The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 11, 1921, Page 9

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MONDAY, APRIT 11, 1921 ues % a Woman's Club Career Interfere With Her “More Important Care They Be Intermingled in Such a Way That Justice May Be Done Both? BY CYNTHIA GREY Can a woman be a success ‘ul clubwoman at the sav community and country best by devoting her entire time i. Rer children? In other words, are children and women's iy spanless spheres? ime more opinions. Dear Miss Grey: dren versus clubs? yy ts it that women marry if not @ @ home and watch their grow up tn the best possible | to man and ? T've often thought of from babyhood ry thing and 1 think they @r three things: dren, and if one has children “ean she attend clubs and card ? She will neglect either one other and of course it Is the m that get the worst of tt. I several families who have chil- @nd love them as much as we; they are sent off to school and know a father’s or mother's Why some do this se their parents did before Mor home. and they believe it ts best. others find «mall away because they are so. still others send them because } believe they learn more. Maybe @o of some things; but don't believe a mother and her love guide those little feet much ? Ido. That's why I assume entire care and responsibility of did no Small son. Sometimes it's hard, @h the glory, when one can look | and say, “I guided him and him to make him what he ts." . in Mrs. Everett Colby’s ] FUBK—the way she spoke out clear g sé Ao care for her own children r children are grown and families, they'll follow in her Why not all the nation § : set the example for our % so they will grow up with Me same ideals? f only the mothers of some of these poor boys and girls who are ta; n for crimes they have co: d had the time or had taken it M sure they wouldn't be where they MRS. F.C. 8. . eee Mise Grey: Under existing regulations there ts in my Mo question as to whether a should leave her children tn are of another that she may her time to the official and re- and financial ability on on: and the mental and physical ty of each Individual mother, on fee EB there te another most vital to be reckoned with, the bus- and and father. Kc @ mother begins eponer, ae Mra ba suggested, ft does not neces under our present laws, il have finished her period h hood any sooner; conse ly, instead of @ few children may be many, and the mother cally worn out that she will Seover strength to enjoy the ble part of club work. ELLEN CLINE e- Miss Grey: What was the Doctrine? AN ALIEN. “Monroe Doctrine was enunct- by President Monroe in his mea- jw to congress December 2, 1883, Wes to the effect that the Amer- Continents were henceforth not considered as subjects for fu- colonization by any European and that interposition @ view to oppressing or con: any of the independent om these continents, on the ey any European power, would | ped by the U. &. aa the mani- of an unfriendly disposi- B toward the U. 8. oe ame Miss Grey: How could Sab- iy, which the Bible refers to, ised from Saturday to Sun- which we claim, or which day Babbath? JEANNE. “Babbath” referred to in the fn the seventh day of the week, ¢alled Saturday, and observed Jews (and by some Christians | present day) as the Day of Early in the history of the mm church, the church author- Changed the Day of Rest from , the seventh day, to Bun- the first day, in recognition of i Reeurrection on the first day. Christians observe Sunday as ING Babddatn. ASPIRIN ne “Bayer” on Genuine Warning! Unless you wee the “Bayer” on package or on tab you are not getting genuine rin prescribed by physicians for ty-one years and proved safe (ailllions. Take Aspirin only as Bol in the Bayer package for Colds, dache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, he, Toothache, Lumbago and Pain. Handy tin boxes of we Bayer Tablets of Aspirin coat | cents anes Druggists also sell larger Aspirin is the trade Bayer Manufacture of Mo ticacidester of Salicylicacid. oe | For kood apple ple, go to Boldt’s, —AAvertinement a nal “STUDY WITH AN: EXPERT AT Business ll ATT oe ymthia Grey: Here's what two Seattle women think about it. May I a few words in regard to Love, fame | le. What does love include | children and full of mischief and send | lege er of Motherhood? Can ful mother and an equally suc- ne time? Does a woman serve Let's have A Bachelor Husband DISHES , BUT KEEP IT IN OPENS IN A Few Days BY RUBY M. AYRES Copyright, 1921, by W. J. Watt & Co, (Continued from Saturday) | Chris woke to daylight and thd} tramp of feet on the road outside, | He started up and stood listening and shaking in every limb. ] He knew what it meant—they were bringing Feathers in . . The inkeeper’a wife came tiptoe Ing to him across the little landing as he stood looking out of the win dow on to the road. She had been up with Marie all night, and whis | pered to him now that she had fallen | aslee “Such a lovely aleep, bless hert’| |she said, with pride, “And if you was to be very quiet - | No more words were needed. Chris went past her and into the room where Marte lay, | “I love you, I love you,” he sald [aloud, as if ahe could hear, but she move or stir, and presently he went away again. The doctor came again, and was | very pleased with Marie's progress, ,. “I think she could be taken home today,” he told Chris, “It will be just as well to get her from thts social world that she is go@place.” | “I see Thank you.” Chris went upstairs slowly, je stood for a long time at his wife's door, not daring ta knock, but at last he summoned his courage. | } She was dressed and sitting up tn &@ dig chair. She did not look eo il!| as he had expected, was his first re | Neved thought, and yet In some strange way she seemed to have changed. Was {t that she looked older? He could not determine, but | |her eyes met his steadily, almost as if she did not recognize him, and her votce was quite even as she answered [his broken question, | “I wish you had let me drown,” the said, with passionate Intensity. ‘Marie—Marte,” said Chris, In an guleh. “Feathers gave his life for me.”| she went on, tn that curtoue sing. song tone, “He could have saved imself, but he would not leare me) —and we were . oh, hours tn} that dreadful darkness!” | “Don't think of ft, Marte! Oh, my dear, try and forget it all. She raised ber haunted brown| eyes to his face, “I can't! I eant hear anything any more but the sound of that dreadful river! It was like a voice, | mocking us. And he was so br: x She caught her breath with a long, shuddering sob, but no tears came. | Presently he said gently: “I shall have to run up te town | this afternoon—only for an hour or| two. I shall come back as soon aa possible. You don't mind, Marte? “IT shall be quite all right,” si sala, thetically, | He left her then, and presently | from the window Marte saw him driving away down the soad, CHAPTER XXVI. j Chris got back to Miss Chester’s deserted town house to find young Atkins on the doorstep, staring with jhe ified eyes at the drawn blinds. | 1 say, it's awful, you know! young Atkins sald aghast. “Miss Chester, and poor old Feathers! I say, what a shocking thing! And) what a marvelous escabe Mrs, Law leas must have had.” “Feathers saved her,” anid Chris, and impetuously he began to pour out pomething of his present diffi- culties, of how impossible it was to bring Marie to London. “T've got a sister—" young At- king made the suggestion eagerty. “She lives close to Somerton, and| she’s a nurse, but she's not doing anything just now. I'll run down and explain to her. I've got a motorbike, © She'd love to have Mrs. Lawless, if you'd care for her| jto go.” . | Chris was only too giad of the suggestion. “It's most awfully good of you,” jhe said, gratefully. ‘You see how jimpossible it is for me to bring jher here?” He was not allowed to see Marie |that night, and it was two days before the doctor would consent tc |her being mo She never spoke during the short drive to the village where young Atking’ sister lived. “If you would rather I stayed with you, of course, 1 will,” Chris said hoarsely, when he bade her | good-bye that evening. He longed j with all his soul for her to ask him to stay, but she only shook her head, It was only just as he was going | and had impulsively raised her hand }to his lips to kinw ft that @ little |1ook almost of horror crossed her white face. “No—no-—pleasef’ sho maid, He felt desperate as he drove back to London. What was the good of living? There was nothing | in the future for him He had left it to Millicent Atkins to break the news of Mins Ches. ter’s death to her, and it was with lan unhappy heart that he went |down to the cottage the following | afternoon. | | Millicent came to him in the gar den, as she saw him drive up, Her leyes s-*e compassionate | “1 am so sorry, Mr. Lawless, but she will not see you. Somehow, J felt sure this would happen, and |that was why I asked you to stay little while. Oh, don’t look jitke that,” she added, as Chris turned his © away. She hesitated, then me to give you this added Marte’s letter waa vory short: | “Pleane do not try to nee me. 1) can't bear it. T want time to think lthings over and decide what to do I will send for you if ever I want you.Marie Celeste.” Continued Tomorrow) | |for a “fhe asked letter,” she | MIND IN CASE 1 SHOULD BE LATE FOR DINNER SOME NIGHT! THE BASEGALL SEASON 4 THE SEAT DOINGS OF THE DUFFS TUWELP You WITH THESE like T You KNOW | WAS A PRETTY Good PLAYER WHEN 1 WAS YOUNGER! Page 335 THE PION @addy?t David that the “In that you, wanted to know. “Is only hotele there were in the early days?” “No, there was one at Olym pla, and every man whe came to Puget Sound from Dixte Land— that le, the etates In the Bouth— liked that one the best of all It was owned and managed by a fine olf negro woman, and her cooking was @ rare treat in the new country. “There was Mr, Tibtals at Port Townsend, ene at Tacoma, and the ol4 Occidental tm Seattle which Mr. Colling managed. “People coming from San Fran- claco in those days had to wade thru sawdust ankle deep to reach that hotel, and tt stood where the Seattle now stands. That was the first real hotel. “But Mr. Collins had a rtval tn @ vacant store room not far away. Men were so uted to sleeping In "Yank’s bed’ man carried his blanket wrapped in an Indian mat and when night came he could roll himeeif up tn the bianket and sleep wherever he happened to be. “Then after a little while the New England house was started. tik that almost every EEK SAILORS The proprietor hed three Gaugh- | ters, nearly grown, and It was much less rough than the others —e nice clean, quiet place. “Bo the hotels started—iittle | shacks and rough men tn the be ginning, growing better year by year as the country was cleared and travel was made easier. “Those men who made the trip by water love to recall things which happened to the men they knew tn the early days “I think it was Captain Sey. more who told about the first tripe he made from @an Fran clace, and the funny men Ip the crew, “Practically all the freight was shipped by sailing vessels, and it was sometimes three or four days after the veasel was loaded before & suitable wind came to start the trip. “In his story the captain says, ‘I waa never so cold tn my life as the night I was “lookout” when we passed Cape Flattery. The northwest wind seemed to search out the very marrow of my bones.’ “There were 13 men in his crew, and it Is about these men that he writes.” (To Be Continued) rae ADVENTURES OF lke Wabat “Hello, folks, how's t After Mr, Seal had finished tell- ing his wife about the circus he had left, he picked up his newspaper and his pipe and started to read again, or at least he pretended to read, But he was chuckling to him- self and hig fat silky @ides were Ko ing out and in with his chuckles. He was pleased at himaeif for impressing upon his wife that a etr- cus wes no place for a quiet, home loving seal. He'd really made out that it was a dreadful affair Mrs. 1 was disappointed. She had hoped that when ehe was mar ried her husband would take her around to see the wonderful wide world that she had heard so much about. She'd heard that beyond the fce- bergs the world was green instead ot white, and that there were lovely things of different in the ground, called flowers, and other things of lovely colors flying around in the air, called birds, She'd ween r-ducks and gulls but the were white and gray like the snow and rocks, Most of all she wanted to a cireus She suddenly noticed her hus band’s fat sides going out and tn. and stopped a sigh she had begun: “Why, Silky," she cried, “I believe you're laughing “Laughing!” snorted Mr, Seal, ao bering at once othing of the ort! It's Just hiecoughs, T ate two pocks of salmon fur my luach, and nee colors growing | TWINS\ 5 Barton — ricks?” called a voice. |I ought to know better at midday, }I shall he to diet again. I'm | wetting too fat.” Mrs, Beal was about to aympa thize, as a nice, pationt wife should do, when a cheerful voice called. “Hello, folks, how's tricke?” It was |Fiippety-Flap, the fairyman, and |Naney and Nick, the twins “Good lands!" said Mre, Seal |drawing back in alarm, “In that « man and a lady and « clown?” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1921, INGROWN TOE NAIL How to Toughen Skin so Nail Turns Out Itself | Lanrereessseoeee: A few drops of “Outgro” upon the skin surrounding the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and | s the tender, sensitive skin | ath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate’ the fle ‘turns naturally outward almost over t utero” je a harmless antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. Low ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing direc bibl » and the nafi| TLE STAR | IMAGINE You WERE - THAT GAME LAST WAT Game! WUOUO~ FRECKLES GOA GuURRaL~ FRECKLES GoT ONCE A WEEK NOW THAT IM DRIVING ‘TH’ GROCERY WAGON ! Confessions of a Bride JANE’S BOOK AT THE STRING’S END We came to the en4 of our strin, suddenly. It led us straight to th wine vaulte, They were dark, bu 1 found the light button. ‘The tiny ball of linen twine ha: been carefully concealed under « box next the wall Of one thing 1 felt sure-—whoever had put i) there would not dare to wander fa away from it Daddy and Spence had forgotte: about the Clicquot and Mumm we had started to find. I glance: around the low room and clung Spence’s arm The place was a still as a tomb. I knew that wha I suspected was about to come true 1 was not at all surprised to hea & voice that I had loved, ages an ages ago. “Janel You here? {t called. | saw my husband standing in a re cess of the room. I saw a girl with tawny balr emerge from ness, Her hair ehone like g0id junder @ nearby light, She ran-+ jtoward us as if she were welcom ing us. She cried out: “Why, it's only youl what a relief! I saw Bob coming to me—! turned to cling to Spence, And then the sound of deepening waters hurt my enurs, biacknes: and cold overwhelmed me, 1 went! down In a heap. But finally, I came back, fully, to light and to life, I was in my husband's arms, | was confused! There I cuddled, with that safe feeling every wife knows, and which every woman needa, Bob held me close, tenderly. Then suddenly I saw the glory of Katherine's hair above his shoul der, Never any more could his arms be my rheiter! J acted on the thought before I had expressed It to myself. “Don't touch me? I pushed him away. “What's the matter? understand®* he exclaimed. I tried to riso—gave my hand to Spence, who helped me. Bob would have displaced Spence. He Goodness» pain I don't Cuts cost of drinking good coffee. Xlent Blend, 1% Ibs., 600; 1 Ib., 350. M. A. Hansen, 40 Koonomy Market.-- Advertisement, RAH Don’t Worry About Your Complexion Cuticura WillTakeCareoflt | If you make the Cuticura Trio your every-day toilet aby ns Lie ealthy skin, g will have a cl hair, and soft wiitte hands, Soap to cleanse, Ointment to heal, Taicum to powder and perfume. ‘uticure Soap shaves without mus. REMEMBER SUMMER WE WENT To? DO YOU REMEMBER THAT four BALL THAT CAME UP In THE STAND AnD YOu TRIED To CATCH IT? REMEMBER HOW YOU STEPPED ON YouR STRAW HAT AND GOT 50 MAD - AND EVERY BODY LAUGHED ! ¢ BY ALLMAN 1 Covi.D TELL You wer A GOOD PLAYER BY tie EXPRESSION ON YOUR FACE! You LOOKED SCARED To DEATH! Ou, HELLO ALEK! HER DAD MIGHT SEE ME AND NOT NOTICE 'WAS BRINGING IN ‘THE claimed the husband’s right with a gesture. “Don't you dare to touch me!” 1 cried passionately. “Father, explain’ “Young man, you're the one to do the explaining” his father re- plied, (To Be Continued) it sup the highest of STAR 1 NEVER KNCW THIS FeLLow To PICK OW ANYONG OF HIS OCWN Size xcept ONCE, ANO ON THAT, OCCASION HE KNOW TH NICTIM WAS A FPAITH EO QUAKER I = WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

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