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J RBhS REDS ' CHANCE ACQUAINTANCE PLAN ISAPPOINTES THIS GIRL I do not think anyone can answer the} who wrote thru your columns, that is,| th a view to helping them meet nice men, 3am skeptical, because I have tried out the plan of meet- Dear Miss Grey Lonely Gir! g men I thought I would li intance route, and this came here a stranger five months ago, and became 80 nely for the friendship of jt meet any like them, that oking man who was the street car conductor. d fro for weeks on his car, » such as “Good morning,’ d day at the store, trying to please all kinds of customers, smilegand cheery “Howdy rather struck me that at I would not have to be so ely. when he asked if he might cal, “Yes.” HH called and decause eed to kiss hign he never came T am not so pretty and do not like a flirt, and he was 90 nice ng and gentlemanly, yet, you how it turned out to a dance these days properly chaperoned, if she ot have an escort, the girle ment let their friends dance with «~ else, so girls like me must ty decorate the wall Tam becoming s0 skeptical about Whether there are really any nice young men here like the boys I used know beck hame, that I'm begin [> ming to get like the old lady who was Woking at pictures of animals and {fame to one she could not make out. | then, after a moment, exclaimed ain't so sich animal.” LONELY GIRL. He's Partial to Tam a young diness man in this city, and wish say the girt who signed her name | City Giri” i far from being my) First she says she lived in the eight years, then she goes poking fun at the ignorant coun girl, and still she had to visit %, ignorant girls last summer. | that was to get a good square There are good and bad rs But my choice would ) the girl that curts her hair all_ ‘with a curling tron, and as for Seventeen,” I think she is a 2 aminded girl. Now, please, Girl.” stay where you are; @ountry girls can get along with- and your “waren” F. W Interesting Letter a Grandmother Dear Miss Grey: “Almost Thirty” a “A Reader,” also “High School, * have all had their say, and I it's time Grandma had ber Btle any, too. I want to ask you eon gl ereigeat Bor going to do to defend against these despotlers ? Hew can a man expect Wife to look like a girl, with ail Children’s Play Suits and All-Overs 98c These are regular $2.00 value and are from our regular stock and will be sold at this price for two days only—Friday, April 16, and Saturday, April 17. Sum- in here and the kiddies should be comfortably ¢ressed for play. Two days only Golden Rule Department Store 1014 First Ave. q aTwo ae eattile Style No. 58—The Star's snapshots of attractively- 3! dressed women on Seattle streets ke for friends thru the chance is the way it turned out: the boys back home, and did I began to notice a nice, clean- I rode to and used to pass the time of * “Nice day,” etc., and after a Wt AT do YOU think? Write thia Grey, care of The Seattle Star. the traits of a wife and mother? | If she has filled the miasion God leave to her, he should love every |Little wrinkle in her dear face, made }there by serving him and his chil dren. But soon wives will refuse to have children at all, not knowing how soon they may be left to support and raise them all alone, I deplore |Uhe attitude The Star seemingly takes toward these female libertines. Last night's Star aaid Esther Butts had smilingly apotogtzed for stealing a husband, as tho it was very funny to break up a home and the heart of a faithful wife. The Star quoter Mins Butts &* saying #he loved him. I wonder if his wife loves him? 1 |wonder if not, why did she place her | whole future happiness in his keep |ing? Had ‘the sympathy been re ‘verse, and with the wife as it should jhave Been, it would still be worth just as much as a news item, and would have appealed to the good |side of the reader instead of the bad | side. ) It sugwests evil to people who would never think of it otherwise. We've had this sort of news in the center of the front page of The Star ever since we read of the slim ankles ot Ruth Garrison. I have noticed thru the whole list that the evil doers jalways hold the center of the stage and take all the curtain calls. In Kentucky men of that type used to jbe shot down like dogs. “| It was an unwritten law, but now, | if some poor, deserted wife would |make an example of some such |woman, she woukl stand a poor jchance of a fair trial, The news: papers would bias the public opinion | Thank God, my three girts are raised and married, and if any woman, even now, should break up my home and }comx away my dear olf hubby, she | would never live to be cursed with her heart's desire, I am right here jto tell you, if our country {# worth fighting for, #0 are our homed, for they are the heart of the nation. Disreputable men and women are | real menace to our country. a, |suit. It is caught in a semi-ti Dear Miss Grey: Im answer to | the sophisticated writer signing the jname §. &, I would Ifke to say that | “Mise Seventeen” has the right idem jof country girts, | Further, why should he that aN country irks are “un! iat reeedy: thekets jeated.” A good country girl ts “lou estan: | level with a good city girl and vice versa. The writer mentions but two types of girte—chorus and coed. May I suggest that there are others? } A more general knowledge of the | | woo! mixture, and The flower crown hat has a ‘world is hot necessarily the createst asset in making the most sue-/ cessful wife, A generous and sym-| | pathetic nature might atone for the| inferred ignorance. ‘Will someone please tell where all | Clever of line and deftly tailored is this charming spring} a narrow novelty patent leather belt. It is of very light green just the tiniest check im ished at the back with a wide, fluffy bow. If the lady pictared here wil call at ‘Tho Star’s Sditorial THE SEATTLE STAR—-THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1920. \Sir Oliver Says (Mankind Will ‘Become “Godlike” Sir Oliver Lodge, who comes to Seattle Sunday night to lecture on spirit phenomena, believes that fol lowing death, |faculties assume an [having the same earthly form. The genera! £0 to & place Very r but more elevated. “The facts of ir past and futare states of exist ence,” he says, “are organized on a basis of slow evolution, 1 bo ‘sudden jumps’ in natu Bir Oliver predicts « glorious dew tiny for mankind. 4 million years hence, he says, will have reached such heights that in comparison with. the present genera: tion the man of the year million will be almost a godlike being, physically and inteliestually, probably having wonderful payehic faculties. He will moreover, be living in a much tm: proved world, from which disease and suffering will have been ban inhed. Siy Oliver's researches have been scientific, Ie does not present his Jconclusions as proof of religion, but jrather in the same cool way as he would present the results of an ex periment in chemistry Interest in the coming of Sir Oliver Lodge to Beattie is reflected in the heavy demand for tickets at the opening of the sent nnle yenterday at the Arena for the noted scientiat’s lecture next Sunday night on “The Pvidence for Survival.” THE OLD GARDENER SAYS Several years ago a new type of squash’ made its appearance in central Iowa and has become so popular that people in other parts of the country are beginning to ask for it, It is called table queen squash and is prised be cause it comes very early, is very productivé, and is of the highest quality, One good way to eat it it to cut it in halves, bake, and serve each half as an individual partion. Ask your sestsman to Get sceds of thin squash for you. Then you will have a garden nov- elty that will make the neighbors envy you. ethereal body contour as the an of men, he think, Uttle bit ‘inepired.” “The man is an expert electrician He's master in that department) aboatd the Blue Bird. His supreme we are in port. I've asked the cap tain to asaign that job to him in the «mall boat. “On condition that you never let him hear the word ‘war,’ the captain has warned me. “Hard condition, ten’t !tt™ (Te be continued) ~—Photo by Cress-Dale. ght fashion at the waistline by | able. fashionably narrow brim, fin- The Talk of the Town 2000 BLOUSES DAISY HENRY. rooms, she | Dill in “Wet and Dry,” at the Met the soul and material! yeh like earth, | ) ~-and wondered if he is not just al joy is running the power boat when | preference to all others, when I une | |the general knowledge in gained? } A CITY CO-ED. When s woman declares there ia no use talking she is preparing for &@ fresh start. CHRYS BEGINS HER TALE OF EXCITING) EXPERIENCES ABOARD THE “BLUE BIRD” | “Oh ta! la! If Katherine Miter) nity of s drama when pieced to. belongs to the secret service, the! gether from the scrapa of code and whole story”—I laid my hand on the| scrawis from Daddy, from the ele-| letterd we bad received from Daddy | gant pages in Katherin'e beeutiful | $4.85 4 Chrys—"will be buried in the) archives of nations” | "You may be sure it will never) Maunt iteelf in history, my love!” said Rob. He wan arranging the | missives in some kind of ehronologt cal sequence and I was hetping bim. writing, the brief and direct state-| | ments from Gene Archer, and typed | | pages dictated by Chrystobel in al | business style she has followed ever | since she acquired it as part of her office work in the war. | Little did Chrys imagine that she | $5.85 Four Fine New Red Seal Records From April List You'll enjoy hearing these in our Sings Victrola Department J)HN McCORMACK “Yoar Eyes Have Told Me § JASCHA HEIFETZ "$1 Plays “Minuet” (Porpora-Kreisler)—$1 FARRAR and DE LUCA Sing “Il Bacio” from “Zaza”—$1.50 F RITZ KREISLER Plays “Gypsy Serennde”—$1 VICTROLAS $25 to $480 Convenient Payment Terms and as I skimmed their contents I | was setting down the opening chap: | naw that they made a marvelou® ter of a tragedy when she wrote her | j tale of the secret Intrigue of nations | first letter aboard her yacht after jand the trickery of politicians. |leaving San Francisco! Chrys’ let: | I perceived that it wag a story Dot | ter started out much like any other | to be net down by fits and etarte~| chatty recital by a traveler, Bhe | | discannectedly-—aa tt was reflected | snoke of the beauty of the bay and| |by one and then another of our cor | the first munset at sea, of the unex | reepondents. Tho it was thus divided | pected conveniences of her dear lit- |by acts and scenes, It possessed the oe recht, of the dandy captain and | HOWTOADD STRENGTH, BE HEALTHY | cot een him under | More Happiness and a Long: | guard, if Chrys thought best. Of; er Life Through . Use of | course Chrys had to hear all of the! story Bitro-Phosphate Health | Mente Stns wk Gis hata , name. He was Scotch, born to the | sea, and reared by fanatically relt- | | gious parents. We had been a con t|selentious objector, but had been “ne |moved by the righteousness of the | war, had enlisted and nurvived three - | years of active service. He had come forth from the trenches full of bit: | th ternens against all wars and with | his noul aflame against the Germans | who had thrust the horrors of the Great War upon humanity McCall was the captain's nephew |and the gor old man had belleved that since the boy was a sailor, the fea would surely cure his sickness, McCall was, tn fot, as normal as a | man need be except when the war. ee eefictent iaites. | idea got into hin head. Then he be- Lat the scalen,|came fanatical and perverse. One | minute he would cry out for the end of the war, and tho next he would | we pred laim that red wars would rend | Persons were “all run!) Europe for a hundred years to come. nero ge conemierele| And for what he had seen, and fo great trrivabitity, Inability to concentrate what he prophesied was still to be, and in numerous 0 oF te, remember, and tn numerous 5 | Be. wrens invoke the wrath of his phosphoric element was ensenti Seote Bitro- Phoephi hi The sailors no longer langhed at plished marvelous benefit, a io} him, the oaptain mid. The super. soporte ‘af entheciasticaliy chests atitious among them considered him & prophet. Chrys conetuded her letter thus: “I am glad that the poor fellow han come back to the great ‘mother and lover of men, the sea,’ I truat that he will be cured, but now he mot by "sll busy druaeinte every. {talks like the Ancient Mariner, f myself have listencd—and shuddered The captain had asked her to con | wider the capectally interesting case | | of one of bin men, she wrote. The) pos was half crazy at times, and | | be might address the ladies unex pectedly, but they mustn't be afraid of him, he wouldn't harm a mouse. the captain said; the man was crazy NEW YORK— |from this very day you will steadily | permanently improve your health: have calm nerves and. a 1 nto yourself that ray of the true kind repiace yo seae and eck of etther wit! power or no longer. Don't be posh wumber. Brand poselbilitie can show grenter and live longer if y true method. PI ‘only adopt your improvin, your, enim. forcefulnese and | ment show themacives pearance, your accom tro-Phesphate ts not a pat It te wold under @ recommended by may obtain a infor ation by writing to Arrow $6.85 $7.85 New Arrivals in GEORGETTE CREPE, CREPE DE CHINE and PRINTED VOILES 1920 DESIGNS in RUSSIAN BLOUSES and REGULATION WAISTS Come and See for Yourself MARKET between Pike and Liberty Theatre BUN er RTA RO EEO AN 1 OF LN F, Aa a eo FBP OY FZ Oe pages lo Woltan can affard fo miss Dress Your Hair Becomingly, No ooo ig Km \ IT YOU HAVE A MIGH FOREHEAD The human race | | IWEAR YOUR, HAIR ow iF YOu HAVE A ROUND _HEAD WEAR YOUR. HAIR, HIGH Matter What Fashion Is in Vogue de * Here are a few suggestions in the way of “Dos” and “Don'ts.” “How shall I do my hair?” There is one DO and one DON'T in answer to this question. The DO ts: Dress your hair becomingly. To really accomplish this first study the shape of your head; second, the height of your forehead; third, the contour of your nese. The DON'T ie ‘A HOME-MADE GRAY, ‘ BAIR REMEDY You Can Make a Detter Gray Hale * Reanedy T! You Can Buy Gray, etremked or faded hatr te not only unbecoming, but unneceamary. Any one can prepare a simple mfx ture at home that will darken gray hair, and make it @oft and glomy. To a bal pint of water add 1 ounce of |Day rum, a «mall box of Barbo Com, pound and ‘These ingredients can be bought at jany dru \the drugstet will put it up for you. Apply to the hair twice a week luntil the desired shade is obtained ‘This will make a gray haired person look twenty years younger. It ts leasy to use, does not color the scalp, in not sticky Or greasy and does not rub off.—Advertisement. % ounce of glycerine. | DON’T MAKE YOURSELF LOOK LIKE A FREAK BY BEING A SLAVE TO FASHION. All women can no more wear the fame style of hair-dreas than they cin wear the same size of shoes. The woman with a high forehead can add 50 per cent to her personal | beauty by pulling soft flufts of bait | jover the too prominent feature. ‘The | pretty, dimpled, full-aced girl who! does her hatr in the modern fashion. | | able ear puffs, is in danger of mak. ing her face look fat instead of youthfully round. Most defecta of head contour — even serious ones—can be greatly helped, if nat wholly overcome, by the style of dressing the hair. A great many women have what ix known an “fiat head,” that ia, a head flat tn the back Instead of curving outwart in the aecepted shape of | the cranium. But the clever woman | by massing her hair at the back of such a head can build out the Une until it is wholly attractive. Actreases understand the worth of careful hairdressing better than most people, and one of the clever. Jest at this art is beautifal Elsie | Ferguson. Mise Ferguson's hair is |always dressed in absolute keeping with the lines of her face. Well and becomingly dreased hatr is every woman's greatest single beauty, is the belief of Mins Fergu- ion, who is very careful to avoid all freak syne of coiffure. Wail-knewn capitalints and mene. sgn n of St. Louis have combined to invest several million dollars for an initial sugar industry develop ment near New Orleans. MOVIE ACTRESSES AND THEIR HAIR Did it ever occur ta movie actress i i you ii J E iH I i k Hit Ey i Hea j g Fy g Ht 332 ot 3 Vote With OLYMPIC Flour Sacks In the Great $12,000 Prize Contest selection of wheat is the first step in as- Uniformity: of Olympic Flour In 93 tb., 2434 Ib. tbe athe ff «6 at your nearest grocer, Vig