The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 16, 1921, Page 9

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vynthia Grey Why Do Brunette Girls Disappear More Fre-| ner (Com Tt waa (hb A between tides wently Than Blondes? | riers we eels bs reat ta the e Writer Delves Into | ect \auanter that ran. over. the Astrology for Answer; | eet was piainiy audibie. They could Another Attributes | srr enim and it a cigeret. Cause to Super -Emo-| “Looks tie tney moan & the ‘, 5 fe fiat Ferrara bv arded “Can you tions Of Dark Races. | ir inat and make anything What's Your Hunch?. | “vet tem ao the tilting.” MacRae —— janswered. “If the fieh run heavy I Dear Mins Grey: A word to those | oan make a littie, even if prices go ‘whe wonder why brunettes disap | higher, If he boosts them to seventy: | pear more frequently than blandes five, I'd have to quit 1 would find the answer in the study Macktae kept abreast of Folly Ray | ef astrology for 10 days and emerged from that period with © slight lose, because at ‘The air we breathe is of mineral The dark men and women thicker skins than blondes. | ‘¢ same ; ; | iaterally it has larger cella and|™inal warehouse, But when he ran Paraws the light and salts and elec | NI" first tend into Crow harbor tricity with a greater force. Con meant Dogon pened ad origen ~ sea) hey are not sensitive and|™on his men were forking acros gy tare dl the floor and drew Jack into his have a better chance to use the strength they draw. | Blondes are weaker and more | offies. t forces they draw thru the alr.) Mhg-vine nature, they have not the @ourage to face the hardships of the World. depending solely upon their own ability. MAY, eee ‘Dear Miss Grey: I think the ree). )), @0n more brunette girls disappeer | comet londes is because they are gov tween Then # ” by their reason. A smooth) oj, ), @ man might influence a dark eth xioned girl, when a blonde | gemande. sive him the laugh. h emotional, quick tempered Faces of the world gre the dark ones I am inclined to believe that we Rhemans are guided more largety by emotions than common sense. it fs the lack of emotion, rather than & greater supply of common sen that causes the blonde type of gfr!| to hesitate when on the threshold of her home, and turn back, where the emotional brunette would forge etraight ahead Hc. C ° | ust “well,” a dollar tho. a definit Very w them. them at could ini loss on ¢ fhe son of James II. of England? [™e ~ YOUNG HISTORIAN. | dollar te , He ran ‘This son, James Francis Edword several attempts to regain the | of Bagland, but was defeated teok refuge in France, later re- pin stand an: mon. you stop. were Catholics and how many ? MAUDE We presidents of the U. 8. have} members of the Roman Cath-| church, Nine were Masone ton, Jackson, Buchanan, | Garfield, Johnson, Toft, Me-| |, Roosevelt. President Harding manent cliffs to ‘ seem. : moe e Mem | ong the cliffs until he saw the : white cottage, and saw that some Become one sat on the steps in the «un rmy Nurse | Whereupon he turned back. He} )Dear Miss Grey: How may one | didn't want to nee Betty. He con Become an army nurse? AMY. | ceived that to be an ended chapter | Write to Major Julia C. Btimpson.| in hig experiences. He had hurt her, | Buperiatendent of Army Nurses, Mu-\and she had put on her armor @itions Bldg., Washington, D. C., who against another such hurt. There Wil furnish you proper application | Bian ka | him terr! fourths of the t “No thing worth more by their emotions and) o- oo a case I wan't go any ¢ MacRae went ba harbor and dropped from seven hundred dollars on each load, until even Stubby lost patience with boats, Jack. Let kindly to being beaten, Rock TRAND W. SINCLAIR Sopyrieht, 1920, by Littie, Brown & Co, were worth at the uebacks caught b nan and Folly Fe Bay ba nly . must be crasy,” cannery can m profit.” nety jon your limit? MacRae| 4 about.” Stubby granted. | eoluctantly—“I That's the utmost rther.* k n his mind. G 4 idea ell, then, he should & lows, and #0 far as Mac flict lose upon him ower. in cargo after y loms myself. and the Bluebird moorings. be alone. idly. y had determined to have the salmon Poor Man’s|| the close he was paying more than Ter “L've made a contract for detivery | The beunettes (Of MY entire sockeye and biueback BIg “crentar’ torce ef eamed “4 pack,” he said. “I know precisely have 7. hs action | where I stand can pay up to BBA strong mental powers. With the ninety cents for sly fish, I want all the Squitty biueback# you can are strengthened to stand OM be Go arier them, Jack.” Their own two feet anit carry out And MacKtae went after them. He heir own ideas and whims rather | p04 the imeue He sed the price Shan to depend upon someone else tty sixty-five, (o seventy, to seventy Side them. Blonde types, expecially | five, to aighty. Hy the third week in Women, are of such a sensitive. cling | juiy Macttae was taking three ” Jum ped | | the price to ninety cents, te ninety. | five, to a dollar. — Stubby | o any reckoning at a dollar cents and five cents’ can stand Lignit, Squitty with ower have But he would have to take| tae | with | deliberate calculation he decided to} lone the greater part of what he had made, if for every dollar he lost him | self he could inflict equal or greater MacKae met every raise Foy Bay He saw bluebacks go to « then to a dollar fifteen. cargo to Crow three, to} “What's the sense in becking him um you go broke? I'm In too deep to Tie wp your | Let him have the sal those blockheads of fish ermen see what he'll do to ‘em gree But MacRae held on til the firet hot days of August were at hand/ and his money was dwindling to the | vanishing point. Then he ran the Blackbird Squitty cove and tied them to per He sought the into rwer had beaten him, tt would And MacRae did not He walked take yas a studied indifference about ber now, when he met her, which hurt | He supposed that in addition to his own incomprehenst bie attitude which she resented, she took sides with her father in this Dear Miss Grey: Where was the & F obvious commercial warfare @figinal home of the Indians, and @id they get on our soil? y. 0B ne was bleeding them both financ | Very likely she saw in this only the "s ED. open workings of his malice toward ‘They ore oagebh of Asiatic | Gower. In which MacRae a ed ged Ree gpm she would be quite correct. He had hap ¢|not been able to discover in that Peecific istands, or having crossed af) 0, ing.up of passion for Hetty an ~ the Behring Straits, where the two continents were perhaps joined. cee Not Good ing Dog Dear Miss Grey: Does @ collie | Make a good hunting dog? BERT. Be. A collie, or sheep dog, is uscd @2 @ watch doo. The rough-haired @ariety of Bootch collics are the tra- Gtional and typical sheep dogs of the world. f May Cut Timber at Any Time Dear Miss Grey: In there a right » @nd wrong season to cut timber from the land and does the time of cutting | effect the productivity of the soll in| ‘any way? FARMER The forest service says that, #0 far es they know, the cutting of timber oes not affect the productivity of | the soil. ED PEPPER HET QCKEST REL FROM ARENT Concentrated Heat Penetrates —Brings Quickest Relief Rheumatiem, lumbago, neuritis, backache, stiff neck, sere muscles Gower, the sea. sun reat bone of Point Ot then lurching One, 10, cession, again a MacRae He left fring “What' auletly carrier's “Folly he said wee if y ( strains, aching jointa. When you); are suffering so you can hardly get! { @round, just try “Red Pepper Rub,” another the ouver bac! Ja serrated inland. on Vane ed id, saw first one boat come sipping Poor Man‘s Roc a@ dozen, an endless pr sometimes three abres string in single file, M around felt tt his boulder and back toward the Cove, The trolling boats were about the Blackbird fo clone MacRae left his dinghy on the outer <6 ‘and walked decks to the deck of his own vense! he asked across ‘a coming off?" “You fellows bh convention of some sort?’ One of the men’ sitting on the big k reason for a burial of his feud with He epent a good many hours during the next three or four days) lying in the shade of a gnarly arbu. tus which grew on the cliffs took a book up there with him, but | most of the time he lay staring up at | the blue sky thru the leaves, or at| He Then upon an evening when the MacRae, perched on a mossy boul-} der midway between the Cove and} and ar « Rae sat watching them pass, won-| fering why the great trek. There was something in the wind lke @ premonition hurried packed that | their rail spoke Bay's quit—shut down,” sheepishly. “We come te ud start buying sain.” lontinued Tomorrow) INGROWN TOE NAIL THE SEATTLE STAR DOINGS OF THE DUFFS WHAT TIME DOES THE SHOW START, EIGHT FIF TEEN D YES, COME ON ! ) HAVEN'T SEEN AN OPENING CHORUS SINCE WE'VE geen MARRIED ! GLASSES! CAN YOU BEAT IT: AWAY AND foRGoT MY Were, PLE TRY _ANO GET ALONE WITH OUT ‘THEM! 1 CAME Maybe Tom Is Only Near-Sighted You DON'T NEED LASSES | THAT SHORT SKIRT, HELEN? WERE LOOKING FoR» BET Vou CAN'T WALK ON YouR WANDS’ AN’ GET utr CANDY W YouR MovTH NAt-MWaAhstha- WELL GNE You ANd ER, Cle Page 312 AFTER THE FIRB David and 4ad¢y both laughed | at that time, and her young men at the story of the pretty gir! and friends would come and get a meal the usgty girl in thetr bidomers,/ most any time You ees, there and perhaps ft was that Inugh| wasn’t hotel or restaurant or a which started Mra. ——'s mind off | cafe left standing. on the fire memorien “They got quite famMar with “Some funny things happened ™y house, too. Knew just where at the time of the fire,” she sald. | the pantry wae and the little “My lUtte bey was really the one | clowet on the porch where I put who saved the Btetson-Post build ‘kings to cool and keep frenh. tng in the Rainier block. Heeaw| “One Gay I took @ plate of drip a woman wringing her hands and | Pings I had collected to set tt out exying, ‘Tt will entch and tf tt don | ‘Dera I used to let the grease the fire will go ap the hi Oh!) form Utte cakes, as it will, mn Why Goeant somebody get up, there off with « fork and keep there and keep & wet? them for frytag. “My boy was onty 12 years old,| “Well. aa I'd fed wm many extra, but he was brava ‘I'l go,’ he |T had quite @ platetul and I had waid, and go he did, and he and pat ft out there to keep fresh. another little boy saved that “That night ene of the boys building. When be came down | dropped tn, and after supper he and staggered up to me I didn’t! went out on the porch. know him any more than if he} “He felt quite at home and he had been a stranger. |opened the little cupboard door “Tle was os black as tar and/ and peeped in. had a big «ilk handkerchief hang- “‘Ah? he said, ‘ent this great! ing around his head, and over that Mises Laura has ect these ltt a man’s elk hat. cookies out here to surprise me. “Our house didnt burn, and/ She knew I'd be nosing around’ everybody who had a house and | And he bit Into one of the cakes of food and « place to cook it served | pure grease “meals to many people “I guess he wae surprised, all "My daughter was a young lady | right,” she concluded. Raernk ADVENTURES = WINS Barton Nancy, Nick and Mlppety-Flap, |hiding up in a jungle tree, heard | Squeak, the circus elephant, tefing his parents about the circus, from | neck and I'll get on behind and p which he had escaped. up my feet to hide ua. Now, Suddenly Squeak gave a lond cal | Jump!” and waved hia trunk wiffiy in the| It worked perfeetty. Jair. “I amoli ‘em,” he cried excited |Off at a trot, thinking that he cou ly. “There's a peanut-tree near, as|Feach the tantalizing and ae branch #o that the bag dangles |front of bim. ure as I have a nose. Do you see|tore thru the jungles and any and blue striped paper |Oceana, the adventurers went w bags, anybody?” | him invwered Mra, Flephant, | @ around with her little eyes but in the tree right over our hea two very queer things that | like immense tortoises.” | him back to the ctreus. (To Re Continned) I What she saw waa really Flippety: Flaps large feet, or rather the fairy. | And that's the way they brought him back to the circus. “Now, when I aay Jump, Nick, you land on Squeek's head and hold this Nancy, you sit on his but then, Bquenk net! ewam And that's the way they brought BACKACHE OF WOMEN The back Is often called the main | | in 21d | he th }and Mansfield chorused. Les —_ Confessions of a Bride Copyrighted, 1971, by the Newspaper Enterprise Assertion THE BOOK OF MARTHA BEST BUSINESS TITR “Had you been a married man, the irl would have beseiget you just the same! Martha commented. “The the trewpaseer™ | “Jack Barnes te married! I havent observed that a wife proves a # that a man can depend upon! Mansfield remarked. “There are hundreds of conscien tous and eelf.cespecting women In business!’ I protested. “There are! -There are! Martha | “But at thin moment we are discussing’ the other kind,” my friend continued. | “You know, Jans, that the trespass ery are the girls and women who pretend to go to work for the work's sake, and then make it an oppor. | tunity for sentiment, slush—and worsen “I don’t hold that man fs a saint.” | Arthur Mansfield commented, “but! really, I nev@ yet knew a man to take a ponition for the sake of its romantic opportunities! “I think girla do! Not infrequently, firis who are paid to be busy think of nothing but thrusting themselves upon the notice of men who would prefer to be busy. It's easy to pick them out in an office—if any are present!” | “I'ma hard olf bachelor, bent on defending my isolation to the end,” laughed Mansfield, “and I honestly believe that it is a man's responsi bility to keep a trespasser in her place—which is not in his arms!’ “Would any man find It possible to no rebuke a pretty girl?” T asked myself. I couldn't help wondering what Rob would do,’ if tested #0. Probably he had been rather silly | about Katherine Miller, nevertheless | if attacked by a “trespasser” Bob would be indignant! Men Ifke to make their own conquests, They do not like to be picked out, nor picked upon! I felt ure that my Bob would prove to any aflly “trespasner” that he could be Joyal to his wife! Cer. tain young women need that lesson and will learn it only when righteous ly reproved by indignant married men, Yes, I could trust Rob that way. I wanted to run directly to his office and tell him so! was still talking: “There are two kinds of women in the business world,” she averred. “The trespasser is the old-fashioned But Martha kind! Oh, yes! A descendant of Lilith! Out ahunting a man! But the other woman ts the supreme phenomenon of the era, She ts for. tified by cter, education and tn. clination to rival man in almost any occupation. This new maid doesn’t disregard man and the mating prob- lem, » is sophisticated, but she has an educated will as well as an educated mind!" “An educated wil repeated Mans. field. “You must have been reading Payot? Then they turned Ifke true Intel me Tog will have the quickest re }|man's very large shoes, I've ani spring of a woman's life. What nown. i |idew that his feet didn’t fill them: [can she do, where can she 0, #0} Nothing hae such concentrated. TURNS OUT ITSELF :| “Ana 1.” boomea Mr phant, {long as that deadly backache eps Penetrating heat as red peppers + | “see ‘three very curious creatures |every particle of her strength and Instant relief. Just as #000 a8 yOu !.sssessesmsesssessssreseeseeseessseeonemees! |One ty pink, one is blue and th jambition? She cannot walk, #he apply Red Pepper Rub you feel the| 4 noted authority mays that a few other a sort of lemon color. Can/cannot stand, her i a tingling heat. In three minutes it | drops of “Outgro” upon the skin sur-|they be peanuts, son? If #0, I shajl|burden, or the long hours bebind warms the sore spot through and|rounding the ingrowing nall reduces get them for you at once.” the counter, in the office or fa through. Frees the blood circula-|inflammation and pain and so toug “Ooo!” shivered Nancy. “Hemeann|tory are crushing. She is miser lion, breaks up the congestion~—and jens th ve skin under-|us, Mr. Flippety-I’la What shall | a The ume ie many me is gone. neath the that it eannot|we do?” ¢ | ine derangement of her eyster Rowles Hed Pepper Rub, made penetrate the flesh, and the mail| “Leave it to me, Kiddie,” answered |and backache is a common « from red peppers, conta littie at any |turns naturally outward almost ever |the fairyman, calmly. “And do just|tom, Lydia B Pinkham’s Vem drug store. Get a jar at once. Al night as I tell you. We must act at|table Compound ts « reliable reme mort instant relief awaits you. Use| “Outgro” is a harmiens antiseptic | once.” dy for backache, as for more than ft for colds in chest. No matter | manufactured for chiropodists, How-| He took a paper bag of real pea | forty ye it has been relieving what you have used for pain or ever, anyone can buy from the drug|nuts out of one of his magic shoes,| women of America from th congestion. don't fall to try Keed | tore @ Uny bottle comtaining direc Jana, breaking a large branch off the|ments which often cause i--Ad Pepper Bub—Adverusement tons. tree, tied the bag to the end te Be lectual and spiritual mates to a dis cussion of the book. J gathered that “The Education of the Will had run thru 30 French and seven American | editions! And that its theme was that one does not master oneself by mak ing concessions to oneself! It was directly opposed to the popular phil onophy of the time. “Vietory ever eroticiam t# won by | not thinking about it at allt ‘Thus | ] Clear Baby’s Skin | With Cuticura 1S WIHOUTAN | [ BANK FOR THE 18) RENT MONEY Hi +e whe SAVING (TTD TAKE UTTUE FEL TOWN TO SEE A CIRCUS PAPER YESTERDAY 1S @:32! Ttha quote from the book. (To Be Continued) I heard THAT SMITHRINS DOD cast NiauTe owe EQUAL, STATES SEATTLE WOMAN | |“I Can Never Repay the Debt | of Gratitude I Qwe Tan- lac,” Says Mrs. Langlands. “Tantac has reiteved of troubles | from which I suffered for years, Jand I can never repay the medicine the debt of gratitude I owe it,” said Mrs, Kate Langlands, of 7228 |2nd Ave, 8, Seattle, “I had rheumatism in my Iimbs so bad/I could hardly get around, and the pain it caused me was sim ply terrible, I suffered dreadfully from indigestion, too, and my food} soured in my stomach, and gas bloated me up 80 bad I could scarce ly breathe, I suffered from such severe headaches that at times I could hardly see, and would become | so dizzy I would almost fall over. | I was so nervous and restless and | in such misery at night that eleep | was almost out of the question. 1 lost weight, and-got so weak and run down it was all I could do to look after my housework. “Some of my friends got me to try Tanlao, and the medicine has so completely rid me of indigestion | that I can eat anything I want} without it bothering me. I'm en-| tirely free from headaches and dizzi ness, and the rheumatism is go| nearly gone I never notice it, 1 have gained around ten pounds in| weight and feel like a new person. | I don't believe ‘Taniac has an equal anywhere, and I can't recommend | it too highly.” Taniac is sold by the Bartell Drug Stores, Seattle, and Brooks & Son, | Kennydale,—Advertisement, THAT DOESN'T SOUND ANYTHOG UkG he STUEE You SHOT OF AGOUT HIM BEFoRGe HE PASSED Ove i! STAR ADS BRING RESULTS

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