The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 12, 1920, Page 11

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THe \ FA LETTER WHICH CONVINGES ONE THAT LOVE IS NOT EXTINCT Dear Miss Grey: The letter in your column tonight signed. *Just a Married Man” is one of the few that really “got under my skin.” One would think from the tone of his letter that ail the “Just Married Men” were living under the same condi- tions, and as one who tived under different conditions, I can't resist the temptation to “throw a little mud” at this particu- lar man. . '* Miss Grey, 1 used to think the sweetest love in the world Was that which existed between my chum and me, She was a lovely girl, a wonderful disposition, which I admired so much, and as true as gold. We went together for several years and ¢ But, Miss Grey, along came a man who changed everything in my life. As much as I loved my chum, I willingly left her for him. We had a little bungalow and settled down to married peeped into our little bungalow he would not be content to graduate” in the school he pretends to now be in. tainly is unfortunate and I pity him with all my heart. has missed the greatest blessing one could know. When a girl marries a man, keeps his little home cozy for him, fusses over the meals and fixes up his favorite dishes, mends his clothes, presses his suits, and does a thousand and f one little things for him, then she really begins to understand what married life is. Per He al human being instead of the saint she had pictured, but eWYoves him more for his little faults. And at the same time he finds the same thing true of her. I would like to ask this great sct-| entist what it and if it is just a} “habit” when the girl dolls all up HAT do YOU for hubby, m the minutes seem think? Write Cyn- thia Grey, care of The Seattle Star. like ages before he comes home to supper, when shé listens for his foot- step on the porch and then flies into his arms to receive the everdeRcious Kiss that has met lost its flavor; when, if he is a minute late, she wor-| of us humans—but as far as having ries for fear something has happen-|any definite proof, they have none, e@ to him; perhaps jitney was!7 detieve wrecked, perhaps he didn’t see an| automobile which was coming from) Not Classed the opposite direction; and then when F she finally does hear that footstep | 44 Men © and knows he is all right, what is the} Dear Miss Grey joyous feeling in her heart? course it is unnecessary to do all this | Clothes? Worrying about him being a few min-} One who signs herself “A Wo fates late, but can she help it when | #0,” and who says a woman wears he. means everything to her? The} bat men want her to when scientist may call it “habit” but 1|S8¥s men, she surely doesnot inean gan't, because 1 had no such habit|Feal men, for a real man certainly before I was married. jdoeq not want a woman to expos: May I have my 1 « shoe-tops o ‘Then the. evenings together sit nee Fj Maad hes gat adios ting in hubby's lap in front of the) Vue aie ae eer ae ib oe, 6 “movie” around * fireplace, ar to the “movie” around| "2D. Toone these excuses that | the corner, or perhaps hubby reads | to you while you embroider. 1 won- der if “Just a Married Man” could alize what all this might mean to im? Miss Grey, there are lots of ppy married couples, T am sure, It does seem a shame to let your cor Fespondent class himself with “Just Married Men.” He more property| belongs in the class of “Negligent| Men.” Surely his wife was not that | way when he married her, and I} ‘can't but believe that he was more or less to blame for her becoming stand! around on the street corr and make remarks about wom [they pass—they are not men—they are only dressed in the garb of men And she goes on to say that they dress to attract the male, to lure, and to be pursued, and so on. Then is it a fact that womén are as willing to expose certain parts of their bodies to get them? If that is the truth, then I, too, will sign my self'a hater of women. ALG. a that.way. Perhaps he took it all as a a joke, as the tone of his fetter/OlL PICKLES would indicate. b dont dowbt..but) Ireacumbetrs green but medium {some men would drive a woman to do all of these things, but she cer- tainly isn’t 2 normal woman. sizes , 1 quart. onions YW Pound mustard seed Married nearly three years. + Slice “onions and cucumbers 2 y& BAPPY GIRL nkle with salt and let stand j ; over night. In the morning drain This Artist Feels Different | sax dry ingredients with vinegar About Bobbed Hair Craze jand stir until dissolved. Reat oil |eradually into vinegar. Pour over pickles and put in a covered crock to keep Dear Miss Grey: I am one of the Many who read your column, and I have read with no little interest the different opinions on the subject of sine bobbed hair. Fond time onty tnar| LIMA BEANS IN i deve taken tne tlberty of exoress| LEMON SAUCE ing myself thru your columns, 1 pint lima beans but I feel I am almost forced to defend 1 ese f «art, in answer to the one signing 2 tablespoorts cold water herself “Artist.” First, bobifed hair 1 tablespoon lemon juice is not artistic, for a woman's hair is 1 tablespoon butter her crowning glory, always was, and will always be. Bobbed hair makes & woman look mannish, and it is the Salt und pepper Boll beans tin tender von with salt and keep hot t ex part of a man to look manly, and the| with cold water till light at in part of a woman to look womanly jemon fulce, a utter cook God created them thus, and the| over hot water till thick. Season object of art is to portray nature with salt and pepper and pour over a) That is my understanding of it, and) tang : : 1 have studied art for nearly - 4 “years. One more reason I wou Love is blind, That's why a man liké to give is if it was left to the men to choose, I doubt if the be one man in a hundred that would want to see his wife.or mother wear in love is unable to distinguish be tween an ange SHE IS A'WISE WOMAN re wou and a goose. bobbed hair unless it was necessary. | wo recognizes in the tell-tale symp: A, B. J, ARTIST. |) r 4 er ene | loms such as hackache, headache sh drag@ing sensations, nervdtisness and Impossible rritability the true cause and relies to Answer fon Lydia HK, Pinkham Vegetable Dear Miss Grey: Are the planets | Compound to restore her to & healthy Tesponsible for one’s m ? | normal condition. For 40 yeats this root and herb remedy had eminently INQUISITIVE. You might just as well have ask successful in. confrotling ed: Is the moon made of green|the @scanes of women, Merit alone cheese? Astrologers have a theory} could haye stood such a test of time that the planets influence the lives —Advertisement. Nothing is more unsightly than an un- healthy scalp. This great guaranteed remedy relieves all scalp ills, Get it from your druggist. Ask your barber or hairdresser to apply it. I doubt very much if matty such really true friendships exist. | life, and I am sure that if “Just a Married Man” could have | He cer-| n little of the glamour wears | off and the girl begins to understand that she has married a} Of| little say also in regard to women’s | so crazy to get a man that they are| been pre-| What’ll I | Wt Wear ‘Today? i CZ ee } 1 have ever known, in the hospital as freely as Jim's! «poettort Better?’ I said hurriedly. wife ought to have done, And Ann| ay The poor ¢ > er face on} | Lorimer was put to bed at home he poor child put her face on SEATTLE STAR ae ee Bee Confessi CSSIONS OLa | (Copyright 1920, by The Neusspaper Enterprise Association) THE BOOK OF DEBORAH JIM COMES OUT OF HIS DELIRIUM—SO DEB ISN'T NEEDED “Dead? word | | | the finest girl tho| came and went Bo Deborah Burns, Her lps shaped my arm. and cared for @ trained nurne y Ann liked to be nursed, A simall by | indisposition affords her a grand ex | “But quite cofapsed,” 1 continued. | “Temperature down, delirium gone.” | Her tears wet my hand | “I understand,” she whispered “I'm not to see him again.” She | cuse for a regular orgy of lai ness, Deborah looked Ike a goddem of | renunciation, I thought, aa I took| Ded her pretty head high over to the hospital, “She wa worry about me, Jane dear. member my prayer—mad@ in the Rep bens aang se dust of t pen road. The Lord} F “o'n cap on he smooth crown, and her shining | MA St ao cropped” curls Made a lovely halo) 7 et en t hetped | ‘a: oeanlbepneals nig him when he needed me, He was The internes w quite fascl-| my own for a little while. All mine. | nated, wherefore some of the p I can be tent ‘the reat of my Gicr nurses became suddenty critical! days. You've been awfully under of ™M Burns Inevitably, thelr) standing, Janet’ gossip about Jim's delirium crept) with that whe turned and went| outaide the hospital walls, But itlinto the house. J went he oon didn't matter; if only our Jimmy: | deri how long the poor girl could! boy got well, nothing elve mattered) maintain that difficult pose. to Deb (To Be Continued) Deb, always at hand to be called o to Jim's bedside, had never been) cyy yy Ta ial to beautiful. Mor tace was iu | CLEANING BRASS ome great determination.| When hammered Or ‘éngraved Jeanne d'Arc looked 9°) brane becomes tarnished, it can be when she went to the stake cleaned by rubbing with @ plece of at Jim never recognized her, Lace Patterns— A New Design Every Week Chain Btiteh—The thread drawn thre the loop. Open Mesh—A double chochet into = chain oF the material, Owe and a double crochet. ain stitehes double I ur crochet ir materia itehes 16 til t into Ne. au stiteh from ¢ he need! LADDER EDGING no Wotan can afford fo SUVA eee Ue ee Oe eee | I Thin lace could easily be used as a} ving off the picot stitches, turn, into the seventh stitch from le making the first open m cro * more open m, then chain seven titches, skip seven stitches and dou het into the eighth wtitch Continue until you have made two open meshes, and turn. Second row—Two open m, seven double crochet stitches over the chair made in previous row with a picot on the fourth stitch, two oper meshes, Chain three stitches and double crochet 11 times into the last mesh made, catching the last stitch mto the chain which was mo start this lace, Turn and in thre catehing it with a slip stitch be ween the first and second double crochet stitch. Continue maki: loopa with chains of three stitches, | | BY UNCLE SAM, M. D. In dressing the baby, he should be handled as little as postible. A little s body in very tender and if 1 roughly or too much, he will very uncomfortable Au Ing should be drawn on and instead of over the When he ie dressed completely baby has on a band, shirt, diaper aml bootees. None « clothing should t It in better to d and slip Ugbtly on a jacket for cool mornings and ¢ nings, When baby ts a few months | an old, it is a good plan a hot sum mer day, to take off his clothing for a few m in the middle of the day and allow him to roll and play on a bed. Elaborate or fancy trimmed gar stem }ments have no place in a tittle baby’s wardrobe, Hoth mother ar baby are better off without them especially if the mother must care for the garments herself. Lace about the neck of a Httle baby's dress is Uable to irritate the tender skin and cause the child a great deal |x discomfort, as will starched gar I won't take your time any longer.| i pound celery seed [ments enetimes these irritations }.just want you know that there téispoon black pepper are diftiontt to heal ag lots of us who know what TRUE cup sugar |" For the first few weeks of lite E is. And I am not a newly quarts vinegar died: eer tek Gbte Wathe’ het eat Wed by any means, but have been pint olive oi! esp and grew.. He seeds man and these should be ,and most comfort clean clothes, of the ximplest abi ne. The following are all necessary For everyday ‘wear there should be six plain white slips. These should be cut bythe kimono sleeve pattern 1a tape run thru a facing around neck and sleeves. If they |made 21 inches long from shoulder }to hem, th not need shorter ing. Th never be made longer th Two Sunday that are a the are wil should 27 inches slips may be ma with bishop sleeves and a little efnbroid on the front. Set-in sleeves are more in your home whe Grafonola and Rec your address, 1 hear it play your f There'll be a lot of real happiness ords are delivered to ut innit lemon, It should then be washed in time is inhibitions — p! when che ves with tie, hot water and polished with a dry| miled when she spoke nd went | cloth to sleep only when she held his hand. He certainly lived thru a pecullar kind of a double life while his fever lasted. | “Our patient is much better,” sald the surgeon one evening. The bead pu ted the good news wh ° Deb and 1 were leaving the ho: For This pital. YI caught her hidden mean It was highly probable that Give Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin to 0 could dispense with Miss constipated child and note ite y presence next day It that I ought to prepare quick recovery. Debor she might wish to take y by a growing family the subject of a last long look at the: man she thought with the parents is how to adored—but I couldn't find courage keep the children healthy and happy, my thought into words | > phoned from the hospital as Most ilinesses of childhood are the v carty’ in to Bow symptoms of constipation, such as oP pdm sabre headaches, coated tongues, flatulence, t “Jim's fever has gone down,” Bob biliousness, ete. You can surely feel safe in doin tens of thousan results, so give, according to the the well's Syrup T asked. n't tell. But you'd ther. Jim rium and 1 Bob paused, and Pepsin. Deb stores. It is America’s favorite m Sans Bir pees a8 remedy for constipation, indigestion fhe meget or ‘va eboae™ and similar ills, and is especial suitable nate: aeee Xt. Fm alte for children, women and old folks as Ae. bese at 3 = a ee ll to it is so mild and gentle in action. TRY IT FREE oor Debo: went over to her : By ~ ingetled sre th as usnel There is no secret about Dr. Cald- Send me your name and ad- to sk 1S ny CAP. s well’s Syrup Pepsin. It isa combination dress and | will send youa free See ae ie coine to the howpital ||| of Egyptian Senna and other simple trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin. this morning,” I said, not realizing | what my words might imply ARR Aifficult to put on a little baby. For wear under the allps, baby needs also skirts, Princess style er these may be made text weight flannel or and cotton, needs four “nighties” bags of white outing flan For winter tasting aromatics. Drugy? for thirty will last for months. | mothers are never without it sleeping pel or knitted material. went, the si¢eves of the nightle may be made two inches longer and the! [bottom eight inches longer. Draw tapes may be run thru the sleeves | and the hem and baby's hands and feet protected from the cold. : bags are made 33 Inches inches wide, open down The baby tw Jaid in and up. He can be ed without taking him out of the bag. | front bdg buttoned the pairs. service. the authorized n this Fine Cabinet 1102 E. 45th St. Hopper Kelly Co. ayorite mi All Mothers Will Find Use and what to do when they become iil. dizziness, loss of appetite and sleep, of others do with good hid, a small quantity of Dr. ight million bottles were bought last year at drug laxative herbs with pepsin and pleasant ists have sold it ears, and a sixty cent bottle Experienced Laxative what age of raid family Address me Dr. W. B. well, 513 Washington Street, Monticello, Minois, Every. body now and then needs a laxative, and it is well to know the best. Write me I in the Ford dealers. HUGH BAIRD Fourth Ave. at James St. Elliott 750 L, M. CLINE MOTOR CO. Kenwood 31 CLARK-BAKER MOTOR CO. Tenth Ave. and Jackson St. Beacon 532 THE UNIVERSAL CAR One Hundred Per Cent “Pep” When your Ford car or your Ford truck doesn’t display its usual quantity or quality of “pep” and dash, it’s time to have a repairman who understands the Ford mechanism give it the “once over”’—then make And return it to you full of its old time You'll notice the difference. We employ only skilled Ford mechanics—men made, and how they should be kept, in order to nomical service. And our shop equipment boasts a great many specially designed Ford tools and time-saving devices and machinery. plete assortment of repair parts—genuine Ford parts—that are exactly the same as their tough, sinewy originals in the Ford car. For prompt repair work or adjustments, phone er drive to our garage. Don’t risk chances, play fair with your Ford car. Za eA entching each between ench of the: BRACELETS double crochet stitches, When com REPLACE SLEEVES pletely around the half moon, make , two open im, and continue same & Since no sleeves are worn with thet irst row, Continue until lace is the] hecio? ae sey “03 , ' fe tt smartest of evening gowns) Paris hag required length adopted the fad of covering the armn with bracelets. As many as six OF Death enables us to dodge the tax npnennor even are worn, some of them above ' the « Furs $20.00 to $75.00 If in need of a new Fur yu will do well to look over Wool Sweaters $7.98 to $10.98 The Wool for new Bweate are exceptionally our stock before buying. attractive and smart looking Our prices are very~reason- for Fall w They come able for the high grade of in the season's moet favored fur offered Foxes, Kit ‘olore; many are Coney, White Lamb and with sailor collar and belt Moleskins are included; and some have trimmings New Shawl Scarfs $4.00 to $10.00 You can’t beat our selection of Fancy Wool Scarfs, either as ‘to quality or price. There is a splendid choice of colors, well chosen and beautifully made up. They come with belts and pockets. Some are tassel- trimmed. combed wool taswel trimming; with Children’s Bath Robes Lace, 35c Yard $4.50 Each Imit lace in many n new tractive designs; Pretty little Bath Robes’ for | good quality and reasonably the kiddies on the cool winter J priced. There are pink ones with animal de Cord trimmed. Priced low mornings and blue ones, signs on them. Ages 2 to 6. Ladies’ Purses $2.75 A special offering of Ladies’ Purses; genuine leather; silk lined with coin purse and van- mirror; strap handle. An velooking purse and @ at the price. Sanitary Belts’ 35c Up e stic, others good quality Some are all hav€ elastic side and priced low Ladies’ Hosiery 85c Up Kid Gloves, $2.25 We still have a good assort- Ladies’ Fine Cashmere Stock. | ment of ¢ Washable Kid ings, hemmed top; gray heels | Gloves for ladies. Small sizes and toes; firmly reinforced; | Only—sizes 5% to 6%. If you suitable for fall and winter | can wear any of these sizes buy 4 pair of these gloves. great valies Handkerchiefs 4 for 25¢ wear, They're Onyx Hosiery $2.75 * Hemmed Top Stockings with heels and toes so firmly rein forced as to prevent quick xcellent for school children. r, Pure thread silk; colors are fine, soft cotton brown, black and white kerchiefs with a %%-inch Sizes 8% to 10. hem; plain white. “THE STORE MAT, SAVES vOU MONEY] the necessary adjustments or re- power, “pep,” energy, pull, and who know how Ford cars are give the most efficient and eco- In our ‘stockrooms is a com- Keep it in the hands of its friends, Central Agency Co. A. F. (Burt) Blangy, Manager Broadway and Pike St. East 320 HIGGINS & MATTHEWS 315 Nickerson Queen Anne 74 ALFRED G. AYERST, Ine. 1830 Broadway, Cor. Denny Way East 126

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