The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 27, 1923, Page 13

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The Unfamiliar ‘Sf mune “Sorsent | y ADVENTURES | Copyright, 1 Arret by E. Phillips Oppenhe NE m BY VIRGINIA BRADFORD | LLYW¢ A. Servioe, Ino Pi ‘i “Motion picture production isn't « He OD, March 27.—Cast fat f moviedom, to H game, It's « business. who un as Perhaps you've never though ertmina: liywood | hOw costly tt ts to cast untried p ple for prominent of flounder t10r m $6,000 to $4,000 may slow works. a ae ae parta, on tn thetr One mis the whole mportar came an tiluminat M Istadt an of Hg wh or stop Go ft the Lasky “There is no way ner, even after bres whet the b per week novice lywood's cast m 1 gained sin ap for the begin king in, to know ong de month, Unless the something strikingly her view by sendi te er the oortu 4 shows with a M weep Levies Mart wateroe nd reves! falerates unruffied and stage od man ts Goodstadt, who goes he market for his human-plo very much any ness man for supp Ho aif an hour to tell me about job, the ma 1 looks for, t the n fi expect—a ‘iy service to @ stranger which I haring with every movie-struck ads thin. ne everyone once,” hic led in a pec’ Mi Mar fash ahe exe nal, she connider self extremely lucky to work than four or five days.@ month at $3 to $10 a day MOVIES HELPFUL Any in the nomething which hack, anew Popple |! mre ity to his} ture materta her bu k h care of Janet W GO ON WITH STORY JANET IS TALKING: “Wa! dered, snat the message from my hand. There was heavy night, and I upon my bunk very fe 7 flushed. She message. Underne giled the interpretatio’ “Danger 97 it must be yromptly, Louisa.” I looked at It and shook my head. *I suppose I am @ fool,” I “put I can’t understand a word.” re a fool,” she agreed hacl never trusted Tt means that someones tched Feaen the + taal pane pceae te Seat ke an a | ame ttully. : f J pifear lone for what he or she or aa dealt with you've got common sense |! Ther iia Ta promptly by me—Loutsa—my name. take a word of advice thing in farther cxblesmantes vapelone lege tere tt Seep out 1 the truth than the tm “But how could Michael know that ate { ph bec airenpagl Ps align Bhevenrig , | erabbed by the movies and made a aw be beveyoent . : 8 star ina weeks. It couldn't be me instead of to you : aahine’ aur ithe aida of fe ex wares! 30 6 “The chief of police at Marseil . > “2 don't know as I ever| | has a copy of every passeng these water,” ¢ steamers leaving London and calling words—" I ventured. at Marsetlles, forwarded overia ‘ |Lady of 70 Has “Crown of Glory” That Touches the Floor—Would Miss 17 Be Bothered? she replied. “Michael has a fr clenia MS ia aa BY CYNTHIA GREY tn the bureau. It is possthle that I/ “Maybe I've opened my mouth am being watched. He knew quite | wide as it ts” well that I should find you out, and| go, altho I knew that I should be of more use than'that Mr. Popple was a ate A Boston lady, 70 years old, boasts of hair that touches way to xive| i | felt a thrin| the floor, according to press reports. Both lovely and re- Leaning | markable as a phenomenon of hair growth. But the modern » wooden | girl wouldn't be annoyed by so much hair. g ! ADVENTNVRES 28 THE TWINS wis naan A man doesn't grow his whiskers to his knees just to Olive Roberts Barton thin | Show that it can be done, THE Does one wonder why girls exchanged all the discomfort} of their ancient “crown of glory” for the ease and conven- jience of bobbed locks in apite of predictions which no doubt} , issued from a hair store—that bobbed hair must go? | ey n your o letter of next mornir \ieis came over eo ey te and tal t a . ron -Tunt ston | nm with me f = Z BUSH & LANE PIANO CO. extend to all intending purchasers of an UPRIGHT PIANO, PLAYER PIANO, GRAND PIANO or REPRODUCING PIANO an invitation to make comparison with all other makes and prices. A PLEASANT SURPRISE AWAITS YOU Get the lowest prices elsewhere, then give us an opportunity to positively save you money. The large volume of business we do makes this possible under any and all circumstances. Also Unequaled Values in Our Exchange Department, Such as BUSH & LANE, STEINWAY, MASON & HAMLIN, KNABE, CHICKERING, ETC. Lowest Prices Consistent With Quality Terms Most Easy Push sane Pians Everything Pertaining to Music 1519 THIRD AVE, he st youngster who makes good has that «compelling would win success ki movies very pale. wo a swell that down ate girl who re “I try to t any other field my £ ts the tnsuf m of #0 in a he hat get ferable egol cants, Of think well of up a for photogra qual for charming person for intellige tor capacity of growth many It's enmential but don't take him how at wk ullar to p and you'd be if tter dealt with had Extra ly 4 say you want are just as am are the principals care. ank an nelecte fake than trump ur whick oad iret miatake,” exper for this wt heart-breaking capable of hom is one of the ft “No you nt or two,” this was meant for I cor only guens. hat had I to offer tn the pic hat this much o! the smoke market to “slow breaking struggle’ adviser had sought to impress be ear cour registered and went home to a an and sleepless night Would Mr. Goodatadt call me for Ithe next picture? | lemanded dors. that any will a an that you have pol lé 4 ked at me with a queer lit oal of porpolses,” ow nee yuthia Grey: * aho nald, “prefer to shoot Then I kr er everything. In that I had t o way of wn ew that M ety,” hael had told that moment of love for ared. too | all him now for certain Ye 4 the on the harbor at Mar. following ning, n our way to the aning the pared to land, but r at the over SURPRISE EGG of th lean-fa eevee a was sb y dresned even Yet I knew Michaol, | > he never glanced aguin ny tion, Tk that he had rec on: ©. I made my way to where Louisa was standing, and I touched her on arm. “Look there,” attention like GORGEOUS GOWN A gorgeous gown recently exhib ited in Parts is of black lustrous crepe with diamond shoulder straps, an elaborate design of peacock feathers worked out in diamonds tn the front panel, extending from hem to waistline, Henry Ford's Address Dear Miss Grey will you kind! FASHIONABLE COAT The fashionable coat of the mo- ment is the tubular, straightline af- fair presenting an unbroken silhou- ette from collar to hem, and tied at the side with an unobtrusive bow, He a lat rer. and To settle a dis- give me Henry | nufacturing home ad- | EB. W. P. gives Mr. Ford's address as Dearborn, Micht- | gan. | SMALL VEILS Small Iace veils which fal an | inch or more below the brim of the jhat are featured on spring millin. ery. They are particularly liked on black milana. Will you kindly | umn for | “A Girl Milas Grey will recelve callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 to 2 p. m., and on Tuesday and Thursday lea, with a|{ from 11a m. to 12 m. each atterty weifiah, || “80% Please do not come at nfort and safety. This is true| | Yes, ite value extends to tts low even among animals—the fernalo| | thermal conductivity and tts powers among many animals having to hide the | of resistance to the attacks of actd— PERRI TERRIO ST AS AGA peotath liar Founk coed tema’ the |qualltles which multiply ite wees, | BEAD GIRDLES brutality and jealousy of her mate, |among the first of which are the| Hip girdles of colored beads de- Gay canal eenaerina Gin thane: jacketing of Boilers and steam pipes,| veloped in interesting motifs are Bo the packing of joints, glands and/contributing the only bit of color Dear Mins G allow mo mp an answer to of Twenty-two” In the first fow except caring only for T sald, directing her | ws) cautiously toward the! I ing figure. Bhe ‘looked at him for a moment| with Then sudd y the change came info her face. She lutched at my arm. “There tn da "He has been ob TIERED SKIRTS ‘The tiered skirt is used effective- ly with the plainest of blouses. It 118 becoming to tall or short figures aa the tlers are so artfully arranged they do not cut the height TAILORED COSTUME A coat frock of Potret twill gains {ts chico thru its lack of trimming. Only bindings of black silk braid about the oollar and pockets are used. place, ar Has asbestos any other value ex- nut jcept that derived from its tnoom- or,” she muttered. | aed to flee, Alas, | our week at the Villa exists no lon-| ger!” A How big a vocabulary has average business man? About 6,000 words. Who are the Letts? moment afterward, there was « ement toward ganxwnay. I called clyilized men take advan- “Look in and see what you ‘The Twins went with the pretty Serap-Picture Shepherdess in Sugar. Plum Land “Tl tell you where the Cut-Out Lady lives,” she said, “If you two will do me « favor.” “Oh, yea, indeed, we'll be giad to,” | replied Nancy, obligingly. Bo they walked back thru th field of lolly-pops and past the chocolate bud bushes and the trees ful of sundaes, and the soda ‘foun- fain and the stalks of popcorn balls, toward the granulated sugar Easter ®gg, where the Scrap-Picture Shep- herdesa sald she lived. The Twins turned thelr heads Sway this time, however. They had Ro appetite for any more goodies “We got sick eating so much," Nick explained. “We want to fir the Cut-Out Lad if she can give us some med: “Come and help me and you won't Reed any medicine,” smiled the pretty Shepherdess. Just then they arrived at the white granulated sugar Easter egg. It had pink candy fluting all around the edges of the round doorway. | “Look in and see what you see,” to see ine.” ‘ed the others off the ship. and see,” said the Shepherdess sald the Shepherdess. sweetly and shook and held out her polnted her tiny ntily that Nan room inside of She gold skirts: bh slippers expec the doc curls ue and all 80 a way—a gold and silver and satin room be tting #o lovely a person But behold! Thru the doorway, Instead of a room, another country met the chil dren's astonished gaze—a country with green grass and a barn and cows and pigs and sheep and chick ens. “That's my farm,” aid the Sher help with chi the feeding and help me I'll tell you cried the thru the the DV granulated, sugar Easter-egg, onto the farm of the pretty herdess. Shep. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) ar P2 Thru the Golden Gate, on a golden October day, Into the har. bor of the land of gold, sailed | the good ship Golden Age. But in spite of the goldenness | of it to vens the| world was ¢ The fever sufferers were taken to @ hotel; army surgeons were called who were old friends of the governor, and they shook their wise heads over the pa- tlenta. For weeks the fever ran its course. Then Mra. Stevens gan to get better, baby Kate im-| proved, Sue was almost well, but 4-year-old Maude annk lower and lower; the little spark of life in her seemed burned out. “She cannot get we tors told their friend, be thankful that the other two But the governor had not least intention of giving up. "Give her a hot bath,” he eald, “and leave her with me.” Now pe h baths w fever th nanan idea of his kod, ne he loved her, nourishment into her little parched mouth, d » by he waa too w to more, And te 1 morning The sr cooled and she nto get well y the time they were able to travel, October was Kone, and November n well on ite way with cold rains and fogs Up the const they aniled, across the surging bar, into the Colum- all, the doo- You muat and Goattle * bia, and Vancouver. up the river to Fort For two weeks they rested there in the home of Capt Brent, for Mra, Stevens and the hildren were weak afd tired On a little steamer they Portland string of small wooden along the river bank full of deep mudholes, and no sidewalks, but a board placed flat in the mud here and there, The next morning they took a steamer to Rainier; from there they went in canoes acrons the ‘urmbia and a fe Sowllitz to Monti t time i they ent a houses Its street to Portland was loose miles up the wan must night wajt till the last journey, Day gray with a broke cold and drizzle of rain. wo canoes waited for the gov ernot’s party, one for the family and one for the trunks and | gage. In the canoe used for family, lots of mats and blanks were placed and the governc and his Hazard and Bue Maude, baby Kate and nurse © len were told how to ait flat o the bottom, how not to about because the — canoe nally upset, then the four Indians, y at each end, got and she off | The Indians y wit eul was tall ere strong and a# they paddlad wang a low, aw monotonar song, and their brown bodl awiing and stooped and atralgh ened In perfect rhythm with the mule But the end of the Journey wa» not yot. (Continued Tomorrow) ‘aot, me for A dide.” 1 |when I “He | whispered ! you got “To the Hotel Splendide,"“1 told her with a T sh ok." me ‘One “You should have found that out by felt ne factory a ble folts Into one of the |coast mlx gan to manded "To t Jean hid “Even t | scarcely | We st | dark | squalid tated | pushed, jentry, with a high side, a allmy place with the swish of waves d | treme end she pushed open a door on | the left |relves in a cafe of the poorest cin | with sanded floors and fron table. woman stood be Louls an and woman, four ch smiled, colored teeth around the place that clientele, finger, counter along a fearsom| no furnished, with a cracked gilt mirror |upon th ing with chairs of Inoredtt | the cor Michael guise of a Mrench ouvrier, but with a new I | ed, deap "You and men brought man he “Tt tn Marvell “A ho (Continued Tomorrow) 1. Black eff cnrdens I was on the point of entering !t| T asked reluctantly and narrow streat to leave the however, elbowed me out and of: oream coking | {Re of helpless young girls and de- had | fenseless women, and rob them not magnificent ling of gartic. o signa with a plece. of The to but everything | se It in @ start- about the only thing| {in all the world women have to fear| who should be their protectors | and per- ® economic them- ow- only of Meat trunk shouldered it and turned tu doge directed. to the Hotel Splen petuate yaterm t selves and exp er their ow luxury, while wages, they ows felt a touch upon my arm. naista upon seeing you,” she a low tone, “Whore are ing?” | at they may At w I in re work and day eas is the re fer to ive with a woman ed time a in preference urn for pi to death other nking heart men's w | all fetch you tonight at 6| does Michael no men | for a luxurious apart- to assuming the responsibility of a home and family; n when they get tired——which tn generally soon—they can quit Women must learh, and are ing, that they must depend themactye that much of the seem- ing attra between =men and women ly mostly. sex mesmerism, un- orthy of consideration: Let them ‘© into business for themselyes and nto politics more and more, become | I be-| economically independent, and then| | they can dictate to the male of the species Instead of wheedle or beg. TWENTY-ONE. ehys want to nee does not ask Michael ques. | she answered with a sneer. learn an tho upon an ugly cloud were! derful holiday spent a restlean and afternd At 6 o'clock {n a small flacre; owly and with hort foulest nen- ums one could Imagine. feel fear, ro aro is wor , and I tion we going? I do- ho only place where Michnel x In anfety,” Loulan replied. he police of Marseilles would dare to seek him hi ‘opped at Inet at the end of a A place #0 unsavory that I hest- vehicle. Has there ever been born a calf | with a human head? No, such a monstrosity has never existed. There have, however, been | many clever fakes which have suce | cevsfully fooled the more oredulous ‘Louisa, | part of the public, half- o-. half-conducted me along an wall on elther and Where did gypstes orlxinally come from? In Western Burope the gypsies belleve that they came from Egupt, Others trace thetr ancestry back to the Saracens, the Jews, the Amorites, | the Canaanites, the “Lost Tribes of A| Laract," or to the “mixed multitude” fat and with a hideous face,| that followed Moses out of Hovpt.| hind the. bar. | Later investigations have tended to| went straight to the wom+|establish the fact that the gupsica whispered in her ¢ar. The|are an Indian race, and every step who had at least three orjin the study of their language and Ina, nodded ponderously and| racial charac stica tends to con~ showing a row of yellow, din-| firm the truth of this. Gypsies bear al She glanced cautlously | striking physicdl reaemblance to the| , a8 tho to make suro| Hindoos. At precisely what date these stranger was amongst her|gypaies left thetr early homo in Then, with a fat, beringed | Northwest India a not knoton, but tt whe beckoned us behind the| could not have been later than the and led us down some stops, | tenth century: passage, into a somber and — - e-looking apartment tawdrily SG, G 1 damp, and some violet plush | . shabbinens, In| ner was a bed, and upon tt wan seated, still In his din istinctly audible. At the ex- hand side. We found our- 16 mantel-plece jook upon hia faco—the hunt erate look of a man at bay devil!” he sald to me slowly nacingly, “It !# you who have your damnéd lover-police- ret” fal T replied. en for a hollda liday! only," | Michael repeated pit-| ‘The slmplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. Stops the pain instantly. ‘Then the corn loosens and comes out, Made in clear liquid andinthin plasters, The action is the same, t your druggist APTRTA AND LACK taffet hata for early «pring ectlvely trimmed with or luoe, 60 blnole or nr ee a equipped with small volls that shade only tho eye Blu TAthwanta ily, from the modified other peo; number fi | Why a on the wheels of rallrond trains? — | Experiment. been mad passed it. Great No They differ ttle in appearance They are a branch of the Letto-| #topcocks, and the filtering of cor It has come into em- romve fluids. ployment aa an and even clothing been made from it nm group of the Aryan fam TAthuaniana, but are less to many of the street dresses, Kasha cloth stitched tn self-color being made up into serviceable [street sults for spring. Batin electric insulator, for firemen has | in drapery. by ples. German, Finnish and| They are estimated to rom 1,350,000 to £,000,000, re not roller bearings used along these lines have | A new roller bearing has} s preliminary trials on the rthern railroad in England. | It was shown that whereas dz men} toore req 27-ton co one man vehicle fi sg interpret train fite saving of effected locomotir bores would be bearing has uired to move a atationary ach on a dead-level track, | could easily push a similar tted with the new wheel ‘he offiolale of the company this to mean that on a ed with those bearings a 25 per cent in coal could be and the wear and tear on es and the permanent way greatly reduced, This new been made possible by the use of a partioularly hard but not brittle « Coffee occitpies a place in the meal that requires unfailing § -you can always depend on Golden ness better way 15. minutes to breakal3 hour fast 13 hours from supper to breakfast. And while the morning meal is important, it is invariably a hurried one. The food you eat, therefore, should be appetizing, nourishing and quick-digesting. ‘Olympic Wheat Hearts, of all foods, digest quickly and supply sufficient en- ergy for the activity of the forenoon. Ideal for children—babies, too. Start by having Wheat Hearts for breakfast to- morrow. Cook according to directions— and get all the nutriment and delicious, appetizing flavor. PORTLAND FLOUR MILLS CO., Portland, Oregon Mills at Portland, Oregon and Tacoma, Washington Manufactures of Olympic Pancake Flour and Olympic Floue gowns for spring trimmed with big flounces or capes, or with youthful \ bows, circular.

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