The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 1, 1920, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘Other New Goldwyn Releases? How many of us are doing that every day — SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1920. PAGE 7 and matr NS Year’s Building in Seattle Smashed Previous Records | |} Seattle smashed all previous | I] ulldinig records during 1919 | This was the announcement Muilding Superintendent James ' total COPYRIGNT BY KATHLEEN NORRIS s for the sthorized , SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS apie agree ey Rachael Breckenridge—y beautiful and er=te married to a man who cares for his wine and his IT-year ae dene Shenae, ‘ : | 9 OM daughter by a former wif dese ’ A Racha 4 » A$ the cat ae In 1917 the total was $4 q | Pappiness Rrockenridge ( ie ~~ met Hilly. A . ‘ in 1916, # 4,469; in 101 mildly tra A a ob b A r ' L 470,46 ncoording to the record | ter In New . a . “ ¥ , ted n i 3 Alice Valentine's calm Parle she met we first w » Ned * V ME becentn wo fret wits bad erie’ | ’ 1 '* | acceptance of the situation bewilder | Sere . s # ng and discouraging | THE arrival oc vt ‘ y ‘ thet ut dear, I don’t eat a meal in BIE Rechaes tna ne ie tiad' te man Somorigh nant oon dese ; Des rt, the entire. timel" Alles ead . and Rachael t - h t * of " ‘ ° . "7 ® Breck Hut I am such a broken reed! talking Rachael amiled ruefully “I have no Giscuss the 6 i eta than pers a be a te tee ° | ‘The older woman laughed ~ 4 — : | “I know, my dear—haven't I been t ) follows t y se « nte of B thru it all?) Just don't worry, and i deorwrard podBh wn i ght to Rachael could do neither, She i 1 ea % wanted Warren every minute, and Kenda t . and gives her 0 @ she wanted nobody else. Her favor ° ; , 1 ge worms ne 3 ite r# were when she lay on the Tach : ' ‘ playing with hin| Il - ae we 2 read to her or ‘ es aa : talked to her, She wanted to hear H 4 a n . * » “ . r r r ain, that b loved t they cail it And finally .@ baby bey arr fdea lined invitations without even con ‘ teaving the > go to London with her h a sulting him, “because we're happler| (Continued From Yesterday) —, but you and t think’ Tie sentoon, | PY OOF ows fire. then anganees i be When the winter season wan well| nia joe ain we |me about your stupid operations!”'| Begun, and Jimmy delicious in inal cat vs Aiagatan ae tytn freed like anything ws at makes You| sho would smile at him, “talk about Bis diminutive furs, Doctor Gregory | ponte .? © pihagageatiapeagy geom my devoted adorer on MT his wife bad-a. serious talk, late| P*°P* © Janswered — wiw and smiling | she went over and over the details on a snowy afternoon, and R: el If she had expected him to endorse | wi Heally she and 1 fh] of her old life with a certain morbid Siranlieed then that her husband had| “tis radical hope she was disappoint. going to get some new frocks and] satisfaction in his codstant reassur-| heen carrying 4 slight sense of griev ed, for Warren respor ak giv serves dinner and win YOu! ance Her marriage had not been| Ele carring 9 sti ern of et |S hnd we ould bere och thrall over aaa [in more of Greeters seks ae s Scheduled tor He had come in at 6 o'clock, and| ‘© death in two months | approved r jot I # clopement; she had done anging his i Rachael was r eerfu going on with his er share for them both, more than half an hour la when R king Tite r Rachael watched him/her share came info his dressing-room. Her was gallant » ly for a moment e| Summer came, and she and the} Phair had been dressed, and under her! lutions. w © went on to b own dre aby were comfortably established at} white sik wrapper her gold slippers| her clothes, she room |Home D Warren came when Bnd stockings were visible, b ahe ) study le afterward she remembered | be co haps twice a month, and Beemed disinclined to finish her) parties, she we that this conve rked a ¢ usually without warning, If he/fl toilette. opefa at least « nge was ne mined her the weekends, she 9 “Awtul bore!’ she said, smiling, as I gave up t a ! ning " 4 to have him miss one, « she sat down to watch him you w " 5 80 it red her every nd sent ber} ‘ “What—the Hoyts? Oh, I don't on was #y aA ar « and fruit * and mage think so!" he answered in surprise. takable r 1 “ory had told b and | tines ove wee and came at & e “They all bore me to death,”| grievar have x been clas 1 agreed, that the com r intervals, A and Georg Rachael said idly. “I'd rather have| in his mind It's baby—baby of her child would draw her hu: tine and the hildren, her e & chop here with you, and then trot| baby! 1 don't say much nd and wolf m lonely t her baby, and the ocean she Th S ] Cl f Be dees here oh te cacestvent| "inderd you don't?” Rachael con-| eether: but, as Rachael expressed it|loved so well must fill this summer e Seml-annua earance O Why don’t they leave us alone’ ceded gratefull , it was If she alone moved | for Rachael e ‘ “My dear girl, that isn’t life.” But I think you overdo {t, my ' pa eel re eee ale . Odd S t d P Warren Gregory, sald tirmly. His! dear” husband kind! to depend upon | The beautiful Mra. Gregory made ultes an 1eces, and O fone chilled her a little, and Clarence would ® ashe ion r first ppearance mn A freoked up in quick penitence nave fo be 1 r the th of he nd» n : ona her by adding diss D had not mov He marriago t rker Hoyt. Thel fl ’ 5 2 must say I don't ike your « c ro he had always been, an cag ontins ent of event +4 M4 my dear girl. These people all) Her love for him made this moment experiences, but untouched and | their friends for two or three year 6 (ur good friends; I personally can|one of absolutely agony, and it wa*/ unaltered himaelf, For her pain, for| it took place in early December, . RO fault with them. You may/with the humility of great love that py responsibility, for her physical|the most fashionable, of all the “ that you would rather spend all/ she met him more than halfway limitations, he had the most intense | churches, with a reception and sup your time hanging over Jim's} “You're right, of course s. 2nd| tendern@xs and pity, but the fact re | per to follow at the most fashionable ’ stppose all young mothers| it must have been pid for you!" | mained that he might sleep thru the Of a@l! the hotels, Leila naturally NOTI CE . ‘and to a certain extent all moth-| Stupid! It seemed even In this mo-| nights, enjoy his meals, and pla and excited; she had (fs ought to—but don't, for heav-/ ment treason, it seemed desecration,| with his baby, when the mood de ant fight for her lover : lms cake, let everything else slip|to use this word of their quiet won-| creed, untroubled by personal hand ars, and she had won, but Th 7, k: ill be 2, d f di li f F . @ut of your lite: derful summer together? a : returning tide of comfort ree WeeKS W1 require or delivery oO urni- “I know, I know! Rachael said Weill.” Re aid, moillified, “don Rachael, like all women, thought 2 had not begun in ¢ : NN ck amere Maee ual at cack Sage toe moan. ve, buars ot, hoes thinay cortooeny dotnet Y Ne ‘nen sian ture bought at this sale. Delivery must be accepted _ ~ Gisapproval almost (wnendurable./ It's bnly that I love my wife, and w of her child's lite , he was a cool-blooded, fish " ‘ 4 ’ ’ - es Warren did not often complain; he | prod of her, and I don't want to cut when Jimmy was little man; there had been other h h FREDERICK & NELSON Ss had never spoken to her in this way | out everything else but Jim's shoes utter his first dolict her father's heavy within this time, at con- | Before. Her face was scarlet, and| and Mary's day off’ He came ¢ stammering menosyllables, it was her mother’s discon ; | she kmew that she wanted to cry.|and kisved her, and Rachael with great gravity’ that she realized ingering engagement, venience. 3 _ “I know, dear,” she added more com: | to him. that motherhood waa approach! a persis state. of un _ Posedly; “I am afraid I do think too} “Greg, as if I could be angry with | her ain, that at Thankagiving she} one. } Much about Jim; I am afraid” —and) you for being jealous of your son would have a second child. She was t, the old aunt was at Inst "| * WRachect emiled a little pitifully—| “Trust a woman to put that con-| wretchedly languid and ill during the | 4 Parker had dutifully gone to (FOURTH FLOOR) if “that I would never went anyone: struction on it,” he said entire spring, and found her mother ward the end, and had re é _ — again, duly, bringing the i. escorting Miss Clay. a, ma was dbened, i FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET i a uusly unbecom m jeomaids were duly hatted and frocked in green and silver, and ‘ xhe wan drenned, too, realizing t sil ” _ betaine ai hs |her new praeta were a trifle sm - — — _ a and her lace veil too heavy ifeation of domestic dignity and de | thing dazed and inap; propriate to her} “Magsie Clay!” Rachael exclaimed, )eaid. “Tell me about yourself, we. i And the dingusting caterer bad! corum |friends as they filed by; but now | the look uncertainty on her face|hear you're having a baby every 10 ome — . ome ia og say t _ At the hotel, after the wedding, she various groups, scattered about the — wt . ne of » ure and wel-| minutes!’ a whereby the 60 tO tee center of an admiring group,|reom, began to interest thems come ell, you dear child, you!| “Not quite!’ Rachael said, Samuel Goldwyn ee Se eee atin - gy . — necious of her husband's ap-|! the food, Elderly persons, after —< ote you : I wie y ing, but a little discomposed Fey insolen an had eo) ‘oving eyes, full of her old brilliant vaguely ut for seats, dix | here, and yet I couldn't pi "s 00) te naw ON Presents nd the bo i ak Seat patna Al the old. frie ona ‘rallied Of thelr coffes and salad ‘htt You've changed—you're thin len yn > vere ie fon prove 6 you n hundred dreadful 8+! avout her—they had not seen much ding and soon there was a gen-| “Oh, much thinner, but then I was | if you'll come to see me!” we e eric in re all addressed, the back lo¢ her wince her marriage—and { und breaking palate an absolute butterball!” Miss Clay (Continued Tomorrow) BGOn ¢ owns W'S) hor more magnetic than eve The zw a thing of the i - % ’ gifts were arranged In tWOlniotted out by more recent ents nel, thinkir the impending ig rooms at the hotel, duly ticketed.) now: there was the Chase divorce to| dinner hour of lit erald Fairfax and the three hundred and seventy |iscuns; the Villalonga motor car ac-| Gregory, began to watch the swirl Bis one dreadful personal notes of) ident; Elinor Vanderwall had aston-|ing groups for Warren. They could nks had been somehow scribbl shed everybody a few weeks b lip away now, surely; several per. BIG cusatieal off and dispatched. Leila was abso-|)y her sudden marriage to millions| sons had alr gone. Her heart ate ox nd felt a8 P&lelin the person of old Peter Pomeroy;| w r r nursery, where n wa F and pasty she looked Ie} now people were beginning to say toddling back and forth tirelessly w wh tar . resome ANd) that Jeanette Vanderwall might soon | the firelight, and where, betwee nary or rag riers igpet | ee algo, «ge Drange Malaria sinedaeert LAST TIMES FRIDAY a be or nd dull, withleptuily decorated reception room | clo © new baby er ly saying the same thing tO/hummed with gay gossip, with the That's a pretty girl,” she found and Parker trying to be funny) tinkling laughter of women and the| herself saying involuntarily as her | nd simply making himeelf ridiew-| qeeper tones of men absent eyes were suddenly arrested u t barbarity of the modern) Caterer's men began to work their by the face and figure of one of the enned itself Yr way thru t crush, bearing indis-| gu 1 wonder who that 1s , ride a laughed and] criminately traya of bouillon, xand brown eyes she was watehing trained and mechanical) wiches, salads and fees, The bride, met hers at the same second, and i whatever they sald tO with her surrounding bridesmaids, | smi a lit rt heir owner ' gue Was still standing at the far 1 of came toward } e ward anim n decid-|the room mechanically shaking Hello, Racha the girl said “ «that or Leila had tb hand and amilingly saying some How are you after all these years? t fu era am | Z I aa I | I | ult and her new sables, won every What would you have done in body's eyes as he came down tt a A . church aisle with her husband best Aher place? Or in his? Qe vier son wan not auite ‘As the second wife of Daniel Cabot, Madam, ff) ™month old, and if she had not re T you would probably have done what the lovely ered her usual wholesome bloom, ane peace Pauline Frederick did — sacri- was a refined, almost a spir Gm [ oree | ficed yourself to spare your husband — and his ial, eloment in her beauty now es tL) dead wife! hat more than m up for the = As the husband, you, Sir, would probably have 1 mee: one Sans ae suspected your wife, as Cabot did, and con- inch of violets at her H nd tinued to enshrine the memory of your first r the sweeping brim of her hat wife in a halo of flowers. beautiful ¢ ’ deepl EE 1s the flower eomed full Lal ‘Tom Moore in "The Gey Lord Ques” ae mrieie ee rene aoe eee ee che om ‘Will Rogers tn “Jubile”’ Madge Kennedy la “Serictty CenSden- ‘That's the big moral in “Bonds of Lave,” er erent in the superb emotionalism of line Frederick and picturized with the Rez Beach's “The Sliver Horde” realiam of Goldwyn! oo stinging Watch for This Goldwyn Picture at Your Favorite Theatre GOLDWYN Bs MOTION PICTVRES a fa new wifel nly charm and it was quite in key with © that old Mrs ory and oung Charles should be constantly 66 in her neighborhood, Her relatives with her, her babies safe at home, ing Mrs, Gregory was the person. Let's go buy Botdt’s French pas try. Uptewn, M14 Third ave.; down town, 913 Second at Legally Married?” = Embroidery n¢ Braiding | Kemstitching, Picot Edging Buttons Covered Button Holes Made Knife and Accordion Plaiting G. J. BAUER & CO. Tailors’ and Dressmakers’ Supplies | 1817-1819 Fourth Ave. Seattle COME EARLY AND ENJOY THE EXCITEMENT Cc nian C ‘OL

Other pages from this issue: