The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 7, 1920, Page 15

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bra ¥ mi atu da . Pa co E travels from ia Gy x il 115 SEVENTEENTH CENTURY “ye OF TWENTIETH CENTURY WOMEN | Dear Miss Grey: inisters like the speak the truth, I think if there were more broad-minded ew York Reverend,” who weren't afraid nstead of a lot of osteopathic preachers, Who have to pat the women of their congregation on the back and tell them they are perfect saints in order to draw their) ries, that the devil would have a slim chance of forming} poration with the women I hope, Mi , that the devil has not deceived you gato believing in mediums and ouija boards. And I hope | You will admit that there is evil and good in this world, | i ind if evil, where does it come from except the devil? As you women are always seeking the protection of the} Masculine sex, it would go to show that you are the weaker,| d, as you are always placing yourselves on a pedestal to be worshiped by man, the devil certainly would be using! 0 judgment in selecting a woman to use as a medium to Bo his deceitful work It is no disgrace to be tempted by the devil 0 temptation is sin If the women would consult the Real Spiritual Medium, ija boards and human mediums would be a drug on the rket. tie That New York City congregation is to be congratulated having such a reverend and broad-minded man as their stor. SKY-PILOT, Have no fear; 4s ouija boards and medius are con- ed, 1 am a tee unbeliever. But I do @ reverend’s attit toward my sex inking his sermon broad-minded, myone who has inve i Béances, knows that there are as many or men in the sgame as there are women. The greatest recognized medium and hypnotist in the world today is a man, and hundreds of men, well as women, atte nd his performances, as he ty to another. y to say that the ss Gr But to yield | so fa total take exception To my way of but very narrou was not tigated these supposed-to-be mystic more as It is absurd and sill 20th century woman Mas of the clinging-vine type, and looks to the masculine sex woman of for protection. The looks to her own sex day stands on both feet and for whatever protection she may need. Bachelor With W ETROPOLITAN ::: in Love and Daughter dou ETomorrow (Thursday) Night ; # han I She 4 daughter amger than | one of those pair In Concert—First Time rs selib penn Here. er isn’t powdered kind tries t ok young, but ust naturall ways she 4 tive than the daughter e guess I'm in love with His Only Appearance When | think of on Puget Sound mothe: tarry me, the When I think of ask-| ughter, I think, well, if the| w is too old, why wouldn't I be} too old for the daughter? I met der indy about two years ago, and went with her steady | for nearly seven montha My work | then took me to another town. The} w's daughter worked in this/ town and lived with her aunt. The mother gave me a letter of introduc | tion. In @ short time the girl and/ I were going together. I went with| her about the same length of time | I went with the mother, and I am| in love with them bot and they like! me Which one shall | marry? Who lea anyway be older ‘thar ke young. In # much more attra and, well, I them both. | asking th weation the hter are now | I find myself v Being os me best A MAN IN certainly 1 out w DOUBT are in the eternal gle. And I am afraid I can be of little or no help to you, because I feel ex as you do about age. Age of mind, and there are many happily marri the wife ia older as vice truth were known You throes of the RICCARDO STRACCIARI World’s Greatest Baritone is @ stat just about as «wher veraa, if the If you wish to remain on the saf and sane side, you would, perh best remain a good pal to both leave the matrimonial angle td adjust itself ape To Prevent Patent Pumps From Cracking Dear Miss Grey Please giv my new pumps te Direction of J. W. as to at oF keep them from cracking A READER A a Apply olive olf and rub the leathe Stracciari is the big- gently; rub surplus oi away with a gest vocal artist among Dear Mise Gri nt the other I had an argu and have come u can settle it. I the men singers Seattle o has heard in many sea- § 1 to see If yo dan account in the paper where man had bought a Ford 0 He is leading baritone of the Chicago Opera Company and has won tremendous suc- cesses there, with the Metropolitan Opera Com- COMING SATURDAY pany in New York and PB or ‘There are of both 1 REX BEACH'S EATS SELLING Hf” Horde” Equaled Only by “The Spoilers.” in the opera houses of lenty his Italy other European tries. native and coun- $2.50, $2, $1.50, $1. His program will in- cludethe two numbers with Which he has won his Prologue acci” and the aria from “Barber of Seville.” IBERTY MARKET Pike Liberty Theatre greatest fame—the from “Pagli- Gil Us No. 46—The Star's s THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1920. race 15 ito Woltan can afford to iiss 2ST .—_———_— Seattle Sty lle Confessi essions of a Brid| napshots of attrac Yue dressed women on Seattle streets EVEN DARNING HAS THAT MEX | | | “Bob, dartin y J how I've tonge nothing exciting car turb me!'l said in m when we And I'm going after Mex Darning in the tion fonned. I'm proud te it tremend to me that the hearth cep things stirred up rs, forever and fore “A little ~monot good 5 would fee mighty something m nays that Certels ¢ Russian tir ers in Hon ndded and waited for inien af me tu sinister angle mented, It might thr the world!” replied my husband, sc emnly I wouldn't cor that lude from the pa there im any t day. 1 pers too muc peace at stake to ton to thene ines **All- Bocialiet Rule for Germany ah it Feared in Dublin “‘Foch Asks for Allied Troops’! **Polish Offensive tn Baltic’ ‘Starvation and Typhus in Cen tral Europe German Reds Drive for Holland Foodstuffs And the Letts and Esths prepare | for war make Alaska secede big strike in Spain; and po and there’s a aes a eee eee ITS DELIGHTS JAN EXPERIENCE and the Reds attempt to | wh school tea tieal un-| mum wage. | eZ IAI [Ribbon Dress Has Hat of ——— to} Match ssociation) AFTER THE OLD G. ARDENE R SAY Ss Continued) a haven't yet bbage nmark, i BY CORA MOOKE York's F Authority © you a ribt and a hat oud of the ribb round, crush affair, all of ‘Too TIRED. TO EAT? Hest = Bit, Then Take Hood's Sarsapartiia a little 1 contume New York's society them has, first, a n skirt with For the ov chiffon is ibbon in dif n back and front, as shown in picture; then the rib- bon ts enclom with single rows of beads, and wreaths of beads and sil ver flower sprigs are appliqued here 1 there over the chiffon. by Down each side run three lace ruf. fles, each three inches wide. A straight piece of chiffon is draped ‘ons the bandeau ‘foundation, ite lower edge finished with inch-wide ribbon and the upper with a berthe of lace and ribbon, while the flower and bead motifs add the finishing| touches, as in the skirt. The hat, with its dangting ribbons, wearing t Slowly, straight f deau bod drens In this way you will avoid indi- our stomach will feel tonic and in @ short time you will have better appetite, more digestive strength, bette similation, and will find your “food tastes good.” One grateful woman writes: “I ommend all women be made new, of 10 with that tired f d's Sarsaparilla, It ved me of sour stom- distress and, belching A well known Justice of the Peace Indiana says Hood's Sarsaparilia ade “food taste good.” as after king three bottles he can now eat three hearty meals a day, works bard and sleeps sound. Doesn't this appeal to you—to eat well, work well? Then get ‘ia As a gerfle Pills help greatly, widths is ther kind in the smal! garder plant some Say too, say the Americar umbhead, which is unsurpassed for home une |ASK MINIMUM WAGE England now has women's unions ich ena! paid a mint If you want artety cab. | ar io even the poorly *% to demand —Photo by Cress-Dale. Unusual smartness of line sets this one-piece dress apart from the ordinary. It is de stripe material and carries out are four of these panels, waist, bound with black silk braid. charmeuse satin. which hang grac almost to the hem of the eloped in a pretty dark blue pin- leffect. There fully from the skirt. Each one is neatly The vestee is of gayly-colored the latest pane If the Indy pictured here will call aP The Star's editorial rooms, she tickets to the Moor. Saturday's picture was of Miss F actly | " and falls t sickness and b: the car back? YER Certainly not, if the ret im th * * NOME PE W bright day depend on the rain and But you know and I know tha indoor sunshine which come from happy kiddies and j« krown-ups just isn’t affected t man ean get up. But when you do happen to find a day when there gray fog outside and aren't nice in the house, it is just the worst kind of a day that And that is the kind that came to David and F this day that I am telling you about nother was gone for a week, Mother dear was in bed with a headache and, of course, Daddy was town and it was the dripplest kind of 4 just tr « that it which reall uround all morning, at utes to 12 Peggy and Day up and down in hall THINK that and dark 4: weather ids and sunshine thing is a thick things show you isn’t the wea counts, after mopir dancing a long di message had come and Grandmother sald she would be home pretty and she had just heard a brand-new Indian baby to tell therm when she got home. And when she did come and had seen everybody and had some luncheon, this is the story she told them "A very long time ago, before Victoria (B. C.) wan a city, party of white people came in small boats to Vancouver Island, | They landed safely and started up the beach to look about for a | good place for a settlement. 1 don't know how large a party of | soon story about an OF. By Mabel Cl Cie oe aoe 18 Donnergard, 708 University st. mention, the buyer waa arrested ov 9. If he could ne attem pte he surely could b ts and SHE'S RURAL RRIER Mrs. Winona V. Simmons, the first woman rv mat er in North S2mile triz hite peaple it was, but one man mong them had married a beau Indi rl and this couple ed t es and their baby girl They+made their landing earl morning and make @ home for them very ful rough in her trail carrying the baby arms. He wanted his baby to be like a white child and bis wife tried to tress her carefully #0 no could call her a papoor they had made h t of white milk n from ducks little bonnet of whi It all peaceful thankful tossed the soft c4 with de lovely padded soft and wool quiet were storm boats: back they and so very had and the and forth other a walked, head of them they saw a wicked Indiana. They to thelr boats and ore Indians ‘orest ta right and left Indians till they were seen and they that no ir little men were calling to each Then For ali fine launderns came more quite surrounded . f the white men had guns, and they when they are at uld_ think of nothing but how « Kht no one saw aw and ferns. could wateh, Those important soft little woolens— they need the most delicate laundering there is IS wool things, so sly small they look like make- believe, are very real to him—there must not be a single scratchy shirt, nor one shrunken band in his whole wardrobe! Every night they're gathered up and tossed into a big bowlful of the gentle Lux suds, Then just sousing, and pressing of the rich suds through the very soiled spots. There's no matting and no shrinking because there's not a bit of rubbing to hurt the fine wool fibres. Let Lux keep all his tiny wool things soft and sweet. Your grocer, druggist or department store has Lux— Lever Bros, Co., Cambridge, Mass, 2 Rinse in three lukewarm solving a little Lux in the water. This leaves woolenssof MING the water out. Do not SATURDAY Dry ina moderate tempey = Crammed with fiat tm. with « warm ison. terest as well as heart interest REX BEACH S “e Silver orde” with and yelled « day wore on Khhkhnh Cherry Malotte, most famous of all Beach's characters,

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