The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1920, Page 11

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BY CY T WHY DO WOMEN STEAL? NOTED WOMAN CRIMINAL LAWYER GIVES HER THEORY. WHAT IS YOURS? HIA GREY WHY DO WOMEN STEAL? For baby, husband, lover, s elf? Not that they steal more than men, bat— Mrs. Uoe Georgia P. famous criminal lawyer and former deputy district attorney of Los Angeles, has given an expert analysis on women's peculiar motives for stealing, reflecting her whole sex life below. After you have read WOMEN STEAL, social, as well as a po well as intensely inte stin Recent crime developments in var fous parts of the cotintry make Umely a discussion of why women Steal. My experience leads me to say Where are four main reasons: PRIME EASONS 1—Women steal from @ feeling of Onfustice in the unequal distribution Of wealth. 2—To dedeck themselves in better elothes, for personal vanity, or to Make themselves more attractive to “certain man B—To feed hungry dadica. 4—Recause they are Kleptomantacs. = ALITY" The qreatest number of thefts by i due to the fact that some bave more money than others, Many persons brood over this con Gition of affairs and convince them Selves that this spelis injustice. This feeling leads to desperate acts cal- Culated to “eyen things up a bit.” Many women can't stand sqing @ther women with lots of pretty @lothes, autos and other luxuries, while they themselves are in actual eed or have Iitue ans REMEDY One of the remedies for this, for Men as well as women, is to extend educational opportunities: to enlarge facilities for social welfare work ‘and to provide entertainment for the fortunate; to hold pageants, out concerts and like affairs to di the mind and stimulate imagina- ; to make the less fortunate a 2 ot community; to let them “belong” and are not an class, of companions by girls and n is of great importance. Bad tions always foster the weak qualities. It would take a strong and @ strong will to withstand associations without being car- ¢own. | ‘The cure for theft tn the individual with the individual It's a mat of will power. D DUSED Im the case of the woman who ‘ more than once, it seems each time Each stay fn ja: Jean of a shock and there's a rapid ard trend. theft doesn't pay. theft doesn!’t pay. Crime is al a@ losing game. Teach this to woman thief; drive it into her O and when she realizes truth she will use her will , turn around and devote her to other things. BAKED GREEN CORN % cup butter 3 onions . 2 green peppers 2 tomatoes 2 cups green corn cut from cob 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper Peel and chop onions; remove seeds peppers and chop; peel toma- and slice thin; melt butter in ng dish and take out half; put a of tomatoes in bottom of dish corn mized with pepper and n; ad4 anothér layer of tornatoes more corn and so on until all is season with salt and pepper Crime fs al- + oe or 30 minutes in a moderate oven. P RUEUMATIIC PAINS "RAISING A RUMPUS? R Sloan’s Liniment ready for q sudden rheumatic twinges bs Jet that rheumatic pain or ache find you without Sloan's iment again, Keep it handy yin the medicine cabinet for imme- @iate action when needed. If you are out of it now, another bottle to- , #0 you won't suffer any longer necegnary when @ pain or ache ks you. ‘Apply it without rubbing—tor tt —giving prompt relief sciatica, Jumbago, neuralgia, ikache, lameness, soreness, sprains. ins, bruises. Be prepared—it’s to use. Ps © All druggiste—35e, 700, $1.49. The . 't size contains six times h as the smallest. hi 1oas 9 a> pour over remaining butter; bake | as.) (Pain| and psychology. It is printed it, think about it for an hour, and then write your observations and conception as to WHY g Following is Mrs. Bullock's theory: ! Starts on Page 1 id rather bo seen with a “20th ry fashion plate” than @ real- goodness, red-blooded man |vour present fiance will dowd be glad to learn the truth and re lease you from your promise at once, | Information on Scenario Contest Dear Miss Grey: I wil be very thankful tf you will please answer & question for me regarding the “scenario contest.” In case the man | upseripta are not accepted, will they | be’ returned? Yes, tf postage ds included. | ENTHUSIASTIC CONT | ee | She Delves Into Past | for Might-Have-Beens | Dear Mise Grey: I have read your }letters with interest. Perhaps you jor your readers will be able to give | me yome light on this subject: Am {responsible for my husband's death? | I left home, friends and everything dear to me to be away from my} | people, who say that I could have |saved my husband if I had not been }of such a jealous nature, We had been married a number of | years, and we were very happy until last spring. I Ieft for a brief visit | with relatives, and when I returned [there had been another woman in | his life And he acknowledged that it was the truth. He begged me to forgive him and try to be happy with him again, and he told me tha his life was in my bands; that if I could net go back to Kim, life would not be worth the struggia Now that he has taken hia fife, |T feel that I should have considered his happiness first, as my life seems so useless; but I felt that I would have done @ great wrong if I had returned to him, because our life would never again be complete, as my confidence and love would be for- ever dead; and still the eternal ques tion Is; Should I have tried to for- pet and have taken him back? , A BROKEN HEART. When 4 crisis overtakes often prone to believe we but sacrificed more, might | have prevented tt; but in your case, |who dares to say that eventually the end would not have, been the! same? And before the énd finally | |came, there would have been more suffering heart-break, for 1 now #0 well that there are women like you, women who would forge | everything gladly that e man might do, except unfaithfulnces. You are right. It would never| have the same again. Your whole | future life would have been one of misery; always your happiness would have been o'ershadowed by the jclouds of doubt. You were not the lagoressor, consequently you must not seek to blame yourself for the inevitable. And likewise do not per-| mit your family or othera to con-| demn you; your conacience is clear and your God is your judge. | DN JIBITY PAP |LEMON JELLY CAKE % cup butter 2 cups sugar 3 eges 2 cups flour 1 cup milk 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon i4mon extract % teaspoon salt, Cream butter and sugar, Sift tn TANT. us, we are that had) me | of a Bride by the Newspaper rprine Ammociation | ‘THK BOOK OF DEBORAH |THE FRAGILE STRUGGL MATRIMONY MUST KEPT IN REPAIR There was nothing very tender jabout my husband's parting caress that morning; nevertheless, my heart was light. I counted the hours un * or BE tt be should come home again, Tt wo 4 to me that all of our ditt. culties had come to an end. Bob had been Jealous of me, moet unrew | sonabty sol That was why he had Are their motives different from men’s? Has Mrs. Bull- sgen vo much of Katherine Miller! ck summed them all up in her “Four Reasons”? A discussion of this question, which is a domestic and | or pleasure in another woman's so ice problem, should prove helpful as | Hlow be could find any comfort cloty while quarreling with me was more than I could comprehend Nothing any other man could aay to me would ever make me oblivious |t@ trouble with Bob. Here's More of } Cynthia Grey Tt was bard, but I'd fost have te acorpt the fact, I told myself. Men and women do not look upon love in the same way, And #0 I counted the hours until Bob should come home, and resolved to put on one of the dreanes he liked most. Fora long time I had avoid every means of interesting and ting him. But now that I knew at his jealousy, I added a new paragraph to my new code—I would be useful to my husband. And once more I would amuse him! I reminded myself that matrimony ts a fragile structure and that hue bands and wives must make an ef, fort to keep it in repair. Lots of men who are mighty par- ticular about the upkeep of a car never give @ passing thought to the | upkeep of their domestic bilan, Low of women treasure ther jewelry carefully, but never take the leant pains to guard the treasure of & husband's love. I asked myself tf persone of sense would plant @ wonderful garden and expect it to bring forth its choice | Diossoma without care? Weeds grow faster than flowers in a garden. “And it's just the mame with love,” T admonished myself. “Tob apd, I have fenced ours in by all the walls | of matrimony and then we have let | it take care of itself! What right have I to ory out about a weed—or— @ tiger ily?” To be sure, Bob had done his share of the neglecting. Lately he hadn't known whether I was glad or sad. But now that I knew that it had all started in a fitvof jealousy, every trouble between us was cleared up, I decided. Very soon T found out that I had come to a hasty decision. I hadn't been anywhere with Bob for weeks. overture, I wanted of view. ing his children alone Now, Rob has always Iiked Theen to see St. John Ervine’s drama. called him up 6n the phone and asked him to buy the tickets, “Jane, T don't care to see that thing. It’s bunk.” he maid. “All right.” was my cheerful re ply. But my cheer was hypocrisy, Evidently my hurband couldn't be upon his own experience! Probably he was tangled tighter than I could guess! The sunshine went ont of my day. heart, Bob had destroyed something which he could never reatore, (To Be Continued.) y Any man knows what the girl who doesn’t think talke about, but it ts the girl who doesn’t talk about. % cup of the flour. Add eggs well jdeaten. Sift flour, baking powder | and salt together and add alternately with milk. Add flavoring. Turn into four layer cake tins and bake 20 mirutes in a moderate oven, | gether with the following | LEMON JELLY 1 cup sugar 1 ews 1 cup water 1 teaspoon butter 1 tablespoon flour grated rind of 1 lemon Julee of 2 lemons Mix flour and sugar shoroly. Stir | Into egg. Add water and lemon. Add butter. Cook over hot water till thick, Cool and spread on cake, | made with oil of mustard. a mustard Presents the Following Wednesday Evening, Corner of Fifth Aven MUSIC LOVERS ARE “The Last Song...1. Paolo Tosth Mr, Fay ftittenhouse Morning Wind’ : Gena « Jeanne La “The udiey Back ma Malick Mise “Irish Love So ne Margaret Ruth “Without Thee”. .Guy D'Hard Mr. Joseph KH. Bowman Morning” ..... Oley | “The Sweet of the Year” ‘ sees Mary Turner Salter Mins Lucile Collins ‘Maymaking’ ....Alice Needham Mrs. Hagei elius “Faust Romanee” (with Harp) y Charles Gounod Pipers r John’ Hyatt Drewer Miss Genclta Prudence Weaver MRS. MONTGOMERY “Fairy Mr. Montgomery Lynch AT BIGHT O'CLOCK IN THE AUDITORIUM OF THE FIRST METHODIST CHURCH PROGRAM Pupils in Song Recital November 10, 1920 ue and Marion Street CORDIALLY INVITED “One. Fine Day” (Madame Butterfly). Puceint Miss Peggy Kremer “The Moon Drops Low” (Amer- jean Indian Song).... o-. Charlies Wakefield ¢ Miss Evangeline ¢ Call Me No More”. .....seeee eee Charion Wakefield Cadman Mise Lois Wiley ‘Honor and Arn as sal Babe .. Handel “Rolling in Foaming Billows” (Creation) Haydn Mr. Clarence J. Sylliansen “He Ie Kind, He Is Good” (Herodiade) ......., Maasenet “Dird Song” (Balletetia from Pagliacel Leoneavallo Alice Pinckston Maclean LYNCH, Accompanist > ES pages Ii THE SEATTLE STAR lio Woltait can affard to ittiss LPP OS EF BAA We Ve as SANO4 ‘PAUL GUSTIN COMES INTO - | | iustinecta, There is nothing bimare, | I decided to make an| Our | Clemg.” the best problem play of Paul Gustin'’s especial subjects for) many & year, from a woman's point! masterpieces, “Jane Cieeg™ sendn her er-| rant husband off*with his “fancy | astonishing. HIS OWN AS PAINTER OF WEST Paul Gustin BY DOROTHY FAY GOULD Autumn* many people see tie crippled | trip, which is @ study in yellows ax|or observed. For instance, the real child, so few the crippled mind,” in| cheering as the more usual sparkling |cause of headache may le in a re & wise saying made by Mra. A. M. H.| ues, such as “Madronas on Nelson|gion far removed from the head; Ells apropos of the few who could Island,” are bracing. One of Mr.jand ®o-called heartburn, which i* be interested to join the Fine Arts in ite educational work in contrast to the many easily persuaded to work for @ hospital or orpban asylum. Yor once, thousands instead of Ue recently. hundreds bave been crowding the| All who ha Corcoran held annually for several years now,| come, will yearly attracts greater numbers.| Candytuft" that usually hangs op-|*kin diseases called “syconisvul Some five thousand have been in| posite the door. This ts a type of | aria.” since the gailerion opened this! wall decoration, very popular Mast| A. The term “rycosis” ts now us- month. They are at 1213 Fourth ave, and open free to the public} daily from 12 to 6 and Sundays from iwi The secret of the wide appeal; Guatin's canvases have is found in the frequent exclamation of observ. to rout taste, ors, “Oh, 1 would just like to take that home." The simplicity, the | “Off color, the high«mindedness of each picture appeals at once to one's best | Mr. nothing strikingly modern, nothing in vulgar nudes to distract attention. mountains, our ‘Their reasonableness of price in towch with. | thousand dollars a small one, just | or his retired I} for $75 ' coaxed to see a play which touched | nangs in a position of honor over |A splendid fame had died in my4 bie for bim to discover whac|<t'* University club several years pra grew are ar nat OF net ao of a abip in the fog. ‘The tale is | | advertising | summer homes at the Country clu { overmantel in each dining room that | pictures and last fall comminsioned | ® | him to go to New England to paint | tion Smaller sketches sul can be had for $10. Mra, Horton Forea, Mra, Stanley Griffiths, Mra. Max Kuner and Reg: inald Parsons have purchased pic- tures at this exhibition. Mr. Parson bought the large one of “Outpost Trees, Tatoosh Mountains” that the plano, It is ono of Gustin's best nd most brilliant pieces of work, nd will be hung at the University club in the Ubrary. ‘There is @ story that in earty days Mr. Gustin scorned to do our moun-| tains and spent all his talent upon painting Puget Sound. His earliest works certainly were of ships and water; an example is the one given by Mra. A. M. H. Ellis to the Wom- ture. that James J, Hill came Weet and tried to get Mr. Gustin to paint some scenes along the railroad route at ‘Glacier park, Mount Rainier, etc. of mountains, Mr, Gustin is said to have indignantly declined such an commission, and next summer started off to Mount Rainier himself to paint the snow scenes that have since proved amoug his most admired works. mea! Both Mra, William MePwan and! > Mra, Alexander Mclowan have inter-| #t eating work of Mr, Gustin's in their | ple annually a an Be 004, [organic tron | Nuxated tron | blood and Ik Jana hanated nine hae N. on Bainbridge island. He painted an! je: “makes” the rooms, many say, and also did a strip of ships above fireplace in one house and a run aboard his yacht eth and enere: drugaistea Her gallera Thin may be his youth But it is interest- and Shaw.,and I had no reason to! right for the average home wall and| ing to pote that the one canvas on suppose that he wouldn't be glad | equally delightful to own, can be had| exhibition that touches humanity in the one men most admire view of Mount Rainier across Queen Anne oxer the rooftops of the city. Some people say it reminds them of | the foreground in Ambrose Patter | ine phasis for successful medical treat | son's “Fleet” that attracted #0 much attention last winter. “Home Port of the Windjammers,” and the spirit of spring around a picture of the Libby cannery Meet in| ey, atiate? Lake Union, is another popular ple-| ay @ shoe button. Several etchings, water colors and pencil drawings are hw: One of the mont jewellike is “Nootka which enters the eye, and also in ndians,” in watercolor, Ute. is another done on thin Gustin’s paintings was sold at the in Washington D. C. and another to a gentleman | from Liltnols, who passed thru Seat called at Mr, Guatin's Fine Arts, Paul Guatin's exhibition, | studio, where guests are alwaye wol reeognize “LAlies now, and revived from Roman times, that bids fair to come West and put the poverty-stricken idea that caleimine and wallpaper are sufficient for our homes of best | All the pictures, euch as “Jervis Inlet, “North of Nootka Sound” and peranra Village.” were de when Mr. Guatin was the guest of Pratt during several summers Thene are typical scones of the Went, usually unap- Proachabie, that suit Gustin's palette And the subjects are all our own. | best, according to critics who enjoy woods, our! the sparkle and depth of his water to see “Jane| water, our curious atmosphere are 8nd the unusual manner in which he succeeds in making our difficult firs look altve, ‘ A oritictam often gtven ts that Mr, Where one of the| Gustin'’s work ts lke himself—very lady” and turns to the task of rear-| large pictures of mountains and aloof and difficult te get in human | twisted trees will be sold for a WEAK OMEN ever to become estrone and well aga Uniere they bave plenty “of rich, red blood ef the kind that | Nusated tron—helps make. | like the fron in you the fron in mptn pot injure the teeth nor upset the stom ach: Ht [san entirely different thing from | ordinary metallic iron. rith, red blood, re It quickly help Pee: Oo and It ina study in green: too. 4 For wale by of substitutes. The amped on every tab- Always insist on having the genuine. HNUXATED IRON Questions of health, sanitation, nygtone will he anewered if semi to &. Pab INDICATIONS OF SICKNESS | Karly symptoms of sickness are {ten slight; hence they easily pase | noticed. Yet @ slight trouble, | sarily checked in ite early etages,| may, if neglected, grow into a seri,| ous oF even fatal disorder, just as a burning mateh, whieh anyone could | *xtinguish instantly, may kindle @ fire beyond the power of an entire city to control It is important, then, to notice even slight symptoms of sickness (iret, In order to determine the na ture of the trouble, and, second, tr order to institute treatment as early 18 poentble. Tt is, however, hardly leng important to observe rymptoms urately during the entire course of an ines. A patient's progress can be determined only by careful | comparison between the present and past conditions In cane uf suspected fllnens, the eafest plan in to send for a phy wician Diagnowis, or the proceas of de termining the nature of iliness from the symptoms observed, is often ex ceedingly difficult; it must take into consideration not one symptom only but the presence or absence of a number of symptoms, Untrained persons who attempt to make diagnosis are frequently led astray by the fact that actual causes Of trouble may be situated far from |the place where symptoms are felt caused by disordered digestion, has nothing to do with the heart. An early symptom of tuberculost= of the hip joint t* pain under the knoe, —_— Bycosie Vulgarte Q WIN you kindly tell me thru the column all you know about the ually applied to @ group of definite disorders affecting for the most past the region of the male beard. The laity speaks of this conditjon as “barber's itch.” There are at least | two common kinds of barber's ite In one the trouble is caused by pr | forming bacteria, In the other, it is really ring worm and ix caused by a microscopia plant, | ‘The disease in elther form tw eur. | able, but at times prolonged treat Ment may be required, and requires perneverance on the part of both the) |physician and patient to attain the | |desired end. In the latter form of | | syoorts, the moet effective treatment |is radiotherapy, that t#, X-rays. ‘The direase is often mixtaken for fyphilis, chiefly becanse of the un- sightliness it produces, GOITER Q—tn you tell me what to do} for any one who has had an opera-/ tion for goiter and had it removed and is in a very nervous «tate? | A. Disorders of the thyroid gland | Jand “goiter” are entirely too serious | to be treated without the best ob-| tainable medical advice. As a rule, ment is absolute rest, tho often this, must be supplemented by medication. eee ‘What makes the pupfl in the Sometimes it is og large | | A. The pupil dilates and contracts | in response to the amount of light | accordance with the distance from | the eye of the object on which the gaze is directed. In bright light the pupil contracts, and it opens! widely in the dark. Unless you are troubled with poor vision, or have some other eye trouble, you need not worry about the change in the size! jof the pupil. “GRIZZLY BEAR” CAPE PARIS, % wear” cape has made in Paris. ‘The ningle bearskin of the sort hitherto for rugs. The front s were crommed over the breast f the wearer and fixed with a gold Nov, The “griely ite appearance cape consists of a solely Prominent Western Man Praises Tanlac G. W. Logan, Peabody, Kansas “Tanlae has completely restored my health and I feel finer than in years,” was the straightforward statement made recently by Mr. rge W. Logan, of Peabody, Kan sas, one of the most prominent stock dealers in the Middie West “It has not only made a new man of me but I have actually gained thirty-five pounds in weight and feel as well an I ever did in my lifa I am telling all of my friends about Tanlac but they can see for them- selves what it has done in my case. “When I began taking Tanlac I was in an awfully run-down condi- tion, I was away off in weight, felt weak and nervous all of the time and couldn't take any interest in my work Or anything ele. ,My main trouble was indigestion, Nothing PAY FOR IN SMALL week, curlers for we have brought the REACH For appointment ning pattern of black roses on the| The most fi window shades in the other, Frank Pratt of Whidby teland tor th, tn the several views of old famy homes.| goatee Several of these are at this extibi “Glory of the CRESCENT (Made in Washington) To Make Good Coffee — Keep Coffee-making utensils clean. It pays to be very particular. Crescent Manufacturing Co. money, the beat fo mouth, your r ¢ your guar- ° DR. EDWIN J BROWN Lenat Offles= CREAM COFFEE It’s Mighty Fine! Seattle, Washington ! sack of tests in eclls The name @QQ7MIPRC on a flour has a like mean- ing to the “Sterling” mark on silverware. The same quality throughout. Your new sack of OGQTHIFIC Flour will prove equal to the last one. Rigid milling assure it. Your grocer knows this and it in 10, 243 and 49% eZ ASIST clasp. The hind lege were castened | loonely Just below the knee, showing the slockinglees leg of the wearer, The combination of bare skin and bare neck with the furs imaginable made even the soctal réf- eree, Andre de Fouquieres, gamp, while rival drewmakers claim that the fur was ridiculous and impract- cal on account of ite weight heaviest seemed to agree with me. At mes I would have dizzy spells and at other times my back would ache 9 bad that I could hardly get up aad down in my chair, This is just condition I was in when I 4 to take this medicine. It took ¥ six bottles to make a well man ef me. I now have a fine appetite, ew erything tastes good and my dige> tion is perfect. * “My wife was alse troubled with indigestion at times and it her the same way. You may my statement wherever you like if anyone doubts it, Just tell them HAVE US WAVE IT NOW and At your own convenience Our credit plan fs the very best guarantee in the world tag you will be satisfied with the results obtained. A wave will save you at least one-half hour every day ef the Every one can now discard the eld curling fron an@ patent PERMANENT WAVE WITHIN THE LADIES’ IMPROVEMENT SHOP Sterling Quality IT LATER PAYMENTS OF ALL call Main 6507

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