The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1921, Page 9

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PAGE 9 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1921 THE SEATTLE STAR ynthia Grey: DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Tom Performs Better in the Air Than on the Ground - BY ALLMAN THE NEXT TIME YouR KITE GETS CAUGHT §M THOSE WIRES- YOU WAVE YOUR MOTHER GET ‘T FOR you! SHE'S THE GRACEFUL ONE IN THIS rou Cultivating the Weed of Selfishness in the} de ve, Plastic Brain of Your Child, Misnaming It} Mother-Love? WELL PL TRY To cer it! 1 read the woman's letter last week under the caption | cal Man Snubs Puithful Wife of Twenty Years” t for the opinion of readers, the writer believes: that | Miss Grey @qBalfiah, Bgottst! answering her reaues’ of "M. C. T” ts & ery Common one among women, but they the ya, the Courage to admit It, when they realize that thelr years have | wereen directed to quality them to meet the unexpected and become inde- | f the support of such a bus | et Cobiem, “MC. T." ts the problem of many women, and should lead Tour Pe that they must wnite In the atm to solve it, for it has been the of our mothers and will be the experience of our daughters | mm only way it can be met is thru : nich character train-| _ tion, of ¥ : ; ISS GREY will receive read be, feligions and rors’ jonal, must ao of (ts Gpaned ot pave the arantest share. WAL Mf) The Star offies on Tuemdays from jout character ~~ 19 to 4, and at other times by ap pointment, Please do not come pwiedge wit! tee, and what we can accom bs im achievements that will con- Beeaeks F sllksGaeg 2 Fibtas te to the welfare of the whole ends 9 — <—— -. Loge things that count. Undoubt cae ais “Open ae sae wp you have been given this ex-|| Way Ooi . oe y pu to ttort tors interfere with lence to awaken you to the ¢ contribute the benefit of your ing. pete for those who come after you. | peat waste your vitality grieving | Helpful Remedy eer what you thought you owned. | for Oily Skin fe love is a germ that must be)” Dear Miss Grey: My akin is very gered and developed with ‘under oun bs tiene caaaranamaman es ‘The chances are that you |. est to rem this? jt too much attention and it ppalb os jecty <a Br weary and blind by'your too! 17 your skin te foo olly the follow- gue attention which fed the Ee ling solution used once a day wili gvedfishness in your husband hele-—4-drem berte ectd, M-eunce ur. educational system provides alcohol, 534 ounces of rose water punterstanding of the proper con-| Use it at night preferably. fet of our lives, We take up the/ on es important vocation that life) How to Keep fais, with the same measure of | A hedge that is possessed by an Ice Cream — : srt grade schoo! girl, We would Dear Miss Grey: Is there any way | ‘take up any other voca- | Yeu can keep ice creun over a day | dba a orevareion- tor. [or.cwet HOUSEWIFE. | | bea If there 4s tee orcam left and We have the vote Let's use our | 10, p10 me ple appr yeaBroery! and atm for an etucational ope 97 gelatine in water a few min- Maem that will develop life on all | Ufo, gissolve it im builing water, ond gies, namely, spiritually, mentally | wren cool, beat i into the ice} wd physically. leream. Turn into a mold and put it) ‘The rocks that come to ns are sald om sce to chill, fe be the stepping stones for our eee en advancement Call upon the| [7se Jar Rubbers See cree Soon for Mending glen cag Dear Mie Grey: 1 have a brand| ib geelty portion of the duthe t wate: which has a tiny | Gal rightfully belong to those for/ Pew bot water bag whic y | @tne then Sah hole tn it In there any way in ee oe Sone ? |which I can mend it? LR Mothers in eg’ ee eS Old jar rubbers can be heated ine @ understand! hago | pan wat they become soft and then tever realize until their strength '8 iweared om holes in your Rot water | fore and their beauty faded that po010 The rubber patch should de Gey have been feeding the selfish |emoothed down with the heated bem of children and husband. | bade of a knife. This will also do| Consider the proper development) jo, sending rubber boots, ec apy plant: No other plant must Led | $8.6 lowed to rob it of its strength, as ; neither plant can develop property. | Talbot Is vibe rm Ys soll must bo kept tree from | Lieutenant of Irel weeds. Weare all creatures of habit,| Dear Mins Grey: Who ts the new. | tbe weeds are our fault. I hope you |ly appointed lord Heutenant of Ire- wont weep over this rock, “M. C.| land and is he a Catholic? CR. T. T.” bet will instead step on it and Lord Pdmund Beraerd Talbot. He progress. MRS. K. L. G. is @ Roman Cetholic. The Mosquito’s Conduct Worries Tag (T MIGUT-UE fT WAS A GOOD UE MIGUT BE IF WE WAS A REAL GOOD ONE Do You “Mink HE'S IN HEAVEN PoP wiLt THAT SKEETER GO B7FS Bad” (Bl 2386 THE WUT BROS - CHES & WAL- eae OE fp rage wees TAILOR 2/ “uw ' y | AED GRE ‘ dist S. Sf rit =| i“THE UPHILL ROAD” ~ — — ADVENTURES |" | =| —_______ || F= OF THE ins S| meno By RUBY M.AYERS) |= =) re sA32 ar. Stalllle |» Oe ebeks % a CTR ——serpscos retest * By abel Cleland »% ‘ ‘ze there letters for me—name were he hada 12 year age Page 378 rua, ’ dent bey, he had started out to/ ALL’S LOST “How we worked?! Mins| wood, burned like kindling wood. Frances mid, “how we watched) “Father had the wagon out in and worked! Every Mame which | the road as a sort of shelter from showed iteelf near the house was/ (the beat for us And, ducking quickly put out. Father mid it) and dodging sparks, shielding our was no use, but still] we tried | faces from the heat and wiping “Then, in a twinkling, the wind | our smarting eyes, wé watched shifted, and, with an angry roar | the outbuildings burn, the big and a ewirl, the flames bent|barn, the milk house, the other smal! buildings, “An old mother goose flew out outbuildings; one caught. Clara | of her finming nest and tottered and I wept ever two baby pigs [out to us, singed and burned ter which were Burned. There had ribly.~ It i a miracle that she been no time all day to pack. We | lived. hoped and used every minute of| “The wagon caught fire; we time and every ounce of strength | were half suffocated* with the we had. | smoke, “When the ples met thelr crue! “The men from town came fate, Clara and I gave up and, | back and helped father save a few He waited impatientty Poigetees make his fortune. | Fivent to search for the nest OL) what a LUfetime ago it seemed meebo s. Presently she returned) 0: tne hard work and the strug: | 03 gle he had known before the luck | “Thanks.” Ferrier took the letter | , were like @ dream! | Wthoat glancing at it and walked fay. His per Be rose. Hastings| Even now, he could hardty be | bh evidently been unable to come, | eve that he was a rich man—that | unless he chose—he need never do another day's work. to the dining goom. ‘The small hotel was unchanged— fmp steak and fried potatoes, then | there was the same group of marbie | anced down at the envelope in |figures at the foot of the wide i hand. It was addreaned to him|stairease, the same huge buffalo | ba strange hand—it bore a govern-|horns spread on a@ side wail, even Rent stamp—it had come back thru|the smiling wes the Be Returned Letter Office. same woman—a little iter, @ lit stared at it with a numb/tle grayer—but be knew her at/ mm of dixappointment. Mechani-|once! ally be broke open the flap and| For the first time warmth stole thew out the letter which Micky had|into his heart—he held bis big | Witten a month ago to the man|brown hand to her— | Who was such a “thundering good| “You don’t remember me? fap." He wondered vaguely why| She stared politely at him—she hd! been returned to him Then|shook her head; Ferrier felt disap | wer. SEND A MAN OUT THERE THIS AFTCRNOON ,- Before Nancy could move an eyelash, something dashed out of the door. The Magic Green Shoes carried) “Jack Frost, why didn't you watch 5 Nancy and Nick right up to the! your tum’ and get out, too?” said f star of the weatherman, Mr. Sprin- |. notner, kle-Blow, a great big place with plenty of room on it for everything.| “Get out, eM Staty Dry-Weatherf* ‘They walked along and pretty soon | retorted Jack Frost. “Why didn’t they came to two houses. One was|you go yourself?" t on one side of the road and the| “Too soon, Jack, too soon? ‘sald i Re ie ONG MOMCNT — IT JUST NOW STEPPED In HERS T FIND CUT ABOUT THS Same KIND OF A PROMISE HE MADE _ MS be remembered that Micky had told Hastings to write to the Lime Street pointed. Was 12 years such a life time? crying bitterty, we ran into the house and gathered up our trea things from the house, About 10 o'clock the home caught, and in other house was across from it on the other side of the road. old Sizzly Dry-Weather. “Just you wait Ull summer.” ere. 15 or 20 minutes our house was “Drenes and coats and hats?) a heap of ashes, ' Shoes and stockings and such| “Father suid, “Take the chil sensible things? Not much! We|{w-Svay, mame, it's no use bul if he were unable to get to| “I stayed here 12 gears ago,” he Liverpool himself. Ferrier crushed |explained. “I was a tong, lanky boy De letter into his pocket. He was|then—and you were very kind to Umest absurdly disappointed. When|me. I was going to Canada—you | Me rump steak and fried potaoes|told me you had a son there.” | So the twins did what anyone etse| “Gracious!” exclaimed Nick, mop ; would have done, walked up to one| Ping his face with his hanky, “Now f of them and knocked. If that wasn’t | we've done ft, Nancy! We got the i the right one, at least there was no/ Wrong house. This must be the | place the Nuisance Fairies lve that | | i staying now.’ . a | 4 r- a th ~ brought his appetite had gone.| “Well, to be sure"—the emiling| got our precious dolls, an armful | was a sad walk up that hot garg Regs bye ~ aa ft tnr’|the Fairy Queen told us about, x ‘4 depression of loneliness had|face smiled more widely—“T've often | each, and the tiny wine glasses | road; fences burning on either and Nick gave the door a push, wide|guess that's Mr. Sprinkle-Blow’s : Milled down on him. He wished be |thought of you, sir, and wondered & pioneer Indy in Tacoma had, "!% sparks fying. Our little open. house across the road.” : tad stayed up in the backwoods. At | how you got on, and—woll, it's made, = given en arms ached with their burden of Before Nancy could move an eye | Just then the door of the other that ant pen seemed the |e be of you, if I may say so!” <> = pat a pa ie dollies, our eyes ached from the lash, something dashed out of the | house opened and out came an odd place on eart Perrier laughed. “Tum for road,’ T\emoke, our legs ached because ‘or her with a little fairyman um 7 pe . ” > great rushing | little carrying a large oo ee Mh and cated Ne S|, Sele ey pee eae the taty borg er as ues tua” carameast called to un as we came stumbling | they had had no rest all day and [{neima, almost knocking her Monin (neta. | Tsien to ae tes omer = want brag binge roo pee ag, < wah somber and heavy. Ferrier rose | out of the house, ‘that is the bend hearts gl because our [! Nick grabbed the door and pufled it (To Be Continued) i if ou do} . was 0 - yrist 2 i tet his ticket. Then he walked | Fortune has been very good to me|*eized bis soft felt hat and went out | INGROWN TOE NAIL “The chicken house was dry as | mont” . vee pe rereathbs|paliin rabies! Silewly up and down the platform |—and here I am again?” into the street. | tinder and, being built of light (To Be Continued) at once, “Oh, there goes Old Man | 4 wondered what on earth he| A man sitting In a lounge chair| It had stopped raining now. Lor | Perer |iMeod! ‘said one. f foul do with himeelf during the|in the hall looked up from behind |don was waking up—theatregoing GIRLS! i ‘me months’ holiday he had/his paper. He was a slim, rather |folk were on the move. How to Toughen Skin so Nail LEMONS f Yanned. effeminate-looking man, with shrewd | Taxicabs rolled past him with . e | Micky had been so sure of Hast-|eves that seemed a strange contra-| beautifully dressed women. Once a/ Turns Out Itself | | Se—had told Ferrter #0 much | diction to the weak, almost woman-|olden-haired girl leaned a little for-| OI | essions O a us al l BLEACH SKIN WHITE H Mout the old country house that lich, mouth that was partly con-|ward and stared out at him eurt Z $s | 4 quaintly called High Chimneys. |cealed by a dark mustache. ously. A few drops of “Outgro” upon the ‘ ——— tat he almort seemed to have seen! He looked after Ferrier sonst Ferrier stood for a moment on /*kin surrounding the ingrowing nail (Copyright, 1921, by N. mH A) f and now Hastings was no longer | when he passed him. the curbstone, uncertain what to do | mic) Sens tenae and roomed aoe Squeeze the juice of two lemons in- there, and he felt as disap-| Ferrier ordered dinner because it|or where to go, Then he walked on | 8° toughens the tender, nansitive w to a bottle containing three ounces og as @ schoolboy who is sud-|geemed something to do. It was|aimlessly, carrying ht hat in is | SO oe pope ger gt ben 23. I AM A GOOD SAMARITAN of Orchard White, peg any drug "ei | penetra: i > " ¢ deprived of a cherished half-|only when he sat down to it that}hand, letting the cool, damp air | aes naturally outward almost over| The ies was so thick about my/it will make you and your mother)a big plece of Ice clinking In ft, he| Store will supply for a few cents, home on Sunday morning that I felt | feel any better, I'll give back to your ati.| Shake well, and you have a quarter father the $7 I won from him last sali me almost with real Brat) int of harmless and delightful lem- ude. on bleach. Massage this sweetly fra- “They're a nice bunch of fellows,| grant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty and white ness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this 34 he realized that he waa really hun |blow on his forehead bought some papers, but could|gry. He ate with relish. Apart from his height, and look Mt settie ere | to read them. When at| ‘The «lim man, who eat at an ad-|ot superb strength, there wan noth | nanuractured for chiropodists, How- night. “Outgro” Is a harmless antiseptic | like an Aretic explorer. er ee eee eee Both her mother blamed | nicht. it will make him feel any vg train snorted out of the sta-|jacent table, watched him enviously.|ing particularly good lookifg in|). anyone can buy from the drug|me pr dys ppv omccn Thy ke mishap, | better, 11 give him all he lost, "at and stared thru the rain-| Not for worlds could he have eaten | Richard Verrier. He had kind, non: gore @ tiny bottle containing di oe lor aiken Dat for the twentieth | “Just keep this in mind: T@lan't|those friends of yours,” he conde- Window with a feeling of|such a meal—he merely toyed with{descript eyes beneath rather frown: tions, The depression each course as it was set before|ing brows, strong white teeth in a | flying country was gray and|him—he drank a great deal of| firm mouth, and @ nose that bad time, began to tell me about “poor|have anything to do with him play-|scended to say, “but they aren't father,” I broke in by saying: ing cards nor drinking. He needed smart card players. If I get another feted and dripping. Disconsolate |champagne, He wore immaculate |run off the rails altogether. BR. bring eee, norms, Poldt's Look here, dear, 1 ‘belteve ou Ro urging to do either. chance at them I'l show them a|jemon lotion to bleach and bring that $M stood about in the wet grams, \evening dress and a gold-mounted| His sjn was tanned a deep brown eee i re eS tality oC hii ete ea anything to suggest | thing or two." soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, FEM? buddies together under the|eyeglase. Beside him Richard Ker-|by exporure to sun and wind; his Your father made & éhump of hime | that she recognized the justice of my) | “1"ll try to get up a game for you." | also as @ freckle, sunburn and tan tien trees. |rier looked enormous and clumsy) |hair was chestnut color, and would! self last night, wanes oan't me remarks, but at least she dropped the|1 assured him, tho I did not regard! bleach, because it doesn’t irritate— E wae still raining when they| Ferrier finished his dinner with alhave curled had he allowed it to| is in any way my fault. i o'tn | Tbsect, tho she and her mother still! the prospect very agreeably. Advertisement, the London. Gray evening was romy-cheeke, al wv, but it was cropped close; | Fy Record ais fest maprnsed mo sally: In about half an hour I went back Gaing in Already a prea bba botraayll th on on rye ag we ian MeuKbad, 6 hte eaeanicte of ills labs ge that dliemracetul Copmicon’ Later in the morning Dot an-/to him. “How about some milk and Hae twink a ut, LON ttreet |into it with hin atrong, white teeth | When Me ene ert his |] (ExPrenident Michigan State ff] “Should 1 have let him go to steep | nounced that sho and her mother] vichy?” 1 asked. “I've known It to MEO the streets | peside his plate. se leyen and gave him a particularly Board Dental Examiners) under some lamp post? Now let me) were going to church, and asked me| work wonders.” iH} ED took a taxi. He leaned| When he rose mai fot sh appearance, If his mother Dental Si tall ‘you my side of 1. FOU insisted it I would stay home with Bobble) sq71 try sh he) competed. ny eyes followed | boy! PP =) n Surgeon upon me playing cards last night.|and her father. I prepared the drink for htm, and ef ) Staring out into a London |him euriously down the long room. | had adored him as @ long and lanky ; i er : oil ep changed and different from |He was a strange figure atnong the |boy, she would have worshiped him | ti gerne | oth : awry hic ROR Sate 1 feel bedbibsheeaaaal | aye ry Sit edi Tandon he had left. |biack-coated men and smart women. |now ax he strode down the «treet in| Pyorrhea Specialist aM inulaved Ga Metelta' the Winski” “pk See Naew ho dosnt Galli at adam oe, segererant motors had chased the|He wore a sult of rough, baggy |the strength of his vigorous man-| X-Ray Laboratory oii thie Font af Gu aed GOMmvtael will © Lik ae cticetned. aameatae! Ee inibuses off the astreets,|tweeds and a loowe searf knotted | hood |i Highest Order of Restoration durselves Nike gentlemen, and inct-| after her. i rsd taxicabs slipped thru the about his powerful throat, A theatre tn Shaftesbury avenue Work Done dentally, HE drank up all my friend’s| When she had gone T went in to i . ge outsped the fingling| He went upstairs to his bedroom |binzened attractive lights into the Examination and Estimate | rye, see my father-in-law, who was stilt in|{{ GRADUATION PORTRAITS yoy He wondered again why |and mt down on the side of the bed. night. Kerrier ntood hesitating ont Free | “FOF insisted on betting like a crazy’) bed Is die Doha i Mi had ron |Already time was hanging heavily |side the main entrance—he & a] 504-12 Eitel Building | man, and even so, he didn’t lose any} “Well, ‘dad,’ T said, briskly, “how i 5 00 Ming pyc’ "cally been nothing to lon hig hands. He wondered how |down at his rough tweed suit—then | SECOND AND PIKE more than he won the last time he| about a little ice water? ly Priced at a oan id the gray hatred long would be before he booked|he shrugged his shoulders and a SEATTLE 7 played with my friends. No--walt a “L guess you think you're pretty * Merrihew megrained old |his passage back. pushed open the swing doors. minute, for I haven't finished. amart.” he growled. But when I w : J 700 Mitel Bidg., Second Pike | Seg Co Dep ‘ both gone to their last| The room was very oppressive. (Continued Tomorrow) “Now. I'll tell you what VU do, Ifibrought him a pitcher of water with =

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