The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 9, 1920, Page 15

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reday stares” Clelda, min. eiihriees§ § prEtiey ri EU5P iz f aie 23ia? ftivests @ oe RSE aanrer SS * + | UNUSUAL LOVE PROBLEM =) A al ab ra Al y | PRESENTS ITSELF FOR SOLUTION BY CYNTHIA GREY Does love, real love, bring more misery than happiness? | Sometimes wrter I read over these letters, bits from the| book of life, I am wlmost inclined to believe it does, Or is that great something which the majority of us believe to) be love, only an imitation, for which we pass up the real| ey) Prcecived one of those letters today which makes me skep- tical and over which I have pondered a considerable length af time. I am going to print it and my answer and ask the readers to also answer it according to their own views, ‘as many minds are often better than one: Dear Miss Grey: Will you advise me which way to take— it seems that one of them is inevitable? Shall I marry the man who loves me, and whom I do not! Jove; or shall I give myself to the man who loves me, and whom I love, but who cannot marry me for a reason I can not give lest I disclose his identity. I love him. Is the world never “well lost for love’? Anyway, I think it will happen, unless I let the other man marry and take me away. I have no means to go away by if. I am 25 and up to this time has always been “sensi-| ble” and true to all laws. I had not known before how strong Jove can be. Will you, can you help me? A WOMAN. I do not know that it is within my power, but I hope I may something that will be of help to you. hon say you did not know how strong love can be, and that have always followed the straight path before. My dear irl, we never know how strong or how weak we are until we are tempted. Sometimes the most virtuous people are not alcays the most moral ones—they are virtuous because they have never had an opportunity to be otherwise. It ts the person who meets strong temptation, who is nearly caught in its vicious whetripood, but who turns back to a safe distance who is really moral, Personally I do not believe that any love which will lead a man or woman out of the beaten paths of conventionality i the right sort of love. The conventionalities were created fo the protection of women even more than men and I firmly believe that we should strive to keep them, at least until such time as we feel perfectly sure of our course. I cannot advise you as fully as tho you had confided to m« the real reason why itis tmpossible to wed the man you love Can it be that he ts already married? If so, you will be « very wise girl, and later a happy one if you will put him e1 tirely and forever out of your life. There is another thing to take into consideration: A mar who is truly honorable and of a strong character will not en- courage a girl when he is not free to marry. I do not advise you to marry the man you do not love simply to get owe temporarily, from your present dif ficul- ties. You would be wronging the man, aside from causing | yourself untold unhappiness, and your trouble will follow you| up. Stay right where you are; stiffen your backbone and jarink the portion Fate has poured out for you like a true martyr. In this method you will find the only true solution ‘to your problem. } cee ! Would Lead Away From Rather Than to Mating think? Write Cyn- 2 Dear Miss Grey: Having reat sev. | thia Grey, care of The emi opinions concerning the eternal | C * courtship plan, I will endeavor to Seattle Star. | expreas my own, to the effect that it MOTH ER! can’t be done successfully ; : | : AT do YOU In my mind “Uncle Tom's" “ane | great billow of love” ix not ensential ss as the baxis of happiness between *California Syrup of Figs” | anand wits “Uncle Tom” must i ‘ * consider that this is a very modern Child’s Best Laxative ag and eventually the separnte ex , istence woul 4 to seeking other | friends instead of being companions | to each other. If m wife is @ pal| days, thelr tastes mutual, they would not be so bored with each other that | meeting just once in awhile would | keep them together. “Uncle Tom” has my admiration for exposing himself to so much criticism, but to me, living separately | would be as much as to tell each to picane himself, it made little differ- ence. Ay married couple should be more to each other than mere inti mate friends. None of the mad billows of love for me, for it will not hoid under all Accept “California” Sy¥fup of Figs| tom based upon respect for each only—look for the name California m the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and Most harmless physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children tho-married list would be longer. love its fruity taste. Full directions| Sir Robert Kindersley, governor) fn each bottle. You must my “Call-|of the Hudson Bay company, started | double strength Othine; it is this that! “Oh, mamma! she exclaimed, | fornia.” las @ clerk at $2.50 a week, lA Ce Se ee i — tnd ave. MILLER TRUNK & LEATHER GOODS CO. “tsa: “RELIABLE” LUGGAGE SALE r JULY TRIPS Positive Saving of 20% to 25% LEATHER TRAVELING BAGS and SUITCASES for $ 8.50 Values $11.95 for $15.00 Values $13.95 for $18.50 Values $18.25 for $22.75 Values $24.75 for $30.00 Values WARDROBE TRUNKS $43.85 Full Size H. V. P.; Regular $55. $49.85 Full Size H. V. F Regular $6: $67.95 Full Size H. V. I Regular $8: $82.75 Full Size Mendel Drucker; Regular $100.00 $84.50 Full Size Indestructo; Regular $95.00 TWO WONDERFUL SPECIAL VALUES IN SILK HANDBAGS : They come in a variety of new shapes and in all the popular colors. $5.45 for $7.50 Values $6.45 for $8.50 Values Quality MILLER’S sie Prices 1007 Second Avenue Two Entire Floors, Featuring the Largest Assortment of High Grade Trunks, Hand Laggage and Fancy Leather Goods in the Pacific Northwest ' Seattle Style | jas well as a sweetheart of courtship | _ conditions, just a good-steady affec-|W94eF guarantee to refund the other and able to enjoy the same| nterest. Then I think the happy-| EIGHTEEN AND MARRIED. |? ations should show a wonderful) her m r to a matinee musicale tmp ment, some of the lighter! and became very much interested in |freckles vanishing entirely. the tr THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 15 0 (a OE LOE OD OO A me CLP OIE OWE Which Is Which, Asks ‘Social Washington Se ———— ———————— | (Copyright 1920, by The Newspaper Ertterprise Association) oi THE BOOK OF ANN No. '124—The Star’s snapshots of attractively- dressed women on Seattle streets in Fre | ANN AGAIN PLAYS HER PART IN THE HORRIBLE MURDER OF IVES | “1 want you to go out to the beach,| weapon and dropped it with a care | Mr Lorimer, and show wu just | le hrug Then he wid out her | wher tood at the moment Ive ishes, mirror and « toll ar was ki nid the lawyer, “I wint uch as & wor | “We'll do whatever you think best, hing w a) emarkable Mr. Mahon,” I agreed p, then nly dumped the sult Mahon sald that he and Morr k Into the box and stepped to | would leave us, because their window. For a Jong time she * Jence in our car would attract gazed intently at the figure on the | on to us. Ann and I motor | t k. Then in an instant, as | vut along and join them at wing powerful impulse turned and f! n the bath | at as she ran. athing beach I dreaded the ordeas anead of us Ann, I felt sure, aid not realize that | he had come to the crucial moment in her whole existence | She could conviet or clenr herself H by what was going to bap pen I re- |), an 1, the novice, | } fed upon Morrison make he oF | with Ann play her part Jeal an easy as possible or in the | \ When I pulled up at th of the! Yea, 4 | steps which led down the hill to the | iiette gtrt | , board walk, I saw rison andjon the pla of t aire w ( Mahon with » » whom I) face the actor wear Ivew gay They | beach toga, as he « » the very |epot where Ives had breathed his| took to be plain ¢ were grouped about the spot Ivea had been slain, The beach had | jast been cleared of visitors, Quite 4) ‘The actor held up a hand as if to » nection of the park had been attract her attention, then the sharp 1 off to keep @ curious crowd | sound of a gun was heard, the man way staggered, and turned half around moaned Ann, as @| Just as Ann had pictured Ives, Then draped in a gor-| he fell, 1 rellent performer. m the| he ananaged to swab bis head and clothes with blood-red powder as he went down | “It'e—ho's—wearing Ives’ beach mena par ag pode pe ag “Well—what?” r be! she whir ered. ee bar * mopping his brow vigorously | was an unforgetable garment, e - hag to admit, a thing of ocean greet | pergt eee FOUTS eare—ahe did | It? I gasped ellk with what, from a distance, looked like @ procession of vorelet| STM PLE BEAUTY Left—Miss Frances Hoar. Right—Miss Louisa Hoar batiked” about the h the main| RULE . WASHINGTON, D. C., July 9.—-yresentatives, took place this season | Morrison escorted © m aly | Washington society counts among| The girls look so much alike that entrance of the bath house, Ann| Women should take five minutes all but-thelr most intimate friends wad given her box containing her|a day from work and lie fiat on the, are sometimes hard put to tell them hathing contume and the gun, and) back, all muscles relaxed, with eyes | nd Miss Louisa Hoar, daughters of| apart They are kind enough to ac was instructed to go into the bath | closed. It will be found a wonderful | the late Senator Hoar, of Massachu-|cent their individual tastes in dress, house and repeat every motion she preserver of health. beauty and setts, and Mra Frederick H. Gillett.|to help their friends, however. : had made on her previous visit. |«trength, according to the advice of ‘The marriage of their mother to Mr.| Both sisters have distinguished ‘There was even & man at the window |a health expert | Gillett, speaker of the house of rep-|themselves jn amateur theatricals. to sell her a ticket, and she was _ kiven the key I knew too well, the key tagged “No, 25." to the room she had actual ‘ pled, It waw in the @ r ) @ Jlower of hree tiers of compart- nents, and at the ext left-hand —Photo by Cress-Dale. ora ag the exit ‘and oppestte the en Isn't this a neat and pretty street costume? With a stylish |°*™"""* | ; ! y : : sty 7 6 & game little girl Chat da: plaid skirt (blue and brown) a dark blue jacket which istieowen Rd a piney of ann | belted tight enough to give the flare effect is worn. It has) clothes men, mhe picked up her box a small collar and many buttons are used for the trimming. |4n4 reheareed her part. I could have The hat is particularly fetching. It is fashioned of dark oA wae 5 seempete Soe blue taffeta silk (the very latest in hats) and emphas Ot at temget'ew'ane Bayer introduced Aspirin to physicians 19 years ago—Always say “Bayer” 4 * ' LS pit f Hi lh its favorite members Miss Frances scalloped brim. DAISY HE} Ay was allowed to mpeak to sor child. That was understood, eens the If the lady pictured here will call at The Star’s editorial rooms she will She entered compartment No. 25, receive twe tlekets to “The Great Divide” at the Wilkes, threw her box on the pine table buftt | Wednesday's Fashion pictures: Marie Lanta, 901 Seventh ave, and/ against the wal, and looked thru, Lewore Hill, 1219 Fourth ave. | the slats of the window. Immedtate- eon iced enanteansennananciiiescnesioatn sieipsticinimsiastaieininiiiliataioe |ty whe & back and turned to Mor " HOW TO MAKE | m Ge round the number et exdoeien |TINOR FINE | AST STEAK TENDER of protein per pound are the mame. | [200 0 Me mtcrinon repied, | The chief objection to round ateak |, 4.ny 1 gunned that she was re- The cut known as round steak In| is its toughness. The connecting tis ose to a person who was wear- | beef contains ax much nourishment | ues are stronger and the meat| {27 qaaa man's bathing things as the more expenatye cuta. In fact, COMrmer grained. If the meat ts opened her box, picked up the ground very fine this diMouity is| AT? °Pt } | THE OLD GARDENER SAYS ‘There are two\typen of Tones. one of which gtves & big burst of bloom in the «pring and another which blooms more or less all Ss R overcome. In cooking rown@ «teak one te very Apt to cook most of tho goodnens ont of it in an attempt V make it tender. | If the moat is very Unely chopped it} _— can be cooked in a variety of ways, | Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Ro "0 oF well done. If the steak ts tr be brofled rare an excellent way to Ret bong cook ft is like thie Buy two tin pie pear gg ~ ote Pv 4 . “ i a, ‘ the pi ¢ * . vr s This preparation for the removal Pans exactly the same size Butter || 0) ick when the flowering The ‘‘Bayer Cross’? is the thumb-print of { scribed by physicians for over nineteen years. rans and pack gi at in one. Dae “as - of freckles is usually so succemsful in Pan and pack ground meat tn one. | Ot vee and work « literal |! genuine ‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’’ It pro- Insist on ah unbroken package of genuine eae & chenr. | BIC ne side, turn Into other pan sete a é ai We et ‘ r; ocd ef pt oe we ear] and brofl on the other mida Season || “mount of bone Picks oth Geom’ tects you against imitations and positively iden- Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’’ which contains with salt and pepper and a little but-|| Sround the roots, tifies the genuine, world-famous Aspirin pre- | proper directions. ter, | Semt: Slab 4 nerve|| monly force another crop in the oy glee elaaben am |] tan, , With the ever-blooming va rieties {t is better to cut @& jong stem with each flower, as in this @ e y continuous pruning ts dong. rm thera, need respond td . t an be given | money if it fails. Lib ap Don't hide your freckles under a veil; get an dunce of Othine and r move them. Even the first few A bright Itt» min accompanied ing of a young woman vocal Be sure to ask the druggist for the | ist mulch of old stable ma n't she gargie bootiful?* BIG REDUCTIONS JULY CLEARANCE SALE This sale is one that is altogether different from the ordinary sale—one that has a two-fold meaning —prices greatly reduced and offered to you with credit privileges. The largest credit house in the West handlihg only better grade merchandise and selling on convenient credit terms with no extra charge. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents—Larger packages. Anvirin (e the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mononceticacidester of Saficylicacia is sold on the money-back guarantee, “A: NOS ARE PER- H FECT FOR THE There is real charm in the soft, clear tones of a Kimball Piano—from the con- certo to the popular melodies there is an alluring, pleasing quality to the music. Correct Tone and Durability have made KIMBALL Pianos ideal for the home—more of them have been manu- factured and placed in American homes than perhaps any other make. The KIM- BALL Piano h also won an honored place on the concert stage and in the studio, We show a great variety of handsome models for your selection. Kimball Pianos and Kimball Players Are Sold on Most Convenient Terms BEAUTIFUL GOWNS NOVELTY CLOTHING DRESSY SKIRTS ‘| CHIC HATS—COATS—CAPES—and WRAPS ' “Credit Gladly” Kimball Player Piano is a most complete instru- ment that will bring music to the home that is not for- Between Pike and Uni tunate enough to have a id Union H | : pianist. A complete library | yjcjort Pianos Phonographs g of Music Rolls gives you oe Gratehinas 2 i ; F the music you prefer. New Edisons 211 Union Street 1332-34 Second Avenue and All And Others the Records

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