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Pure Silk 12 M. M. Pongee length sleeves—Gingham trimmed collars and cuffs and FOR US— BLOUSES Waists and Overblouses — Short, long, three-quarter pleated and high-low convertible collars. All sizes— 34 to 46. REDUCED TO Including every Sweater in the Shop — Tuxedos, Slip-ons with the Peter Pan collars and cuffs, Paisley trimmed—IN ALL SIZES—36 to 46. Every Color of the Season. You will find such values here TOMORROW as were never offered before. arket Blouse Shop 107 PIKE STREET THE SEATTLE STAR Cynthia Grey: Then Further Cheapen Herself by Bringing Suit Against Him. Dear Miss Grey: I received attentions from a man over! &@ year, who was married, He claimed he was quitting his) wife and would get a divorce and marry me. I believed him} and lost a man who would have made me a good husband| by letting the other man come to see me, Now his wife has found out about us and will not divorce) him, Can I bring suit against this man and compel him to} do as he has promised? Or shall I drop him? He still wishes to continue our relations and claims he loves me Please ad-) vise me, Miss Grey? A READER. . How can there be any doubt in your mind as to what you should do? You ought to thank the wife for refusing to divorce such a man; and congratulate yourself that you were} saved from a fate similar or worse than is hers. | I feel sorry for you, because after this unhappy experience | you haven't as yet learned your lesson—you are still barter-| tng with Old Man Fate to sell your birthright for a mesa of | pottage. The man “claims” to love you—how absurd! He) carea not a whit about anyone but his own selfish self, and if | you have any womanhood, any sense of refinement, any prin- ciple, you will drop him like a hot cake. There are plenty | of good men in the world who haven't messed up their lives in any such fashion—go out and cultivate one of them. | _ You COULD bring suit against him, of course. That's a! simple matter these days—all it takes is a fooligh woman and @ shyster lawyer to fix up most any kind of an old 'guit, but you would be the loser. You would so cheapen yourself thru| the unfortunate publicity in connection with euch a thing that no worth-while man would wish to have you for a wife. The promise of such a man is not worth the energy it takes to repeat it, and any woman who deliberately helps to tear | down the conventions that were made for her protection is} courting her own destruction, Mins Grey will recetve callers tn her office Monday, Wednesday end Friday from 1 to 2 p. m., And on Tuesday and Thursday from Ji a. m. to 12 m. each week. Please do not come at other times Aa it neriously interferes with her writing. What was Sergeant York's record in the world war? Corp. Alvin C. York of Co. C, 888th infantry, received citations for con-| «plouous bravery above and beyond the line of duty. Me single-handed | captured four officers and 128 men of the German army; also several guns j eee jlittle nete, I'm sure many of the} working girls ax well as myself will be grateful to you You know, Miss Grey, many of the Many things are to be taken tn ‘orking girls are only given « half consideration, such as mationality, Sour for lunch (myself included), | climate and the individual, The beard | Which isn't much time, you'll agree. | first appears soon after aT alte > could get perched up at the which in the temperate sone ts es-|!ench counter as soon an we're let tablished between the ages of 14| Xt It perhaps would be time enough and 16 jbut when we rush down to the near ext lunch counter {t's to stand and | CORRECTION wait five and 16 minutes, and some: | In Monday's won it was times longer, for @ seat—vwaiting for stated that there te no minimum women with thelr children to finteh wage law tn this te for men. | first. These women don’t realize that! There is & minimum wage for jthe working girls are in a hurry be. | minor boys of $9 per week, but no || cause if they did they'd be more con. such Iw for men sidernte; most of them would, any e_—— YY What t# the average age when boys begin to shave? | This could hardly de stated, | way WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1922. MecDougall-/outhwie Second Avenue at Pike “The Store of Eternal Newness” r Shopping Hours 9:00 to 5:30 Main 6720 REDUCED PRICES Jersey Suits Very well made, beautifully. and splendid quality Jersey. In brown, navy, heather These sults fit Sizes 16 to 40.... ‘ $9.75 Flannel Jackets Bright sports shades, Attractive with white skirts for summer pastimes, fashionea with revern long Tuxedo Bizes 16 to 44 $6.95 Jersey and Velour Jackets Both bright able for street w Sines 16 to 44 colors and cohnervative navy brown and biack—sult New Sport Skirts Velour checks, plain gnd plaid eponges, tweeds, flannels, imported shaw! materials, baske models, Reduced to. | tart RY DR, K HL BISHOF | OU often read of) someone being | “knocked out” or killed by the fumes of an au tomeobiles ex aust in a closed garage. Such pomontng in called carbon monoxide poison- ing This sort of poisoning is one of the most frequent in industrial aceldents, Nor ts tt always caused | When do altheas bloom? | There are @ number of vartetios of altheas, some diooming in summer, |some im fall The earliest Boom in June or July. eee When and where 4i4 Jack Johnson win the heavyweight champtonship from Tommy Burns? December 26, 1908, at Sydney, New |South Wales, eee The usual tunch hour ta be tween 12 and 1 and that’s just the time you always find a family gath ering at the counters, Mise Grey, I'm eure If some of these women see this they'll find it very easy to take their lunch before the rush hour or immediately after, and {t won't in- convenience them aa much as It does the working girts. Thanking you for your kindness, WORKING GIR. by the exhaust fumes of automobiles. Leok out for the bullding having a leaky furnace or chimney or a gas stove without flue connection, such an tenement, tailor shop, or boarding hour. ‘This warning will bear repeating: Never run your automobile engine in your garage with the door shut. ‘Too many men have been found dead beside @ running motor In a closed garage to make that sort of thing vale. t weaves; light and dark colors; smart + $7.95 —MacDougall- Southwick, Second Floor 2. Remove patient from atmos-| 6 phere containing carbon monoxide. | reat. 3. If breathing is feeble, at once | esas artificial respiration by the| OMAHA prone posture method, \leged to by 4. Keep the victim Mat, quiet and en in a shac warm. | bonds. Afterward give him plenty of Neb.—Fred Brown, al held two Omaha wom- K, held under $63,009 WIL SERVICE examinations ‘tor ¢ ‘wil be held How many box cars are there tn gain in Seattle, July 19 + |the United States? DERS In 1980 there were 1448,768. coe Gorvox AFTER tot auestt| to Frisco Planned|~ AUTO SPEE announced: Law clerk and/ ised that congress takes fa-| Tt tay cost more shortly to sit in ” | yorabie action on a bill providing for | the game of “Speeder, Speeder, Wh | Carbon monoxide gas hae no color, odor or taate, and ro you don't know wenn you are being poisoned. | ‘The bént things to do tn case of | | carton monoxide poisoning are | 1: Administer oxygen as quickly | Is poasibie, preferably from a cytin: | | | : H i GIRLS! LEMONS | BLEACH FRECKLES |She Has Half- Hour Lunch; Counters Crowded AND WHITEN SKIN With Women and Childdren| tcvcerserereenernrermesncenerssreaneene! | Dear Miss Grey: If you have a| Squeese the juice of two lemons little space in your column that isn’t! into « bottle containing three ou taken up will you please print thir |of Orchard White, which any store will supply for a few cents, | shake well, and you have » quarter pint of the best freckle and tan Diench, and complexion whitener Massage this sweetly fragrant lem. | on lotion into the face, neck, arms | and hands each day and see how| freckles and blemishes bleach out fund how clear, soft and roay.white the! skin becomes. —Advertivement. | ‘What ts the diameter of the moon? mali to be carried by private con-| Gets Caught by the Motor Cop?” 2.159 miles. tract an air mail service between Se-| Judge John B, Gordon te consider | attle and San Franctsco probably will | ing giving all second offenders a jail be established soon. sentence and raising bail from §2 te Such is the opinion of Col. Paul | $2 for every mile over the apoed Henderson. second assistant post- | limit. master general, who visited Seattle Tuesday. der of oxyg® thru an inhaler mask. SHOES SHOES SHOES WE WERE THERE WITH CASH IN OUR MITTS —the dealers had to realize —so they practically gave us these shoes 49° 96° —greatest Shoe values in history. Come tomorrow! 69° Sale Opens Tomorrow 9 a. m. DICKSTEIN @ KLATZKER ize. pown7z® (421 FIRST AVENUE», X'S INCLINE PIKE ST. PULLMAN, Wash. — Washington | State college tfie team wing annual | ‘The coney prefers to live at ele) R. O. T. C. intercollegiate rifle com vations above 9,000 feet. ‘petition for Ninth corps area but thoroughly. Sold at all stores 25c, or direct by Joyner Co., Spokane.—-Advertisement. Star readers who wish for tn |] formation on the care of table nen and of silver will receive same by writing to The Seattle Star Washington bureau, 1322 New York ave, Washington, D. two cents in SHOPMEN WANTED FOR RAILROAD SERVICE AND AT WAGES AS FOLLOWS Machinists ..... ......+...+.+...70 cents per hour Boilermakers .......... .......71 cents per hour Blacksmiths ...... ............70 cents per hour 70 cents per hour The Tests of Good Coffee no ov 4 Slay frengit ps appr Coffee goes ers by its richness of flavor. White Canvas Leather Sole Boys’ and Girls’ Button and Lace Shoes Sandals for Little Tots 70 cents per hour ....63 cents per hour ....63 cents per hour ....63 cents per hour ..+..-47 cents per hour this line ... Freight car repairers . Car inspectors Painters, freight cars Helpers, all crafts ........ Children’s One-Strap Patent Slippers Hundreds of Ladies’ Shoes at These men are wanted to take the place of men who are ee | against the decision of the United States Railroad Labor Board, and their status, and the FULL PROTECTION GUARANTEED, are ex- plained by Mr. Ben W. Hooper, Chairman, in his statement of July 1: “In the past a man who took up the work of another man who was on strike against wages and working conditions was termed @ ‘scab’ or a ‘strikebreaker’——terms to which much opproblum was attached. In the present situation created by the strike of shop. craft workers, men who assume the work of the strikers cannot justly be reproached with such epithets. “This is not a customary strike in which the employer tries to tmpone upon the em- ploye unjust wages and unreasonable working rules. In this case the conflict is not be tween the employer and the oppressed employes. The people of this country, through an ect of congress, signed ty President Wilson, established a tribunal to decide such dixputes over wages and working conditions, which are submitted to it in a proper manner. It ts the decision of this tribunal against which the shop crafts are striking. “Regardless of any question of the right of the men to strike, the men who take the etrikers’ places are metely accepting the wages and working conditions preseribed by a government tribunal and are performing @ public service. They are not accepting the and working conditions which an employer is trying to impose. FOR THIS REA. SON PUBLIC SENTIMENT AND FULL, GOVERNMENT POWER WILL PROTECT THE Pare WHO REMAIN IN THEIR POSITIONS AND THE NEW MEN WHO MAY COME IN: Apply W. H. OLIN ‘Washi Station SEATTLE, WASH. “ALWAYS” GooD Herman's Munson Army Last Shoes Lots of Men's, Women's and Children’s Shoes at Girls’ and Boys’ Sandals Roasted, Packed and Guar anteed by Schwabacher Bros, & Co., Beattie, Wash- ington OR W. L. MILLER 436 Central Bldg.