The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 22, 1920, Page 11

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INEXPENSIVE H AND-MADE AACHRISTMAS GIFTS WHICH | LL BE APPRECIATED Dear Miss Grey: USIC In Seattle MI Kindly give me, if you can, some/Concert by Frederick Suggestions as to how to make pretty and useful Christmas| © Nelson Chorus ts from cretonne and cardboard, | Please help me, as that is way this year. the only way I can give them| E.M.R. | My dear girl, I feel sure there are many more of us in the @ boat. 1 pensive gifts, 1 am of the o ppreciares much more the li pensive. Here are some suggestions: For Handkerchiefs A @ainty handkerchief box ts made & shallow candy box, The lid Covered with sheet wadding which Stued tm place and Covered with @atin or taffeta. The bottom ede finished with ribbon. The box is Bimmed with lace, little ribbon roses ‘@nd a bow of ribbon that covers half et the box. Cushion as Gift pillow cover may be lof yellow linen with a diamond same material hemstitched to ter, At opposite corners of colorful Mowers or but. | aes or cretonne are appliqued ushion can be finished off with sitk cord. A Simple Gift ie mchet bags make an accept Sift. Fil three little square bags B delicately colored silk with cotton gachet. Tie them with another d ribbon and finish with a bow tiny ribbon roses, matching the tions the Game | Dear Miss Grey: Will you please Ry explain a football game to me by play? I have never seen the Played and as I am to attend im a week, naturally I wish to something about it. Will you a|nswer at once? SHY. You have a privilege before you | Cannot learn it im what I will ‘Bbie to tell you—you must see ik and read the rules, or vo gomeone who knows football to i all, dut driefiy: men on each team—one jm “kicks off” i ¢., kicks the ball the opposing team, one of them) Aside from whether one has the means to buy pinion that the ave ttle hand-made gifts, Attractive Cushions Attractive cushions can be made of cretonne. They may be either long or round, The round ones can be finished with a pleated ruffie and A crocheted edie, Roudoir Bag | A lovely boudoir bag is made from two shades of satin ribbon about 1% | inches wide, ‘The strips of ribbon are | joined together at the bottom form: ing @ rose. At the top the bax ts held open by a wire hoop. A small ring covered with ribbon allows one | to hang the bag up. | | Pincushion as Gift | A pincushion ia made of two} shades of satin ribbon about two inches wide folded flat around the cushion, The ends are hidden by shirred ribbons and the cushion ts then trimmed with little ribbon roses. / Lancheon Sets | Very attractive luncheon sets can be made of cretonne, Or the set may be made of linen or other white ma terial and have a rather narrow border of cretonna | oe Persone whe have problems which they do not care to confide dy private letter or phone, may see Cynthia Grey at her office in The Star Bldg, every Twesday and Thersday between the hours of 8 to ila m and 12 toS pom To accommodate working people whe cannot come at that time, she will be in the office cartier or later by appointment. Please do | not come at eny other time, as Miss Grey cannot attend to her writing because of the conston{ tmterruption | | Invitation to Lonely Ones Dear Misa Grey: For the benefit Tuesday evening the Frederick & Nelnon chorus will give their first concert of the season. The chorus THE SEATTLE STAR pay se a THE BOOK OF DEBORAH \I VOW TO USE ALL MY ENERGY IN THE} CREATING OF A HOME } T think T must have turned white, and drawn. My own color had van | | | | | for Deb brought me some smelling | ished. yjerick & Nelson staff, janticipated by both teacher and stu is under the direction of Claude Mad-| quits and a pillow before she con don, with Arville Belstad accom! tinued ‘The concert is for the Fred-| «ann knew you'd be territty hurt The PrOKTAM | You know how tmpulstvely she acts She changed partners, very quickly and without attracting much atten tion,” panist will be an f “K Arta, “La Bon: Mimi Bong of the Be ™ “One can do anything unnoticed at Chang Foo's, I suppose,” I paid bit- terty “Well, Ann made our people do |her bidding, She sent Van off with Kath Immediately and steered Bob back to her stall, She took all that Jane.” Chorus an in the 2 a Swe Reading, “The M: Au trouble to save your feelings, “She meant to be thoughtful,” I nAraitted. aura Pingrey y & Your Ago AI a And she managed ft very neatly, Vora! soles. you must admit,” Deb urged. Hinilin® TRE! «os cecene ope iat “The trick waa like her,” I pro tented. “Of course lea, subterfuge and deception mean nothing nn. | | But I refuse to be consoled by « lie! |I'm ruled by my brain, Emotion |rules Ann. The truth has nothing oo. Josef Lhevinne _ bone yo . | hateve! 0 do ith he or ite." Coming to the Met 1 ane Wien: Gast bis tacee eeicment The Ladies Musical club the flat truth. ‘That's why you auf.| nouncés Josef Lhevinne, the fer said Deb with a sad amile brated Russian pianist, on Thursday} It wae after this little talk that T evening, December 2 at the Metro-| fell i, 1 didn't go to bed. I wan politan, Lhevinne ts a master of | dered around aimlessly and forlornly pianists, and his recitals are eagerty | Nobody cared about me—I believed. Once Hob would have called me up dent. Lhevinne, having been in-| by phone Just to say a cheering word terned in Germany at the outbreak | to I would have called him at of the war, was forced to cancel hin| bis office to let him know whether American engagements, It was not|my head ached. Now that my heart til 1919 that etre rmitted | Was one big ache, I never called him his return « years, |at all, Because, rightly or wrongly, and his pre | I was sure to be hurt if I found he vented Woatern | wna not at bis desk, always imagin- dates. The present trans og that he was at lunch, or tea, or tour opened at Carnegie hall October | riding with the girt with the tawny and the New York press was en. | hair, | thuslastic in its praise, At Qhis time, I was passing Giro ve the very depths of misery. - +902 sos . 1 tried to hold > head and Silvio Leary ee ». Sh aie tahegenteale wan Sb ‘0 Pres ils most as destructive to my poise aa yete ould have been. Sitvio Risigart will present a num. |!) steria woul ber of his pupils in recital on Tues | Ode day 1 put on ae peel day evening, November 33. The con.| ¥bich had Just been de gra hel cert will be given in the hall of the | 8" Shocked to ave myself in Seattle Fine Arts society, on Fourth | Pretty pink thing. My face was thin ave, and will begin at 8:20 o'clock . Amith “Bong of the Ma Hadley an cele 80," me, « umatance Eastern engagements him from filling ontinenta lever to come together again “Don't decetve yourself any lone er.” said myself to the worn Iitile face in the glass, “You're on the wrong tack, ‘This agonizing over the past, this morbid depreciation, this passive acceptance of your unfortu nate domestic relations are simply | destroying you. People actually do die of love, sometimes. Their melan choly reacts on their livers, I sup pone, and pretty soon their whole organism ts out of gear, Can't you have @ little sense, Jane Lortmer? Don't let a cheap woman like Kath erine Miller destroy you.” I told myself that Bob had not | | been fair to ma, but even #0, I had| traveled around the ¢ of my wretchedness long enough. What I| needed was a straight path tn the future mynel f: “I made a contract with Bob a few years ago. Under it, I agreed to do! the best that I can under all circum tances ‘until death do us part.’ And 1 haven't been doing it, Neither has | Bob, but this lan't the time to think | of what Bob has failed to do. Bob | will always do as he choosen. It is I who must compromise, if we to mynell . My husband's failure to do his share doemn't relieve me of my responsibil ity as a wife, Hereafter, Um going to put the last ounce of enersy and character in me to the creating of a home.” And T confers that tn the weeks of my misery I had lost all my joy m our home. I had turned all the pret ty services 1 formerly had paid our home over to the maid, Bob and I might aa well have been living in two rooms in a hotel I msuppone the world 4s not without other wives who could confess as much, Some shirk thelr proper work and some set out to attraét the homage of other men “And are things I might have sold and did not sell,” I quoted to the white face in my mirror, (To Be Continued) there The man who imagines he never did a fooliah act isn't wise enough to ty is. | of CLERIC WINS | BEAUTY PRIZE HENDBON, Ene A the garden fete here was @ beauty | feature of | rompetition, the prize being given | to the man who best represented a| woman The Rev. in the height popular vote FILM TO SHOW HYPNOTISM BERLIN, Germany—The film t# being uned in Germany for displays of bypnotiem. A leading German film company recently pre series of pictures show! experiments on human be with explanatory German selentiats, Reginald French of fashion won by | yoed a} hypnotic | ings and! anim headings by WASHING HINT For the uninitiated and Inexpert this enced in washing clothes “hunch” is meant When lifting the clothes from the botler, especially big pieces, take up thickness of cloth on the clothes ntick. Then begin and wind and lift the article, pulling it from the rest of the things in the boiler By the time the sheet, for instance is wound around the stick a lot of water will ave drained out and the sheet is easily lifted to the tub of LOZANO AEF We lo Woltant can affand fo ete we ODD As SWNT 0 ODS * ORV EH SNR TA eH REFERS, 8) OF NE, (re ZAZA |SHOW LOBES OF EAR FASHION’S DECREE | Fashion decrees that the newest | hairdressing styles must show the Beauty experts advise rouging the tip of the ear very delicately Rugs and Carpets CLEANED The Fuzzy Wuzzy Rug Co, Bince 1900 Phone Capitol 1233 obese of the ears Was Overcome by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound aa for @ complete ‘ down following the birth of my | up too soon which | od werious fe- was so weak that I was not able to | very little and could not do m T had @ bad pain in my left side a would pain terribly if 1 # booklets was thrown in the yard and 1 read every word in it. There were medicine that I wanted to try it and my husband went to town and got me relief after the second dose, so I kept on until I had taken five bottles and | wish, About a year later I gave birth to a ten pound boy ' ‘om a Woman Whose Serlous Illness Garnett, Kas.——“I first took Lydia nervous break i] oldest child. I got | male trouble. 1 | be on my feet but housework at all, urb-ntone. One day one of your #0 many who had been helped by your a bottle. It seemed as though I felt by that time I was as well as I could two me Idren sin my health | a has been fi If 1 ever have trouble | ny kind I am going to take your | medicine for 1 yive it all the praise for my good health, I always recom- mond your medicine whenever I can.” | —Mrg. Eva E. Sitar, Garnett, Kansas, pped off |” rinsing water, Another Sleepless Night? It’s been a busy and fretful day. Brain fagged, nerves frayed and body exhausted—conscious that tomorrow is fraught with new trials and tribulations, he realizes the imperative need of a refreshing night's rest. Yet, he hesitates and dreads to go ta bed lest he roll and toss throughout the night. Do you experience the horrors of nightmare and insomnia? Are you troubled with wakeful, restiess nights? Do you get morning feeling more tired than when ase your revt ie su disturbed Uroken. The Great General Tonic ‘The hour of bad-time will soon lose ite terrors and you wil begin to seek your couch with pleasurable anticipation night free from disturbances. “LY KO” will bless you wert, sound and peaceful slumber and bring you down to breakfast table jn the morn’ trim, keen for the day's activities; rested and refreshed appetite unequaled since you were @ boy. leven brain fag exhaustion; boi nerves; strengthens the mus- cles: correcta digestive isor- Jersand rehabilitates generally the weak, irritable and worn out. Ask your druggist for = bottle uxtay and get rid of nd have had ,seepless nights, Sole Men vlectarere LYKO MEDICINE CO. cone Now York Kansas City, Mo. ke Some 20 ANT oh For Sale by All Druggists—Always in Stock at the < a ee i @ with the other mem- |The public is invited. The program * | know what fol Of his team defending it, tries of those who frequently write to you 14 be given will be as follows FOR ITCHING TORTURE | one wesaie Dna } fo return it to the enemy goal line, of being ljonely strangers in our city, | Pretade and Pugee —_ ade | ‘ ~- Avesis| Use Antiseptic Liquid Zemo | ped “downs” are allowed to carry |! would like to say that every SO: | seguidilia ......+ ss. sss Dall 10 yarde—df it in not Gone, | day, Tuesday, Wednesday and Satur. | Louise McDonald ‘other team gets the ball with the |4ay evening, free meetings of var. | March Grotengue «2-0. sas dinding privilege Sometimes the dail | ious kinds are held at 100 Lyon bide. | one rite Sarorard fhrown from one player to an-|2ti and James, which they gre |The Littie White | fo gain ground instead of be-| cordially invited to attend. They are | CMrrHoml -. ‘Carried—this is a “forward pass.” Si80 welcome to use the reading wryy _ . n 2 it is kicked when the | Toom afternoons or evenings for an |The Clown bats Knows tf will not be able to| hour or two, and an invitation x: | Omi the It-yard gain in the | tended to attend the occasional “Cet Mra trowntield left; this t¢ @ “drop kick” | Tomether” socials given at the hall. | pretete @ Miner makes the opposing team I sincerely hope that this may Bmpremte 7 Khare Dall that much further to| S0lve the problem, in part, at least, | wersens Wish for many. INTERESTED, elie fs 5 aE is easy arge bottle, $1.00. ite sot or sticky and is positi tale for tender, sensitive skins, ‘The B. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O. KEW YORK. —Whitney Warren, | Mabis"Atniadiet American artist, appointed to re. | Bgclette Paraphase store University of Louvain, de) Nita Jade ™ mB M)...Chopin stroyed by German invasion in 1914. |“7*** “Pt Novgmens | 3 The ACE—of the Air that marvelous achievement of the human intellect, was developed to perfection dur- ing the war by the concentrated genius of America’s leading Engineering Experts. These same great minds have, from their vast store of practical experience, brought their ingenunity to bear on the perfecting of the Automobile. The result is The ACE—of the Road Master Car of America. Engineering ex- cellence of the highest degree—perfectly balanced—big reserve of power—massive but light. A Thoroughbred throughout— clean design—lines of beauty and. refine- ment. The ACE- THE UNIVERSAL CAR x \% anil leas atin The Ford Sedan is the favorite family car, seats five comfortably. While. an enclosed car with permanent top, it has large windows, and may in a minute‘be changed to a most delight- ful open car with always a top ‘protecting against the sun, In inclement weather it is a closed car, dust-proof, water-proof, cold-proof. Finely upholstered. Equipped with electric starting and lighting system and demountable rims with 3¥,-inch tires all around. A real family car. Anybody can safely drive it. It has all the conveniences of an electric car with the economy which goes with Ford cars— low cost of purchase price, small cost of operation and main- tenance. Won't you come in and look at it? HIGGINS & MATTHEWS 315 Nickerson Street, Queen Anne 74 ALFRED G. AYERST, Inc. 1830 Broadway, Cor, Denny Way East 126 HUGH BAIRD Fourth Ave, at James St. Elliott 750 is manufactured at Ypsilanti, Michigan by the L. M. CLINE MOTOR CO, 1102 KE: 45th St, Kenwood 31 CLARK-BAKER MOTOR CO. 10th Ave, and Jackson Bt. Beacon 533 CENTRAL AGENCY CO, A. ¥. (Bert) Blangy, Manager Broadway and Pike Street East 320 = 2 ale =; 3: Ww; é. ss S ) — Write for Interesting Mustrated Booklet ‘Telephone EAST 849 for ACE Demonstration GENERAL DISTRIBUTORS CORP’N Yactory Distributors 1407-1413 Eleventh Avenue

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