Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1920, ‘ SS . g f t fa _ CVT pa > rn UNCLE TOM ANSWERS BRIDE y ‘ y 1D DLYPpryr LIVING UNDER PERPETUAL ‘ Dre > Dp COURTSHIP PLAN Dear Miss Grey: I read ‘Mrs, M. C, S.’s” communication She seems to be in quite a mix on the separate home plan and desires to hear from me among others. She claims to be now living the perpetual courtship “plan. She says her husband was grieved to find after the honey- moon had waned that her kisses did not have the same thrill as when first married. Could she expect them to have the same thrill after three months of continued association? If she is living the perpetual courtship plan she is living it under protest, for she says she and her husband have sepa- rated, She claims to love him, and his conduct shows that he loves her; but his desire must be to maintain that love, while she would drag him back to an ossified condition of love. a She asks if she shoukl refuse to e ribe to the Klealty of a think? Write Cyn- + 1 by ur ry . thia Grey, care of The tar. Mt become equally magnetized with It they become repellant to each other and next is a divorce w But the real root of the trouble is ugivers People are losing their r the higher ideals. Love, \ truth, Justi are no longer re 4 pected, nit are run on a busi 7 r ness plan ar after money . e well any ¢ urse must pay : pric ap the selfish 1 ire means to invite many other ts along with it because the dormant rd consctenc rything but Bachelor Writes Selfishness Love bec higher nature nes becomes ft. The 1 great ples of love and justice are lost His Ideas eking tholr contentment Dear Miss Grey: May I, be s from the wrong side also a bachelor, voice my Hea on th ‘The present much-talked ual courtship plan? I about evils of society are built u ncle Tom has found a cure| Selfishness and. the one remedy ts ata T think e has fi to destroy it A BACHELOR, preading and making this divorce eh dl worse Unit Home The cure for divorce does not te} Ideal of Marriage? in living parate homes; it lies in| pear Miss Grey: This eternal 5 yy Pestova er Shogee Bey “ hip question to me is very themselves a rigid test to dis " Please ow me to wive over wt are in love: of my experion whether it m their eek a higher, or or just her aie . ~ gietode nat I want if t love re the I was keeping . bring out tt t » a other, unselfish emotion of of th is no longer a hol: j It has becom , travels downward and wh st y knew without even loving the| - 1 soon began to at I had done. hid I start ause I I. No I made thy I did not make a heii 1 MOTHER! '™California Syrup of Figs’ Child’s Best Laxative is is for life” in every way kept my home very wil more t? We ha nt home and he neat a n half way If people w minds right from the » tent, love or no love, and nese bring All it needs is My hushand and I would look @ lon, another man that coul plac But when I do my husband does not outside w rerious step I nice children, an myself tld or was ried to advise my best of it and on earth for said to mynelf started in to © myself and husband happy and to please him; nd clean; was all times to meet him a never did find nat I had never toved him. make up thelr tart to be con. one house will wurely be large enough to held them contentment and happi- a little will. power and unselfishness died five years ago = time to find id ever fill his marry again, want to plan on “Uncle Tom's” way of thinking, king an ideal Accept “C: yrup of Figs and living in two homes. only—look for the name California! To my way of thin on the package, then you are sure| married life is to str your child ts having, the best and fost harmless physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children Jove its fruity taste. Full direct on each bottle. You must say “C fornia.” pal to one another. “Oh, call not this a ive to own a comfort and feelings and be a real omfort and feelings and be a retal world of tears The world is what we make it.” A WIDOW. ——— 2nd Ave. Between Our Furniture Store in Oakland, California, has favored us with these low-priced specials, enabling our cus- tomers in Seattle to avail themselves of real bargains in these home ne- cessities, This is a genuine cut glass jar, with silverplated cover and spoon, suitable for jams, relishes, etc. Well worth double the price. No Phone Orders No Deliveries Watch Each Week al a READY TAILORED CLOTHES FOR MEN AND wom! v FURS Madison and Spring For Our Specials owy mind, | 118—The Star's s1 dressed women ( | | | | _ The dress on the left is made of lighter shade of blue braid worked in pretty motifs as trim-| pee It is very cleverly designed. | ming. | The costume on the right is dion plaited skirt, a nobby 1/ elbow length sleeves finished with a flare cuff) is worn. which Minnie Maddern Fiske comes VELVET COATS WITH SUMMER FROCKS NOW BY CORA MOORE New York's Fashion Authority Fashion this summer is going to allow us all sorts of velvet coats, ons, ete., to throw on with organdies or linens or even with our favorite ginghams. All of which is by way of explaining, that the vogue in velvet ts being exten to the year around instead of a few winter months. Here in the {ilustration tr |a summer coat of black velvet, de | signed by Harry Collins, It is ir regular in length, b cuffs and @ crush’ panish girdls that tles at one side. The skirt in o French blue sports silk, straight anc { comfortable width. The are held in at the wrists by a stra; and @ large button. TO FRESHEN A WORN BLOUSE An advance fall style note offers in excellent suggestion for fresh: ing up a satin or taffeta blouse that double eupped sleeve {s too good to throw away 4 | has lost its early charm. On fall styles in blouses feature lero or Eton jacket of embroidered |keorgette, worn over a taffeta or satin under-blouse. Incidentally, it is agreed among de signers that fall blouses generaliy will be very simply trimmed, and that gorgeous fabries, such aa bro: cades, Chine: approva batik effects, Oriental prints, repes, etc., Will have strong PARASOLS AND HATS TO MATCH Hats and parasols that match are favorites for this summor, An ex ceptionally lovely la hat of black chantilly lace, trimmed in roses that re itly, was muted with a tiny parasol of the same lace. For sports wear a parasol and matching hat, shown by one of the smart shops, were made of inch-wide strips of ribbon in two contrasting was display colors interwoven basket fashion, A narrow self fringe finished the edge of both parasol and hat = * . > EOD page eS Seattle Style | If the young ladies pictured here will call at The Star's editorial rooms | was showing they will receive two tickets to “Mis' Nelly of N’Orleans,” the play in| that she was sorry to part with her. | THE SEATTLE STAR Hy | napshots of attractively- m Seattle streets any person suspected of mur Claude Ives ering “An evil omen for Ann,” I thought But Ann did it wasn't gloomy about the out come of the In the midet of the big Lorimer family Ann I did not get an opportunity to talk confidentially, but it appeared to me that Ann believed she was saved from scandal because her name was not nee no, She at all matter fact which depressed me most Ot course |papers ever got breakfast table the morning I manag | for the town's sensational sheet It hinted at a big society scandal the conservative to the Lorimer In the middie of 1 to send out only when all of the evidence had been collec and made public. It told of @ rumor about a messenger boy who had carried a note from ven to a certain beautiful young bride who lived in one of the urious palaces, It ¢ ty girl who had be beach wearing blue ser or hat Once more it comforted me to re member that Ann's attire was like that of several hundred pretty wom en who were at the beach that day All of the papers announced that the detectives were at last down to a few really important clues scribed a #0 n Reon at the and a sail ined to develop inside of 24 hours. who could contribute any informa tion about Ives and his friends to report the same at once. “That means me! I groaned. Put before I undertook -that awful —Photo by Cress-Dale. dark blue tricotine with a Ann. Regulation army ammunition had |the report of the autopsy |promecutor, But arranging for pri little Eton jacket (which has Mother Lorimer kept close to us girls all the morning. Ann was to move to her own house and mother In her sweetest way DAISY HENRY. Ann's darling little home was com pletely furnished andsby moving that morning she was only carrying out & plan formed the previoun week. I jam sure she was glad to get away |from the big house, glad to escape to the Metropolitan next week | || THE OLD GARDENER SAYS It may be true that tickling the with the hoe will make it awugh with the harvest, but every conscientious armmateur has learned that it takes a lot of tickling Still, you can't grow good crops on land that ts eaked by the rains or baked by the sun, for a hard warface causes excemmive evapora tion of moisture, with the result that the roots of the plants soon roll ves. | ple fashion. Never having had serv ants to wait on her, whe seemed set would Ana clockwork—for as for hiring. run like much as a month, Mother Lorimer will answer, but It is worth a dol. lar or two to avoid a backache. |FIREFLY HAS jODD USE In Cuba, a spectes food, Ann had assembled more than her fair share of help. She gpenn’t know a thing about working herself, She will not know | soldiering or sabotage when she see it,” sald myself to mynelf. he just in| helps to demoralize domestic service of firefiy found so brilliantly ninous that! for a lot of mothers who are doing | the negroes use them for lantern the work of two or three women.” | lights. ‘They confine a few of the| I didn’t care to share Ann's ele insects in an ordinary glass lantern | gance and leisure at such a com. which may be carried about or | promise with my own principles; I hung up in the hut |didn't like her gay When eyening fextivities are held|chintx slipovers; her establishment Joutdoors in Cuba, {t is said to be a| never could soothe me; on the con | usual thing for ladies to adorn their| trary, it made me awfully neryous gowns with these fireflies, which | But since Bob was away from home glow more brilliantly than gems. I agreed to stay with Ann for a few | days, For several reasons, I did not | The United States produces half of regret my visit. It would enable me the k phosphates used for|to watch over my erratic little sis fertilizer purposes ’ terinlaw every minute, day and ca Aa AS THE HOURS PASS THE COMING OF BABY DRAWS NEARER— ARE YOU PREPARED? CT is natural to think of the expectant mother’s influence upon the unborn babe. Her food, her habits, her hygiene, and even the condition of her mind, all have a part in determining the well-being or ill-being of her infant before birth. No one can be in doubt that the months which pre- cede birth are of vast importince for the future of the child. It is therefore necessary that the expectant mother prepare herself. Mother's Falend gives comfort to expectant mothers by softening and makffig elastic the muscles dur- ihg the anxious months before maternity, THREE GENERATIONS cf motheragecord the virtue of Mother's Friend for not only allaying distress in advance, but for assisting nature in assuring a epeedy recovery for the mother. It renders the jominal enuscles pliant as they readily yield to nature's demand forexpansion. Asa result, the nerves should not be drawn upon with that peculiar wrenching strain. MOTHER'S FRIEND Used externally At all Druggists Write for special booklet on MOTHERHOOD and BABY, free BRADFIELD REGULATOR COMPANY, Dept. A-22, Atlanta,Ga, | SES Confessions ofa Bride Copyright 1920, by The Neu¥tpa per Enterprise Association) ‘ANN JUST HELPS TO DEMORALIZE DOMES- TIC SERVICE FOR OTHERS Next day's papers falled to name! night not down in the list of the smart | n Ives was reported to | known She was comforted by the very | city’s most lux: | getting | and that exciting revelations prom: | | ‘The authorities Invited any person | or- | |deat 1 must have a few words with | | n used to kill Ives, according to] 1 must | also attractive. With an accor-|k with Ann before 1 visited the | | vate speech with her was difficult. | }from hourly contact with Jim's rela | Ann's servants moved tn, too, and} they were a host. Ann didn't intend | to run her establishment in my sim: | | on acquiring all she could find any | her house / yellow glazed | | | | | I could interrupt, or at least be b rried off the key » the should manag ) 1k thru the entrenchment of ervants which protected Ann What had become of the key—and when we should hear about it again listurbed me tremendously (To Be Continued \Caird Leslie Teaches Ballet Dancing at Cornish School A Visitor to our p¥fescription room would be impressed with its spic-and-span clean- liness. This strict insistence upon cleanliness makes this the preferred drug store with physicians and all who are inter- ested in preserving the public health. No matter where you buy your toilet articles, | Ruth Page and Caird Leslie dancing Bal Masque, by Advertise Seattle as The Cornish Schoot has a special | idea: for artists to spend an ideal remembe i i" ummer class in ballet and interpre. drug neers this clean) titite dancing, now enrolling with |at the same time that ¢haan ; drug store when you/nuth Van Valery and Caird Lestie money by’ giving teasomasall give Seattle ybung people the of Eastern advantages, c beat Maine as the vacation for the world’s artists. have a_ prescription to} Quite « thrill attaches to M& Les be filled. |life’s recent return from New York, where for the past two seasons he has |been a solo dancer in the Metropoli- First Aid tan ballet, with Adolph Bolm, and in ———— Lead Poisoning 4 much-praised dance, “The Birthday! TOMATO SALAD Call a doctor, While || of the Infanta,” by John Alden Car- | p peer aee 4 waiting administer a half ||penter, with the Chicago Grand % om ounce of tumbler Opera company in Chicago and New York | Mr. Leslie has just completed a concert with the Bolm Ballet Intime. | He is but scarcely in hin twenties, land many Fine Arts folk remember when John Butler discovered him two years ago at Broadway High for B jthe annual Spring Festival of the | Fine Arts. UTLER, His dancing was unusual then, es- pecially because he could do such Eo 2 horrible snake twists and still be 4 graceful. He has kept his boniness | *, [and thinness—the type most admired } ee | by modern At the Fine Arts | Sun and Wind Bring Out Uj | Festival he rose out of a gorgeous} How to Remove E painted sarcophaggs to dance in| Here's a chance, Miss F wierd fashion. Two pletures of him | to try a remedy for freckles in July Theatre magazine and Van-| guarantee of a reliable con ity Pair give a suggestion of the|it will not cost you a penny Us courtly type he has been doing in| removes the freckles; while if New York. Caird Leslie has just | give you a clear complexions completed a tour of the East with | pense is trifling. the Bolm Ballet Intime and the Bart-| Simply get an ounce of | rere Little Symphony, Seattle friends | double strength—from any will be glad to hear that Mr. Leslie|and a few applications will appear here in the Bolm Ballet | you how easy it is to rid during the spring of 1921, when that| the hqmely freckles and get company will stop here en route to|ful complexion. Rarely isi Mexico. one ounce needed for the r Ruth Van Valey has returned from| Be sure to ask the druggist Othine, Eprom of water ulants and soothing Keep your medi cabinet well supplied against emergencies salts in hen mato. Scoop out pulp. Mix ents with pulp of tomato, and add mayonnaise, Serve tuce leaf, After the war of 1812, fl ed from $7.50 to $100 a Mar. Second and James rf fe A Watch Repaired by Jones Is Always Right Telephone Elliott 2607 1329 FOURTH AVENUE ore SWEET POWD FOR GHILDREN ac jevertahnesa, Certain Reliet for Comen Beadoche, Brephles Teething | suffer from thirst. Get a wheel || and I agreed a year in New York, where she|double strength ‘ a - rade Mary DeMrey Werme. “Tr ? fe pret noe if you can afford it, or a Because she could pay exorbitant Sates © Celde 10 $4 hour Aech See | studied ballet dancing with Alberteri.| strength is sold under guat seume hoe if you land t# not too || wages and net a fine table for he: sosseetee. mothe cae, (Rt. ‘Address, | This special dancing class illus-|money back if it fails to stony. Of course, a common hoe || servants, regardiens of the cost ot AY CO.Lo Rey,K.Y. trates one of Miss Cornish's pet freckles, Don’t Ever Worry Let the do it for you THE LATEST IN LABOR-SAVING APPLIANCES FOR THE HOME Big Advantages of the CRYSTAL: , fs ONE-WAY CYLINDER—Smooth running, simple, silent and practical. Oscillating and reversing : gears done away with, No wear or tear as there are no sudden strains of starting, stopping Ry and reversing z * THE MOTIVE POWER of the Crystal is one of the finest ball-bearing electric motors money can buy urely protected from dust, dirt and splashing water by Special Crystal Shield. swr WRIN Power operated. At no time is it necessary to move the washer, as the = wringer swings freely 9 any position required, k IN FIFTEEN MINUTES it washes thoroughly a batch of clothes at a cost of % cent for electricity, SAFETY AUTOMATIC RELEAS! protecting both operator and ma: CENTRALIZED CONTROL, operate it AUTOMATIC LUBRICATION—Oiled for life. SOLIDLY CONSTRUCTED of “ARMCO” THOROUGHLY, QUICKLY AND ECONOMICALLY washes the heayiest blankets or the most deli- cate fabrics. AWARDED GOLD MEDAL “for the simplicity of construction and operation and for the thorough manner in which it washes clothes.” stops the wringer and washer instantly in case of unusual strain, © hine. Regulated from one point by touch of the hand. So simple a child can — No greasy belts or chains, Rustless metal. SOLD ON VERY EASY TERMS Drop in at our showrooms and see the Crystal wash, or phone Elliott 152, and we will demonstrate in your own home. UNION East of Post Office