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RS prove to the hed * bt lone, not the Makes Suggestion on RMER COUNTRY SCHOOL HA’AM WRITES ( VONDITIONS IN AVERAGE SOUNTRY SCHOOL Dear Miss G Living in the country, too, wish to and an say a word for the country we should have more mature, experienced te solated districts, but how are we to get them? he average district clerk prefers a beginner, is less, and she is easier to handle r, so he sorted out those that, and drew one. ly a very few first term teachers have moral courage to handle! HAT do YOU Country school, that is, the think? Write Cyn- ts of the children, in festern Washington. thia Grey, care of The Seattle Star. Often, if the teacher does not allow Epediady to ¢ o friends, an ghe is made as one applications, tact, the city, parents us the parents of their tes, and nothing vate life. Th the teacher principal whe of. the country Is the World irowing Worse? Dear M tf Johnn 4 5 od. it So and prejudice us all and pare obeying st laws. Often the teacher « slide, and the ones who suffer for it the teacher gets more but is it her fault, Jong as any d iy a living wa, age. that one may be fr @uties of a nursery cove @ecape the neighborhood gossip. @lects clerks who wish to her, not to educa We will got immatu girls, teaching for what tha entirely? | refuses to provide a from © a new bat and are an Par to a can be.” ° family women, or men, to w Ia wish to entrust our education ows 1 What shall we do about it? little of the kind just me EX-SCHOOL MARM. [so much of the former most wonders if there news chit is any good ere must be some cause for these PY marriages, loving homes be broken up, and wives absolutely efuxing to become mothers Why do our young girls have such bold, brazen locoks on their otherwise sweet faces? Why om swear like s seem afraid or ashamed of anything? I hear someone say, “Times have changed.” Yeh, they have, and mus low to Get Acquainted . [Dear Miss Grey: In answer to “T &.” and also to a young man Wrote the other day, saying that _@ould not get acquainted at ch. I would like to sa words. I am one wh to meet nice young people. N fend Sunday school, church and People’s society, and thru » so many of and don't »x-school for. her} clerk said put them in THE OLD Seattle Style (ies it before you e#tart planting may save you much There is no make the test tha No. 59—The Star’s snapshots of attractively- dressed women on Seattle streets awdunt the chers | experience | New Cornish Catalog I have certainty ep Clean Minds | van pir pu a by M expecially the latter, have met Proved to be the cream young folks. } Shurch is small and so it tf to get acquainted. I sug-| but why can’t they change for the better instead of the worse? Can the readers answer? FORTY E and he and his voice breaking the stillness ke the wail of a Greek Rasputin, hate thone bet nt Just chorus who PAGE 11 a al Pant to ta ttice Taffeta and Serge Combine in Spring Dress New If a girl gets only DOROTHY FAY GOULD Mexican Art Shown at P ublic Library 1 never went to college 1a ibe red if you will make Annie ¢ h rehearsing to make equaintance of nee room What HOW TO ADD STRENGTH, BE HEALTHY More Happiness and a Long- er Life Through Use of Bitro-Phosphate Health | publie lb at the rary she now, wont willingly ar non to e will Elizabeth G. Baker |C oming to Se attle Baker, ure BY CORA MOORE “ not or rk's I alifornia Wr portraits, She pure aquar Seattle Homes Eastern Mag eral article Cutter, ect ler McEwan home, s a ree of 8 be hoxphate, always re sous eogune club, was in BREAD ks ago to a fellow * dom @ few weeks ago to a have destroyed Russia! I hate the ty student that he come to EGYPTIAN DES @Burch, and sce if he couldn't} Exyptian infil the kind of people he had been linery and hap r in tain to meet for so long. |in the newest fash) came, and now he says he will h colorings and ho other place. I should like on have those people who have had signs o same trouble try th ns from Paris. * of em 1 de ¥ |heavy black maline t is a well-known fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s egetable Compound i is the most successful remedy or woman’s ills obtainable. Actually thousands of _ women have proved this to be true. Notwith- ‘standing, some women make the mistake of trying something else, said to be just as good, simply because it is new. Is it not foolish to risk the possible bad resnits of ench periments — and is it not better to depend upon amed- Be that you know is reilable—a medicine that has bad po equal for more than forty years? Read what these Women Think About It “Twas io ill Utica, N. ¥—" Twas all rm down years and doc- | and had no energy or ambition and 4 no strength to do my work. I went me belped me. I was jrregu- | to the doctor's office every other day yd had such terrible a my and could hardly craw! to get there lower part of my' and | and back. My husband wanted me tech side that I bed to go to | to try Lydia B. Pinkham’ s Vogo- three of four days every mouth. | tabie Compound and he got me a ves very nervous, tired, could not | bottle and in two weeks this medi- aad coma not eat without get- cine did me more good than the doo- P cick. A frieod asked me to tor’s medicine had dono in ten. I o Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable kept on antil I had taken ten bo: tiles nd I am sorry I did not and felt like anew woman. NowL do all my own work besides all kinds of dressmaking and sometimes paper heo ing. 1 will recommend Lydia g ink am’ '» Vegetable Compound you may pide 4 take it sooner for it has helped me @ondertully. 1 don’t have to go to ed with the pain, can oat without P being sick and have more strength. [recommend your medicine and you yerty Ww publish my testl ~Euizsoere Weaver, i. d. ~“ hs asl live a lish my testimoni Tannen, 616 Plant St., Utica, N.¥. Be Wise — Accept Nothing But | proletariat, and |down the house —Photo by Cress-Dale. | This pretty street model is fashioned along simple but effective lines. It is of dark blue tricotine. The coat is straight in outline and is beautifully trimmed with many rows of| black silk braid. “string” belt defines the waistline. | The hat worn is of the “Chin Chin” variety, It is made of | ; and has bright-colored flowers cleverly |imbedded within the round transparent brim. —DAISY HENRY. If the lady pictured here will call at The Star’s editorial roonts and identify herself, she will receive two tickets to see Kolb and Dill in their | musical comedy, “Wet and Dry,” at the Metropolitan. Monday’s Fashion picture was of Miss Leona Genshaw, 4107 39th ave, S&S cigar | gesture essions of aBri (Copyright 1920, by The Newspaper Errterprise Association) de THE REVELATIONS OF RASPUTIN APPAL THE RUSSIAN AND THE SAILOR has a comple came from ‘I will rule Russia from of the dead as ance hand of the “Thus Sandy His voice war women who heard him And the men moved uneasily pretended to feel for frest and matches.” (To Be Continued tion vibrant Lorimer of all that } “Lookin ance, I Miller man. as a contre lett “Cert Inve © effect of it upon} | the s Lorimer and | that Insane man of the sea was stu yust What she had done to appalled Misn Miller herself, a ‘control,’ was an {n- of the sort which reacts surprises the Inventor who plays 1 game ‘out sa Rasputin, aspiration r almost believed for a at Raspul SPECIAL FOR $4.85, $5.85 : LOT NO. 1 500 BLOUSES Including 100 Russian Blouses Values up to $15.00 Special at $5.85 ides Georgettes, Crepe do hines and Tricolettes going to be rd that skep jcism often sur like this, t fun a n ersion! In for the sailorman, he be Heved, in spite of his strict religious training! The m that dread ful s name had tur trick with | him | “Ana* from Mis the temp ntal young All New Blouses LOT NO. 2 700 BLOUSES $7.85, vorus girl ears by a lo the war Values up Special at $4.85 Includes Georgette; and New Pongees Short and Long Sleeves 1 confirmed seoffer at ouija dering how the wired so great He went but as soon as he heme of the thing fairly flew across the must have had an excel Blient knowledge of English, for he is unthinkingly using our alpha het to make wards in his own lan guage. “It seems that the pointer works am obligingly for one medium as for two. Presently Katherine Miller folded her hands, sat back in her chair, and regarded the Rui astonishment, Jt made me think airy tale in which some prin had played with magic—and had A the devill ' sldn't help we suddenly with the ee |F facility tri Georgettes, which wer merly wonderful valu $5.85, clumsil had gra the tr board. He go7 Pike St. Between First and Second Avenues on Pike Street voke ed the transla The shuddered cigars FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CONTEST ENDS SATURDAY Send in your letters at once, if you wish to win one of these attractive cash prizes offered by the Seattle Association of the Baking Indus- try for the best — nt on php We Should Use More Bakers’ Bread,” or “How Bakers’ Bread Cuts Down the Cost of Living.” “LET THE BAKER BAKE IT.” In these days of high living costs, you know many ways to use bread in keeping your fam- ily well nourished; you know many ways in Which bread helps you to economize. Write out some of them and send them in a letter. First Prize... .$25 Second Prize. .$10 Third Prize... .$5 Ten other prizes, each .........$1 You also know that the won- derful food value of bread—four times as great as the food value of potatoes, for instance— stamps this “real staff of life” as the most economical solid food on the American table today. You also realize, if you have made a careful study of the subject, that to buy bakers’ bread at 12c a pound loaf or 17¢ a pound-and-a-half loaf is much more economical than to at- tempt to bake bread at home. Tell us some of the things you know about Bakers’ Bread and its economy. Tell us, in a practical way, how it keeps down the cost of living. Write this in a letter of not more than 200 Mail your letter by Saturday, April 24. Address it to— BREAD CONTEST EDITOR, SEATTLE STAR And Cut Your Cost of Living by Reducing the Quantities of Other Foods