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TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1923 LG Se RAK BEACH OTE ‘Continued From Saturday) habits of y rok The ether too Not rich nment amid oundings mical, mos Ma amuse Allie to pursue the r + laid down by her tut Now Ma had not gone wild stent ex n reve en a erfall, for instance, and the Proved so amazing that she} mpelied to seek more after which she Deoame int i in aves, and befpre long ramb ad taken her up wat purse ‘and into every ravine in the neighborhood. This sense of a Kien ground roused in M resome spirit. of indepen unsuspected capacity and when the wealth of jes failed to awaken in- family nm and became m in her t in her she sed re Each hote fered thru the grounds app without purpose, but in re ireultous route and tak twistings and: turnin pursuers off the scent Ever deeper into the wilderness sh netrated, but with the sly caution| of an okt fox’ returning to its hk for was always being followed | ny wicked people, such, for instance, | as minions of the law, members of e Black Hand, foreign spies, gen-; darmes, and detectives. Having baf-| fied them all, she laughed scornfully, flung deceit to the winds, then hur ried straight to the “fastness,” and there uttered the tribal call. At the sound her gypsy band came bound-| ng forth to meet her, and she gave them her royal hand to kiss, raising them graciously when they knelt giving a kind word here or @ sharp| reprimand there. | ‘They were the fiercest gypsies in| the world, and quarrelsome, too. | They were forever fighting among themselves and crying: “Curse you,| Jack Dalton! Take that!" and plung-| ng swords into one another, but they had good hearts and they loved| Ma and were devoted to her lost| cause. She could handle them where} others would pave failed. t Having accepted their homage and} heard the details of their latest raids against her, enemy, the false Duke eve habits rning she slipped out of the mr rm ently lity pursuing throw of Dallas—he whose treachery had) 4 made her what she was—she as-/ sumed her throne and held formal! court. | The throne was a low, flat rock| beside a stream, and usually Ma) removed her shoes and stockings and paddied her feet in the water while sho gave audience to visiting potentates. Those enlarged joints! never seemed ta accommodate them: | selves wholly to the sort of shoes Allie made her wear. Court “‘let} out” when Ma’s fect had become! rested, after which there wero less formal affairs of state to settle. These out of the way, it was time for the queen's recreations, which took the form of singing, dancing, conversations with animals, visits with the invisible fairy folk who} lived in flowers and gave them their pretty smells, Ma never had any trouble putting in the whole day {n some such man- ner as this; evening came al! too soon, a8 a matter of fact. Then it was that she bade good-bye to her faithful subjects and prepared once more to fare forth and mingle, in the cunning guise of an olé woman, with the followers of the false and lying Duke of Dallas. But courage! Patience! The day of reckoning was at hand when she would come into her own and the world would recog- nize her as the wronged but right- ful Princess Pensacola. Thus would Ma Briskow spend one morning. Another perhaps she would be an altogether different character, but always she was young and beautiful and full of grace, and only whén it came time to go did she assume the disguise of an aged, ADVENTURES OF THE Olive Roberts Barton _ 2 MIKE MOLE’ “Mr. Mole,” he said sternly, “I want you to know that you've ruined Mrs. Brown's lav Nancy trurried down the magic steps of Ragsy Land looking as if she had something on ner mind, | ‘Mister Tatters, oh, Mister Tat: | she called. “Where are you? I've something to tell you.” The little Ragsy mari came hurry. | ing up, wiping his ‘hands pn his overalls, “What is it?" he | asked. “You look as tho you had bad news," Well, it isn’t so dreadful,” an- swered Nancy, “but somet¥ing Is wrong. You remember how} nicely we fixed the grass lawn in gront of Mrs. Brown's house? How Pe pull- ¢d out all the plantain wed and dandelion and dock-weeds arf every: thing and had it looking Wke a} green velvet carpet?” { "Don't 1 just!” anaw tle Hagey man, looking at | "T've got blisters yet, We happened, to it?” “Well, you just ought now,” announced Nancy ZT just passed ii,aatt it's ters,” the lit iy hands, ) what's p wee it Yick and ll covered daughter & . ' F | THE SEATTLE Cynthia Grey: | Bride Moves Into New Home—Inexperienced in Art | of Decoration—Asks for Suggestions. Dear Cynthia Grey: I am a newly married woman with- | out any experience in the matter of housefurnishing, so, like many others, I come t6 you with my problem. | We have recently moved into a house with the woodwork all done in French gray. Could you tell me hfe color to tint the walls? My dining room furniture is dark oak, and | the rug is buff color. For the living room I have no furniture so far, What | could you suggest in something inexpensive. How would ved or wicker furniture be? This room has a red brick lace | Do you think that the deep cream? I shall be very grateful for any suggestions. A BRIDE With the French gray woodwork any of the pastel shades {are good—pale pink, pale blue, etc. I am afraid that your buff-colored rug will not go very well with the gray wood- work. I don’t know how you could remedy the matter, un- | le you would care to re-paint the woodwork, unless, of | Usther Lovejoy came|course, you happen to have another rug you could use, home from Greece as a third-| Cream-tinted walls would look well in your dining room, class passenger on the S. S. Wicker furniture just now seems to be very popular, and Befengaria and gave the dif-|«s it comes here from the Orient in large quantities of late, ference between steerage and|! think it is rather less expensive than some other kinds. first-class. far for hospital| You may buy lamps and almost anything made of that ma- work among Greek eufferers.| terial in the larger stores, I have seen some of this u icker he ‘| Incidentally, she has been| stuff enameled and stenciled and I must say that it certainty ; ulawerded the only Greek war| can be made attractive for little cost if one is at all artistic, j Such furniture has the added attraction that you may use {small “rag” rugs very nicely with it, and the are in- expensive, easy to keep clean, and look very well. Your bedroom would look very well in cream, or the new its! “old ivory,” with the walls done in pale pink or rose. Some K Raila saate of the new wallpapers in dainty floral designs add ever so tus. Sup. much toa room. One can furnish a bedroom very prettily 4 Statue of with comparatively little expense, when “rag” rugs, white} ty slipped and f6il, Allie could) enameled furniture and dainty muslin curtains are in vogue | jump to Dedioe’y istand take a turn holding tho torch. they’ve got the coin you say th TIRE By REX BEACH WITH METROPOLITAN MIADAAPER SERVICE, Herve one wrinkled, bent time dart springing lik rushing thru the aping rc ue fawn, flashing ds behin swiftness of he: that T ex ~ Ma did not actually run : | draper i going, Oh Of « bedroom would look all right in a sure dh enca was Neither her bare being 1 in flann No, she wi | hatr not gold, It what little there was of it ambled b perhaps short and grass wa: smooth, her whe the then she stood stil! and ran and leape swayed and darted—with her Anybody can do It At other times she defied tion pret accomplishment own, which manifested whe: She would begin tc higher and higher, and t she jumped the lighte until finally she weighed than a thistiedown, and of became a pure an Having arms. Dr. gravita » jump higher became no more ahe ear ex pe springing eased her to spr fully ve riow pleasure f on, One cannot appr 2 en Joyment to be had from method of locomotion without trying it And always when Ma came back to earth and opened her eyes there were the great smiling mountains the clear, clean waters foaming over the rocks, and underfoot was Bogen 4 Dear Miss G Would you please the cool, green grass, not that hot,| ®8¥@. T think I'll have to see m tell me who had the leading oe in hard ‘dobe clay she had always|°f her ‘ the “Bohemian Girl,” which was known. Trees, too! Beautiful whis You won't see any more theh the Blue Mouse not pering trees, with smooth leaves in-| > She's bitsing. of al} Sots stead of burrs and spines and stic she up to all day ers. Nor was there the fain! Working, study choking smell of dust; no sand, blow ercising. Rehearsing for the ing up her nose and smarting her| movies, | guess. She has worn that eyes. j companion of hers down to frazsic Ma Briskow had never dreamed|She has her own masseuso In the that the world was so clean, She| bath department, she rides a horse blessed God for making oil to Ile| three days a week, and every morn: in the rocks of the earth, and she| ing she takes a long walk Il hat tsann'® prayed that none of “them hotel got’ HEY Mr, Delamater |) oe lashos Cépend for thelr people” would discover her retreat.”/ slipped his thigh. “Road work!l).31, Gea beauty upon the condl But, of course, somebody did dis-| She's getting ready to take on tee ef thie ie. De det’ aloe cover it. Mr. Delamater, the danc'/ Dempsey.” He laughed mustcally,| inom to decome inflamed. Brash the ing instructor, for one, stumbled! “If she marries mo her days of labor 8 upon dt while Ma Briskow was in| will be over; it will mean for her |(Y"\0) the midst of one of her imaginary| the dawn of a new life—provided, ne his w cross ever given a woman, de as far as it , soaring grace and deriving a om t late upon w ft cde ay Dr ther Think nt If debate The fu Powerful has Delamater of marrying I admit anything the bank roll 4 1 living for bé for thi obstac went pone Li Instance, 4 Will not curd in mayonna’ ove ae a8 they are now, Does not get rancid. Does not discolor. Mins Grey will receive callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 to 2 p, m and on Tuesday and Thursday from 11 a m, ‘to.12 m. each week. Please do not other times, as i: seriously inter feres with her writing | pe ie SONA EN SO played here at long ago? Th wl MacDo To Make Eyelash Mis the eyelashes grow? another. Wholly vegetable, increases the value of foods. come “The by ald gnd Gladys Cooper Bohe aymond leading parts in know Girt st don « re taken th are For usual. shampoo tial Warm wate ones cake or tar soap| (shaved); one teaspoonful of borax. | For an oily scalp, add whites of two eggs; juice of two lemons. Apply! by rubbing the whites of the egos thoroly into the scalp with the tips of the fingers, After this molsten the scalp thoroly with lemon juice : vee oOse natural flavor. Grou , two au What will make Does vaseline of castile “I've he te application rd hes frequently with hair brush, Use an w diluted in one quart o, motion, aa this tends to make Advantages of AMAIZO OIL Does not smoke at cooking temperature, Economical—can be used over and over. Does not carry the flavor of one food to In the Can with Hygienic Top —Collects No Dust—No Rust Best for salads — ideal for frying— a perfect shortening MAIZO OIL is the perfected salad and cooking oil made from the hearts of golden corn. For years it has been used with great success by hotel chefs and manufacturers of salad dressings. For salads nothing can excel AMAIZO OIL. It never curds in mayonnaise. It keeps perfectly, never gets rancid. When you've fished using AMAIZO OIL for frying you can use it again and again without carrying the slightest flavor of one food to another. Because of its purity, foods cooked in AMAIZO OIL are easily digested. AMAIZO OIL is thoroughly wholesome and adds to the nutritive value of every food with which it is used. An ideal shortening, easy to measure, quick to mix, TRY IT TODAY ber Your Grocer has it American Maize-Products Co. New York nutritive Foods cooked with AMAIZO retain their gar nd he reported his discov-| of course, those oll wella are what ery to the day clerk. say they Kidding aside, alis that I don't dislike tho girl and. ho inquired, a notion to give her a chance, ‘s peculiar behavior, What the clerk said was true. “Not @ thing in the world except] Allie Briskow was Indeed in train-| a6, 1 bobbed my hair, and since money,” the clerk declared | both physica! and mental, ing, and . very | then It has become very olly and will Doubtfully Mr. Delamater shook! the application, thé energy she dis|,, egy prs not stay curled. I use tar soap to his handsome auburn head. “People| a played had surprised not only her) wash it. Can you suggest a remedy?| Aout the only twoay to reduce largc| many white skirts invite one. ‘They with good sense don’t act like that.| parents, who could but dimly un | Also, what is the difference in time | ankles ts to take exerciac, Dancing | are silken, almost invariably, and She was doing an Isadora Duncan} derstand the necessity of self-cul-lnetween Seattle and -Jacksonville,|4e especially good for this. Massage|finely pleated, And many of them when I saw her. Dancing—If you/ture, but also Mra. Ring, the in-| Wioride, Thanking you, In W. | 4s also helpful. jare fastened to small silk founda- care to call it that! Anyhow, her| atructress. Mrs. Ring, a handsome, stra tlonwiata: tnetena!:6t, stleropinda hair was hanging, she was flapping | middie-aged woman, whose specialty} Pearl bracelets, pearl necklaces and her arms and . jiggling G e f S | S} egies Vimamlermtaten, ce lal nenicas aioe teen con Ge ee oe memory. “There's a big, awkward! this position partly by reason of Sand Shades and Brown Dominate; White Becoming Popular Again; New Bracelets of Colored Glass The difference in time betw Se Florida curl, For that are Nght and spars fully app is said to © benefick yelashes “es ttle nville 4 just no. try You turban and Jacks three hours. may on white old ne, any counting in fold: crepe made with of of georgette one bright metal in front to adorn it. If Dear Miss Grey: About six weeks! Dear Miss Grey? Will you k print In your column how one reduce large ankles without your face is small and your hair much exercise? fair, you'll like it! Never did so may | ornament taking Ce bird—#ort of a crane or buzzard of/the attractive salary mentioned in some kind—that dances, I never|Calvin Gray's telegram, and partly saw one, but she reminded me of it./ by reason of the fact that she need And she sang! Gee! it was fierce!" | ed @ rest. She had met the Bris- WA ahs ise Sout’ |kows in Dallas only a short time “Scarcely. I don't mind being| before thelr departure fot tho north, alone with Allie’—Delamater’s teeth} ®"4 altho that first Interview had shone in a smile, then, seeing his|¢¢® 4 good deal of a shock to her reflection in a convenient mirror, he | By the way, the new braceléts |that cost just a little are very at- tractive. They are of gleaming col: jored glass, You buy a pair of |them for a dollar or so, and wear them high on your arms with your | shortsleeved dress. You can ex- jactly match them in long scintillat- ‘The are tan and relief to turn turists, you'll find a shop equippec with intricate Swiss machinery fot jfrom them to a simple summer] working silken patterns on plait, |frock that almost anyone would| material. Have you admired tht find becoming. It is of cotton voile | silk embossed box coats that are s¢ in a light rose red. It slips over|expensive at some of the stores! | | jthe head. It’s decorated with sim-|/They can be duplicated in work ple hand stitches in black on the|rooms here. pockets and cuffs. It has a white 4 |frill at the V-shaped neck and fas- tens with a tiny black bow that trails long ends to the waist. A string sash of the voile completes it. The hem {s wide. All hems jon thin dresses are wide. Have you | noticed? French frocks are here again for little girls from two to seven. Nothing but a ruffle for the skirt! |Nothing’s more attractive on the frock of pink checked gingham than |a cross-stitch design in black. How |well the cape mode fits the tiny |girl. The knitted capes aren't high- priced, either. If you've a little them brown, mostly a eee Have you coveted a shaggy sweat. er coat with bell-sleeves, an open front and a tie-at-the-throat coll Usually they are so hard to match up with the skirt or frock. is some news for you: They are made in our own city, You can order one of just the shade yo want and {t doesn't cost any more that way. We have truly ful shops in Seattle. If you anything, you should know almost as much of a shock as if studied it with complacent favor. He tried the smile again, and, get ting it to his better satisfaction, concluded-—"don't mind it a bit, but in a bosky dell with a mad woman ls my idea of no place to be.” “Alle?” The clerk lifted his brows. “So—‘Allie’? Has !t gone as far as that, Del?” | “Oh, you know how it is! A les-! son every day, soft music, arm) around the waist, a kind word. The sirl is human. I’m probably differ: ent to anything that ever came into/ her young life. Look at my ward- robe! She's not so bad to take,| either, and yet—” ‘The immaculate} speaker frowned. “Father like a horge, and mother’s a nut! Gee! square that.” “That's ong thing they've got. | asserted the clerk, “Nothing but TWINS '$ MISCHIEF | wn.” with curlicewe—the lawn is, Little hills about two inches high that go criss-cross and up and down and round in circks and every which way. It's simply ruined.” | Mister Tatters,went up the magic} steps that led from Raugsy Land, into the outside world. Then went straight to Mrs. Brown's front | lawn and there, Just as Nancy had} said, lay the lawn in iumpy ruins, “Um, h'm!’ nodded Mister Tat- ters nicely, “I me—ee—co"" Then he went backto Ragsy Land and down the magi¢ steps, Then he walked. @ distance under ground till he cate to a queer house, Then he walked in without knocking, “Mister Mole,’ he said want you to know thnt ruined Mra, Brown's laws it this time, But if you de Vil fix you! Good day, sir. remember what I say,” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1928, by Seuttle Star) stornly, you've "Il fix it again, Please ja season at Burlington Notch, he | ing she had been asked to tutor the off. spring of a pair of chimpanzees nevertheless sho bad nerved herself to the necessary sacrifice of dignity. After all, Allegheny was only an | overgrown child in need of advanced Kindergarten training, and in the meantime there was the prospect of The latter was, in itwelf, a prospect al uring to one suffering from the wear afd tear of a trying profes: sion. After some hesitation, Mrs. Ring had accepted the position, feel ing sure that it would rest her nerves. But never had the good woman lie, she soon discovered, was any It would take some coin to| thing but a child, or rather she was/{oned valise. an amazing and contradictory com- bination of child and adult, What Mrs. Ring had taken to be mental apathy, inherent dullness, was in reality caution, diffidence, the shy- ness of some wild animal. Nor was that the most bewildering of the teacher's. surprises; Allie pouseased character and will power. For some time she had accepted Mrs. Ring's toutorship without comment or ques; tlon—Calvin Gray had recommend. ed it, therefore she obeyed blindly —but one day, after they had be come s¢ttied in the mountains, she came out with a forceful declaration. She knew full well her shortcom. ings, 80 sho declared, and she ‘was not content to learn a few things day by day. She demanded intens!- fled training; education under forced draught. “They took green country durin’ the war—” “During the war your g's, my dear,” boys Don't drop ‘em ught them!" taught them to be soldiers in six months. Well, I'm strong as a horse, and I’ve got a brain, and I'm quick at pickin'—{ mean I pick up things quick “You pick them up quickly, Quick- ly Is an adverb; quick is an—” Allie's dark eyes grew darker. Im perilously she cried: “All right! But let mo say this my own way. It won't be right or elegant, but you'll) understand, And that's what we got! to have first off ing. After I'v it down and curry it, 1 been watch: you like a hawk, Mis’ Ring, and you're just what he said you was, You got everything L want, but--I can't go so slow; T got to get It quick—quickly. You been teaching mo to read and talk, and to laugh, and how to set—sit—but we been playing. We got to work! Oh, 1 know I'm forgetting eve thing for a minute, Miz’ Ring, Kota learn how to act pretty and talk pretty and look pretty, And T gotta learn how, quick," (Continued Tomorrow) ORC 1K AND TAFFETA An attractive summer frock of white organdie has « bolero of white taffeta und a frill. of Mnglish eyelet embroidery ubout the round neck, # good understand: “during the war, and learned} said it, you can rub GLADYS KAYE RHINE Today I've been jdiing about the lshops without purpose or plan— just enjoying everything, important and unimportant. There is so much that's new just now! Sand shades and brown have been dominating things of dress for months. Now they have taken hold lof the baggage situation, Luggage, \for harmony, has decided to be brown, too, It isn't pumpkin pie jbrown—the shade of old-fashioned }tan shoes. It's brown, the color of chocolates and sealskin, Brown pigskin in walrus finish covers a smelis| Suffered such a disillusionment, Al-| handsome traveling bag that’s some- quarish” like the old-fash- Brown calf wrinkled in great, coarse blocks, makes a slim, wedgeshaped case that a dainty person might choose for the handful of week-end things. A new sultease of dark brown leather has all the corners rounded. Even the new fibre trunks (of the kind that jan elephant may stand upon with |impunity) @re made in a gleaming |"nigger-toe” brown. . | what How long we've been buying |white ivory things for the drosser top! Anyway, ivory is going. Per- haps it's gone. Golden brown tor toise shell comes first now for combs, for the backs of brushe: for the mounting of file and shoe- horns and tooth brushes, 'The most expensive sets are made of tortoise shell, Tho best traveling cases are fitted with it. METAL CLOTH Metal cloth frocks are very pop- r for formal affairs, and the |amartest of them are absolutely without trimming. Footwear! When Fashion decid- ed, for the summer, to allow shoes to be sensibly round-toed and low. heeled, she planned, too, to let color and cut express her wild moods They do ft. Hurrah for the red, the green and the Easter-egg blue! And hurrah for criss-cross slashes, jand trellis work and weaving colored leather shoes. A_ kinder- gartner at the end of the 10th Jlesson in cut-outs could do nothing |more daring or dizzy than the de: signs we for the insteps and toes of the new pumps. And the new maple-sugar soles, a inch thick! If you wore “ when they were six dollars a pair and weighed as much as they cost, you'll Probably choose these for common: sense purposes and walk about nolselessly under the constant im- pression that the world is one hot asphalt pavement from beginning to end. seo Lingerie is trying to keep up with footwear and be colored, too. You can buy the two-piece suits of jer- sey silk (vests and knickars) in cherry, jade and purple, now, In beige and gray they are lovely and fairly practical, Lingerie shown in black! Not only see the clinging gloye-knit thing but stepin garments of crepe de chine, lace and ribbon trimmed, and all in black! © yes, and if you like you may choose a frilly net and ribbon boudoir cap for your sable scheme of things eee is do you White is here again! and it ts more than usually popular, Such an array of white milan hats one sees at the shops, But they are faced, almost tat. feta or crepe. be- this year always, with They're more re by embonpolnt, or just points? “skeinny"? out « and majl as directed; WEIGHT DECREASE Cc) Name Street and No.. City. BUALO. ree sereeeeeeesenennene Are You Have you too many bones, or too many curves? Are you troubled Do your friends call you “fatty” or TOO FAT 9 TOO THIN « In either case our Washington bureau is ready with help. They have # bulletin on “Weight Reduction” and another on “Weight Increase" which give suggestions, food lists, menus and other helps so that you can elther coax some more pounds on an underweight body or take off some of the surplus rolls of fatty tissue, Just till refully the coupon below, indicating which bulletin you wish, Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1822 New York Ave., Washington, D, C. I want a copy of the bulletin marked with inclose a two-cent postage stamp for same, ” below and INCREASE CO WEIGE in} being | ing beads of the same stuff.. You can have a set of bracelets and beads for every gown! . . | girl to dress, you must surely look jat the frilly lingerie hats that are i [here for summer wear, , | _ ee | I've just seen a new overblouse jthat's different. It's of white geor- gotte crepe, but it’s very nearly cov- Long ago polo cloth and related fabrics for rough wear began to decorate themselves with great self- ered with crepe de Chine bands that | color plaids:-.And now’ the. silky muke stripes about {t. It has alfashonas and maryellas are doing boat-shaped neck and the tiniest of /it. But in a different way. The |sleoves, I've been puzzling over|piaid is machine-stitehed on with some very new and ultra-smart|embroidery floss. Lots of this ma- |fuits that I don't lke at all. They | chine embroidety is done in Seattle. jare of hemp-like wool, coarse, with | Upstairs in a building full of doc. jawning stripes running up and tors and dentists and beauty-cul- (al as nalure serves it/ Bran for health every day, of course, ay especially in summer. But how to serve it? our safe rule is to follow Nature’s own suggestion—keep the natural proportions just as you find them in the grains of ripe, whole wheat in Shredded Wheat Biscuit. Eat whole wheat, becauseit provides every food element in perfectly faeces propor- tions. Eat it shredded, because the crisp toast ed shreds form “roughage” not flour-paste —in the long digestive tract. For allyear health, eat bran in the way Nature ay it for you—in Shredded ‘Whole Wheat. § Strawberries and hredded