The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 24, 1923, Page 11

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TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1 ; THE SEATTLI TAR PAGE 11 HONOR LOCAL y e. UISPERING "hss. ° apped o IP 7 S | hen bh ¢ im, 4 - . ad iste Gere fem MU AIA re LIBRARIAN | (Gossip or Seattle Shops AGE. ¢ |, Well, then, lata forwet chis gas 1) «5, 2: sennings, ttorarian of the f | scout nm my own around — —_ attle public Ubrary the only nomi rik a = ~ \ | . “ve , , - . > y “¢ ‘ al’s aj reir Aa noge-sere ‘ |You can't eet near it trom the routs. Woman Who Looks Not Into the Future Brings| se tor president of the Ame Color and Camel’s Hair Reign cae | Ackiin’s n are there nig a M8 } m 1 . | Library relation, which will elect ‘ mn ‘ ‘ . " - a oP nT fae ‘ The old wire fence doesn’t ht Que stion as Old as Time—That of Inter- ie fhe ram nsf . 7 tt Gowns Like Cleopatra Adored jeount any racial Marriag r ‘2 hy} : : r \\—— ARN OMIL AIR DRAGS Aulp thelr cattle be ruge prings, Arkansas, April 23-28 Wash Fabrics of Dizzy Design “tom <OPymieHD RD BY NEA seers 7 ye m gua . be een Jennings w the first president / vid biel F ride Dear Miss Grey: I am 28 years of age, have been mar panclan adele ys 5p. xR te” Editor's Note—This is the j|colored siipon with plented skirt | A Wttle thing tn tteelf, but one] how t ried, and have a baby boy 5 years old, What I want to say pptogbe f yes ks wdanete : first of a series of authoritative |ieaning to mauve? Mous-colored a from which Buck took a great deal| Esteban r is this: Why is the law against white girls keeping com-| {ines the founding of the associat stories of new and novel offer. jhose? Gray footwear in susdet Pntate had told fl 7 9 oS 9 ASSBEES IOS cs in Seattle shops and stores. Banded hat in felt or straw turned he COMME, WHA tDO Each: thas Kons " w himeelf. pany with colored men } 1 am going with a colored man |i 1876, the pre fent ha always Seattle is known far and wide wh all arow r ¥ you choose |Dad gone back to Winnemucca. By t —r who is a very respectable gentleman and I intend to marry ¢ large oe : phd a for its variety of merchandise, |to contour Vke a lion e nper of the crowd In Lookin’ ro him in a very short time, viv ly ee ene | particularly that of feminine ap unt 7 And will at white heat. An hour] get by these Double Get! Every time I am seen on the street with him, we are : So eee | peal, Information and gossip s dy for any Hodine knew they would] into the Kings first; follow the| stared at, as tho we : a crime, and even the| trary profeston. Mr Jennings has| Sppertalning thereto will appear |wenther with a topcoat of camel's ng down. The abuse he had| creek north, say five miles beyond , 10 we were committing a crime, and even th \ i weekly on Tuesday in The Star. | halr : sj don Acklin, added to thelr own| where that little braneh outa in from | @W Seems to have something to say to us about it, Why is Me wy obi 1 as a vice president span Gh ls rial ee Dat an td Gite evens ‘ hatred of the man, had/the west. You'll see old Bengoa's| it that people seem to take the attitude that we have no right) 0" (ht A. ts # Aud bee suave taken) Ry GLADYS KAYE RHINE | Girls’ Club He had not long to watt. Five! OUsht the big fellow's plans to 4! ranch, but keep east of that, by'm by|to be on the streets together? Do they think that a colored| mites work S78. everything the | style this . minutes, and the horsemen hove into | Samar: fd ree bs poet OF them, | you'll come to & little park of birches.! man ig not good enough to be with a white woman? ese Mek MAE Ae year?’ one may ask, looking Plans Spring ¥iew. Bodine was in front. The tm-| °° 544 to ral ne the dice now.) You can't miss the trail east. It) ny ‘ rye rhs about Seattle shops, Yes. For pulse to drop him out of the saddio| He was tn Benavides bar sur-|heads to the north in a utue while|, This man has treated me far better than my former hus-| courage of your convictions| Fashion has turned flirt end lavish.| Blossom Dance trong; but the thrill Blaze re-|Founded by a small group that he| Disaster peak wilt be right in front band did—in fact, better than has any white man, but|—in another you rebelliously ed «miles here, nods there, approval] “Say, Edith, I'm chairman of the ceived when he recognized the man|¢!d charmed with his vitriolic elo-|of you. When you get there, pick it seems that a white girl is thought low when she has a ask “Why?” almost everywhere! For all that [ fe a es for the club, you was as nothing compared to the| ence. To hs listeners, Buck seemed | up a creek; any one; Uuty're all fow-| colored man for a frie thew : . but two great loves she has. One|kSow. I want you to serve on my pene a friend. I have been much happier with Tosi A t 4 , rt’ he rienced ck's |Concerned only with them; but One-| in’ to the Martin. Coal creek is the ‘ | Now, the point is, do youlis cailec 101 ‘ ner Camel's | Committee for the dance that we'll start he experienced when Buck's| y a this man than I ever was with any white man. | y ir | a anne SOREL M8. Guat COMER companion turned his face squarely |°¥*4 Manuel and he had never for|nearest. It hain't over five miles give this week if you will.” feel the same sympathy for |Hair }@ second relaxed their furtive watch I am not trying to knock the white race, please don’t mis- at Kildare. from there down to the head of the th 5 f And so our windows invite us| “My dear, is that dance so soon? v hose of the yellow race? - The cow-boy sank back Into his of fac h other, The bartende r moved water Acklin’s backed up. His lake's understand me, but I would like to see the colored men have Would you ma ry a China- |"! fabrics that vie with Oriental tek it was to be the latter part Fortin, easaclous volta nected is | the door, Bodine rvooguined Hnteban | “And if we get there, then whatr-| elt rights, man or an Indian as readily \desgn. Rich silks are printed in| "No. it's the 21th of April, to be A grim, sagacious sm| ardened his | the doo! od ecognized Esteban | d bere, th n | r ‘ 5.) " e design. Rich silks are printed in BO, 10m the Sith 7 face; into his eyes came a flash of | MORE the men who had just come} “There won't be any if about tt Nothing anyone could ever say would tun me against this| 4 you would thix colored|tapentry hues and banded in Bast. |**act, and we'll have to get busy with satisfaction. A. And when we do,| man, He walked over to where the boy | We'll get there refreah- I love him and I am not ashamed to say it to the] man of whom you write? Do|\em symbolism. Wor my lady the|!Hvitations, color schemes, | From his pocket he took the pic-| ¥4 draining his glass, | We'll blow hia dam out 90 pretty be'll/ world, Did not the negro fight for this country the same as you see your equal in the|*hoPs show now the gowns that | Menta and), &. muilion other aaa | ture he had shown Melody. It was) “Say, I hope you ain't tanidn’ up | be the reat of his life squaring the! did the white man? The colored man is just as human as gee y 7 Cleopatra might have modeled and | "SR! away z ‘ Shorty’s photograph. at a time like this,” ho began. “These | damage sults, the white ij cacatine } negara df hac : white woman who has for @)worn. ‘The first dark suits in navy|,,“¥e% of course. Surely I'll be om ae “Gee, Kid!" he breathed aloud,| folks are dependin’ on you to do| Blowing up the dam had ocourred nite, and just because his skin is dark is no reason| husband a Japanese? and brown express color in their |th¢ committee. Is it a costume dance | : “Ym going to keep my word with| somethin’ for them.” to the boy, too; but he had found) Why he should be looked down upon. He should have as| You say that nothing can|collar fastenings, in thelr sleeve or otherwise?” you.” | “1 won't be asking any advice of | YW Impossible it was to get near the/ much right to associate with white woman as the white man say Bah NOLMING CON | racings, in thelr linings and in their], JUst plain, ordinary dress-up | you." Wall. Bodine’s plan was still a closed! hag This is supposed to be a free country, but it’s far change your opinions, ANd |riouses. Here in one of our shops | 4? No fancy costumes, ‘Thinks 4 n, anq ue. oak bs ° me C a yy | , 7 ps e ie tem| b] | “And I won't be givin’ any, elther,”| 00K to the young Basque. to| from free when the law tells you who to have { Heptary yet you write for reassur-\are sports hate all banded with| “© ™'s ht at mpt @ spring blossom | Bodine was at his test, “Taint foc. |. “HOW are you going to get down to F you who to have for friends Panes paugionet (nt nere are so many lovely ance. rd was hours getting down to/ gettin’ that you told me once you'd wall from there me aah a “TOU story. Kildare | take care of Acklin by yourself. Well, | N°nt be any better off than trying 's Head long be-|nothin's happened yet. You folks|!* from this en4” = | fore the old man went by. It was a/ kill one of his cows, and he burns|, O's 7es We will! We won't even! grim twist of fate that sent the|down your warehouse’ You hit back, | ‘7, '0 set near the wall sheep-man to Bodine’s first with his/and he drives your sheep over the | Dodine's voice dropped to @ whisper tale of grief. Bu k's sense of humor was equal to the occasion, however. | of stuff, won't you?" “Wait till the folks down below hear about this,” the big fellow roared, in a fine show of anger. fo with you right now.” Thus the two of them burst upon | ing in the boy. the quiet town In mid-afternoon. Bad mews travels fast, and their Was soon common property repeated turning to him for firmation of his lose began its effect on the Basques, con- Even Esteban yret him without any open|look at his watch show of hostitity. | “Tl go on. story | vice where It ain't wanted. I'm goin’) Buck's | home now. Violent indignation and old Liotard's| tonwoods by the bridge, I'l! wait five to have| I've got to cay, you mest me there. “If I show you how, will you go thru with this? I tell you we can't loss” “How do I know but you'll leave me holding the bag?” Esteban de manded, “How do you know?" the big fel |low repeated. “Why, I am to be right there with you when th thing’s pulled off. We'll only want one more man; Romero’ll do, | “Well, you can take me on faith, or| forget it.” The boy was still cautious | 1 won't pass my word until I know what I'm promising.” “I'll go You on that.” Bodine was] not standing on ceremony. "You get the dynamite. Acklin would «pot cliffs, You'll grow fat on that kind The murmur behind him was en- couragement enough to make Buck Bodine could feel the curtosity aris- “But as 1 said, I ain't givin’ ad When I get to the cot- minutes, If you want to hear what It wasn't necessary for Buck to He had barely arrived in the shade of the trees The Tey Maker shipped two brand; Bang Landers cried out, “Oh. new airplanes to Bing-Bang Land by express. The Tinker Man opened them and put the parts all together like the Smart tinker man he was. ‘Then he called Nick. “Which one @o you wish to fly in?*he asked. "The one belonging to the wooden soldiers or the ona belonging to the tin soldiers? Which side are you on?” "T'a better stick to the wooden poldiers,” answered Nick “I can- Rot be a traitor, sirl” “Good? cried the Tinker Man. “But you are too big to run this toy airplane the way you are.” “That is easily fixed,” said Nick. “Don't forget that Nancy and I have Magic Shoes.” So he proceeded to wish himself quite small and soon he was in the airplane learning all there was to know. Bye and bye he flew away over Bing-Bang Land and al. the Bing- ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS lim.” ae sca =: me afterward if I bought it. You any on hand, have you?” S08 OF BO. My father wa Bix ¢ getting ready to use it this fall," Es- | teban answered after | companion's face. | “That's great,” Buck shouted en-| thustastl ‘a more than we) need. I'll build @ bomb that'll tear «| hole in that wall big enough to put an elephant thru. We'll sneak the powder, and the other stuff we want, up the way I sald. We'll make a raft there's lots of cedars up there—and } put our little old m on it. The wind drives down that canon every searching bis she'll hit the dam. I timed a log one} night, Ill fix the fuse so we'll be | we'll cover the raft with oil | happens to drift down quicker than I | figure, the fuse will eet the dam thing afire and blow up the works | anyho wwer Buck needed. taking any chances on time. “Tomorrow night, the compromised. “I'll be look at the queer new bird in the sky?” Nick flew right over the enemy’s country, where he could see down into the camps and find out what everybody was doing. | But something dreadful happened. | A tin soldier iifted his gun and shot at Nick's airplane and hit it, | breaking one of the wings. Down crashed Nick and tts a wonder he wasn't killed But he wasn't—not even hurt, and he jumped up to find himself surrounded by tin soldiers, “Take the prisoner off to Jail,” | sald General Hobbledehoy, the leader of the tin army, “and search | Six tin soldiers hustled Nick away and put him tn jail at once, The first thing they did waa to take away his Magic Shoes. ‘When he did not return Nancy be gan to worry. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle, Star) ‘ar. * & * How little we know of the grimness and tragedy of that trail! How splendid they have been, those who traveled it, in keeping the tragedy locked in tehir own hearts, while they came to make @ state, a country and @ history! There's more of this story, but that’s the darkest chapter. And so, along In the spring of 1852 the little steamer Mary Tay- lor came into harbor at Whidby inland, and when she sailed away the tiny little mother with the four children, who had lived to cross the plaing, and Peter Smith, the father, began their home- making on Puget Sound. i “It's better than Portland, I'm sure,” Mr. Smith said, “I ‘have talked with many inen about It. All the ships which come, Into this new country of the Sqund will have to pass here. .Yea, I am giad we did not stay ‘in Portland.” ‘There were lotn of Indians and a few white people on Whidby inland at that time as you re- member, but there was much clearing, hauling and plenty of work for everybody to do. For several months ail went well with the Smiths, then one day while he was out with his ox team, busy at the hauling, Mr, Smith fell and broke his arm, just smashed {t, so that nobody on the Island could take care of it. Nobody over at Port Townsend could take care of it elther, and no doctor nearer than San I*ran , cinco was to be had, Ho, suffering oh! #0 anxious, about hia wif and their children, the fathor wailed away and left them in the lonely home In the big for ent with the deep waters of tho Sound cutting them off from moat By Mabel Cleland Page 971 ALONE ON THE ISLAND Srattle _ » td of the settlers in that part of the country. Now, in thone days getting any- thing to make lights was a prob- lem. There were very few cows, and not much tallow; there were no wax candles; there was no coal ofl and no gas and, of course, no electric Mghts; about the on thing the settlers had to burn wan fish ofl. And about the only way they had to get fish ofl was from the Indians, So it didn't surprise Mrs, Smith to see a very tall Indian stand- ing in her doorway one morning not long after her husband went away. She had learned the simple Jan- age of the Indlanm by that ime, #0 she knew at once what he meant when he said in Chinook, "It have ofl, What will you pay. Mra. mith knew just. how much the oll was worth and how much’the men usually pald for it. You know, they rarely gave any real money, they traded cal- ico or beads ‘or gunpowder or whatever the Indians needed, for the salmon and deer meat ‘and fish olf which the Indiana had to well. So Mra, Smith got out a good piece of calico, and showing It to the Indian, wid in Chinook, "f will take your oll and I will give you this plece of callco tn ex- change for It," Then the tall Indian stooped low and looked clone into her white face and « black scowl dark his face and he anaried out th words, “Hyas Closhe!” es A A then, "Mika, wake potlateh, Mika pogh ka.” fl ‘omorrow we will i what this means, Hen ee and who not to. I sincerely hope that you will print this and answer my questions, thru the buttes? —————— | We can make it by | way of the hills in two hours. What | night. It don't vary five minutes, All| 8% Propitious ho planned to settie/ we'll have to do 1s push her off and| the Issue between them strictly by sure, and just to be certain of {t,|°20® prosperous Buena Vista, he If tt| knew that he could not pass by with- | Ewteban's eyes were the only an. | >8n: but unless the boy had changed “I'm ready now,” Buck was not| Which he must be aroused if he had) Esteban | Acklin had fired thelr wool and killed | your place| Lictard’s sheep. As he sent My Man| by noon. Why not go straight north| toward the havienda, he resolved to le ne aaa to tell the boy the truth, or at | ter’s,” the little tot sobbed, “and he do you say? “It's a terrible chance, Morrow wil! | have his riders in the t , | I'll draw thom away.” & note of sureness in the boy's voice an he went on. > that trail acroas the peak tor They'll make so much nolse Morrow will have his men camping there to-/| morrow evening. We'll go thru in| back of them. | CHAPTER XXVI | Rasilio’s Discovery It was not quite 10 o'clock the fol lowing morning when Kildare walked My Man to the top of the rise from which he had taken his first look at Paradise valley He was on his way to the Bull's Head from Winnemucca He had taken his long deferred day off to attend to what he had told Morrow was personal business, The/| roundabout route by which he was turning was due to a promise given the foreman. Blaze had kept to himeelf his kfowledge of Bodine’s part in the war of reprisals that was being waged. He had no intention of iet Ung the Double A frighten Shorty| in marriage. hades age He tseeag ear put of the country. He had walted ak x b is wil} make a gray too long for that; and when the time| hought for the future has|haired person took twenty years himself. But as he swept his eyes over the desolation that marked the out attempting to see the girl who had haunted him from the time be had first met her, Blaze had heard nothing of Exte- greatly, he could Imagine the pitch to been deceived into believing that) loast part of it. The sound of a crying child caught hia ears as he rode by the open door | the idea of superiority which of the barn. He stopped and called, and Basilio came out, rubbing his face with his sleeve. “What's the matt he called solicitously. “Esteban hi gone to Uncle Pe- , Nttle chief?" wouldn't let me go along. He would —would—wouldn’t take me.” “Don't you mind,” Blaze consoled him. “It's a long, hot rid», and Un- | cle Peter will just about be busy with| cate that you would justify the haying, #0 don’t you cry, little} your own actions to be at chief, The water in the Kings Is #0} low you couldn't do any fishin’ no- how.” jevidently no place in your) younser | marriage often brings forth) | feel that you are doing the | . pretty fat. Why not a@ pretty littie " Egypt tint 11 PEGGIE. | right thing and that this man|"*7?O*2 Snel a, corsage for all the giris?” ; “| wall make up to you for the| xy - r no| Pretty idea. And I know @ Peggie; you are looking| p to you f Even laces have not escaped the| soneme. Let's have your twin siss thru smoked glasses at your | 20ctey of others to world. You are a victim of| 77 selfish prejudice—but of your | ai/ference, then I should say jown, and not that of the rest) “ ~|vice. Nothing I can say will| sunsets to old Paisley shawls. Batik, | +) 44, : of the world. From your dis-| 501) or hinder you, |the art of tying and dyeing, has| Something ike thas eo “I'll send a dozen men| torted point of view, the reat) _ ——————| one colormud, too. Hose, sky-| «sty worry is clothes, I must lof the world is wrong and |blue, vermillion crowd on ther A HOME-MADE GRAY you are right. That others have seen the problem of race HAIR REMEDY in the same light that you do yaar te evidenced by the numbers | you Can Make a Better Gray Hair who are living saddened| Remedy Than You Can Buy lives, shadowed by the miz-} ture of white and black—or| ellow blood. They belong to neither race, and for them,| society has little patience. | I think that there is no|nn' streaked or unbecoming, but Gray, sary Anyone can prepare a simple mix |ture at home that will darken gray unneces: | a half-pint of water add one written law forbidding inter-|ounce of bay rum, a amall box of |of wauze; they between negroes|Barbo Compound and % ounce of and whites. You will, how-| eens. ever, have difficulty, I be-| ae ony drug store at very little cost lieve, in finding a judge or jor the druggist will put {t up for minister who will unite you|you. Apply to the hair twice a marriage A a color the scalp, ts not sticky or scheme of things, but without | rasy, and does not rub off—Ad it, the world would be a p00r | vertinement, place in which to live. You have given no thought to the future lives of the children who might be the issue of such a marriage. Neither white nor black—theirs can be nothing more than a blighted existence. A mixed in the child the worst traits} of both races, tho, vf course,| there are always exceptions. | I think it is not so much creates such repulsion in the mind of the average person at thought of such a mi:ted marriage as it is the inherent knowledge of a difference— mentally as well as phys- ically. Your letter seems to indi- peace with yourself. Your mind seems to waver—in one (Continued in Our Next Issue) sentence you have all the The best same purchase it. Its Companies next winter. Satisfactory 820 Westlake North. ‘American Beauty” ELECTRIC IRON The ONE iron that will give the atisfactory service after years of use as upon the day you cost is offset many times by its sturdy reliability. Sold by Dealers and Electrical Manufactured by American Electrical Heater Company, DETROIT Oldest and Laryest Exclusive Makers, Established 1894, Don’t Wait Till Fall! Right Now is the only time you.can be sure to get ARCOLA and radiators installed in your home Eckart Plumbing & Heating Co. fashioned heating plant. iron made 1 slight extra first tories, Everywhere, for Terms, Elliott 1518 x Dr I would say that if you|ay printed crepes. | whole hats built up fold by fold of whom |color craze! And now our windows your marriage may make a|*>out town are showing beautiful ; | Spanish pro that you need no further ad-|anyth ion of like clouds at sunset on silks that we ory for our standard inviting pillowe—for many @ bit of fine handcraft. And now comes the flood of sum faded hair Je|er wash fabrics aping the crepes | Rialto building, just o thelr riotous color and dizzy de-| Whistle. Take elevator.”—Advertise- | them ir, and make it soft and glossy, |tume Of course the camel's hair coat in| These ingredients can be bought |the thing. fad, a flare, ® flash! day and everywhere, for the whole ong year, the shops show caravan he desired shade i* ob. |loads of camel's nair coats. | follows that dun or sand or biege or tan is everywhere in ha It ts easy to use, does not |and moyse and fawn ts everywhere | in hosiery and pumps and ties. What will you wear, Miss Seattle, over the week-ends at pinay? A gay 5000 homes had to go without ARCOLA because they waited till Fall O 5,000 families in 1921 came a real disappointment. There weren't enough Arco as to fill their orders—and they shivered through the winter with stoves or an old- Three times as many homes are being built this year as in 1921. And we can make only the same number of Arcotas as in 1921 be- cause orders for larger Ideal Boilers have already over-taxed our fac- ARCOLA Heating Outfit Installed ready to use with radiator om $180 to $550 peek FOR SMALL HOMES AND STORES AMERICAN RADIATOR COMPANY ToEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators for every heating need Holgate and Utah Streets flowers now and the club treasury is ters dance their flower dance in costumes and distribute the cor- sages in large baskets.” “You're @ peach for the enter- taimment committee. That’ pret. allovers printed in such color as to suggest g trom flower gardens and have a new party dress, but I haven’t planned it so soon, Oh, for a mil- lion dollars!” You don't need that much, really. Get your party dress at Cherry's Open an account. Six months to pay. They are at 1015 Second ave, be- tween Madison and Spring, in the r the Pign for now to use lamps, as shades tops for cee | Have you seen the new cot | ment |ton volles? Would you have beleved | ———____— possible? They're lke cos. sOnOnOnOR jen enenOE: chiffons They drape like a fabric re lovely! iran in their depth and In ri ht in that sandwich i Bluhill Green Chile Cheese ~ss earn Capes? Oh, yes, as a But for every Bo it and gray | The popularity of Arcota fs tre- mendous. It is the only satisfactory heating plant for the small home. Gives you a genuine American Ra- diator in every room. Perfect pro- tection for the children against colds and grippe. So economical that it pays for itself in the fuel it 55 saves. Please help us to avoid disappoint- ing younext Fall. Ask your Heating £3 Contractor to give you an estimate i now. in each room SEATTLE, WASH.

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