the main n de im locating but it » ma to © on int nity and boos If irrigat jot the | deep and jw |acre. | In its thing try, where the soil other communities comes thru that part | in alfalfa |truck gardens and beet fields will constitute the crop. If the Columbia basin | project is panned | Washington will be the biggest agri- jcultural state in the union. YOURS FOR IRRIGATIO! ee Smoking Makes Him Sick; Still Continues Puffing Dear Mies Grey that will cure the tobacco My brother asked me to write find out ‘t ing him sick Will power will cure it. I can't imagine a person being made sick by a hadlt and not stopping it. That seems the height of foolishness, doesn't it? Of course, tho, I never was addicted to the smoking habit, | #0 perhaps I can't get the full | flavor nin viewpoint BETTY. In there anything | habit? and) as he smokes so much and p now, even tho it is mak- Suggestions Carving Sets in 2-, 3. and 6 combinations. Made of material — plece finest quality $5.00 and Up Special—3-piece set, consisting of fork, game and meat knife. ‘This is a very popular set on account of including the two kinds of knives— $6.50 Game Shears in several differ. | ent sizes— $3.25 and Up {perrite RDWARE (6. st, SEATTLE ERA at home a treat fer. ‘Thankegiv= CHOICE SALMON weighing 7 to 9 Ibs. droased. Carefully packed tn jee and re-iced daily by Express Co., unti destination | reached. Expr prepaid to any press office in U. § Guaranteed to ar rive in excellent con- dition Write or phone your order. $2.00 mae yee helpless 2.28 I am tempted to the Columbia $25.00 OR MORE A beautiful Hand Crochet Lace Camisole Yoke or Gown worth Yoke will be given free. These yokes are actually 00, to say the least, and will make splendid Christ- m rain nearce, the farmers | raise 60-bushel wheat crops an irrigation | upon favorably | as gifts. Special reductions this week on $55.00 Coats, Suits, Dresses, Plush Coats, This Week Sell for— $35.00 We always sell for less. Why not take advantage of this Special Offer and ‘buy this week? At the— | o—¢ Stenswick Shop | Natare Gives a Cry for Help| | That S. S. Can Answer | With the Right Treatment. This {the dar the season when », cold, changing} weather of winter intensifies | \the pains and other disagree- {able symptoms of Rheuma- tism. | Rheumatism by accident. | blood and pain is felt, | The symptoms of this dis- ‘ease are almost unnoticed at | first, so insidiously do they | steal over the body; gradual-| ly the little pains and stiff- ness increase until they de- velop great inconvenience day | by day, and if neglected or improperly treated will be- come chronic, Not only is Rheumatism the most painful of all dis- eases, with its swollen, stiff joints, throbbing muscles and | stinging nerves, but it is a |formidable and dangerous trouble. Every day the poison re- ;mains in the system the dis- ease gets a firmer hold and the patient is soon left a cripple. Of course, if this painful disease was on the surface never comes It is in the system before a The OCEAN FISHERIES CO. | only, you might reasonably 7 8%. Phone EI Senttle, Wa 5362. expect to get relief by the use of lotions, liniments and other local applications. But the source of the disease is in ‘your blood, the tiny disease germs find lodgment there and multiply by the millions, | FOR WOMEN 1632 Fourth Ave. Opposite Times Bldg. “A Small Deposit Will Hold Purchase” scattered by means of the blood circulating throughout |your entire system. In order to get permanent relief from this dreadful dis- ease, the blood must be puri- fied, and all irritating matter | removed from the circulation. No remedy does this so quickly as S. S. S., the best blood purifier on the market | today, that has stood the test of time with fifty years of success behind it, and more popular today than it has ever been before. S. S. S. not only contains purifying and tonic proper: |ties, but solvent qualities, and, being purely vegetable, will not injure the system as |do medicines which contain |potash and other mineral in- | gredients. While cleansing the blood of all poison, it builds up the system and relieves the suf- ferer of the nagging pains of Rheumatism and is the one remedy that is so useful in repairing the damage done by impoverished blood. Don’t wait for your trou- |ble to become chronic, but be- |gin the use of S. S. S. today jand purge the blood of the germs of Rheumatism. We maintain a medical de- partment for the benefit of jall who are afflicted, and our Chief Medical Adviser, whe is familiar with all forms of Rheumatism, will gladly give you advice without charge as to the treatment of your own cone. Ativan Medical be or, wift Laboratory, At- lanta, Ga. A 2 aN AB LR RO IN acre