The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 23, 1923, Page 13

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bfis ry Bosse 4 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1 923 THE EAT LE STAR A Novel by W opyright, 1921, by I (Continued From Yesterday) Part 11, The } CHAPTER 1 Eni 2 lke those emotion too excited, ashamed. It's publicity, its like me to § whom st 1 must be t tion, and to do this without giving myself away to Mrs, Witham, t Polly and My letters we to go somewhere; I had to ¢ to Mrs, Witham that I'd be ter off, to Polly that @ job as se t novelist who lived in Somebody w stories would c ebarge tell a third Ii fo me, and, one day, by mistake I would use Julian's paper, Mrs Witham wou! Oh dear! And the h¢ It was all very the porter w not to } “ about; it was al port But was the por had lived a w ing, and I would Mamma would write toe say not the p had nev and p Julian seen ? Also ravaging body else had ¢ during that year i, as 1 pe the dress 1 the porter was a man, and that men are easily decetved. URSULA TRENT | 22." L. George. ary things, Thi {arper & Brothers t proba ) th But a " maid j ss} \ Krew and did not force th , notice it 0 ad affairs with a« glo year, if nably discreet, If I) a t wen in ox . - be & & a aw hoes. . as I was very unfair to the tley if I'd maid, w Q was I at m I learned to call B th and if I had know on as well as I idn't have both arty gaye il BS BIR r, Vd) ad 1" Take t I H At I Julla ald all that, He was] escaped . ? Pa A s for me| going to t | 1, T suppose tid loft {t to me t 1 was in a sense newly we goa: Iw t to look at the sh ning be kk very frightened. THE “Oh, I don’t know about t Off went Nancy and Nick toward Jack Straw's palace in Mix-Up Land. ‘The general with the bread-pill bullets and the rubber sword had told them he lived béyond the fiery mountain in a domino palace. “There's the fiery mountain nov said Nancy, pointing. “That won’ be hard to get over. All we do is to wish, we have our Magi Shoes ‘n’ all “Oh, I don't know about at now,” whined a voice, and turnin, around the Twins beheld a little o} lady with a basket of eggs. don’t know about that! You see that fire gets higher and higher when « tries to get over it, so that bye bye it touches the sun. Airp things like that a good.” “Oh, but we have Magic Shoe: said Nick. “We can even go to moon.” “Say,” said the old woman curt. ously. “If you tell me what you Want to go for, I'll give you my bas. ket of eggs.” “We want to get the ring off Jack Straw’s left thumb and put Mix-Up Land to rights again,” said Nick “We want it to turn back into Ap. pie-Pie Land and let Even-Steven be king again.” | ave to th. dj lanes ‘n’ n't a bit o° ADV atTURES fe) aE TWINS CUT-OUT LADY Ho arrives early Mpa A kisa, gra & conjugal kins, He dc for he's now, and all my b are burned. It is should nx jus th hesitate, that he should he ts a of me. lover, and holds me t time. I rub my smooth serge of faint scent of Egyptian reaches me. And lays upon my heek his that is now a Iam his; I am lost Id not stay at h him for a long ‘ t the der, A tobacco his sho and I n except t his day 1 and fay,” he hukapala came e's decided to I'm to make her atx rnoon dreases and twelve evening kx I wish I could do her coats | t™ become . you a can do anything. know my limitations 1 er over to Mr. Kalisch 4 Corine will fit them.” ‘Who's Corine?” nd in command for coats and hat now,” whined a voice “You are brave children to at- tempt so much!" sald the old woman. “Why, an army of a hundred thou. sand soldiers and a hundred thou. sand horses and a hundred thousand pretty?” don't be # and skirts, but I'm no good at it."| him to everybe I protest. Of| treat reacted from my a mi dignity I wan material, “ce Cynthia Grey: ay, ¢ thai ne|“Why Is She the Most Wonderful Girl?” Is Ever . a 7 Popular Query—Her Combined Qualities of Heart, THE ONE-MAN WOMAN BY KUTH AGNES ABELING CHAP. 66—~ALICE’S MOTIVE? ! A 1 she found restlessiy ; BY CYNTHIA GREY , mT the peasasenay, aa tantly cluttera my mail. 7 . " " a At th he returned. Ie it because she has ple rion her wit? Do any of these Sometimes some of these qualities may turn the t me Sing Loy er bien, There was dele f, in every line of his or a dimpled chin? Her clothes, are they respon carriage, the shape of her nose, her mouth,| While Kate gered about ng) 4 out the envelope. Sing pened wianced af shook his head, things win the elusive proposal? trick, |men. hat they have very little or|giri wan simply 4 v nothing to do with it in a “Chink joint.” The witke Most men are not observant pings were has I not reaé 4 velope. It had ru the r nd had beep the ner put it ip hand c pped the letter glanc t the contents and Many an engaged man would have difficulty in telling jou the col weetheart’s eyes, the shade of her hair, suit or whether her feet are large or I mall ! lor of his ; recut S the color of her neu virginly slim and wh verdict, and in those four |\*° l reason for the propose the girl herself, her combined qualities of mind, heart| «rouna + ; oul that make her “the most wonderful girl!” bru That is why one is a world famou words he sum a note about ¢ it” vte and put it ip up the rea 1 which were ely, a t| and always disappointed on interviewing |¥* vamp or a most-proposed-to-girl. ng Loy was inclined to suspicion. A his beady After all, ver with @ Alice was d that alone rgeous silken n cast aside n men when they om. He stood for @ at the slim, silent y of the girl. Then he replaced n of colorful fabric. yuld be his Chinese purpose of securing knowl of the post 8 of the cipal stars with a view to promoting navigation nwich time in ra use Gr er part of the world they may see bride in deat As Sing Loy stor 1, his thin brown g those unresponsive ped out and left hin ts the leading Engl ones a mall train ir utes, $8.1 nprth prime meridian. It by King Charles Il in’ ¥ i alone. if| At the front of the shop she came to a sudden halt (To Be Continued) yright, 1923, by Seattle Star) he can mo nergency one, and the als have no objection?’ (Ca We Tell It With It indicates that they are com panies in which the Mability of each ler (a Minited by the number res he has taken, so that he not be ¢ beyond the amo eee upon to contribute t of his shares. What ts the mean and o “Corbett? bably a derivation from uthde A WEALTH OF oats~'Capes and Wraps FOR YOUR CHOOSING Ever in accord with the weather of a waning winter and the bright days of an approaching spring, never out of tune with the occasion or the place, i none. liked to|at all ti lly, Miss Mer nd Vera | # and Hilda, 4 Aunt Au . not sta—to o give them a/I ely abased T had | That wasa 2 to take an | it seemed diftic a crea people, becaune, | ture so virile, that looked so feminine n, 1 wa to pre Ho was fastidious, willful, and it yw I was a woman aga Pleased me to bend to bh fancy. How nd loved a thing Julian! Did I? Can an an idea; my old| I? Does hate the child that with cauired a ur matchless I can't hate need other hats, mille I was ¢ ance from m I came te ya be lke guns tried to put Jack Straw out one hans oe per} Pk e style in just the fabrie you time it the minute he saw em he wor’ t nd 7 coming, he turned the ring on his thumb around, and lo and behold, ey became mince-meat at once!” | thing of Sut the Ranee? s We're not afraid, just the same,’ ot . | scoffed Nick. “Come, Nancy, let's she's rather pretty. Oh, | be "oad pinch me like tha My dear “Walt! Wait! Waltr’ cried the old woman. “My eggs you. Take them along she's a nig » am I, practically. like them dark. ever you are in trouble, break one.| “Yes t England, but not The fiery mountain fs not the htest India. sw do keep quiet thing you will have to overcome I shall lose my inspiration,” 1¢ handed Nick the basket, and| 1 grow respectful while he calling her dog, hobbled away before | the frocks, It is a difficult Job. The the Twins could thank her Ranee is quite ye has regular Besides they were too ch as-| features, and is merely coffee-col-| tonist to speak, for they saw, to| ored. He has a acheme of dee their amazement, that the do; am and gold for one of the eve-| made of chocolate cake and had p! ning frocks. He is trying to get fcing ears, and the o! was y from obvious orange, and is/| made of cardboard and as flat as a apricot chiffon and fur tin-pan | trimming. “She's only a cut-out," gasped} “It's a terrible Job,” he says, “If| ¥. “She's been bewitched too!|{t was only one or two of each! But] No wonder she wanted to help us,"|18 at a time! I'll elther repeat my- You say yc da! hov Ae the (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) | the sake of variety.” David was more than puzzled by grandmother's tone. David, personally, is not so very keen about going to church, and he couldn't quite make out whether the ones who got to go to the camp meeting were the lucky or the unlucky ones. Camping out for a week, oh! boy! and still going to church twice a day. Grandmother's volce went on, “fortunately for Mra, Sargeant, she had new shoes, were a little queer, because the shoemaker had no ‘last’ to make them over, and he had just whit tled out a wedge-shaped block as near as he could get it to the size of her foot, They looked funny, but they were new shoes. “Then she had a new dress, too. | ‘There wasn't a chance to select in 1842 and this new dress was of calico with wide red and white stripes. “But she had made it up very stylishly with # long full, very full, skirt, all ready to be worn over ‘hoops’ when some should be sent her from California or Victoria, “go carrying her carpet bag with the extra things she would need to wear and a basket of ce ee 4 ‘True, they By Mabel Cl Page 920 CAMP ME Soon iok: (To Be Continued) i or I'll do something frightful for |ly. Iam sure that he cannot err. So I was dependent again, end 1 didn’t mind. 1 had in me no suffra-| gette ferocity, no desire to be free] lexcept within the mits of my affec- |tions. Now that I loved, loved for |the first time, I didn’t mind. One's | not dignified when one’s in love, 1 “You won't," I murmur, soothing- | Seattle « | what to do, for the clothes that had} | been suitable for a lonely manicurist | | would hardly do in my new world, |. It was all very v ING things to eat, she walked the three and a half miles to a neighbor's hom so that she might ride the rest of the way in his wagon, Jit! {t wad all very well “facing hand }in hand a eruel world,” as the older | | novels put It. In fact, I wasn’t break- | world was re of London tha shire House, Hes between Devon-| tee “I dearly hope 1 haven't for gotten anything y ride, I've got the ham and the tea and the sugar, one woman said disponed to be cruel so lor have a pound in your back to your frock | time to find that out |ntood that it would w |my four pounds provided 1 as they settled down for the long beagle 1rse on, fried My land! I've forgotten my bread Wh will I do? I've bread! chicken, potatoes. ever yotten my jot 5,000 a ye | So I desperately wanted an eve. ning frock—several, indeed. “It was too late to turn b her hone was farther away the ' han Jla trock, They go on wi dirty old clothes (yes, they are dirty, for men seldom have them cleaned, Mrs. Sargeant’s, Poor woman, she could think of nothing else. “So when they reached the camp grounds and she saw the minister, the first thing she said was, ‘And the most dreadful thing has happened. 1 forgot my bread,’ “The minister looked solemn as an owl and stern aw a Judge an he sald, ‘Well, sister, that's better than if you'd forgotten your woul.’ “That made the poor woman feel provoked, and: she snapped back at him, ‘Yes, 1 s'pone it Is but T would like to keep soul an? body together w little longer and the bread would help.’ ann doesn't show the dirt), Th popular, in baggy knee collars, We love them none the lone, and 1 wonder whether this attitude] the |u4, Or perhaps it 19 fost that most | ley of us, we've nothing elne to do then told myself: “Damn Jophyt T want a frock. T want lots."’| the I didn’t ike to ask Jullan for money. Ho wasn’t quite my property enough; | anc aluo, the idea that he would give mo » and the © of t ply inte far an Iw noteworthy incident gusted with the result of my months’ labor. I det who and traveled down to Woking with| I let him fn, I had regained my self- the intentic a hee to a resident of the place whose | Well-conducted parlor-maid, | name was Jan had a round which rani | the best I ever pla Stanficld wan a silent but by no]and press the clothes which he had means a gloomy | peared to be i land an absolute golf maniac. Hel] parently locked it. The discovery, | +7 be 4 Wintec ho: wae I ‘alent know | Tidiculous care, but I must confess|me food for thought. I resolved to with also the most cision. | but they were long Il to “break Into | t? & | freedom,”” as the modern novela put | "te | complete the course, I cannot remem- | from the world, ber one that was in any way fluffed] vinced of this when I saw that in r foozled. ling into freedom at all, and the cruel|teenth hole, and it was while we] to take out ¢ tad by the portion | Stood together upon the eighteenth | small re Aldwych, New Oxford| was to bring still more excitement | Street, and Charing Cross, It isn’t| into the day and no| of shrubs thru which wound the path It took me some| Which my partner pointed out to me then T under-| as leading to hic house, come me and| tion was attracted by the continued | spent | barkin alg em an eve! g, say 1 «| wandered from the ac of 6000 4 3 sr HIME, BAY at the rate) eed the curiosity to walk a step or| alas, how fow have tho health or two into the shrubbery to see what physical endurance to liv Oh, men | was don't understand what it 1# to want] however, who was a little on ring their| left, » cry from him I hurried to his} iments which retard their progress and they choose them of a color that | side. \ ns ; ve set} extended arms, and a small blue hole | Should turn to Lydia 2. Pinkham's up the tradition that a dandy is only| in his forehead, w half a man; they ean go, content and| & man, , and frayed| and by an extraordinary chance I at| Preven to be once rec of ours does not arixe from a con-| whom I had seen in Woollerton Road | ™*ke you well and strong, and the | sclousnosa that if we let men be] that morning, foiled In his attempt to] Woman you were meant to be.—Ad dandies In aiken Jerkins and ruffied| arrest the man who had been pass- | shirts there'd be less money to dresa| ing under the name of Thomas 1 thought of that at the time, and| JANET SOALE'S EXPLANATION philon Just before midda made one of his unexpec the night before, I had dreamed of love most is sure to be found among the 600 Wraps and Capes now offered at..... THE GREEN-EYED ACCOMPLICE BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM Arrgt There are thousands of these Smart Coats and Capes greeting you daily on the streets of Seattle, and you instinctively admire them. Among the coatings of the dress models are Polaires, Velours richly silk lined. ; ‘ovelty weaves and mixtures, all Stunning sport models in mixtures and tweeds lend interest to tha collection. Suits Not to be outdone in the exhi- bition, 450 new Tailor and Nov- elty Suits will appear, present- ing the new spring modes in silklined Tricotines, Serge: Polaires, Poiret Twills and Nov- elty Plaids, Phillips Oppenheim Dresses As if Jealous of the show by ible day, he should stay When I first the Coats, Capes and Wraps, (Continued From Page 6) or, the sh | him, and ft seemed to me {mpo: that with my passionate prayer ing out day ng of the inspec: able disappear in whom I was wis memorable, saw him turn in at the gate, I was s concerned, for another | filled with excitement. If he could Absolutely dis-| have seen me at that moment, he ix | would have known and understood mined to wipe| everything, By the time he had hed the front door, however, and away much hk 650 beautiful Spring Dresses will also claim your attention—the most gorgeous creations tmag- {nable in lustrous taffetas, col- thing from my memory, | Té orful printed silks, heavy Can- You will also be interested in tho new Spring Three-piece Knicker Suits in tweeds and mixtures, at of playing a-round of | Control, I must have seemed to him re. | Jt the ordinary well-mannered | Mean in irotncantea: th ton crepe and flat crepes, at | He changed his’ clothes and went| amongst | off presently for his round of golf. din my life, | When I went to his room to brush | Stanfield, and we} ap-| taken off, I found, however, that he| had placed them in a drawer and ap- person. He about 40 years of powerful pre-| watch the next morning's news-| His drives were never long,| papers, It was becoming more and nough for him|more clear to me that the ape trouble, and in the approxi- | something in my master’s manner of eighty shots which he took to| life which he was anxious to conceal I was the more con © was He beat mo at the seven-| the top drawer, which he had opened tle, he had concealed a | “Sweet Sixteen” Higher loaded in all six Grade Garments More than usual concern is mani- fested in the very large collection of higher grade garments, so impor- tant these days. ve at the Incident happened which | chambers, (Continued morrow) WERE MEANT TOBE? | Every woman was meant to be which had] healthy, happy, and fill her spher ont footpath, | in life to the t of her ability; but, Our atten of a small dog Without the least detracting from the interest in “Sweet Sixteen” gar- ments at $16, the many higher grade models are all the more interesting for being priced the “Sweet Sixteen” way at from $25 to $75. up to] » many the trouble. My companion,| their ideals! Over-ambitiou my|of them develop nervousness, tr over the|ritability, headaches, backaches, ir nt, At aj regularities, and often m¢ was the first fo di of the dog's excitem erlous Stretched upon his back, with|{!n life. Women in this condition found the body of | Vegetable Compound, a ro and | medicine which has been it 98 out of every Let Lydia stable Compound | | He was dead but still warm, | herb Let Your Next Be a “Sweet Sixteen” Ho was one of | 100 women who try It, policemen | @ Pinkham's ‘Vv nized him. two plain-clothes vertisement New York Portland San Francisco Los Angeles Try PISO’S nishingl tenlahtnaly eee on Thursday Srd of November, my master d reappear- 1 was not surprised. Only set stomach—no ates. 3 G00 everyw! 1021 Second Ave, Corner Spring St., Seattle Prescription

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