The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1923, Page 11

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"PAGE 12> TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1 THE Sst Le ATTLE STAR = Cynthia Grey:f ownpT SHOP QUITS Our Fall Lines of All New Merchandise, Women’s Ready-to-Wear andé Millinery, Must Be Sacrificed at Once at Less Than Cost. OUR LEASE IS SOLD— ey goa Wool One DRESSES And Up Lot Any of (THE ISLE OF RETRIBUTION EDISON MARSHALL Girl Who P: oposed Warns Others Not To—Do You Agree With Her? \Wusrear 7 © WFLt, BROWN 8 Company, 48s RW SATTERY ee BEGIN CYNTHIA ? GREY Positively not, answers “Mise maybe, but not now. opposite view—"Let the girla| try their luck,” he says, “they can’t make very many more} mistakes than are being made now, and there is a chance of them doing better.” | What do you say about it, folks Following .is some of the comment: z Choice Dear Miss Grey; Re: Should we let the women propose It won't work; the men think we are ¢ 50 years of from now they may be educated to it; but now they believe we are hard up for a man—lI tried it. 1t is contrary to the order of things at the present time and would completely annihilate our present mode of living. man she had hoped After all, girls, there is nothing better than the old- All her had fall: fashioned standard, for there are certain conventions we i ar ams had bre ken ‘ike! all must adhere to, if well bred. Surely this is one of them, A SOY. WOre,.. TRS altho we independent bachelor maids oftentimes wish we her soul—| Might tell the sweetest story to the uncourageous bachelor she might] we can’t forget, in a way he'd understand, | m his sight forever | MISS EV on ioe sew Saye, OOOO ONY) Dane Miss: In regard to the woman and marriage ed this ) i epee ace t region, she had had question, I have heard it claimed that the fair ones were Npaxe! sho had never dared ad:|more capable of selecting a mate than their brothers, but in the ' mig ont bef ig I have discovered no documents that would prove it, on ana Meas eect wax the}, 2 noticed that a mariner, styled Christopher Columbus, a| bewailed the fact that the women were appropriating alli the privileges that once belonged to man, yet one of the questions asked by the reader w “Where did we men} tiga I get said privileges and who gave them to us?” I won't nga which had| d0dge the issue, I'll admit that he has me stumped; further- more, I’ve noticed that nobody else has offered a solution| Saki be either, lite a as eae ovat haa}, 2 am not in favor of turning the whole affair over to|estions for the presidency? pe| the girls, but I do say that they have just as much right) yor cuizen of the United States, «ige of} to select their mates as the boys have; just as they are| must have resided in the United r , be 9 ch ‘i she might find the hap-| allowed the same right to bob their hair, (altho it makes | States 1) years, and hove reached the |sons have gone down ints the alley, | ct boome the Dermgnent aaa Ned regain his me. eer aghirrd them look like a cross between a male and a female). ane of & oeh “a piatig Gaeathar burdeaiekcs ly - fa oe soy beat Bg gee’ wshing her hopes as its} Concerning the age, I believe that most medical author-) 31.4 many deserters were th nt many parties of investigate sin- | DISH DRAINER with * that psychology, of| TCkY czust crushes the fallen nest-| ities have agreed that marriage should not take place before) in tne civit war? Se ee aa | After washing the dishes place ious aeboisialiain drunkards should have no| re st lears a dae ” the couple is at least twenty years old. | From the Union army, 117247 : ; pee estaba = le et cases Re Prt Pit help vou] Hauor canes, In he had for.| More mistakes than are being made at present and there is ms —e me 7 Shaken viapa? ne many matters of) a chance of them doing better. be “ + he! SOtten The average person has a vocabu- emart —s rere ee vag, m¥estigate tn the morning,” he é 5 eer 9 nee arene na ares Chey Hurrah for the ladies, ITES-STINGS 4 answered. “I'm very sorry Mr.} lary of from 8,000 to 400 words; . R 2 NEDO iat iy’ fas stores ben A SON OF OULI Apply wet baking soda or them betng that th = § Bla What is the history of the capitals household ammonis,followedby aboard my ship. 10% “To hell with raged tn unabated fury 7 hours, 16 minutes,| Beersheba was the aouthern timit| W ie | ‘ the perilous deck, he the other that a drunken captain] Yes, individwat butter plate from New York to Los Angeles,|of the Holy Land; Dan the northern, | of California 8 4 KS be used, but the bread and made by “Cannonball” Baker, July| The saying, therefore, meant “from| The first was Los Angeles, found- = a Sipe ty i -f to Z,” “from top to bottom,” orled in 1781, and made a city and the! VAPORUB going to inves to the pilot house Ned started out was driving his craft at a break “Captain, do you know speed over practically un-| plate has taken the place of the in-| 29, August 4, Over laietdues butter chip sg a great ex- tet ee omprehending the whole.” ‘capital in 1885. For several years, 17 Million Jare Used Yearly what be-|the doorway, arrested by me of my liquors? charted waters. ho danger lay not only in the| tent. Pigs overeat; why th suspicion, Pre he I can't f m and made his that Knutsen had disregarded ie. 8 have indigestion on the door ‘ab's good advice to seek shel-| Pigs do not They have wide, Then for a one of been found by experiment to be stared into her} Even now he was disregurding th ty careful about overeating. | way of comparative safety, wan not system, alao, ts very pausing to take soundings, but was digestive fluids, and they have | | Should women »| Lue,” who tried it—in 50 years, But a man takes just the propose ‘ thought she acting for own good. Ho tu ammed and strode back to the HE STORY Toon ‘erate It waa by far the ment in Bes fe. Sho had ne right, but her payment was & NOW GO ON I'm not sure I could] of Ned's pre any one asked for f of both most bitter Fur-Trimmed and Plain COATS ‘om the rt and the lo; Any SKIRT wonder kind of place where Trimmed Guaranteed Stock $ 1 2-75 COATS |” Salesladies SMART SHOP Thursday Wanted 9 A. M. Hat in Plush $2.95 Extra Sale Starts 322 PINE STREET thems where balance 4 been on th miracle, But the th been proven false, which could not us - ae ? od lunder Mexican rule, that city and Monterey alternated as the scat of Valley so nam ct that a ty of died there fron However, m From the f tourists on thrist ny per Sho had be to aks tt nnd starvation the administration. In 1854 Sacra- world, cases, was w stra that he r cares, t his post r | forgotten th know any ba perhaps eee = the stores made a mo f thru the Then, raging like a child, imminent danger of silp- | What was the significance of the | Biblical expression, “From Dean to | Beersheba?” prese in mind was wholly search your ship! I'm] gti Are butter plates used any tonig’ moy he halted tn butter a sudd whirled Bess’ state 1920 A way to fore do room binnacie light revealed the) He knocked and desperation on his| Beas opened drawn face; the mouth was long second he longe ling {ts deep-blue, appealing eyes smile. Knutsen glanced at him I suppose you did it?" sharp! On what da overeat, ruary 7,+1 fall? On Wednesday of the week d island harbors. crooked, boyish digestir What ts the trans-c once, “then turned his eyes once} manded, more over his wheel. For the mo- She nodded. “I did it Nick took the glass and looked in the direction Mr. Gallop was pointing. Mister Gallop, the stood near his cave up in the mqun-| tains and looked over the plain be- low. He could see everything very|the plain till they came to the spot clearly because he had his spy! where the beaver family was work- glasses, ing. Suddenly he turned to the Twins.| There was Penny Prnirte Dog, “Take these glasses and look as/|looking as #ad as a funeral. And hard as you can,” he said, d see | beside him were Mister and Missez if you notice anything. If you do,|Jack Rabbit and Johnnie, - looking tell me quickly, for there's no time | like three funerals, and all the rest to be Tost.” fof the plains folk, looking like a Nick took the glasses and lovked | hundred furvrals In the direction Mister Gallop wi But Mister Ranch Man was there, pointing. “Why, yes, I see some-|too! That's what they call farmers thing?” hi 4. “I see Bon Beaver |out West. And Mister Ranch Man and hig brothers stacking some | was saying: sticks across the oreck. | “Good work, little beavers! My And then Nancy took a peek thru| wheat and hay are so dry they the glasses, too. “And they're. pack-' won't grow. But if you make your ing mud around the sticks,” she de-|dam they'll get lots of water! I'm clared. “It's spreading all over everything. k jumped on Blackie, and Mister lop made one leap on to his cow pony, and away they all rode lickety split down cowboy fairy, | N | ditches will fill up to the top!’ “It will newer do! Never!’ ox-| “Come!” whispered Mister Gallop claimed the fairyman. “I'll have to|to the Twins, ‘We'll go away. The ut @ stop to it at once for the first | plains folks will have to make new ing you know the creek will flood| houses for themselves, for Mister the mountain and over | _|looking trail ever so much obliged, for now my/ |racing along before the | stead of heading into it with the power of the auxiliary engines. With wind and wave hurling her | forward, there would be no jto turn back or avoid any island |reeft that might suddenly loom in thelr path. Knutsen was trusting to his mea gody over waters he had never ‘sailed before, torn by starms and lighted onty by a@ feeble searchlight. Once more McNab lifted his head thru the hatch Into the pilot house: and for long seconds he studied in. |tently the Mushed face over the wheel. They hadn't really helped |matters, so far as Knutsen was |concérned, by throwing the cases overboard, Seemingly his watch would be over before the fumes |of the liquor he had already con | sumed died in his brain. At pres Jent he was in {ts full flush: Wholly reckleas, obstinate, | temper Was there any appealing to him Knutsen wind hance posible further asked | good in now?" “You've forgotten all the sea manship wou ever kne McNab returned angrily, ‘There's rf lhurry about reaching Tzar island And you're risking everybody's life jon board, sailing the way you are." “Are you captain of dis boat?” Knutsen demanded angrily. “No, but know You're ‘Den get out of here. I exactly what I'm dol jas safo as— | But it came about that Capt | Knutsen did not finish the sentence. | McNab never to find out |from Knutsen‘s lips, just how safe he was. All at once he cried rply in warning. Before even Knutsen heard that harp cry he knew what lay j ahead Dulled tho his vision was, | slow the processes of his brain, he saw that curious ridge of white |foam in front—an inoffensive of white across thelr | bows. At the same instant his keen ears caught a new sound, one |that was only half-revealed in the | roar and beat of the storm. | There was not the pause of an jinstant before his great, muscular arms made response, |inatant Forest tried to apply the power of his engines in obedience to the sharp gong from above was uncertain of| 7| still At the same! the whole country round about and fill up all the houses of the plains Ranch Man Farmer js pleased with | what Ben Beaver is doing. It's our|An@ then both Knutsen and Me Nab braced themselves for the a special affinity for digesting fats. | They convert starchy foods into fats | motore record? ing the battens from the also. | life boats on the deck. } - | Wh XI |cream? } Knuteen's brain entirely| Because it causes the ce to melt clear and sure as he gave his|and lowers the temperature of the ord on the deck. His hand wanl| water, thereby causing the freezing steady as tron. Hin fatlure to mas-| process to take place more rapidly. ter himnelf had brought disaster,|1f the salt were not used it would |but he knew how to maater a abip|take considerably longer to accomp- at a time like this. From the {n-| leh the freezing process. stant the Charon had struck the} see jreef, he was the power upon that) 1,1 practicable for farmers to deck, and whatever storm-swept ° for light, f |hope McNab had lay in him, reap Mage oat Light, heat and power In be lantern light, blasted bY) Tye department of agriculture, af- he wind and in tho midst of the] 0, ceperimenta along this line, has surging waters, the no had Mtl] noe yound it practicable. | semblance to reality. It a Pi thas | mad dream from first to last, never] to be clearly remembered y the | wurvivors: a queer, confused Jumble of vivid images that could never| be straightened out. The headlight! threw ts glare into‘t filled night,. The biting, ebill wind swept over the deck and into the \darkness, Tho ship settied down like a leaden weight Almost at once the four used in freezing tce | wan | | | | was Why are the Osage richest tribe? Originally this tribe held lands be- | teen the Missouri and Arkansas| rivera. By successive ceasions begin- ning in 1808, they sold their original territory until their removal to their | present reservation in 1980, but they worse able to secure auch terma that | they became the richest tribe per jeapita in the Unitad States. Later gers were on deck, waiting to take | tyeir lande were found to be in the their meager chance in tho life-| oi and the royalties on the wells j beats. Tho stress, the raging ele-| now in operation have further aup- jments, those angry seas th mented their incomes, Invested funds | leaped higher and nearer, as !t\and leasca of olf lands amount to coveting thelr mortal lives, most] nearly $400 for cach individual mem- of all the terror such as had never! per of the tribe | | previously touched them, affected . no two of them alike, Of thethree| f« it true that the body of aj | women, Bess alone moved forward,|qrowned person can be located by | out of the shelter of the cabin,/turning a bundle of fodder in a} to be of what ald she could. Hert | stream? |drawn, white face was oddly child-| No, thi ia mere auperatition. }like in the lantern light Mre.| ee |Hardenworth had been stricken! What is meant by “the acid test?” nd silenced by the nearing visage| Jn chemistry, the acid teat, is the of death;. Lenore, almost uncon-| test in which acids are used to deter- scious with terror, made strang-| mine the quality or durability, as of | ling, sobbing sounds that the wind] fabrice, their color, etc. The term|{ jearried away, And in this moment|is used in everyday speech to indicate of infinite travail Ned Cornet felt) any stern test of character or ability. | his manhood stirring within him.| #8, 18 | (Continued Tomorrow) What are the birth and age quali WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE | Indians the | 6 sleet-| Much Interest Bang Shown inthe Large Num- ber of Women Safely Carried Through the Change of Life by Lydia E. Pinkham’s folk. Penny Prairie Dog and| duty to stand by him. Come away.” Johnnie Jack Rabbit and Brownle| fo Nancy and Nick and Mister Burrow Owl and Prickley Porcu-|Gallop went back to the moun- pine and everybody like that. Come, | tains again. Twins, we must go.” | (To Be Continued) janey climbed up on Snow, and| (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) Ask your grocer to give you a copy of the AMAIZO Cook Book If your grocer has no books left, write us to mail you one direct AMERICAN MAIZE-PRODUCTS CO, 41 Bast 42nd St., New York, N.Y. AMAIZO OIL From the Hearts of Golden Corn BEST FOR SALADS—IDEAL FOR FRYING THE PERFECT SHORTENING shock they knew would come. The craft seemed to leap in the water, shuddered lke a living thing, and the swath of the searchlight described a long arc into the sleet and the storm. It may have been that Knutsen shouted again—a meaningless sound that was lost quickly in the wind —but for seconds that seemed to drag into interminable centuries he sat absolutely without outward sign of motion. His great hands clutched his wheel, the muscles were set and bunched, but it was as if the man had died and was frozen rigid in an instant of in- credible tension, His faco utterly without expression, Forest crouched beside hig engines. There was nothing that elther of them could do, The waves and wind were a power no man could stay. All thelr efforts were as useless as Knutsen’s shout; already the little ship was in the remorse: less grasp of great billow that was hurling her toward tho ridge of white foam in front, For an other instant sho seemed to hang suspended, as if suddenly taken wing, and then there was a sheer drop, a sense of falling out of tho world, A queer ripping, tearing sound, not loud at all, not half #0 terrifying as the bluster of the wind, reached them from the hold Cold sober, Knutsen turned in hin place and gonged down certain orders to Forest, In scarcely a moment, it seemed, they wore pull Owing tomodern methods of liv- ing, few womar approach this per- fectly natural change without ex- poeriencing very annoying and often inful symptoms. Those dreadful ot flashes, nervousness, headaches, melancholia and irritability aro only a few of the symptoms incident to this trying pees of a woman's life, ma the following letters prove the jue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to overcome these abnormal conditions. Fisherville, Ky.— ‘‘ For several months L was under thedoctor’scare as he said my nervousness, chills, hot, flashes and weakness was caused by the Changeof Life, but I did notseem togetany better, I was notable to work and spent most of my time in bed. A friend called to see me and asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I cannot tallyou how much good the medicine did me, as I had such a hard time be- fore taking it. Ican only advise every woman passing through the Change of Life to take Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as itdid so much forme."-Mrs.EDWARD B.N®AL, Star Route, Fisherville,Ky. Peculiar to Women’ be sen f Vegetable Compound The Following Letters Are Impressive Lydia BE, Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailments will he Lydia BF inichi Medi L his hook con 3 valuable information; A Michigan Woman Helped lonia, Michigan. —‘‘I was passin, through the Change of Life and hi been under the doctor's care without any relief. A friend in Lansing, Mich., ed me to try Lydia bh. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and I feel fifty per cent better already. If any one in this condition doubts will gladly answer their letters,”— HAnn, 587 N. Jefferson » Mich. | A New York Woman Helped Syracuse, N.Y.—‘I was used up with nervousness, weakness and hot flashes so Lcould hardlykeap around, and could not get out much on account of those awful prickly feel- ings. I read about Lydia B. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound helping another woman with symptoms like mine. My husband got some for me, and after taking it five months I can get around and even do my housework, washing and froning in- cluded, and my friends cun see what achange it has madein me.’’—Mra. Sipney Humrnrey, 82614 Burnet Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. ju freeuponrequest. Write o Co., Lynn, Massachusetts, | n the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to help them I an Enjoy thirst~ Quench it with this bever- age—not from one vine or one tree, but a blend of pure products from na- ture’s storehouse with a flavor all its own. And served ice-cold. ‘ ise Delicious and Refreshing ‘The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ge. America's Home Shoe Polish SHINOLA HOME SET A All Children Should Get a Shinola Home Set to Use With Shinola Agenuine-bristle dauber and big lamb’s wool polisher give quick, easy, and economical shines! ‘The polish to choose for’ family; shoes —SHINOLA improves the appearance and .makes .the shoes wear longer. Fifty shines in handy key-opening box! Black, Tan, White, Ox-blood, Brown. “The Shine for Mine” Toe Wome SETI

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