The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1923, Page 15

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RSON atone Preset a jew ptectly tock: reade s. down “ awered. FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1923. e el pe , ’ Dy By \ \ oe REX \H) Continued From Yesterday) | : to be a fr end, a detest he tes of t I see ness ital, © nable.” Gray's tone had he was his demeanor and the result as he had appeared at interview in th had been, and A Stato of intense nervy t ™ i was gal of that clash had| m a keen exalta nse of reckless powgr. | on was seriously in girl, he reasoned, Ss another weapon ready r his this aimed for Bar s liking ion of war, he advantage its bear I'm dying to do so, his lun watch No eating | must who cook has been i yesterday from the a wretched cook, pes everybody when we'll an Wherever we g0, "t go somew else. We might try the Professor’s| race: ‘s a Gredk scholar—teft| fis university to get rich quick in| the olf fields, but failed. He started| sandwich and pie counter—a good one—and it pays better than a pamper. But we'd have to sit on high stools and be scowled at if) we dian't gobble our food and make} room for othera, Then there is} Ptomaine Tommy's. Cafes are good} and bad by compa: After you've} been bere a few days you'll enjoy} Tommy's.” “Then £ wete for his poison palace. The very name has a thrill to ft." On thee way to the restaurant, Gray said: “Pa and Ma and Allie! Briskow and the tutoress have gono| to the mountains—Ma’'s beloved| mountains—and they appear to be} living up to her expectations. The mountains, I mean. The old dear wires mo every week, and her let-| ters are wonderful, even outside of} the spelling. She hasn't lost a sin-| gle illusion. She has a soul for ad- venture, has Ma; she’s hunting for| caves now-—keeps her ears open to hear if the grouad sounds hollow; wants to find a mysterious cavern and explore ft, with her heart in her mouth. Sbe revels in the clean, sreen foliage amd the spring brooks. She says tig trees are awful crowd- ed in places and there’s no dust on them.” “And Allie has a tutor!” “The best money could secure. And, by the way, you wouldn't have known that girl after you got thru with her that day. That was only ing. be sorry ADVENTURES OFTHE TWINS &/ Olive Roberts Barton Nancy got her scissors and-snipped and cut and fitted and sewed. This is a story about how Nancy dressed up the Ragsies. One day in Ragsy Land, Nancy had an idea, “I'm going to make you some new clothes,” she said, | “Who for?” asked Mister Tatters, | the little Ragsy Man. | “Why all of the Ragsiee,” she an- | You just shan’t go around | any longer looking \iks ragamuff- ins." Mister Tatters looked down at his old overalls all worn to rags and slowly shook his head, “I don't think we need them,” he said. “We can work better in old duds.” “Oh, you'll soon get used to them,” said Nancy, “You might want to give another party.” “That's wo! sald Mister Tatters reluctantly, “Perhaps it would be better if we dressed up « little, The | Fairy Queen sent us some cloth ono time, but we never had any use for it. You'll find it in my best bedroom bureau drawer.” Nancy got her scissors and COPYRIGHT (922 By Re |gnomen wore, OLD REACH x DEA 7 ATH MATROPSITAN NIRA t beginniz eye now 1 sho's grow ‘Growing Gr chuc but m lectually 1 said “Yes, More than I g r cred f y ‘led. payeh: Not ph logically, sical but are, where will lead 1 don’t I'm a foolish ) rarke for I take the affairs of other pepple ly my friends, My favorite dissipa tion is to share the troubles of those whom I like, and right now I'm Allie as her| she has out already; the t and her reality, She ts quite as worried over father You distanced her pai dream part new life ts a fronted grim and ling ne adapting to a complete nd -bewilder> I'm not sure HL be equal to it," ean that she is is we con appal herself with the { presume you o hness out complete re sponsibil Buddy, and he'll be & credit to me. Th was a tone in Gray's voice when he spoke of the Bris! gave bara Parker a wholly insigh' his character; it was with a feeling that she knew him and liked him better t she sald “You think a lot of those nesters, | don’t you?” ows that new into “More than they believe, and more han I would have thought possible,"| he readily’ declared. “I'm a lone some institution, There's ent upon me; I owe no bills, itude, and I've canceled the bligations owe me. You've no idea how unnecessary I am. It gives me of importance, therefore, somebod s facilities entertainment r tly as anything élse the gen eral chaos consequent upon swift expansion into a city. Such hot had been capable transient tra: pre-p days were full and carried waiting lists like excl vo clubs; rooming/ uses and private dwellings were} crowded. A new and modern fire-| proof hotel was stretching skeleton | firigers of steel skyward, but mean. | while the task of sheltering, and] especially of feeding threo times a} day, the hungry hordes that bulged| the sides of the little city was a) difficult one. To wrest possession of | & cafe table for two at the rush| hour was an undertaking almost as hazardous as jumping a mining claim, but Calvin Gray succeeded | and eventually he and “Bob” found| themselves facing each other over| & discolored tablecloth, reading a} solled menu card to a perspiring| waiter. It was in some ways an| ideal retreat for a tete-a-tete, for! the bellowed orders, the rattle of| crockery, the voice of the hungry| food battlers, and the clash of thelr steel made intimate conversation easy. Gray noted with approval) the ease with which his dainty com- nobody th others public roundings and remarked upon it. “After four years in the East it took me a little while to get used} to it," she confessed. “The Wichi-| ta I left was a quiet town; the/ one I came hom’ to was a mad-| house. At first the excitement frightened me, for I felt as if I were being run over, tossed aside. But now that I've fallen in with the chase, why—I think it ts splen- did.” “Just what are you doing and how do you do it?” Gray wanted to know. Barbara was glad to teil him about her brief but eventful expert- | snipped and cut and fitted and sew- ed and pretty soon she had every single Ragsy man fixed up in a brand-new sult. She made some with long-tail coats and tights like the Brownies wore. And she made some with belted tunice like the And she made some with hort Jerkins lke the elves wore, But when they were finished no- body looked happy. “We shall have to change our names now because we aren't Rag: sles any more,” said Rag Tag sor- rowfully, “We all look like dudes.” “And we'll have to stop helping folks because we're too dressed up," said Bob Tail soberly. “Well, if that's the way you fee! about it, you'd better take your old clothes back,” decided Nancy. “Hore they are, every one of them. And you should have seen the Ragsles grab, my dears, It really was shocking. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Senttle Star) ted ps asl, gi,” Ellery Allen, protege of Calve, home in San the vill go to France Mme. latter's famed the }to complete her voice culture in preparation Mme. Calve says Allen is a “find for an oper- atic career, Miss I'm ey tell me I'm a a time as some of the for the big companie but, of I'm not. I ly have an 1 me mor advantage; drillers te than they'd tell a man Of course, with yor you're safo ir san to go thru the field Wh credul ur father along where, but | head vigorousty Dad hates frighten m while he angerou! ay Extensic scouts do floors talk a families, a fishing jobs; sometimen they let me taste the sand and even show the logs of their well#, It amu them at first to think of a girl playing the gamo single-handed. most men, however rough, have a sense of chivalry, you | , and are better sports than they realize. Now —well, they're beginning to respect} my business ability. They have learned that I keep my mouth closed and that I'll treat them squarely.) Some of them would fight for me. I tetl you it is the greatest experi ence, the mont thrilling adventure, a girl ever had.” “You are a brave child, and I ad mire your courage ay declared. “But I'm not, I'm afraid of everything that other girls are} afraid of.” Leaning forward con-| fidentally, the gir) continued: “I'm a hollow sham, Mr. Gray, but dad doesn't know it. After I learned! how badly he wanted mo to bo a/ poy, and how he had set his heart jon teaching me the things h panion adapted herself to the sur-|_— . casing . | the world THE SEA False Values -Worship o TTLE STAR f Gold Gnawing at Vitals of American Home, Says Man—Woman Blames Mothers for Rearing Daughters in Idleness. BY CYNTHIA GREY Seldor discussion ent has a ment as the pre one on forth so much American Home, brought the Space does not permit pri-ting all of the communications sent to this department, but they are ciate the interest my Following are some letters rec Dear Miss Gre for “A Farmerette” has writte say I think she is right when being dwarfed because the n indolence and would rather | and is content to get her me cans and the delicatessen tha’ a real home would compel her I was raised on a farm, too, and can handle horses with any one. 1 wa school; can do any kind of painting a house. readers all good, and I surely appre- have taken in this subject, eived today: 1 don’t have to write much of a letter) none for me, I just want to she says the American home is 10dern woman loves ease and 9 cooped up in an apartment Is for the most part out of tin n to lead the more active life to.. | a team of Iked four miles to and from work from splitting wood to| Girls are reared in idleness these days and the mother who would raise her daughter in the good old- way, the only right way, too, other girls and their mother shioned has a dreadful time of it, The s put her down as mean and the first thing you know your own girl thinks you are in- sulting her by asking her to trying to raise my capable of keeping bring in Dear Miss Grey: Home, I would say girls so that homes of the whole world, not by the ever-increasing fallacy of false values, worship of go izing on our minds, bodies, ev patching up a false economic for wars c wit nought a son of his si I had a nd I ym 1 om life, I'm mat no timid I ca hen Gray cor er gravely, symp face quickly sobered Now you understand why my fath- er doesn't think It necessary to go along ‘on my trips thru the oil fields. It has never occurred to him that I'm anything but ‘Bob’ arker, his boy. Mind you, he is lost in admiration of me and I r him like a slave, I think he great, too, and he ts. Ho dearest, gentlest, sweetest father in and I wouldn't have him hideous truth about me for learn the anything. For a moment Barbara’s tis studied her thoughtfully, then he said: “I'm immensely flattered that you like me well enough to make me your confessor. Now I'm going to confess to you that I also am an rant cowart (Continued Tomorrow) tener “And what is so rare as a day in June!” So sang the poet. The housekeeper will tell you that there i nothing so rare as a really perfect mayonnaise and that she’s found the one and only one— ‘GOLD MEDAL Mayonnaise HOTT WD Mode lof ‘new-lnid eggs, the finest of salad oils and seasonings so “tangy”, her porch parties are becoming famous. For the most refreshing of Summer sandwiches, cut bread in “rounds”. Be- tween “rounds” apple, spread wi “The Taste Telle’’ A, MAI lace a slice of luscious pine- Gold Medal Mayonnaise. ANO CO., Distributors, 1213 Western Avenue, Seattle, Wash. Round the can goes the hey to Flavor and Strength COFFEE "ALWAYS "GOOD The latest improved package ~a vacuumcan opened by a key-protects GOLD SHIELD ( OFFEE Soodness and you ROASTED, PACED AND GUARANTEED BY SCHWABACHER BROS. & COs, ING. “SEATTLE WASHINGTON , to devote constructive effort to our homes. | NEW SPECIES work. that But nevertheless, I am they will be willing and a home on the salaries their husbands A MOTHER OF FOUR. Regarding the passing of the American both y thing in the world is built on a false bottom, on REXE to blame. Every sand—the America alone, are threatened of the human race. Because Id, we are all too busy capital- en our very souls, blindly busy fabric with wars and schemes | And sad, but true, it f in not worthy pall even bety jod put b harmony howling an economic man's ir is ever on on the sexes, | and live | seems reane, Every one —material apirit. Give fit. in} politics or a pi career and they a helghth « noms; make 6 a money king, and ved. And the i rent of the © busin ths wide Every a: “Do rid does and I'll give you t the sands keep from beneath m fails u nd im are brings fa, W our is un-| make muc neglect the (pomnaciliancetiiasiasiaiacanionjaiotiteeianastssamasli n her offic and Friday and on end rom 1 to pm Tuesday and Thursday from 11 @ m. to 12. m. each week. Please do not* come at other times, ax {t rerlously inter feres with her writing. SSRN NEE eMC Ree Flares NOSE | | greatest sclence of all—LOVE, while | jwe cultivate every other lesser and wars Increase ac- | at man will survive, for while time grinds slowly, {t grinds finely and the devil will play into the hands of God, by suffering a man cordingly; Lave is the only immortal power thru which man {ts safe from him- self, and it automatically corrects all human {lts, for in the heighth of that sclence, man is no longer under his own leadership, | * A YOUNG MAN. . y dear Miss Grey; An article in 4 paper on the subject of the “Passing of the American Home,” reads ‘ollowsn, in part “A man who docs not home and family will not fight for his country.” | Now, speaking from a man’s stand-| point, I wish to say there fs no such animal, Every man, young or old, loves a home. But, my dear woman, the time is right now when a real home, such as in the days of our mother's and father's youth, does not | exist. | Every other horra in cities, at pres- | ent, live out of paper sacks and from tin cans, “lose the can opener and starve to deat Walt Mason says: “Our children are not home any more and thelr friends, Lord only knows | who they are.” | Let mo say, my dear woman, that| unless the girls of tho present timo | refuse to accompany the boys on this} mad rush for pleasure, that the} AMERICAN HOME will be a thing of the past in the very near future. | Instead of rushing out every night, | why not keep tho girls at home and| teach them to cook a meal in order| to get a good husband, because, you know, that is the way to get a man. And if the girls absolutely take a strike vote, as is now being done on| ugar, and refuse to “rush,” this con- | ition will change and the girls will} be more respected then they are at present and they will establish a home, which, without a woman and plenty to eat in the house, is no home at all, And let them select good food, cook it properly; select a husband, accord- love his Jove and This penguin is of the smallest variety known ant lives farther north than other members of the penguin species, It was brought to the Bronx zoo, New York, by Prof. Wm. Beebe why headéd} an expedition to the Galq- pagos islands RR ARIES, lof time | have. in 47 Years Practice HAVE been watching the re- sults of for 47 years, since 1 beg ¢ prac tice of medicine back in 1875, am now 83 years old, and though from time to time the - fession makes some interesting experiments and tests, tho fundamentals of causes and relief in this particular ailment are unchanged. But the people take greater in- terest. today in their health, in diet, exercise and the drinking of water. Constipation, however, will occur from time to time no matter how one tries to ayoid it. Of next importance, then, is how to treat it when it comes. I believe in getting as close to nature as possible, hence my remedy for constipation, known -as Dr. Cald- well’s Syrup Pepsin, is a mild vegetable compound. It is made of Egyptian ‘senna end pepsin with agreeable aromatics, Chil- dren will not willingly take bitter things, Syrup Pepsin is pleasant- tasting, and y love it. It does not gripe. Thousands of mothers have written me to that effect. Over 10 million bottles of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin are now sold every year, and it is the most widely bought family lnxative in the world. I say family laxative because all in the ey, can use it with safety, It is mild enough for the infant in arms, effective in the most chronic constipation TAKE DR. of an adult. e formula is on every package. Recently there has been wave of drastic physica. ( a mercurial that salivates loosens teeth, has been revived; salt waters and powders that draw needed constituents from the blood; coal tar disguised in candy form that causes skin erup- tions. In a@ practice of 47 years I have never seen any reason for their when a medicine like Syrup Pepsin will empty the bow- els just as promptly, more cleanly and pently, wineat bite, ak without shock to the system, © Keep free from constipation! It lowers your strength 26 per cent, hardens the arteries and brings on premature old age. Do not let a day go by without a bowel moye- ment, Do not sit and hope but go to a druggist and get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsi It is a generous-size bottle. a teaspoonful that night and by morning you will be well. The cost is only about a cent a dose, Use Syrup Pepsin for yourself and mem- bers of the family in constipation, biliousness, sour and crampy stom- ach, piles, indigestion, loss of appe- tite or sleep, and to break up fevers and colds. Always have a bottle in the house, and observe these three rules of health: Keep the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. NOB, Qtavrte. md cowasYRUP PEPSIN -<é Jhe family laxative ingly, and live with him until the end! 4 wave this growing con-| dition of being twice a widow at 15 num {Ma © a grandmother at 25 and so on. A oy of 18 a; Whose fault? The second girl knew was divorced, why ma him y not strike aga! marrying a divorced hoy? Surely she should bh Itate for fear of being as tho former. It is not the bo: fault. He would not marry if the| y can't marry ‘opal church, | married twice But she says, “Oh, I don’t care, if t get along i 1 dot t And other eye yur girls, m iss Grey, to get down to mother’s cooking and learn how to make @ real home and retain the respect which is accorded | a woman, A woman was at ono time! considered something more than she} is at present. We used to look upon @ woman as far superior to a man, but, Iam orry to say, that this bobbed-halr age {s causing the men to lose respect for the beautiful char- that a woman is supposed to Sincerely, W. B. LEFT-OVER COFFE! } Uno left-over coffee for mixing gin- | merbread or for gelatin desserts, | Never warm it up for a bevera; the flavor of coffee lies in a vo! oil which soon goes after the coffec in made shoulders From a recent portrait of DR. W. B. CALDWELL) Lorn Shelbyville, Mo,, 1299 IREPEAT MY FREE OFFER $10,000 worth of trial bottles of Syrup Pepsin free Lost year I agreed to spend $10,000 “cash for free samples of my Syrup Pepsin, and send them Sree and portage paid to @ ‘asked. A tremendous mail was the rerull, “But there must be man; uh did not write. I would like get their address this time. So 1 new my offer, in tememe of my opproaching Bith thdey, and wil jain desole $10,000" to free samples. I am anzious to sce one in every Amerie can home. Write for yours today. Simply give me your address. Send it to Dr. W: B. Caldwell, 515 Washington St, ‘Monticello, Illinois. Mine is truly a Joes ot; Ut costs Ue public nothing. The nev earrings are of sil reach the or plati studded with diamonds or bril | to be shorter and belt, ADVANCE HINTS nd dresses for fall empha- straight lir Coats are sald are not much in evidence size the re You you too m point, or just points? on ht Reduction” which give suggestions, food li 80 that you can elther coax sc body or take off some of the surp out carefu: and mail as directed: ny bones, or too man 8? A the coupon below, indicating which bul TOO FAT 9 TOO THIN * you troubled Do your friends call you “fatty” or bur with help. They ber on “Weight menus and other helps more pounds on an underweight of fatty tissue. Just fill in you wish, us roll Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin marked with “X” below and inclose a two-cent postage stamp for same. WEIGHT DECREASE CJ WEIGHT INCREASE Street and No........ssssseseesesscsecccscosscenececvscnene a HOUSANDS of housewives no longer buy double cream for coffee. They have discovered that Bor- den’s Evaporated Milk is very good indeed, and far less costly. It has a body and a richness that is like cream. It gives coffee the appetizing color that rich cream gives. More than that, it can be kept on hand. Regular cream sours very quickly. But you can always have Borden’s Evaporated Milk ready for the stray guest or the extra occasion. THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building X, New York

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