The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 15, 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)

MISS ANNEITA CROMAN (One of the “Miner Girl" Demonstrators) Visit the “Miner Girl’ » Demonstration of Cereal Foods at the {§ Star Grocery 28rd and Jackson St. ) week. 5 Delicious samples will be served you of Pearls of Wheat Pudding _ Golden-brown “flapjacks” Wheat Flake Mush Cream Flaked Oats ? —for a dainty breakfast. Albers Pearls of Wheat ts Made from the Rich Kernels of the grain. nui It is a healthy, food, good yung and old. It takes 4 moment to prepare a fast of Albers Pearls of tritious cereal Wheat make man 1 as pud if finer attle, for recipes. you can irl,” Build iday and Saturday of this WB Ask: for a “flapjack” turner. Magsie Clay By Kathleen Vorris COPY RIGNT THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1920. BY KATHLEEN NORRIS 3 OF PRECEDING CH APTE “Ww € tired © and is | Poor Once; Found Rich After Death WATCH CASH to himself n one but if | thin sountey. trout Germany. trae |Must Not Take Out Too oaava te ee vis tae tae | Cay ‘The Stars and Stripes Service.) sical ¢| PARIS, France, Jan, 16.——In cor nthe | on 28 Up nection with the opening of the t hirt wa and the closing of Br France traveling f for the Us finding themselves or of Antwerp the Yank# Hreet in embark “ 1, but #ix pac # Wrapped in paper States are 1 it Continued From wee: and Rachael quite herself, gradually | rather have o' is marry groce I tied, He e , ‘ begun ~ w|Decoming doubtful, and returning| «pye alte ci Marry Kroceral | ned the parcels, disclosing nearly |!ne @ frontier which did ‘not exist And of course, 1 may not marry™! nome in despair, Her tearful ac) ue ® father w $8,000 in bills, $40 in gold and «| whe were shipping from jsaid Magato count took George down to the coun. | "OM Well, of course!" he conceded.| bank book on a Portland inatitutl French ports, This raises the ques ‘ — ve fl agp ere oes sa try house a week later \ genius than] with $289 credited to the de Hon customs examination and ae od ow me CHUM aS Now x € \c perc t ils stock in trade” wa duty personal baggage Rachael met them, they dined 1 ued Alice merchan apartment, all in & pretty disorder |, shears hinys ts sage Alice! he. protested, | Valued at $3,000, making a total of| To officers and men in wntform now, with Magute’s various posses | (0. if Nildeon, taterentad in| Teally distressed, “don't ever let any-| $10,000 worth of asnet the Belgian customs officialx are sions scattered about. There were) |)" sap et padeen, an i : ‘O) one hear you say that! Why, that ory coufteous and — considerate pietu of on the mantel.) s¢ quoted ee a gga 88) only shows that you don't know what NOT PARTICULAR passing them with little or no ex heavily aut and flowers ber ore ates ‘entures 1. “0 ‘ | natio Uruat carelessly inte vases "T vera) With words. She walked to her gate) \irek 1 u rd. n to] Farmer—-#o experiénced | amination wae & great. sheaf of Killarnese °° Wave them good-bye on Monday have an absolu for bones,| milker, hey side uv a} Watch Your Pocketbook , ‘ bp morning, and told Alice that she was| "ell take & chance when not one ef! cow do you s you milk " roses; the envelope that had held a ; cota tc bie ti the rent will io, you mark my| her? At the French frontier town of ¢ days until the big fam g t card still dangled from their stems wn Hut George ana} Word®, Alice, Greg haw It Magsie| Applicant for Job—Oh, T ain't a bit Frelenes, however, it in prohibited Tee Waele Save Given 8 Bt Seat Sony hearted ae they |CWY Make a fool of him; he's been] partickler if the cow ain't!"—Buffalo |‘? take out of France more thar to w whose card had been torn overtired and nervous we've al Express ] nch currency or! }from it, and whose name was ringing ? that—but he's as ocent of any] . | on the Belgian vie pm | innocent just now in Magste’s brain. She even hat in it ked Alice, anxious! actual ha n this thing as ourlthis, you kpow, George,” Warren ontier, the Yanks a } rm in this thing 1 | cared enough to tentatively interro.| 8 Upon her husband's kind, home | Gore nald, ending it, aftey watching the] compelled to go to the baggage car mate Anna, Magsie’s faithful Swed-|!¥ face ke & person recov} innocent!’ sniffed Alice, “He'll er man hopefully for further sug-jat the head of the train and have ish woman j ering from a blow. She's not sick k Rachael's heart with his in-] #estion their baggage cleared. Fatlure to | “Well, perhape we shail have a| Ut. George, she isn't w | nee, and then he'll marry Magsic] “Hasn't, huh? George anked|/do so results in baggage going to cha rity said} “No, she's not well.” George |< Th see!” ad thoughtfully, hopeful the customs house in Brussels, hange here, Anni Billy ia H ba brightly but cautiously, when she | “steed soberly Rad glitter in her He'll to me to get him out Yo, she hasn't! Warren reiter-| w it ie held until claimed, As |was in the hall. She wondered| yes, and I don’t like tt for! of it within the month—you'll see!" | #ted, gaining confidence, “I've been t of the men tn uniform do not| whether the woman would let her) fiery Rachael! Well, » vn | George retorted. a fool, I admit that, but Rachael hax w this they usually land in Ant-| slip a bill into her hand. here in a week or two He'll keep out of your way!'| Cause to go off at halfcock, this only to discover they have to/]) Maybe,” sald Anna impassively “Last week,” Alice sald not for the| Al predicted confidently 1 know | ¥4 jreturn to Brussels for thelr bag “How shall you lite keeping house| first time, “she only spoke of He has to be perfect or What d'you mean by gauge and wife? Billy pursued.| the trouble, you know—onc hing asked flatly, “Wh te Que Tian Treks y . y o that bayfore,” remarked| were just going out to dinner, and] But it was ten days later n—you've been a fool * | Anna, responsive, to this kindly inter-|#he turned to me, and sald: ‘I didn't] that Warren ¢ dup the I've been a fool about Magsie| At present there ix but one thru | ; / | Clay." W tach-{ train from Paris to Antwerp, Thie| est; “aye ban hahr savan yahre,/like my bargain eight years ago,| steps of the Val iwe at about | Clay ar admitted Rach: | train m Par ntwerp | now, en des country.” | Alice, and I tore my contract to clock on a alent, hazy morning. |®¢! learned about it, that's My|leaves here at 1049 a, m. On all | “and do you like Miss Clay's! pieces! Now IN pay for it had not yet left the house| Lord! there never was an instant in/other trains the passengers must! jyoung man?” Billy said boldly. But} “Andou eald |tor the day. The drawing-room fur.|™y life when I took it seriously, 1] tr ater themacives across Brusvels lat this shift of topic the light faded I said, ‘Oh, nonsense, Rachael | niture was swathed nen covers, | sive you my word, George et thelr baggage to the other) ltrom Anna’s infantile blue eyes, and/ Don’t be morbid! There's no paralle a collection of gc ne, fishing Well je Rachael takes it serious: station by means of porters Ja wary look replaced ft between the cases canoe pad and tennis F and Magule takes it seriously, you Sf tations are under way to | “She got more as one feller,” she Hm!" The doctor was silent for rowded the hallway. The ye may find yourself beginning to take| have the matter of customs inspec:| ' rked discouragingly. Billy, out. 4 long time 1 on't know what/V ntines we departing it seriously, Geor jd with a} tions at the border end the b andling | departed, feeling rather con-|Greg’a doing,” he added after| country tom w, and their excited |4ull man's simple evasion of con-jof baggage across Brussets elimin-| voloes echoed from above stairs ining elemente ated so far as ponsible for members | street. Joe was at home; she had}! left him in bed when she left the) ¢ |house at 10 o'clock, and little Breck | bwith the and had begged his m jhim downtown. Billy was r lsorry for the little boy, but she did not know what to do about it; she wondered what other women’ did with | little lonely boys of six. If #he} wen home, it woufl not materially better the situation; the cook was cross today anyway, and woul crosser if Joe shouted f his fast in his usual un lored boy in the elevator, ; ther to take as they had been, but still fin bie bonds. She could pay the cook, pay the dressmaker, take Breck home a game, look at hats, spend the day in exactly the manner that pleased her best. She had promised Joe that they would discuss the sale of the next one ther when they had sold the last 85nd, a month ago. and avoid it if possible. But what) difference did one make?—a paltry | fifty dollars a year! Perhaps it would be possible not to tell Joe——| Billy looked in her puree. She) had a dollar bill and fifty cents,/ more than enough to take her to the Bhe sig) bank in appropriate style. nalled a taxieab. a eine ae ee Ot ee Magsie did not see Warren the next day, but they had tea and talk on the day following. She t him gayly that he needed cheering. | and presently took him into Tit-| fany’s, where Warren found himself | buying her a coveted emerald. Some-| how during the afternoon he found) himself talking and planning as it! sally loved each other, and ¢ to be married. But it Magsle | a nat they rea wi was an unsati@actory hour was excited and nervous, and was! rather rélieved than otherwise that | her interviews with her admirer | were necessarily short. As a matter te tact, the undisciplined little crea-| ture was overtired and unreagonable. She would have given her whole fu-| ture for a quiet week in bed, with frivolous novela to read, and Anna) to spoil her, no eaptious manager to | no exhausting performances please. n to madden her with a sense of her own and other people's imperfec- and no Warren to worry her his long fac Added to Mags week, W e's trials, in this interview r of y an | dreadful |with the impo | Richie Gardai , Jwome, florid lady, who had inherit large for dd whone |tune from the miner > fortunes sho had gallan | thru some extraordinary adventures in Nome. Mrs. Gardiner idolized her | son; she was not inclined to be gen-| erous to the little flippant actress who had broken his heart. Richie would not go’to the healing desert, | he would not go to any place out of| sound of Misa Clay's voice, out of the light of Miss Clay's eyes. Mrs.| Gardiner had no objection to Mag-| leie’s person, nor to her profession, | the fact being that her own origin had been even more humble than that of Miss Clay, but she wanted! of her boy's love to be the treasur appreciated; lsince the h woman who should win Ri Stout, overdresne 1, deep see the actress, Magsie said that she was sorry—she was so bitterly sorry but, yes, there was someone else Mrs, Gardiner shrugged philosophic ally, wiped her eyes, drew a deep breath. No help for it! Presently she heavily peparted; her solid weight, her tinkling spangles, and her rainbow plumes vanished into} the limousine, and she was whirled) away. | Magsie sighed; these ati eaepge | What could one do? birth # love. | and they came to both erie were romantic. ert sie SIT Silent, abstracted, unsmiling, Fa chael got thru the days, Bhe ate what Mary put before her, slept fair ly well, answered the puzzled boys) the second time they addressed her. She buckled sandals, read fairy tales, brushed the unruly heads, and lat ened to the w avering prayers day after day. Her eyes were strained, | her usually quick, definite motions curiously uncertain; otherwise there was little change. ‘Alice, in spite of her husband's | half protest, went down to Clark's Hills, deciding in the first hour that the worst of the matter was al) over ea 8 mptible as she walked down the| thought had been rather listlessly chatting | bic old Greg out of trouble before.” whole face grew tender as he added he's not like other men! | “I should hope Ae wasn't! said | them. “You know Rachael has left me, | he question is, what ie Magsie| Warren had supposed them doing?" Alice. eady gone. Rachael was alone. In my inion, Rachae he reflected, lone in that ¢ ge submitted ittie country village!) He r told her they had tatked|to the maid, and asked In a gu it tage Alice tered ne for Doct Valentine. A : ave an incredulous #nort o Valentine ‘ell, then, Mageie lied,” he said] in Jrawing-room, and the firmly. jmen ex anged a look Itheir twenty years of af She really isn't the lying typ And there's que that Greg and she did see each other every day, and that he wrote her let ters and gave her presents!” finished rather timidly, for her hu» band’s face was a thundercloud The old car flew along at thirty-five! Warren atte he was on knew George's George he it and Alice | verged on contempt, thinly veiled by} a polite interest in his vis errand. ge.” aald he ce to Jacqueli talk « she was willing | mflee an hour | » had asked for Alloe an © pa tt amn fool” George presently awkward si Billy « she muttered. Alice «¢ od at him | € lalways did think when @mpathelic concern r ify |her reflections reached this point.| “George, why don't you see him?" | me out There were the bonds, not as many preserved a stern silence} He could hard sala two flying minutes, then | fortunate beginning words were, and miserable as “Oh, he'll come to me fast enough | the look that accompanied them, when he needs me! Lord, I've pulled| rang true to the older man, His | went etraight to his heart. “I'm sorry to hear it, George Warren folded his arma, an garded bis friend at “You know Gr is a genius, Alice; Alice with spirit. “Welt” She was sorry for her| George?” he began. vehemence when George merely| “I—-well, yes, Alice went | there first, and then I went dc George said. “We only came ten days ago.” ‘There was an brief silence. shook his head and ended the con versation on the monosytiable, After & while she attempted to reopen the subject. “If geniuses can act that way, FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET ~ The Ohio Is Built for Quick Action HANKS to the ingenious design of the Ohio, there are no tiresome waits for oven or water to heat. So quickly responsive is this Range that it takes but eight minutes from the time the fire is kindled for the oven to be ready for baking. And even more valuable to the home is the fact that there is an abundance of hot water in the tank in fifteen minutes from the time the fire is kindled. The reason for this and other factors in Ohio-superiority may be seen any day in the Stove Section, DOWNSTAIRS STORE. defenaive Warren suddenly an the} dily acrons Yd “She—she hasn't any cause for! (Continued Tomorrow) » al of the U, 8. army then nn rdded arded mo came twe -FREDERICK & NELSON x FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Books and Birthdays: Milestones in a Child’s Life One can make these Milestones count for real growth in brain as well as body, by giving good books. A Child’s library should grow with the child, and each book in it should be of perma- nent value. ; look | \tor’s 4 the wie both and wald 4 rel | down | own,” | back other | Books for Children Under 3 Years Mother Goose, illustrated by Jessie Wilcox Smith, $1.00. Mother Goose, rhymes, $4.00. Tale of Peter Rabbit, 60c. Stevenson's Child’s Garden of Verses, $3.00, Jumping Joan, 25c. containing all the original Books for Children 3 to 5 Years Old Boyd Smith—Railroad Book, $2.25. Perkins—Dutch Twins, 75c. Aesop—F ables, $2.00. Books for Children 5 to 7 Years Old Burgess—Bird Book, $3.00. Perkins—Irish Twins, $1.50. Carroll — Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, $1 .25. Books for Children 7 to 9 Years Old Carryl—Davy and the Goblin, $2.00. Hawthorne—The Wonder Book, $1.50. Mitchell—Paz and Pablo, 75c. Defoe—Robinson Crusoe, $1.25. Books for Children 9 te 11 Years Old Otis—Toby Tyler, 75c. Western Frontier Stories Retold, from St. Nich- olas, 90¢. Craik—Little Lame Prince, $1.25. Maeterlinck—Children’s Life of the Bee, $2.00, Books for Children 11 to 13 Years Old Aleott—Little Women, $1.60 to $8.00, Schultz—Rising Wolf, $1.50. France—Lance of Kanana, $1.00. Wyss—Swiss Family Robinson, $1.50. Books for Older Children Hale—Man Without a Country, $1.00. Roosevelt—Letters to His Children, $2.00. | Muir—Travels in Alaska, $3.00. ’Twain—Huckleberry Finn, $2.00; Tom Saw- yer, $2.00, THE BOOK SHOP FOR BOYS AND GIRLS FIFTH FLOOR i] 1H | F | | | an i SAN (United P of lower }made within mber of Thelan, director tion, Minort | notice Free | | | ase wrunt Ave i} mild toilet soap. ling points to points on the Pacifi coast is imminent rates undoubtedly a few days, a a telegram received toda affic bureau of the San Francisco | commerce Schoonmaker Optical Co, FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET a | | DOWNSTAIRS STORE | | Short Plush Coats in Smart Models at Greatly Reduced Prices yo PORTANT price advantages await the pur- chasers of these good-looking coats, whose smartness and practicability have been thor- oughly demonstrated this Wir ‘er. The Coats are in blouse or flare-back models, styles with large gathered cape collars, and fur-collared and fur-banded effects, greatly | underpriced at || $29.25 $34.25 $42.50 150 Waists Reduced to $3.95 RILLINGS of soft lace, beads and embroid- ' ery trim the Georgette Blouses in this re- duced-price group, and there are also Crepe de Chine Waists in the offering, in White and Flesh-color | Especial interest attaches to this offering on account of the staple character of the Waists— reduced to $3.95. Creme Oil Soap 4 Cakes for 30c HIS unusually iow price is quoted in con-» nection with a demonstration of this pure, — A representative from the | ||) makers is in the Toilet Goods Section this week, ! demonstrating the merits of this fine soap. Demonstration price, 4 cakes for 30c. 'To Lower Rates on Coast Ship Plates) FRANCISCO, Jan, We 48 )-—Reduction in rates | jon ship plates from eastern produc. | Announcem will rainy at the from of public Max Until after the first quarter of the 19th century lard was used only for cooking purposes and as a basis for | various ointments, Now it is put | to numerous other uses, EYES OUR SPECIALTY Years of ex- ence in fitt! and making glasses, and our low operating ex- pense, enable us better | to make Classes for money. less Lenses duplicated om red prices, ny Bain o67%, service, | United States railroad administra —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Embroidery 2™ Braiding | Hemstitching, Picot BUTTONS COV BUTTON KNIFE G. J. BAUER & CO, Tailors’ and Dressmakers’ Supplies 1317-1319 Fourth Ave., Seattle ARTIFICIAL EYES Largest selection in the Northwest Utmost privacy in” fit- ting and perfect match guaranteed. eS | SEATTLE OPTI MAIN 4334) Wachee aad] Est. in 1890. ok ia pia

Other pages from this issue: