The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 23, 1923, Page 15

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AUGUST THURSDAY PAGE 15 AE YECLOW SEVEN- Alice Brady Real Mother THE WISDOM OF ; Y } RABAT-PILAI Tells of Children By EDMOND SaeLe. WLOSTRATED By Row Seren FieLD n with the e: Chinese” etective sent by his government tp British North Borneo to run to earth The Yellow Seven, | a gang of Chinese bandits. DISAGREFABLE ODORS SAVES IRONING able odor abbage or cat , drop a hard bread crust tnt |the water just as it strikes a t | Let it mtay about then “Has a Mother the Right to Plan Her Daughter's skim it out. Jt wilt rnb Life?” Queries Girl of Twenty-Six, Faced Within geal? wate at EMBROIDERED POCKETS Problem of “Marriage or a Career,” | ou t m distinctive : EGG STAINS ¢ om 6 tr Silver whi 4 Cynthia Grey:: : Care minute 1 have a frock of 1 the fa Oyen stavict inciges. think a mother has the right ? That is} i wert Dear Miss Grey: Do you to plan her daughter's life and exclude marriage the problem I have to solv Iam an only child and man for seven years, My of him until now, that we not give their consent. I have been training my 5 } } vegetables may dec ploits of have been going with a young parents have always approved want to be married, they will) JACQUETTES IN VOGLE in high vogue oats r rly fall for the rest of DYEING FURNITURE Jacquettes will be Unpainted furniture without wicker can be dyed with Wet the # 6 dyeing ) WAS A reat 1h under large tot where he NOVEL END TABLE ADDS | TO COMFORT OF DAY BED Ite Book Trough Furnish Unusual Convenience. voice for years, and they think slaw’ tse that I should not consider marriage as they feel that it would cause me to give up my care I have always looked forward to marriage and to having all the things every woman considers her birth-right. I do not want to give up this man, neither do 1 want to have a break with parents. Surely I am old enough to make my own decisions Will you please pub! other readers’ opinions. HINESE PENNINGTON stumbled up the steps of the C Commissioner’s bungalow and threw himself at full jngth in a long chair. z Captain Hewitt—immersed in the fourth attempt to pring to a successful conclusion a game of patience—swept the cards into a jumbled heap. “That you, Penn?” The man with the Chinese eyes moved restlessly. “It’s me all right!—I'm dead beat.” The Commissioner crossed* to where a lacquered tray rested on a table and measured out what he knew to be Pennington’s habitual tot. the | Pilat Group of Fall Dresses Priced for a Huge Saving an By MARIAN MOORE For the sun room which {s fure nished in a formal manner, the day bed has proved a valuable ftem. With a long, circular cushion at each end, and the square pillow in the center, the day bed has the formal nosphere compatible with the rest of the room. The day bed in the photograpli is made more complete by the ad- dition of an end t with a sur- face broad enough to hold a few books between book ends, and the ubiquitous ash tray. A book trough beneath affords ample space for the this, as I should like to have truly yours, tells me thot at certain sea sona there's more cargo rept tously disch than the c dreamed of, “Tu TWENTY-SIX. Youra is an old, old problem, and one difficult to solve by oneself, indeed. In my opinion, parents who attempt to prevent a child’s marriage because it interferes with some plan of theirs, are to be branded as the most selfish of selfish human beings, because by so doing, lives are almost inevitably ruined. Marriage, coupled with love is one of the greatest things in life, t is the normal foundation of the home, which, pad 2 in turn, is the foundation of the race, “put he's | Dombers . ung susp : pad jay i You ve |and successful singer, (s very prob- unfa ell gal ably rosy, but only Time can teu,| and he gives no hint ao far ahead, | The opinions of other readers will 7 your happiness with this man, their | be welcomed in reply to Miss "Twen- a hat © you i + I | motive te purely selfiah, You ty-sie.” have never been so hot r 2 continue your career after your mar- | as | my as they are at this Alice riage as well as before if you wish.| Where was Pola mt born and The secret of ee In that particular you are espectal-| what ts her real nam ch'Chai-Hung is the head has oe ly forunate. Born at Bromberg, near Warsaw, to lie pretty low in these days, be ag As you say, almost every girl, even| Poland; her name was Apotionia take it from me; the in this day of modern femintsm,|Chalupex. Pola ts the abbreviation of evens becoming a back her own name.and Negri she adopted | looks forward with to a amber; it's weeks since the yel-| Partitic listentne..to "an on | toma and children of her In| from the name of Ada Negriaan,| bw c with the seven biack| TePly ; vo ‘au rs 0 “angle dleased Italian poctess, | : aac an 7 Rigg rdent dis.| carly youth, “single diessedn Pp dots went abroad with its message Seeoovinsty pleasin y me ardent dis) oy very well, but later on, ¢ | - | = wondering w of death. It’s Chaidiung’s amaz-| mother should be able Ing personality alone that has kept | ®S* that really does become le the fire smoldering that we've ex- ness.” One's disposition chang: eted every effort to extinguish.”| DE EO Te eee eel and. Ie a pectont,| With years of living alone, and you He blew out long wreath of have no active |" Tittle. cnet Me perfectly | cannot expect to have your parents, smoke. a wonderful hand in t at all, but. the | DOrma’ ft ton Nihon Le or even friends, with you all of the i perience, in spite of trouble’s been traced to Kanih- 2 & me OD | time, “ There's. something ayer area and, theoretically, he's ining. Your parents have no right to at What are the meanings of the | tackling, a worthy sponsible for anything that goes on|,, “That's the reason I'm starting Altempt to make your life for you.|hames of Imogene and Merlin | there.” film library for him now, I buy up| rach one should be allowed to de-| Imogene, beloved daughter ; Merlin, ¢ commissioner began counting old educational films I can| velop his power of will sufficiently |% sparrow hawk. eT find, and I expect the camera to be| to enadla him to make his own de her and goodn h ‘¢ old enough It might be a mother visit ‘ complete ne of British North Borneo since The Shai-Hung ng final stages wa it and will prob to thelr fetow a the grave ast its put th Jesperate min séatte attempt altoge . I ngtor other's arm Ho was oner day rt of yaw and nidnight “Don't for away b cer mar with are 26 years old, and h gone with this young man for #0 years. It acems to me that unle have some fears NE! p, Pay you'll find they'll selves at Kasih-a. rs groped in a for s pouch and can “Things > l Brady and her son, Donald society that Donald ning his future on edu devoted JEW has YORK played and ¢ she beer than How's Mor in none ha 5| Or intelligent ¢ of an “T was to bye? you can y AY e from the othe Tellow $ n cut inte the con! It was a feminine v pleasure, 107. Hewitt atret “That's the 1 Wked Dom John Dewey ealth In his greatest consid he told me. “I'm tre. mendously id of the fact that he's going 9 under t confess to re | ¢| if Pe Name two naturalized citizens o the United States who became fa- mous? Alexander Graham Bell and| Madame Schumann-Heink, | sul, ®@ may affair forward eagerly js mind will need fairest widow ea: yam as Dawson had once ewitt emiled. an effort to be poe sailed or bs pat pind’ you think the veranda attired in a gorgeous! TPO id silve: She set 95 rtably th s ‘T'S hard to believe that Ef} A Useful End Table. (_PETTICOATS. ll cet Sac sic I ctsions: s knows, both ¢ you yourselves. to have your the old people's } her vision of your future © arm 1 remember how tnatten- nt in no matter r tried to Interest could be priced as low as we |}! selection of books which should have marked them. But they have a place in every sun room as have been bought’ carefully, surely as the living room. and will be sold the Fi The furniture in the pleture is Upstairs Way, which m lacquered black, with corn yellow at the lowest possible price. trimmings. The upholstery of the day bed is velour with a small pat- tern in two tones of gray, ‘The walls of the sun room ara painted ivory, with wide panels ex- | tending from baseboard to ceiling. ‘Two wall baskets, with long vines, relleve the bare wall spaces. A flax rug in a conventional de- sign was chosen for the floor cov- |) ering. (Write to Marian Moore, care of this newspaper, for advice or Infor- mation about home furnishing or decorating, sending stamped ad- dressed envelope for reply.) qi Question: Is colored glassware, such as frult bowls and candle- sticks, In good taste? What colors are best?—MRS. BE, Answer: Very good, Indeed. ‘They lend a note of color which so many tan and brown dining rooms need. Orange, yellow, and rose are good colors, and there are also | pale greens and bright reds. i Copyright, American Homes Bureau, school 4 idea please—a nice | 8 , them all r devil, seb Dyas Howit your ing the v behind him. There came « ever you feel y trom tt slope and, this absor ¢ nm, 2 veqotiate X ar se you You want,” Hung in a convenient hole him for ever. You sent for me to lay h by the heels, lord knows many weary months ago—and I'm still at it. For 16 solid days I'v been acting as a sort of railway porter—slamming doors ChalHung. Every pla: an inch of dust Is on the qui —or says he After 30 assurances of loyalty and devot fo duty, I had to sit down in a quiet corner and consider who was} ; the unclean hound that was letting us down. Fortunately {t appears there's only one. His place is un der observation. It's sheer tion, of course, but I'm to swear I'm right ‘The commissioner in his chair. bg a cigarot mes. 0, ances Rep ie wear to be « t gC out of him ed into ure cam such hinery. If Donald wa blackamith, I'm to try to make a Nor do I want him to be fo cupation It’s a Florence Value at $ 15” Poiret ‘Twills, plain © and checked Flannels, Fiat-Back Crepés "and Canton Crepes in new and pleasing ‘designs are Inclyded fn this group. As of films for Don them make geography I can't realize I ever others history ndid drama tt she tary ecler the path an any 0 Ho halted exhausted every possible nterest, !t dawns upon "ve a fiancee knocking ewhere. How's Monten no glanced down the cigaret, now nearing completion. | ® As special honor you may |™ assump-| mo paper and stick It down.” pr < before pleasure, you know,” sald Pennington. striking a match. Besides, I thought you'd gone to! bed.” “[ had, but there was a mosquito! in my curtains—a particularly hun gry and "t sleep. Tsay, ¢ Domberg really in Chai-Hung er at Hewitt n ain Hewitt, I'm tn I want you ear ‘ , going to put if she h - I f bus Letters had be eusing fin) “Look here, Cay no mood to pi ny know when words, low his stead of min there's the rtamanship w Seyen reading d rs 1 then schoolmaster enced by that My experience and ol plied, “But dor lop my son t n to know of course, very himself ten the commissioner polsed 2 table. would simp deal,” ho sald coolly you were.” I'm Van T've ridden from there t 6 and sy ideas are my own, based on I plan just his eyes, I matters a great “It 1 knew who © concluded. most exact and for that} to succeed be atten ing a mother js just t ing Job I ever tackled, determ! Dulen how to use his|reason I'm at it.” Miss Brady formerly was the wife spectmen- ot James L. Crane T cot 1 nd understand ma RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER Deep Seated Uric Acid Deposits Are | Dissolved and the Rheumatic Poison Starts to Leave the Sy tem Within Twenty-four Hours. n exchanged glances. dust remonstrated Hewitt. mination. My firs ng!” erutiny left me with three possibles —all situated wide apart. I spent the best part of a fortnight in tho immediate vicinity of each of ‘em— andthe Kasih-ayer estate romped home, an easy first.” “Domberg!” murmured thaking his head from s and frowning deep “Vd have thought it.” ed imbecile, the is of this luxurious man- unding have you ever en- brand of woman that’s | °" areal gs ox peak stuff cotton-wool in her ears Paigky r the bed , , age ing thelr exploit Brutally disillu: ned! Of all the “Stranger thir women in the world I believed you 3 than that. Chal-Hung himself was| were the one who would.” ny a| -¥ our most respected Chinese resident| “Who's Domberg, authdt stone time, {f you remember. My|that nice old Dutchman tsteemed chief-of-staff—one Rabat- gray hair we met onc ADVENTURES hak me OF THE TWINS ; rte with seven black mudires ed the man me a Aller Imme diately after you start to take It the good work begins. It the uric acid deposits, ns and drives rheumatic | pol: the body through the |kidneys and bowels. It's marvelous how quickly it acts Blesved relief often nes tn two and even in cases where the all traces hu relieves at once Van Dav Hewitt— Shaadved Hib ares oe 1. Whittaker was poise found him in his c metal point hi searches out fi Aissolves the ad. beer secre n out of gist in Ato say to in this. vieinit of ALLENRHU, of rheumatism, swollen jot this country | Say farewell to the petticontle: days. They are gone. The petti- coat has some back—and in a safer and more comfortable style than the te-about-the- waist model that creases and bulges around one's middie. Now it Invariably swings from the shoulder and is made of silk. But more than that—it is showing the Chinese influence that fs affect, ing outer dress. Chinese characters, curious Chinese figures, odd Chinese motifs form border designs printed on the silk that is used for the cam- of all diseasew, and he has instruct-|isole petticoat ed druggists to guaranteo {it a8! Pipings of black, green, red and above in every instance.—Advertise-|other bright colors are being used Ito edge flounc Jack? every rheumatic that if aly full pint the sure ounque p nil agony days, does not nts ight pain, he with psa disappear } Mr. J Allen, erer of ALLENRHU, urs suffered with even Nordea: who for ma e torments of acute matism, desires all sufferers to know that he does not want a cent Jof anyone’s money unless ALLEN. RHU decisively conquers this worst of turn est. twinge rheumatic will gladly out comm All for sults have b in the most s e the suffering and agony was intense and piteous and where the patient was helpless. | rhe 1 has been tried and tested and really m n accompl I should say, rvelous re- hed even andering about ith palvepat vero cases wh nd brushes?” (Continued in Our Next Issue) of Interest to Married Men ment. OUR wife knows how provoking it is to work with starch that formsathick, sticky jelly when it cools, and smears and clots, and makes her iron stick. is ready for use, itis THIN and FREE-RUNNING LIKE WATER—witha “‘milky’’ appearance. | 7 f ma . , * * * | Tell your wife to use Linit according to directions, and, unlike other starches, she will not find Linit stiff or jelly-like. This is why Linit goes much further than the old-fashioned kind of starch- es, and is much easier to iron with. All these drawbacks to easy, satisfactory work have now been overcome with Linit, the new starch dis- covery. Linit is a scientific starch — distinctly different from ordinary starches. After Linit is thoroughly dissolved according to directions and Nick poked in a stick and Winky Wank caught it. Mister Bee shook himself and {and before Winky Wank knew what | shook himself, but he couldn't shake | was happening, Mister Beo made a| Winky Wank, the Pee Wee boy, off | of them and crawkd dia back | Winky Wank winked one of his| so dark that Winky Wank tiny black eyes and laughed and|couldn’t see a thing at first. But | laughed at the joke he had played |he'd never heard such a buzzing in| 4 everybody. all his Ufet He let go his hold on “My, but fun being an|Mister Bee and held his hands over aviator,” he cried. “Nothing else |both fn buzz ike an airplane except} And what did Mister Bee, I've ridden on every |but lose his balanc other kind of a bug but not one of| And altho he r one You, too, will be delighted with the soft, pliable, linen finish Linit gives to your shirts and soft collars, _¢m Electric Range -in every apartment! Linit penetrates the fabric, helps prevent wear, and pro~ Winky Wank do longs the life of the material, nd fall off! n't hurt one bit, Ask your grocer for a them can buzz as beautifully as he @n. 1 wonder why mother never Would let me ride him. When I go home T'll tell her how lovely it is n everything and what a mistake the made not letting mo ride on him before." Winky Wank had run off from Pee Wee Land and jumped on Mis- tor “Bea when he wasn't looking. And Mister Bee was as mad as «| hornet, ' Ber! Bzzzzi he went angrily, fly. if away from the posey vine and Ponhnd straight for a row of funny jihings that looked like great big Porridge bowls turned upside down. one had a doar away down, jhe sank into sticky stuff up to his waist And he couldn't move! 2 y where you are!’ sald Mister |Bee coldly. “You're a bad boy and | nobody is going to help you. “Yes, they are. We're going to him,” said a new voice. ““We'vo hunting for him everywhere been jand we're going to take him back | jto Pee Wee La | My, but Winky Wank was thank- ul! Nick poked in a stick Winky Wank caught it and was pulled out all covered with honey. “Ti go near a bee or a bee-hive n,” he declared to tho id at once.” neve twins. and | (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1933, N. M.A. Bervica, Inc.) In the Can with the Hygienic Top Collects No Dust— No Rast FREE Re snre to get the Amelio Cook Book —fust ont, containing delightful, helpful, receives, Free for the asking. Writo today to American Maize-Products Co, 41 East 42nd Street Now York, N.Y. HE new Wilsonian Apartment Hotel, In the University District, Is assuring com: fort, convenience and cleanliness to its tenants through the installation of ar ELECTRIC RANGE in every apartment. This is only ono zof many beautiful, up-to-date apartments, hotels and homes equipped with ELECTRIC RA by the PUGET SOUND POWER & LIGHT CO, Every modern place of living should be equipped THE MATCH Y Hdn't you our organization ILECTRIG some member of the value of the Just call Main 6000. like to have demonstrate RANGE to YOU? Puget Sound Power é Light Company The Electric Building, 7ih and Olive l0¢ package of Linit and have your wife begin the modern way of starching. JOHNSON-LIEBER CO, Seattle, Wash. &, Na

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