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THE SEATTLE STAR MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1923. 1 re) (“ins Gree se eons lor o and on Tusedsy and Thur tk from 11 @& m to 12 m ; umecien —— week Plea But It Is Sometimes |} or mes feres with b Mother-Love May Be Sublime, Jealous and Selfish, Too; For Instance, the Mother Who Loves Her Daughter So Dearly She Cannot | Protests Against Let Her Go to Make a Nest for Herself. ; * Dear Miss Grey: Regarding the BY CYNTHIA GREY br er aes oe ee | § Mother love ts sublime, sings the poet—and it is to a certain| (\)>. fave F asnaian Big dolaae i} Pyorrhea's coming. extent, but thru it runs a strain of selfishness or jealousy. | ant people sntckering at girls in hik i Unheeded, the price To illustrate my point: I have a letter from the mother of | ing trousers, but really, there ts noth ; n only daughter. The girl is 25 years old and in love. How|'®# funnier than to watch women In paid is lost teeth and ireadful! She has always kept daughter at her side and is | 100s *Mrts plow thru this snow They broken health. Four n near hysterics at the thought of losing her. She “has| ious in their bedraggied skirts bil persons out of every acrificed everything for her” and would continue to do so | lowing over the drift A one exception: she cannot sacrifice her on the altar of =~ rae? ‘ove. what the senatbl That, my dear woman, is the tragedy of motherhood—you | will wear this ki cannot keep your daughter with you always. You bear a| Long skirts may lend dignity and child, you love it and give it your whole life, and then, when | beauty to an — s -, bppaiy4 its own mating instincts call it, it leaves you, Sa Pat eyes May, Sh Rte A lovely home is not what a girl of 25 wants unlese it ia| wy at) means let the length of the her own home. You wouldn't want her to live a husbandless, | skirt be guided by the individual's childless existence, would you, just to keep her at home with | o¥® taste, not by # stupid, freak law. you always? eee me ene }' freight rates on proctically all| 1» Goria Swanson divorced? Indian | Commodities on July 1, 1988, Gloria Bwanson was divorced from More than a tooth Names by Ha her first husband, Walloce Neery, —it checks Py f Dear Miss Grey—Will you please vee ond her divorce from her second hus. print tn your column at least a dozen | What was the first example of or. | Sand, Herbert Bombdorm, ts atill pend 3Se and 60¢ in tubes Indian names suitable for Campfire | ganized labor? jing. Girls and oblige? MARGARET. | ne Weaver's guild wus the ear- ———| Osseo, evening star; Ishkodah, | Hest and most important of the oraft —_——— ~ Last Rites for comet; Memquon, raindow; Weh-| wilds. We find mention of thig|*eaty? eee What was tho Hay Pauncetote | the polley which 14 govern the} humming bird; | in this country? ay od ve | home, Seven ve, N, Satur-|aurora; V A Hegre “ Nabwlet, ster; Wake- United Btates in the construction and Gay, will be held at Sacred Heart | Wall, pi burch, Sixth ave, and Bell st, | Aah, flower; Zintkalashah, reddird Mueeday morning at 9, according to | Tatoka, antelope; InsAtahtoto, dive nt, eves; Ateila, fire; Wanyeoha, firefly ; Mrs, Herkenrath was a well known | Nunda, sun or moon; Salall, equirrel. | oii. waiy unveiled October If, 1928, ‘ oe cry 4 ae im the oa |im Washington, D. O., and stands at| 4 liny : ae ireersives Raster Asks About Proposed | 2 end Massochuoetts ove, 4. 8. M, Hutchinson, soho wrote, os ; John, Henry and Gertrude, ot | Age Law AL well, “11 Winter Comes.” & Mrs. Paul Geisler, of Sno- Dear Miss Grey—I would like to| Who are the greatest Itving Buro- cee # ; Mra. Alfred Samuel, of Hart-| ask you about the proposed law stat-| pean poeta? ie i; the Rev. Father Aegidius Herk-| ing that girls will not become of age| The following are well known Bue Warath and Brother Herman Herken: | until they are 21 years of aga If|ropean poets; Rudyard Kipling, of Winlock, Wash. and Petor | this law Is passed will tt affect girla| England; Sir Rabindranath Tagore, | ball et Sonora, Mexico. already 18 years old, and therefore of | India, winner of the Nobel prise in| Yes. One was presented by Bir | maintenance of an Isthmian canal be Charles Wakefield, former lord may-|tween the Atlantic and Pacific or of London, as a gift from Bul-| oceana, grave Manor or association, England. eee Who ts the author of “This Free- In Gry alr heavier than moist alr? Yea, at the sama temperature and Pressure. All gases are made of up minute particles known as molecules ; in @ group, the volume ts the same. age? Lam almost 19 and would like | Mterature; Gadriel @Annuncio, an ot t ‘ull Bench M to know my standing In the eyes of | Italan poet and patriot; Salvador A oe gd int eroter: NerercNemtons —F eets the law. EIGHTEEN. | Rueda, poet laureate of Spain, we than a molecule of nitrogen an aa rs Court | 7 #1 Aes not vet passed the ae oxygen; when a molecule of nitro~ an Supreme COUrt | a... senate If it Becomes a law in| Address of gen or oxygen fa. replaced or dlo- “WASHINGTON, Feb. 19—Tho su- pleod b= placed by a moleoule of water vapor, ASHID al prodadiaity it will not affect otrls | Barrymore spacey iaiece nals es play nh court today had a full beneh | 047") Dhsie Sanat: wot the first time this term. Tedere the Hapa panel, cali rial Dear Miss Grey: I would be grate-| of air weigh than where there if you would please publish | en adsenc weter vapor. The =) The oath of office was adminis ful to to Associate Justice Sanford, | Peritle te soy at this time, the address of John Barrymore, the| general impression 4s that moist air J ta heavier, because sco feel that the Qf Tennessee, and he tmmediately acte took his seat as Justice Pitney’s suc | Has there been any recent decrease | You may reach John Barrymore at | air wo breathe ts heavter, It is light- Geseor, Il health has kept Pitney |in freight rates? the Lamba’ clud, 130 West 4ith st,|er, but harder to breathe, and one @ff the bench all this term. There waa @ 10 ger cent decrease’ New York city feels stupld ond drowsy, ———_— bet eee contributed to The New Universities Dictionary Now Being Distributed by The Seattle Star Harvard, Cornell, Pennsylvania, ged oot lie adi an since other dictionaries were printed ap . e if ty defined in Tho Ni Univ Columbia and Princeton ror erage Aig bgeete <i imited, 3 COUPONS AND C ‘HE leading teachers of English and Latin of these five great universities have contributed articles to the New Universities Dictionary. This is the Dictionary Everybody Needs From cover to cover it teems with scores of bright ideas, novel features and new educationa principles. Whole columns of new words are here The for the first time defined. The vocabulary proper Un NEWS is only one of its many departments, It is a regu Nie ERSTE § lar little glant Eneyclopedia, and more, it is a guid: MMO eva _to everything educational. Having a separate Dic hy y tionary for every art and science, it is in fact a Dictionary of Dictionaries Containing 22 Dictionaries in One All previous dictionaries are out-of-date. This one, offered exclusively to readers of this paper for a limited time only, is right up to the minute. 4, ‘ ¢ : B ft fac’ You need it—your children need it every day. : Hie’ and’ £0 avenge the caace or Citeatinn hs e t ‘ell-kKnown di RTELL DRUG STORM nd Ave, Union St, OUR GREAT COUPON OFFER BS Psag 8 oe 2 0 Mth ia mrt ae MAKES IT ALMOST A GIFT : BATTLE BEAN or at the aioe mention ntore, lasiebly akg 9 8 or Going Only C Fast And 3 Coupons Ls (NC /{|Y MAIL ORDERS FILLED ON TERMS EXPLAINED IN COUPON — Reduced Size TAKE ONE HOME TODAY - ----------~------~---~- MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED COAST.COAL, Sours SAVER) . | wahtoyece, firefly; Miske, dDeauty;| guild in 1190, when there were guilds | _ Th treaty, drawn by Georstery of Pioneer Tuesday | Ayunil, dance leader; Talala, wood- | established in London and Oxford, | State Hay and Lord Pauncefote, the Funeral services for Mrs. Eliza-| pecker; Adsila, blo + Chumans, | ar ws British ambassador, abrogated the Beth Herkenrath, 85, who died at her | dewdrop; Oveneque, rosebud; Macha! yy there a statue of Edmund Burke | (avton-Bulwer treaty and defined To keep Seattle warm during the recent snow blockade our own large fleet of coal trucks was augmented by every means of transportation we could obtain. In many instances we could not deliver full orders of coal at once, but in prac- tically no case did we fail to deliver an adequate tempo- rary supply, The above photograph—an example of how our organiza- tion arose to the emergency—is a tractor-drawn trailer carrying sacked Diamond Briquets. This unit climbed Se- attle’s hills and brought warmth to many families until their orders could be completed, During the height of last Tuesday night’s storm the Pulmo- nary Hospital, near Riverton, needed coal badly. One of our agents, Forrest Gott, drove four tons of Diamond Briquets as far as possible on the brick highway. From there to the hospital he engineered the transportation by horses—every pound of the four tons was delivered to the hospital that night and early morning. Sales executives and assistants directing delivery work re- mained on the job thirty-six to forty-eight hours without resting. All our central lines on our main switchboard were plugged to the sales office, and here, taking orders and directing delivery service, were all our city salesmen. Of course the regular bunker prices of our coals obtained throughout. Delivery prices remained at normal—from $1 to $2.30 for various zones, Not a single one of Seattle’s eighty schools, all of which we supply, lacked fuel during this crisis. Central heating plants, all customers of ours, were enabled to maintain even heat in the numerous hopsitals, clubs and office buildings. We are proud of the manner iti which The Pacific Coast Coal Company completely- maintained its reputation for genuine service. We want to publicly express our appre- ciation of the loyalty and perseverance displayed by our employes and the consideration shown by our customers in Seattle’s emergency.