The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 3, 1920, Page 11

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)

FEMSPAY, AUGUST 8, 1979, Cynthia PUZZLED OVER MARRIAGE LAWS AND CLASS DISTINCTIONS BY CYNTHIA GREY Dear Miss Grey: I am going to ask you a few questions. | The relationship of the young king of Greece and his present i choice of a young peasant bride—is she not his lawful wife by the jaw of God, or, in other words, of nature handed down from the time of the creation of man and woman upon this ° earth? Is she not his soul mate? Why is this class distinction in the world as it is today? Are we not all equal? Did we not all come from the same nature and did we not all step from the cradle as our own free moral agent, to do and act for our- selves according to our own dictation? According to our resent laws we have three classes. Are we not all equal at time of death? READER. Your questions have opened up a discussion of the whole social organization of society—a question which a few para- 4 hs can hardly touch. he law of marriage ts nota law of God nor of nature. iage is a law of man. It is an institution which has come down from early times and its present form is a product of long evolution. The marriage forms, the marriage customs of all peoples Giffer because each nation has tried to frame its own laws to own society. Marriage IS sacred—all life is sacred—all tnanifestations of life are sacred and marriage, which seeks to regulate the ~ \ gumama is sacred because it degls with the very origin e. Why are class distinctions? You might ask with equal right, why are murder, and theft, and child labor, and profiteering, and greed, and all the other social crimes? * * Class distinctions mean the separation of the individual from the rest of his kind; it is the refusal of the individual to recognize the oneness of life; it is only another way of expressing the egtotism and the selfishness which cause all anti-social demonstrations. At times, nations catch a vision of the universal brother- hood which, for the time, sweeps aside all artificial lines of social distinction. This vision is attained only at times of great national peril—when a “oneness” of a nation is neces- sary for self-preservation. Wwe AT do YOU think? Write Cyr thia Grey, care of The Seattle Star. skirt which | tT eeee_| which he may have purmued with the | most intense and breathless eager | Beas.” This is true of a certain kind ates Seeks you ens | love, especially that kind that a it at| TOU rob a woman of her character VERA. | Dame. “A Woman” is quite likely to find, if she should give herself to the man she cannot marty, that she has given her all to Just such a hunter as Emerson writes of. It doesn't pay one human being to ry this method now. I be-| Make a god of another human being I were you, 1 would take the OF creature or thing outside of God, ‘to @ first-class professional for. in s0 doing he or she is commit Ung the ain of idolatry, and all sin leads to destruction, 1 thank God that all my {dots were cast down and that my proud heart was broken into a thousand pleces, for it was then that my eyes were opened and I saw True Love, In the | person of Jeaus, standing before mo. He in Hie mercy picked up my brok en heart and with His own dear hands put it together again. After “| He had breathed upon it He put it | back Into tte place. 1 found as it took tte natural fune- living should | tions that it was pumping strange submit to con | naw thoughts into my mind, and giv- I have a white 53 5 Present and future. Some of the visions were hazy at firvt but finally one stood out clear and dominant, and then the second one appeared, FaBe es LS moon gets ita light from the sun. The first revealed to me a new na- ture, springing up from a clean heart. It was indescritably sweet and beautiful, It was a nature that 1 must learn to keep if 1 would have true happinens. ‘The second vision stood out so | plainly under the strong, clear light of the first that it filled me with dis may. It showed me my heart as it had been before Jesus had touched it. It was so marred with selfish ness that It appalled me. I looked again at the first vision It filled me with mingled longing and utter helplessness. How was I to retain the glorious nature that God NORTHERN LIGHTS. epenerction Arises Broken Heart getting its light from the first as the} THE ! _—_—_—_—_—Oo—eoOeoOernrrrrerrr'ww?lr?—rss |e Seattle Style Yo. 145—The Star’s snapshots of attractively- dressed women on Seattle streets —Photo by Cress-Dale. A smart sport suit is shown in today’s fashion picture. The skirt is white cotton gabardine and the blouse is fine white voile with blue spots. The sweater is royal blue silk crocheted in loose open square design. The filet lace trim- med collar and cuffs of the blouse turn back over the sweater. The hat is cream colored straw and has a blue band. White canvas oxfords and white clocked hose are worn. If the lady pictured here will call at The Star’s editorial roome she will receive two tickets to the Orpheum vandeville show at the Moore Theaire. |CARROTS WITH LEMON SAUCE 4 medium stzed carrots 2 teaspoons ar % teaspoon ralt | had put Into my new heart? Surely the things of the old nature would spring up and choke to death the | Sweetnem and beauty of the new. Finally another vision stood out} | before me. It was a vision of the old | | Book—-the Book that hadn't meant) 14 tap) ow melted butter |much to me before for it had seem-| poner are ed so dry, But now its words sprang | forth as fountains of living waters—| } parson aa pte neging waters that promised to keep fresh| 4 J uapanl and beautiful the fragrant blossom | that had so mysteriously «prung up| Wash and scrape carrots, Cut In | keep the wobds of my old Mature) ienaer Put in a bak | washed away. Dear old Book that | mS 6 ee OS Oe tela of the love of Christ. His love |th® melted butter, add the reet of is true love, and the world is well) the seasonings, cover and put in a lost for such a love! hot oven for 10 or 15 minutes, JOYFUL. ANERCER SALT LAKE CITY.—Leaping or JAPANESE CUSTOM |," JA%R crrt—taaping or In Japan there ts a peculiar Cu® feet from hotel window, plunging tom regarding the dressing of the/into open manhole, where she in hair. Girls who want to marry ar jfound 10 feet beneath the ground. range the hair in front in the form | Injuries fatal. Jof @ fan or butterfly and adorn it] _ SEATTLE STAR Two, pages Sz Ss Following up my plan to etartle my husband at least once in every 24 hours, I made an announcement, at dinner, the evening after we girls had planned the political rally, With my demurest amile, 1 said: “Bob, I am going to bob my batr™ ] My husband collapsed in bis chair in a spasm of dismay which was jquite genuine. Me regarded | nteadfastly—as if he were studying lone who had suddenly gone insane |Pinally he, asked, in @ distressed | tone } “What put that freak into your | head, Jane Lorimer?” “It/l'm going to dance In the bal |let of ballets’ I'l! simply have to | have my hair cropped, Bob. All the other girls have short hair, I'll apoll | the effect entirely with any kind of a colffure-—" “Make it Greek,” suggested my ‘rind it up with a blue “Can't! Too much of it" Then Bob sat up very stiffly and opened his stern lips to say sharp ly | “Then don't dance™ | “Ot course, being a married wom an, I can't comb my own hair to | mult myself," I wailed. “I thought |you maid you never, never intended | Lorimer.” “Don't weep, Jane. You know 1 | won't have my wife looking like a show girl. Or like a writer of verse bre. Moreover, 1 man's respon | sibility to keep his wife from doing | silly things. I'm only @oing my duty. imy etrt. You'd be awfully sorry within a week after you had lost jyour lovely locks. You know you would.” | The next morning I went over to the Lorimer park to resign from the ballot-ballet. The girls were practic ing there—it waa to be a dance in the open—and they raised such a tornado of objections that finally I had to confess that one af the dix jadvantages of matrimony was the [husband's right to enforce his own jopinion as to the proper length of a Wife's trennen Chrys regarded me muperciflounty | “You mean to say you're going to obey Bob?’ she asked | “It—it—looks #0,” I stammered. “But all ‘the debs’ are doing it rotested Deborah Burns; who hi lepent the month of June™at a emart summer colony. He own hair had | been cropped when she went abroad aa a welfare worker. “And some of the most conservative society ma- trons are wearing bobbed wigs,” she added. “Dut that is @ secret, my deare.* “Thobbing haa even affected the millinery businesm” Midget put tn. “A letter from my designer, whom I am to see in New York, asks | whether or not I have had my hair lcropped. He would have to plan for |a smaller crown size, you see,” | “Even Corinne Caryl is consider- ing having her hair trimmed in the |iatest style,” said Ann. “She says jhe knows it will take about 10 ing me great new visions of the past,| within me, and at the same time quarters lengthwise and boll unt) ers from her age, but she heal | tates, because she says a woman with a reputation as a ‘vamp’ musn't look too kittenish off the stage.” “U&ck was with me,” announced Willy Van Eyck. “I had to have my hair bobbed after I had the fu last winter, Otherwise I know my moth- er never would have consented.” “It awfully convenient for a swimmer, you know,” sald Midget “Dries fast, after a dip, even with jout the ald of an electric fan. Bob. bed hair ts one of the distinctive fea lwith silver or colored ornaments, | The hair fastened at the back of| the head by means of tortoise shel! | pins, indicates a widow who desires to marry again. A woman with hair) cut short nd wearing no | ments, ts idow who wishes tc remain f to her dead hue} Band. My Dear Miss Grey: It ts my @arnest prayer that “A Woman” will find happiness—find it, a flawlem lying enfely at the depths of own true nature. “Love is like the hunter,” says Ralph Waldo Emerson, “who cares NAP ITA EXTRA OLIVE Doctors agree that the Olive Oil habit is healthful for you. oa. i 1h ; , ft Se BB QEPAIRED byExpeRrs THE Pwowe ficsorr $2 | LIGHTHOUSE} /8-J20Umiom ST. IMC OLEON Your physicia will recommend it~ 4 Lo AN VITRGIN Three Wonderful PLAYER ROLLS From August List I “WHISPERING”—Fox Trot The first chorus is played as a Saxaphone solo, then repeated by full orchestra, $1.25 By the writers The pleasant flavor and freshness of ‘“‘Napoleon”’ Extra Virgin Olive Oil: “LOUISIANA” —Waltz of “Hindustan.” A splendid waltz for either singing or dancing, $1.25 “LA VEEDA” One of the most melodious of recent Fox Trots, and of irresistible rhythm, $1.25 make this health- ful habit easy to cultivate. Tty a tablespoon- ful in fruit juice aft- er meals regularly. A. Magnano Company Beattie Tacoma Genoa Sherman, 3 m Spokane, | Special Attention to Mail ¢ Orders Aldrich Player Pianos $695 Pianolas from $845 Duo-Art Pianos from $1300 ay & Co. Third Avenue at Pine, Seattle 928-30 Broadway, Tacoma Portland. me | to rule me in any way again, Bob/| |Has a Story THE BOOK OF ANN MY BOBBED HAIR IDEA STARTLES BOB AND IT LOOKS LIKE HE’S BOSS tures of beach fashions, this year.” I summed up all of the reasons the | girls contributed, for bobbing my | locks. 1 intended to present them, | jen bloc, to my husband. I didn’t! dare to shock him as Chrys sug | ed: | "Get ft done, anyway, Jane | You'll look perfectly lovely with a halo, my dear,” | “It's all right for you to give me! | the advice, Chrys,” I replied. “You're | Rob's twin sister—and you've grown | jup defying bim. But I'm only his| | wite “Keep on practicing with the| crowd,” the giris insisted. “We'll go | in a body and call on Bob, if you say | po, Jane.” Care of the Teeth BY UNCLE 8AM, M. D. While the strength of the teeth,| an regards resistance to decay, varies considerabily in different in dividuals, the factors, in mont cases, which determine their fate, are the usual state of the digestion and the care given by their possensor, Indigestion causes tooth decay by disturbing the mouth secretion» which normally tend to wash out food refuse and neutralize any fer- mentation acids formed, Good care of the teeth involves cleansing them after each meal #0 as never to permit particles of food to le between them, Plain water and a tooth brush is all that ts re quired. Apart from this care every one should at the first indication of decay in any tooth, and always at least once a year, have the teeth | carefully examined by a dentist, and have any defects found remedied at once. Q Recently my wife died of uter- ine cancer and I would like to know more about the disease. Am I likely elop the disease? My wife was y well until a year ago. | instrumental delivery 20 | years ago have been the cause of her trouble? 1 A. If you will send@me your name | and address 1 will send you «@ pamphlet entitled, “Cancer Facts Which Every Adult Should Know.” You need have no special fears of | developing a cancer, for there is no/ reason to believe that the condition | is communicated through martial re lations. Injuries at child birth are! believed to have an important bear- ing on the development of uterine cancer, | TRENTON, N. J—Eleven members | of Alonzo Haring family in hospital | after train strikes their auto. | WASHINGTON .—Capt. Peter Rich- | ardeon, U. 8. A., formerly ef Tacoma, buried with full military honors in| Arlington National Cemetery. PAGE 11 the clover was one of the favorite plants of the fairies and that whem ever they stepped, a fourleaved Glee ver grew. ‘ As the trefoil is an emblem of trinity, clover is used in decoration All Its Own for Trinity Sunday. It has also beam THE CLOVER | widely used in ecclesiastical architee: The mweet-ncented clover mayn “T | ture. promise!” in the language of flowers.| Ths clover or shamrock ts best The name ia derived from the Ceitic| known by the fact that it ts the na» word clava, meaning club. The| tional emblem of Ireland. The Druids regarded it as a mored flow-| regarding this goes back to St Pat er and reverenced it as they did the| rick. One day he was preaching and mintietos, was explaining the doctrine of the There are many superstitions| Trinity to an audi about the fourleaved clover. If a| difficult to understand. maiden puta it in her shoe, whe will Chiefs asked “How can marry the first man she meets.|three in one?” St. Patrick picked Should her lover go on a journey, 4 clover leaf, showed it to them and — the placing of a fourleares, clover in| said, “Behold in this tari his shoe will assure his ¢ return,| how three persons in the An old belief was that a farmer Can exist and still be one.” This should gather a handful of clover|#mple was so familiar and #0 come from the four corners of bis neigh- | Vitcing that the chief and his bor’s field, so that his cattle would | Were converted to Christianity, = thrive, «To dream of a clover leaf er 8 Nee tae portended prosperity. Valuable phosphate deposits In olden times, it was believed that been discovered in Morocco. “ASPIRIN” WARNING!’ The name “Bayer” is the-thur Every Flower | print which identifies genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 20 years and proved safe by millio SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an ‘‘unbroken package” ¢ genuine ‘‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,’ which contains proper d tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, R tism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and for pain generally. Strictly Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cente—Larger packages. Aspirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Masefactere of Moscacetionci“aster of A Permanent Hair Wave HAVE US WAVE IT NOW ané PAY FOR IT LATER At your own convenience IN SMALL PAYMENTS Our credit plan is the very best guarantee in the world that you wil be satisfied with the results obtained A wave will save you at least one-balf hour every day of the week. Every one can now Giscaré the old curiing fron and patent | curlers for we have brought the PERMANENT WAVE WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL Fer appointment call Main 6507 LADIES’ IMPROVEMENT SHOP 520 Union St. Dr, Fowler's Tooth sterilizin, lizer, ia placed, bris the germicide in th fected bristles and Dr, Fowler's Sterili in two hours, Dr. Fowler's Saline Tooth Paste ts the dentifrice you can specific purpose. Ask your dentist The price of Dr. F at all druggists. a tooth brush. Dr. FOWLER'S DENTAL | COMBINATION. | Do You Know--- The danger that lurks in your tooth brush unless it is sterilized after each cleaning? Do you know that pyorrhea, ub cerated gums, etc. are promoted by the use of an unsterile tooth brush? Consider your tooth brush the next time you use it. Is it a debris laden germ collector, hung to dry on a peg by the basin and used day after day, with no better clean ing than a rinsing under the hot water faucet? You cannot keep your teeth and gums healthy with that germ-laden brush! Such a tooth brush, after a few days’ use, becomes a source of real infeetion. Simply rinsing it under the hot water faucet does not make it germ-free! There are millions of germs on your tooth brush that you cannot see. Consequently you do not know they are there. Dr. Fow- ler’s Hooth Brush Sterilizer is the’ onty practical way to kill these germs, Ask your dentist. Brush Sterlizer offers the only pri The used brush, first dried on tle end up, in the sterilizer, and the fui ¢ metal container at the bottom concent: kill all germ life. ser will kill all germ life on the filthiest tooth brush urest, safest and most efficient buy. Each content of the formula was selected for a ‘owler’s Dental Combination after Aug. 8 will be $2.50 STEWART & HOLMES DRUG CO. DISTRIBUTORS

Other pages from this issue: