The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 18, 1923, Page 15

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WEDNESDAY APRIL 18 IS PERING \ 1923 MARRY SINCLAIR DRAGO AND : YODERH HO! . SOPY RIGHT [NED BY NEA SERVICE, Im BEGIN HERE TODAY Will y brother ready nm of J while! Melody the Big Be part the | confirmat ft H 1 the y. {ded his he turning to hin own - it 1 th & on the edge of Merce n Me and Me Ackiin ondes er, Acklin denies the Melody NOW GO ON WITH STORY tome haa tice the change Acklin came down and went to his} “The kid's go! office ne Thru the open window Mercede Esteban, ; called to Melody a ders; sat up in bed Wt you tell “Maybe you could dress him,” Mel that 1 am going tc ody went on, to Blaze, “Ill go dow with me now? and see abou then Melody was back So while Mercedes went to the win The Big Boss | dow, Bt brother ready for fallen manner, I ought to ask your fc « Esteban’s eyes flashed. Some of| Esteban raid s ol Mercedes’ old fire came back to her You Mercedes caught a ft “What has he to do with 3! mystery tn he « demanded. “I take him when I/ looked at Bla want to! I will tell him so! | “Better fo She found Acklin tn his o Don't amount to anyth A hard look came into the eyes of Blaze stuck the the feudal lo’ You can't take him! | window, tryt to as Don't you know that if I turned him | Esteban told ht over to the sheriff, he would go to the pen for last night's work?” He did not n Not afral Her volce was I If my brother go to jail, . too. Not to jail, Senc to the hangman!” | “What are you getting at?” Acklin cried. You You know very well what I am you getting at, you beast! My father was killed last night; shot dead; while! he was riding here! t h Acklin's face blanched. “I had nothing to do with it, do} father?” the you hear?" His voice rose with a Has be been nasty threat. “I don't shoot from | Did somebor get ambush.” | His volce rose to a scream ax The sound of thetr loud talking had/he tried to get to bis feet reached Melody, who had come| With a cry, Merce cad downstairs on an alleged errand dropped to the edge of t In Mercedes saw him. “Senor Acklin| spite of Kildare’s pleading, she broke nd wept bitterly, A sliadow has changed his mind.” she stated. down ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Nick blew up the balloon General Nick looked in every di-; “If you get hurt, I'll come and rection thru his spy glasses for the get you in my ambulance,” called enemy. But no enemy was in sight | Nancy. in Bing-Bang Land. Away went the soldier while the “We'll have to send up a a larmy stood and waited. and look for the tin soldiers,” he! After while he came back all out sald to Colonel Stitt Leg, an officer). breath, with a bundle under his in the wooden army. arm. “Hero it i sir.” he said, “What's a bitmp, sir?” asked the |®o i is. “I had to pass a regiment | nized the Double A man. Firat coined, 1851 discontinued, | _ deperccbidymaseiotic hed General |(°f tin machine-gunners, two reg! ‘They drow near, and still Blaze) 1873. | Don't you know? a zal = mn {ments of cavalry and three of artil-|made no move, Kent wondered why | Se O18 Nick in. surprise... “It's a vho jlery. But altho they shot at me/he did not draw. Romero had hix| How did the word “nincompop”| that stands still in tho air. hO- with everything they had, they |xix-gun ready for action originate and what does it mean? — | Sachi Hick outrvene ine cacy didn’t hit m p that shootin'-tron, quick!"; /t i# said to have originated in a| ntry, . t } wee Be corruption of th tin ph “non } you ind di down gotes to| “Bravo " nt comma A. ption ie Jatin phrase “non | is cond a irop s leas Gaeteis an fer It was sa so quietly that not a| Compos menti. which means “not oo eee ce cat Neneh fa ale whisper reached those beside the| Posacssed of one’s mind.”. The mean- “A very 6 a, Cd bbeoaed 5 4 Romero. he of nincompr we use it is “a! Colonel suite Leg approvingly. “But| Nick blew ap the balloor and tied | 8T8¥ ae : sassy peng natn ed oe piety) ale is “a I believe we have no balloons.” —_—|it to a tree so it couldn't float away. horse NAN gd oun “Then I'll send a messenger back |It was gray and s&s saps URC |.©:) esceel had beens conscious of their} Give some nicknames applied to ta the “Tinker Maz,” sald Wick, “He |saussge, as war balloons are. movements. famous men in American history? has all sorts of things. Who is| “Now, who will go uy and see “Why does he come hore?” Romero! Great Pactficator, Henry Clay; | willing to por” he asked the aire wet the enemy is doing?” asked ical bacceety Sage of Monticello, Thomas Jeffer-| “I'll go,” said a private, stepping | Nick. | “He's a sneak for the Double A,"| son; Expounder of the Conatitution,| out of the ranks. “Magf« I'll win| Private Ram Rod stepped out and) gi 10." sheen |Doniel Webster; Old Rough and “T will, sir.” and Nick let out loon was high a medal for bravery: | saluted. "Good," said Nick. “Perhaps you| He jumped in will.” So he wrote 3 note quickly the string until the tx and handed it to the brave wooden jover the tree-tops. soldier, who stuck it In his breast | (To Be Continued) pocket. | (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) ar Seattle a * * abel Clelan 4 Page 966 THE ADVENTURES OF LITTLE MAY (Chapter 11) It was “slick” all right; down{ of the youthful minister. Pio- neer children in the sixties and she went like a flash, but in-| ievinties knew little of creeds stead of making the grand finish| Ministers came and went, a Bap- as planned, the watchers heard 4} tist, a Methodist, a Presbyterian, little gasp, and where there had a Congrogationaiist, they were ac | all ministers, all good, and as far been a gay Uttle girl, only ao ugly-looking hole. * as the children could see, all try- ing for the same end in the same | way, May had not made the leap; |: a) they “Joined” them with « instead she was far down in the! how! of water. the preacher an- nounced, "Now, come on, I'll get You all baptized, but say! Wait a A shriek rose from the huddle Who'll ‘Join’ me?" "T the preacher and ‘Join’ said Mary's older sister, 1 baptize you, too. I know smothery, narrow space between the two great mows of hay. A shresk rose from the huddle of frightened children who had seon May disappear. “What'll we do?” they cried. “What'll we do? She'll die! She'll smother! She's down there under all that hay!” “Listen up. there!” came a muffled voice from the hay. “Btop “ani how. That done, the self-olectod reacher once more took up the envy work of his new arian, but when he came to May. found a dissenter, “No, sir!” your cryin’ and listen—I can't ay Ket out myself, but I guess you| said sternly. "I'm not goin’ to be can get me out, can’t your” sprinkled on with a bowl 0° Then followed wild schemes of| water, If I'm baptized, I'm goin’ rescue, and finally with heavy itchforks in small, trembling ands, they began to’ dig, terror- to be baptized in the branch, ail over, like they did that Sunday, you ‘keno aticken and suffering agonies of} “But it's cold, May! Your dread lest sho dio before they! mama wouldn't like it, andi could et her out. oh, you'd get youruelf. all But all the suffering was done and besiden—well I don't by the rescuers. May, a bit! think we ought to, eramped and tuncomfortable, a| “Well, then, I won't wee bit uneasy and wholly thrill-| join, and 1 won't be baptized,® ed, was having the time of her life being a heroine, Having finished the rescue and exhausted the discussion of it the children looked about for somo new diversion. One of the boys, # cousin of May's and a little older, wan try- May aid with’ firmness, Once mote the older sinter came for- ward to assist. she said, leading “Just “T'll baptize her,” the way down to wa me; Vl) mado their stream, and the ore ik, h > ing his best to keep things aafe| without tating the Jittle sin for the reat of the day He #e\d,| *ora stepped Into the cold wat “e's play church, Ili be the! Standing as she had woen t reacher and +t Join all of you] Baptist minister sta: nd, and pla ‘ wond, the nto the church,” ing her hand on Me c Older Grit bosi Lhis corenio., tion (Lo Be Continued) 4 - RRRRAR mecmmecemeeeensmmmeeeedd THE SEATTLE STAR NY “uses Cynthia Grey: 5, Who Never 2 “What Is Love?” Queries Young Woman of Has the Allotted Number of Beaus, But Has “Fallen in Love.” BY CYNTHIA GREY Here's letter from a girl who ia worried because she cannot fall in love. “I am past 25," she writes, “and have manded. a8 many beaus as the average girl, but I have no special feeling for any of them, All of my life I have heard and read of girls falling in love, still I do not know the meaning of it and I am beginning to wonder if it is all « fake.” She continues they wed? Should I put off marriage just waiting for love, which does not seem to be for me, and what is love, way?" This girl, who signs herself “A Reader,” has asked broad question—what is love? Volumes have been written in explanation of it, and yet, has it ever been satisfactorily explained? a any- CHAPTER assing of Old : subconscious, or the unconscious, mind, have so far treated love only by its symptoms, They have accumulated a vast Littl t-clouds| Store of information about how love acts and almost nothing places from the| about what love is, They tell us that love produces our widely scat dreams, promotes our business enterprises, disturbs our try and the va rth of the Hum. | POlitics, and provokes our wars. Pith hi to thel Like electricity, love is manifest, but undefinable. At murdered | least, no two persons can agree upon a definition. Just as nStulte tn comtrant with thom was) women of all ages ask “What is love?,” so opinion-makers wheel of an outlandish contraption| 2/ all professions can only chorus, “We do not know!” l'that ‘be called an automobile. But the One might remind the girl of that “Love is friendship alleged auto f a et on fire,” or that it is “Natur trap,” or “Love is a rain- Be amt ; de i ager “7 a et between desire and death.” One might string onde Band oR ata hiss words into similes indefinitely, and in the end leave nquire only with the ancient idea that love is the rul- ng human instinct. se Ae Mice aet| . Just recently | happened to read the following paragraphs ool s im. '” regard to love: i s ft er) ¢ t 008 have al- A : f ; Nake ‘ue that Joa Uinae Mins Grey will receive callers eS } : That . to her office Monday, Wednesday sa and source of lappi-|} and ¥riday, from 1 to 3 p. m, Md ss, Con atly the of wom-|]and on Tuesday and Thursday from 11 & m. to 12 m. each week. Please do not come at other times, as it sertously inter- feros with her writing. ¢ is over-developed E pulle had been tionally, Bhe suffers ac cordingly. Jan't i time to tell her the truthe! "Now the real truth adout love as ; ked algrne + OY. OPE AMOR ONG) ia Gk the afore of hla wetlon: THD and t P moat | s¢udent of the human mind does not! terme is uevally applied to @ secre nati " uit aa the first of the inherited | tary of legation, or other person, in an : charge of an embassy or legation T reckon I'd better et Love iven the second} during a vacancy tn the office or the wurmured off-hand “T 1d | place | n tific interpre-| the temporary absence of th 1 you gave me when I ¢ yomer UCKS ¢ mac ¢ and behavior | beseador or minister. He has not the ry tants is a) “Hunger is the first of the urges;| title of mint ter, and is generally in bran new, t a x wttho we dir After i comes| troduced and admitted thru a verbal take any gun.” Cash! the sex 7 | d the safety urge | presentation of the minister at the fa third in a yu wtitl got that hat vrocession of many | latter's departure, or thru letters of hekdtn | oon : credence addressed to the mintat 40 exal fo exaggerate its! of state of the court to which he ls advantages, has been a fixed habit of| sent. He hae the essential rights of un Its disadvantages a minister. The term charge sometimes restricted to affeires o acore d by of the affairs of the ethical mental of Aas porary charge nder the mission, “Should one wait for those feelings before | } a} Scientists and professors who delve into the secrets of the} pear | ( Pineapple, giapes anda Fruits that are luscious In every direction My fruity confection | | rings Joy 4nd delight dim anes and rare— / ‘ | } American Chicle Co. presents the Flavory 4 in“Quality Gums’ Featuring California Fruit | - The Tutti-frutti Triumph Supported by + + + « « « The Peppermint Prodigy The Licorice Marvel The Wintergreen Wonder Yucatan Black Jack Beeman's from the floor, but] v afternoon and evening jess sport dresses are to be rv for summer. Frequent= pe of figured material is @ | part of such a costume. blazing sun, murmured age-old Latin | prayers for the reposo of their leader, | as the body was lowered te {ts last! resting place. Kildare took off his hat and whispered “Amen” {n unison | with the mourners It was an uncon-| sclous, reverential touch; a response jto a tug at his emotions that sur. | prised him. Should thts girl marry some one, simply to avoid apinaterhood? Echo answers “No.” Undoudtedly she would be much more unhappy than she ia now. She must woit wnt “Mr, Right" comes along and ashe twill inatinctively know him. He atil has five or sie years in which to make hia pearance before the young lady should become seriously alarmed. Mercedes, with hers, ling th was sho if in respons she turned a Basillo’s bentde the on to his i saw ] | the coffi | Denetrating Marshal Joffre born? | saltes, France. : Where wa At Riv en conveyed to each othe an unspoken site Mercedes How did England obtain possession |seemed to appeal dumbly to him in| °f “Gibraltar a | jher misery. Kildare stepped torward,| - By treaty session in 1718, after the | but he stopped almost immediately as | 8Pantsh succession war, jhe saw an expression of intense fear| s | creep over the girl's face | Romero and Salvator When was th 3-cont piece had recog-|Colned and when discontinued? first Kildare's blood leaped. | Ready, Zachery Teylor; Old Hickory, | “I'll take that from no bosco!” he| Andrew Jackson ; Poor Richard, Ben- | cried. jamin Franklin; Old Man Floquent, He used the cow-man's term of John Quincy Adams. | contempt for the Basque, with a Big | shade of emphasis that meant deadly | | insult, | "Kild was tending to bis own| representative or minister of an in- business," Tuscdrora stated loud| ferlor grade, to whose care are cor Jenough for nll to hear. “These boyy| — | butted in on him—tried to Jump him.| Qd-F | We won't have any rumpus.” CHAPTER XVII Friends to the Rescue | Long after the mourners had dis-| | “My | persed, Ktidare and Tuscarora sat in| different girl. their saddles at the gate of the ceme-|doing to yourself? ‘tery. I saw you—three weeks ago, wasn't Tuscarora had swung his horse|{t?—you were a lifeless creature. around, and was staring intently at|/You have so much energy today 1, |the rise back of the cemetery down |hardly recognized you for the same which Blaze had come, Kfdare saw| person.” |Immediately the cause of the little! “Oh, 1. guess those first warm man's interest. Silhouetted against|days gave me a touch of spring the sky were six horsemen. As the|fever. My mother is great on spring \; two of them watched, the riders{tonic and she fixed me up a mix- separited. One went north, and the|ture that 1 take with every meal. |othery dashed away to the east, It certainly has made me over in Kent whirled on Blaze, “Is thatla tow weekn What is a charge d' affatres? In international law, a diplomatic ‘ashioned Mother Cures Spring Fever you are a y goodness, Anne, What hay ‘a been The last time } your bunch?" he domanded. “1 think I'll call on your mother | “I came alone,” the Double A man|and prevail upon her to give mel ‘ |shot back, quick to realize the Insin-|ner recipe, I have had a sudden |uation. “I think I recognize the bigliors of energy recently which can | fellow ahead!” he blamed to spring fever, I-imag- “Yen?” ine." “Bodine! Let's find out what| «Mother will bo delighted to fix they've got on their mind!” you up. She loves to fuss over “You said {t, son. I don't tancy|foixs, she'll have you turning this Mr. Bodine even a little bit.” To avold seeming to trall the mys- |terloun riders, Blaze and Kent chose |rather to intercept them by follow- ling the road Mercedes had taken, | She and Basilio had left with old Us. ter, the head of the Bengoa clan of Kings river, The gray-hatred Basquo (Continued in Our Next Issue) was an uncle to them by marriage, handsprings in no time. When I was & youngeter T used te rebel at the tonle mixtures mother fed ua all every spring, I haa to take them so I learned to drink {t down as a matter of course.” “IT think that spiffy new hat has something to do with your improved appearance, too, And you naughty child, Do I see a new dress under your coat?” “Maybo so, Both het and dress jare new. I wondered if you weren't going to notice them.” ROSE GEORGETTE A gown of rose georgette iy [trimmed wiih ecasendes of the ma. |terial, outlined with small rhino. y “I should say so, They are both | EEAeOe De Semele RR GM OTTUBE Gc uattal YOu Tdudh HAYES. gold ine.’ | Nothing of the wort, Unless It |in a gold mine to know about Loyety clothes, and 1 have They are at Chorry's, ‘a charg account, nd ove. between Madison iyo ‘) > Rialto bidg,, just Biover the Pig'i Whietle Take ele. yator,""—Advertisemed A i th ioe ye AAS Y reared in CRDAYASEH All of the wheat— 10 minutes and it’s ready to edt We take large, plump kernels of the choicest wheat we can get. We clean them and wash them. Then the wheat is rolled into crisp, wafer-thin flakes that sparkle with the sunshine of golden wheat fields. Nor are we content with that. For, during the flak ing process, the wheat is partially cooked under a high pressure of superheated steam. So that all it takes is 10 minutes cooking in the morning and you have— A breakfast cereal that gives you all the goodness of the wheat—a cereal, taste-full and worthwhile, that you can enjoy the year ‘round. Your grocer has it! SPERRY The year *round cereal i. One of the famous Spetry Red Package Cereals

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