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capone tr innerliner —————— WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2 -Cymtlnia Grey: Girl of 18 Victim of Moods- ~Mother Worried Over} Her Attitude THE SEALALE bsiaAh BY AHERN | I'VE GOT f “TIN-TYPE OF THAT TEAM “TAKING THAT KID WITH 'EM “To A Movie | THEY JUST GO | THERE FOR A WAND HOLDING DUET!» THEY P STANLEY. THE OLD HOME TOWN BY | OUR BOARDING HOUSE WAW. = T WANNA Go WITH You “To 1H MOVIE SHOW Wo! 1 HEARD You SAY YOU WERE GOIN’ OH ALVIN, LITTLE SOLDIERS DON'T crv! wWelRE NOT GOING “0 A PICTURE SHOW = 1 SAID WE WERE GOING To GET TLL BRING YOU BACK & PIECE OF GUM ALVIN! Dear Miss Grey: I am the mother of five children. The HOME GIT FER HE MAY RUIN oldest girl, who is 13, is in junior high school. When she e fomit DON'T SeE"W’ PICTURE: (BRUNO! THOS OR’ comes home from school she is so sulky that the minute she| ioe a ae awn ey A. LOVE |S BLIND! < ts, — SE Dy S comes into the house she sits down to study and studies till Ws wo HA FRAMED + vs a ogi et Aw wey te Cas suppertime, After the meal I have her and the next oldest | ‘TAKE ME “TOO, Bere 1 eu . EW == girl wash the dishes. She doesn’t have a pleasant word for any one and is so hateful to her father and me. I do not like | to have her whipped as she is good about doing the work if 1 am sick, but it worries me to see her so unpleasant to every one. When | try to reason with her she is so curt, and | know she would say more if she thought she dared. 1 do all 1 can | for my children. My husband makes less than $30 a week, but I do all the sewing and dress them well and keep them | fortable. 1 get so discouraged at times and wonder what | there is to live for. 1 am just 30 years old and try to be a companion to my children, but I guess I am a failure. What can I do? WORRIED MOTHER. There must be some cause for your daughter's attitude. Try to find out what it is and remedy it. The fact that she goes at once to her studies when she returns from school in- dicates that perhaps her school work is heavy for her and that it requires too match of her time and energy to keep up with her classes. It may be that a talk with one or more of her teachers would help you to decide upon the best course to pursue with her. Or, it may be that her health is at fault. If you have reason to think that is the case you should consult a physician. Perhaps yoware trying to do too much and are so tired and discouraged yourself at times that you have not the tact and | patience to govern your daughter successfully. Try to sys- tematize your work and neglect a few nonessentials, if need so that you can vetter keep poise and courage. And re- ber that while you have many cares, this is a trying period for your daughter. Girls of her age are likely to be noody and to think they are misunderstood. Perhaps you have been so absorbed in the care of the younger children that she has felt somewhat neglected. Pratse her whenever : ~ possible and show her that as your eldest daughter you are|\;"ronnm ef which the beginning to depend upor. her, and that you wish to make a | strike. Teaiedore, “sound” te also de- real companion of her. fined im physics as “that form of And try to cultivate a more cheerful outlook on life. How) mbrational eneroy’ which occad@ons can you say you have nothing to live for when you have YOU | one Taking rae children? Perhaps your daughter's attitude is in a measure | sound would be prevent in the Joreat a reflection of your own, and before you can change her it | because the vibrational effects would will be necessary for you to become more cheerful yourself, |>¢ Produced. It may be suid that the . Se sek | Seual definition of sownd ts the first given, or, stated im another wey | line Dut mone has proved sattafMe | “sound ts the reception into the car tory. of waves in the air.” If this def When was giass invented or dis- oe @ tion is accepted, there & no sound ? What fs the canse of Chinook | when a tree fells unicss there is an The ” ef winds, common in mountainous re-| car (human or animal) against which manufacture glass 99) Hons? the air waves #0 produced known to the Egyptians af @ very) The Chinook is essentially @ 4e-| strive, = ens: early date—the exact date is not | scending wind and owestts tempera- eee Eaown. Tombs of the fourth and| ‘ure Loy made sie foe: Se. nTtow can one make one's sett tnvte- | fitth dynasties (4000 B. C.) show! conditions may cause descending| The pg geen Rah ooh mgood glass blowers at work, and glazed | winds, but in any case descending eir| pice to fairy tales only. Buch ace pottery in the form of beads occurs) by coming under greater pressure | complishments are purely imaginary tm prehistoric times, the true gless|/ must be compressed and therefore | and impossible fest appears later in the form of warmed at the rate of abowt 1 degree ° qpaque “paste” and finally as trans-F for each 182 feet of deacent.| 1% the population of Parent glass. Tyre and Sidon were! Pherefore a fall of 5,500 feet, such 49 | creaming 0 gmenaword lag bik 2 eelebrated for their class, and Pliny |is very common in flowing over bea | According to the authority coneult s the invention of giass at the| Rocky mountains, will rate the tem-| ad the world's population im 1918 Mouth of the river Belus in Syria, | perature of the air abowt $0 degreet.| was estimated at 1699 millions: in Put i was certainly known tong de-\and es this warmth i wery slowly! 1699 the figures were TH) millions fore the Phoenicians manufactured |jost, the warm air spreads over | :nercjore population ts increasing, — i. In the view of some scholars the | wide extent of ground. The hot winds | eee Phoenicians did little more than car-\of Kansas and lowa undoudtedly| prow fy om the processes icarned by them| cleo owe their Moh temperature to| murs Mt Of What Is blotting paper MISS GILBERT, ° os as >= $ EuPID 1S A KID, BUT ALVIN, THE 2S LANDLADYS NEPHEW, DOESNT FILL THE PART= WHILE MENDING SOME PIPE oN MARTHA SN HOUSE TODAY, ‘BULKY’ BOOB UNFORTUNATELY STOOD) ON THE OUTSIDE CELLAR DOORS. BY ALLMAN DOINGS OF THE DUFFS fon Cynthia's Answers to Short Questions Wom the Egyptians. eee ‘When and where was Nero bern? ‘When did he die? How long was he Was he the crusiest of the Roman emperors? He was dorm at Antium on the coast of Latium December 15, $7 A. D., and committed suicide A. D. 64 He was emperor from 54 A. D. to 68 rapidly. As no moisture ts added to the mass ef descending air, the Cht- |nooks of Montana and Kansas are extremely dry and evaporate and ad- sorb any mow or moisture at the wurface of the ground. eee What ts the highest peak tm the British isles? the fact that the air ts descending | end soda pulp, some of the chief grades containing varying percent- Socs of clay. The stock ts beaten cory rapidly and cut wp tm order to ort a fluffy, porous fiber, It ls gen- erally made on a Fourdrinier paper | machine, The process of making ts too lengthy to desortbe here but there | From soft fiber suck es old regs, Inverness, Scotland,|°7° 2 number of books om papr- level. making which cover it. | ove . } What I the menning“of the follow. | BSL fos red various books names? io by monke’ gy Ss the Irteh Cacin, mean- They are to be found im numerous ling teceping of wailing, Winficld—| PuD>¢ic museums, im the Vatican, in lAncto-Saron from win (wine) and| Private collections, and in the li- feld (field), meaning winefield of braries of convents and churches vineyard. Thomas—from the Hebrev | a meaning twin, Lulalia—fair speech Lester—tustrous } eee } ‘What fs the area of the Noether- lands? What \s the population? Area 12588 English square mies; | population (1918 figures), 6.778499. | eee | A.D. Nero was a monster of crucity,| Ren. Newis, Put 20 were other emperors. It is| 4406 feet ebove sea impossible to say which was the most mbt: oruel. eee How can rancid tard be renovated? There is no way. Many experi- ments have been made along this Men’s Two-Pant Suits 335 HATS, SHOES, FURNISHINGS Ove Price—Cash or Credit 427 yp Chas. & Fitth Ave. Tedd, Mgr ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Clive Roberts B: CISTSN To TMS, MRS. TRUSS “AN INOIAGNA MAN US SUING POR A Divores Because MS WIES, ReFuses TO TALK SOME Boost! | | What is the best wood for making a bow? 8 | Yew. | eee When « tree falls tn the forest t+ there any sound produced {f there is no one to hear? It in merely @ question of defint- tion of the word “sound.” Sound may be defined as a “sensation pro- Juced by air waves set in motion and striking against the tympanum of the ear” Taking this definition of sound, there would be no. sound in a forest in which @ tree fell, becaurw no “sensation” could be produced if there waa present no ear against th “Nancy!” he cred, puuung his ster down. | It's the Green Shoes!” ia). ese | | Clean Child’s Bowels with | one @ay Nancy and Nick were!her lazy bunch of a husband called | “California Fig Syrup” out In the orchard. It was May and | directions to her from the top rail. | syrup all the world was beautiful with ®) Nick had spied something of the! | million lovely white and pink blos-| ground and wasn't paying the least | | soma. * | bit of attention to things overheard. They had played outdoors since! sxaney heeried, pulling his sls. |early morning and now it was after | oo. Gown, “Just look! It’s the Green | noon, a warm, drowsy, sweet-smell- | Sioa! The Magical Mushroom must ing, dreamy afternoon, just the #ort | have been here and gone away again. | of time that fairies get very DUAY| Tis a pity we didn’t see him. with folks and things. | “Dear old fellow,” anid Nancy re “How pretty everything Is said! eretrully, “I wish he'd waited. But Rheumatism |A Remarkable Home Treatment Given by One Who Had It ar and Mub-Acate Fim only tho tar Grattle Or By * *¢ Pool is abet Cleland _»% Page 558, “Does a plant live over 60) lived, then slowly put out more years?” David asked. ‘fat’ loaves and by fallyt was a “This one has,” motherdear as! thrifty plant. sured him. “Lilly aw the strange} “and Lilly whispered to It, Prickly plant in the home of the | you'll be my Christmas flower, German woman, and because she anyway. I ‘spect you'll bloom just naturally did love everything | just about that time.’ that rows, she asked questions) «put the weeks went by and met Me every fat leat turned out to be “"Yes,’ the woman told her, %t/ ony asother green, prickly leaf, iss one strange plant, and by @P4 | nut the cactus never lecked care. by, when it is older grown, the beautiful red blossoms will come | out on those fat leaves; blosoms | without stems, right out of the leaves they grow.’ “Lilly clapped her hands with Joy. “Oh, then Its Christmas | cactus, isn’t it? she cried. “'No,’ the woman told ber, ‘Tt is different yot from that. The Christman cactus has many pur. | Teen leaves were tipped here and plish blossoms which come out at | there with big crimson flowers, Christmas time. But this one has |and for 50 years, not once has it some of them old, and th “For one whole year she watch- ed it, and Christmas came and went again and still no blooms ap- peared, “And it was not until she had waited three long years that the little gardner realized her dream. “Just look! | “On Christmas day, when Lilly was 10 years old, the glossy Naney, dd ly looking * he's always so busy T suppowe he had |] q few which are real holly-red, | failed to bloom. aaa Chewe Title 0 my bribi: -w “ag oF a: 2A pot gg ne |] and they also come from the time! “1¢ iy a great, sturdy plant now, |xky peeped thru and birds of many | hurry, Nickie, we must be going to! pe revi 24 ie? pr eartgid Sr a family of other plants peg ors fluttering about among eve pore cyl Let's put on the called Christmas. cactus.’ which have been taken from it, pba yur nose Sighs away “And then sho took part of the | but among her many, many flow- Oriole was there, He'd just | “(ripg as Pe A ; 3 lasvites’ aun’ 'he was at hie Bor Sih R a Ri ac irene aes big plant and started it in a Little | ers, not one has a higher place in weaving with bin new little pale /into that funny little house in the agro yg co the {the affection of this pioneer lyellow wife sitting by watching him | old apple tree that daddy built when |] cnig tended’ and wa and!™other who used to be Lilly [|—— — : 4 jadmirin The Robin Red Breasta!he was a boy.” | ena ro “ Suttle." | Moth | dress to which to mail a note of ape Tb ey oe pene ha were using the same old house that! And he had his own shoes off ina|y Watched a aoe Aci REO baw ue haan ups Ered er ai presthtian, ‘i rulty” taste of Salifornia FYB) voy’ 4 last summer, and Belind y } | she did, I'd call he nu tel peiation. yrup.” If the little tongue in coat. they'd had inal mummuor. Mt owe gai (To Be Continued) nnn # HX ememenenmnnnmmnnd that Ginette has linked your name| Cissy Sheldon, arriving with the ed, of if your child is listlens, | Bluebir yr tha tenes Gavter while| (ehipeelaht 193i. Weattle aes therefore I'd better not discuss what | gues I've got to tell you something. | with McMasters, Use just them | most magnificent roves T have ever P feverish, full of cold, or haa|!m & tree by th iz wt fabioh : er) | didn't comprehend, Henry passed it to me, It's this: | words, And if your Motherdear wa seen, was himself magnificent, And CREDIT - GLADLY : y & teaspoonful will never fall ‘And so I made no reply to Rose|Ginette has been going round link-|to know what Ginette is spilli chty also, a romance from open the bowels. In few hour» ° ° concerning the prospect of the clos-|ing your name with McMastors’!" — | tel her to call up Cissy Sheldlon and which sorpatend anything : TY you. can see for yourself how f M St ling of “the factory.” My silence] “Let her,” I said, “What's the | Dick Barn over happened to a member . Li S thoroughly it works all the constipa, on essions ce) a ovie ar irritated her, And her next remark |harm? McMasters has been mighty| | Whatever Ginette had told Cissy | our compa ‘ e fon poison, sour bile and waste (Copyright, 1991, Seattle Star) was intended to worry me: food to me and I've done my best | didn’t count against me with him. It “Don't go, Mrs. Scott,” Cissy @tts { LO T HE te, tittle bowels . ane wa “1 say, May! Don't trust Ginette |by my plays, Motherdear says he's jonly served w send him straight to| treated when | Motherdear rose to well, ‘playful cbild pe " too far! I've seen her in here a lot! made heaps from my films, but he's | mo with another proposal. leave us, his weleome being over, and iC -TER XLVILI—THE WOBBLING MOVIE WORLD IS}, i deh a > at aid me a good salary, T admit I'm] Incidentally, he brought me a box | his roses duly admired and placed tq FOR a | CH? “ lately. Don't get chummy. §' MEN & WOMEN iene <6 motheve:titap “Calis DISCUSSEL ilable not to sign a new contract—-| proud to have my name under his on {of the most expensive roses in the |a vase with salt and ice added to Pall A Bi nia: Vig Byray Bendy. “They knew y 0 4|the billboards.” market, I could tell at a glance. My | preserve them. “ » with etiq laques, bos Henry says so, And she's the kind | the billboards y | 4 teaspoonful today maves a sick| “Ginette sayn that If any studio with ¢ dapat ane segues prosper that will slam any little girl who has| “It's a darn shame to turn any-| daily gifts of flowers are many. The| Motherdear was weary and anxious EASY PAYMENTS hlld tomorrow, Ask your druggist |cloxes, It won't be yours!” 7 bib bgp gee des luene was the. bath a peek aaa | thing as innocent ax you loose in the |number of my holiday, Easter and |to be alone ti her room, Cissy could tor amniiae coeitorais Fig. S¥fup'_| hose hed Kor way ebout Cer wove lace rele oi hor gid 1 hurried to Ginette’s defense: |movies!* Rose registered deep dis | birthday floral tributes runs into the but he insisted: 4 Ye Lig + geal gel rg aie bh had warned me not to! ‘she often reminded me that T “She's been wonderful to me|gust, “You sure ought to have aj hundreds. Pounds of candy ar sent | are. Seott, it's so very im per ae adie Reap aah. | . . | atelyt* husband around as well as a Mother:|by my fans, in exquisite p: s, | portant! " Mother! You must say!talk shop too much. © explained | wouldn't know polities if I listened, | lately May! Y¥ don't 1 r to look after you. Liston! You | occasionally without a ca I am} (To Be Continued) seitfort ou may get an imiithat every meyie company has aland whatever I said about the powers| ‘“Ligten, May! You don’t know |dear to look after you. Jisten! ; y : ee ¢ Contras parted wt nate a lutte politieal ayaters all its own,| that be would be misinterpreted, and her, A girl Uke you couldn't, I] take what I've told you home to your always grieved when I have no ad-| (Copyright, 1921, by Seattle Gtnap DT Pe nai