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M41B STAR—TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1911 r ofa You | PROBLEMS Housowi IE SOCIAL PROBLEM The pr » of maintaining a EDITOR'S NOTH = The gocial postion, particularly in a writ f this article is the old small city or in a special neighbor. eat coed In the world, her #0 hood of a large city, is so general years dotracting nothing from tuday that the title of Irving the enthasiaem with which she Pachellor’s novel, “Keeping Up pursues her studies at the Unt with Lisele” bas rapidly token ite — versity of Wiseonsin. She tells place in the national slang. . iS why in oe ew. written for “Keeping Up with Linge” Is readers of The Star. the fare to be abreast of your neighbors, tho endeavor to con form to social standards which demand more money than the racer ts able to afford The git] who leaves her home! town when sho marries has the ade} Ladies’ Suits All Ladies’ Suits, value $17.50. Sale price .$ 7.50 All Ladies’ Suits, value $27.50. Sale price .$12.50 All Ladies’ Suits, value $37.50. Sale price .$17.50 All Ladies’ Suits, value $47.50. Sale price .$22.50 All Ladies’ Suits, value $60.00. Sale price .$27.50 BY AMY DAVIS WINSHIP. An insatiable curiosity to know | things accounts for my being In the | university at 80 years, My hobbies are Uterature, philosophy, paycho-| With considerable dynamle. force Nw i vantage of being able to set her! gocial life according to her means avd her desires. She is in greater danger of understrain than of overstrain and often hag to force Der iaterest Ip affaira and connec! Qons that will be healthy for her golf and probably valuable for her Dusband But the girl who remaine In the same town or same neighborhood where her girlhood was spent will Hind that one of the dirt thes of | ber married life will come from Ber effort to hold friends, ac|___ YOUNG COUPLES ARE TOO quaintan and general ih social start with their hard-earned wis @anding in equal degree with her dom. | @xters and cousins and aunts and} Pridesmatis. An eastern girl who recently | OFTEN SELF.SUFFICIENT keep as well-dressed girls for myself every tine 1 missed a ball or logy and ethics. 1 took every course Joffered at Ohio State university, 1 spent the first two years | of my college lite. | 1 want to remain in colloge until it om as I enjoy the college | jere and life more than any j thing that has ever com | My being a student came about jaceidentally, 1 had gone from my home in Racine, Wis, to visit some friends at Columbus, When there I availed myself of the chance to hear professors discuss psycholo- gical toples. After a lecture | told | Prof. Lowden of my ambition, which was to know all I could of the | | where storing my impressions fo my sub eOnacious and I ean command the khowledge when I want It Of 1 take exceptions to the nts that the professor me when they conflict with my opinions, This is especially true in claanes where child psychology tv | dealt with, They gradually come to |my way of thinking, for they know that my knowledge is based upor years of experlence with my owt | children and grandchildren, as wel! ae with hundreds of others who have come under my care. There ie much troth in the old Brahmiy philosophy--All knowledge comes from experience, 1 adbere to the view that woman's All Furs, Fur Coats Broadcloth Coats Mixed Coats sphere ta homekeeping. 1 was 0 home maker until five years a when my second husband died b married « struggling young doctor /opera, But out here we give our| subject. He asked me why I did The ae that & certain jin a little western town recelved ‘time to more important a tm | not enter college, 1 was surprised eoterie 0 AE sxpaets he the condotences of a visiting} mediate matters. that he thought of it, for I only had syoung couple to live in a cortain friend with amusement | If the girl “back home” had the|® “log school” education, fotlowed| After that I entered way a See et to Sxpenal:| rm not really missing any: | courage, however, she could do ex-|by & life of varied experience. 1| and some reporters s¢ ture far beyond their means, Liv. thing.” she declared with honesty, |actly as well for herself and ber| took him at his word, and the next / broadest that I was # wealthy tex eh te sreey cent = their tn-|“for we started at rock-bottom | husband en if sbe has social) day t registered. widow. come Bike eae wae ieee eee os por rag could correlate tt to} in the classroom T take no DOLC8 | eeenemmrese aS agains 3 were back /her environment and financial olr-|and | have uo diffic in memor- NEW ARDS EAS ad and they have to take a fresh home I'd be miserable trying to \cxeaaneag vs ss elt what, ql Sant ommeonarene SOME Y! C. ¥ : a CHILDREN TO MAKE Ball Dress for Violet Chiffon Se ttt li Lvening Gowns One-Third Off Use Your Credit MRS. AMY D. WINSHIP. Ee 0 ye oem eS FOR THE il i Cynthia Grey’s Letters A CHRISTMAS LETTER TO} fvster-mother better, } CYNTHIA. torn to her, essay sgh | a sors amore war: al Deer Miss Grey—i am impelled el ‘Dy the Christmas spirit to drop a| Dear Miss Grey—I hare bdecn | ‘word of greeting to you and let you} keeping steady company with a/ iehets LI hee nas x = heow that | think yon a dear,| Sweet hearted woman. You are do-| fag $0 much for the thoughtless, im-| were not engaged. We had a fall- paisive, romantic girls who have | ing out and do not go together. Now Ro guiding band to lead them from | he has sent me a bracelet, locket _ the pitfalis that beset the path of} and diamood ring, and he fe going the young. My own little daughter] with other girte. Wonld it be right ) Sdmires you and devours your ev-|to return the gifts? > ery Word. And so often the word | BROWN EYES . a loving friend brings stronger A.—-It is not the proper thing for than all the loving counsel! /a xirl to accept valuable presents, of a mother }and I would send them back, with a And #0 | would send you & Word | nice little note giving my reason, If ‘of cheer and gladness for all these you want to encourage bim, say and all the mothers. For) that if they had been less valuable 2 mes even the strongest feel! you would have accepted them. F alone and discouraged — May you have a glad Christmas| Dear Miss Grey—Thank you for ged a New Year full of good things, | your otter, Miss Grey. Yes, I see Sincerely, 1 was selfich, but, oh, Mise Grey. ONE OF THE MOTHERS. /jif you could know the kind of boys A.—This letter, with many otifer/they are. And it is hard to see other greetings from My peo) feliows with their arm around the strengthen my heart for mew) gir! you want. And then she t# so fn the’ year soon to degta. | simple—just an innocent country has her problems just lke) giri, little knowing the danger near People, and sometimes inher. But you did misjudge me. I Delping snvther to solve bis, she un” / did not write the mother about the | @hpectediy finds an auswer to one j girl. 1 wrote of my own love for ‘of her own. The appreciation shown |her. Yes, I will read, read, read By those who have taken time td |-—anything to forget. You know it a ifttle postal, or bette fs so hard for a “green” fellow to prized, and I want to thank | get along In the city, and times are (Re and a!) Soon | will write to you./se hard. But you have helped me ater the many people you have | so much, Miss Grey. If I could only this year by your generous do something worth while to prove @mmations to those who would have /it to you. You may think me “soft” & poor Christmas had ft not/and childish, but 1 am just as ain for you. cere as can be. IU remember your ——e mivice. Never again will I “fall in HURRAH FOR ISABELL! love with a woman.” If I only had | Dear Miss Grey-Piease tel! me! books and books of your letters I What is good for itching scalp, and/am sure they would help me. What will make my hair grow in A COUNTRY BOY. Wicker. My. husband and ft love! P. S.~-1 will succeed, Miss Grey. other, but onee in a while j|1 will stay in the elty. Never will I &@ pouty spell—can't seem to go back to the rut im the country. it. Please tell me how to A future for met Percome it. ISABELL. A-—-Thank you, my country boy, A-—Isabell, it does my Beart cood for your appreelation of my letter & fin in you 2 woman who will | —even if you Mid get it twisted a Seknowledge she \s at fault, Now,|bit. No, I do not think you soft, but hat is half the battle—to feally|know you for Youth, bubbling over ye where the trouble Hes. The} with a surplus energy that must thing to. do in your case is to change have an outlet. It is up to you} Jour mind as quickly as a “spell” whether you will direct it into a @mes on Yes, I know it is bard, healthy channe!l—or waste it. Your Gey to the spell, “You can’t poasibly success does not Ite in the fact that i my day. or my evening.” ‘Thea you live in the country or city, but something that requires action is within yourself. Men of talent— &t once, if only running around the men who help to make the back- house a half dozen times or turning bone of our government and ster. somersaults. I mean it. ling character—-come from the coun- As 40 your first question, pure, try. So, far be it from Cynthia to! wnscented vaseline will do both. /deecry the pastures from which we! Massage the scalp with the fingers, glean our besi. As for the girl, you | on which is a very small amount of |can now see that you might have the vaveline. | benefited her had you been sensible, | ‘elite lbut other opportanities to prove | THE GIRL AT THE “JOINT.” | your metal will come, Cynthia tried | Dear Misa Grey—I have fallen tn jto show that love is too great to be | love with a girl at a joint I do not | submerged. in personal selfishness. ike, What shall I do? | Love is right and love ts good. God _3.J. Z jmeant the manly, strengthening | A—It it is mere faseination, let | qualities of the male to combine the girl alone. If a love that {s|with the gentionoss of the fomaie | deep and strengthening, start in by | to the benefit of each, and the right being a real friend to her, and try | kind of love brings out the best in| to wean her away from the place.| both. Yon do have « fature, my Don't dictate, but show her some-| bey, and I know it will be good. thing better. Through the right] Dear Mise Grey—(1) Will red kind of love you can accomplish| sweaters be worn this winter? anything, and both may reach a! (2) I am 14, have auburn hair and point %m your éxperience that will/am fair. What colors look good on prove this, You will have to be| me? BRIGHT BYES unselfish and look to the girl's good| A—‘1) Yes, red swea in this matter if you want to suc-| always stylish for young giris. coed (2) Wear blues, greens and browns containing shades of your THE PANAMA CANAL. hair. Dear Miss Grey—Will you kindly| Dear Miss Grey—I have been ‘iv give the dimensions, estimated cost |ing for 15 years with a man with and exact location of the Panama out being married—on account of canal? A READER. | family troubles. Two years ago | A-The Panama canal is to be| met another man and fell in love 49% miles long, the” average bot-| with him, and he wauts to marry tom width 649 feet and the mini-|me. The old lover Is no good to mum depth 41 feet. In 1909 it was | me, a8 be don't want to support me. estimated that the cost would be,| Shall J leave him for the new one? When finished January, 1915/8376, ELLA 000,900, inciuding $20, for| A-—You have probably justified waultation, $50,000,000 paid the | yourself to yourself all these years bile, and’ $7,880,000| by thinking that you were married h Canal Go, It starts|in the eyes of God, If you had not on the Atlantic side at Leman bay,| been by man. Now, in my opinion, Tune through Gatun lake, and ends|you have no more right to fall tn on the Pacific side at La Boea. love with another man than ff you had been legally married to the first Sees Her Mother for First Time atjone. So don’t think “Well, I have 15, and Doesn't Like Her. never been married to this one, and Miss Alma Mann, 15, saw her|I might a8 well marry the one I mother for the first time when she |love.” You must decide that ques Was turned over to her in @ Chi-| tion just as if you were really mar- ago court, to be taken to Panama,|ried and had to get a divoree to Where the mother is wealthy jmarry the other man. Be honest The girl wept and did not want to| with yourself and don't make non- ®, saying she preferred her foster-| support merely an exeuse. If you | patent Mother, Mrs. A. L, McCarthy. ‘The| and this man have stood by each Court ordered that if, at the end of|other all this time, why not make a six months, Alma still likes her|go of it and marry? dress recently from & French the ry floats lett ow The of thie gown has two contrasting corsage | W Pretty New Year cards can be made by @ little child without mach trouble. ** A snow man or a row of bells cut from paper is pasted on a folded card of a contrasting color, Inside the child writes or prints | his Now Your's greetings. The pattern for both snow man and bells is made by “free hand™ Ung: An oblong of paper is folded and half the object cut from this. n the folded paper is opened you have the whole silhouet, By | drawing around these patterns and then cutting out, the child makes the design to paste on the card if a larger card is used a small calendar may be pasted below the design. AS Dear Doctor: E STAR’S PHYSICIAN | WIN you plense {addition giving the Juice of an or jo | tel! me a cure for threadworms in| ange to drink three or four times founda crepe with « pointed the skirt con- the draped, the other has the embroid- Women -in the News Girl Who Saved 1,000 Dime ; $38,900 alimony. Tips Gets Many Proposals; The alimony was allowed as A paragraph in this column ré-| reparation Im part for the wrong to cently told how Misa Ivy Cole, a her character by testimony as to Denver waitress, had bought a fur her past, which the court sai@ was coat with 1,00 dime tips she saved. | untrue Since then she has received many — Christmas presents, letters and pow Received Stork at 9 @. m. and at tal cards commending her frugality, | Noon Waited on 40 Boarders and proposals of marriage from all} Mary and John Flovatsky of New over the country. | York became parents of twin boy See | hables at 9 o'clock yesterday morn: Gives Three Reasons Why ing. When the doctor arrived at She Has Lived to Be 100) noon he found the proud mother Mra, Priscilla A. Inglee, of $05| serving dinner to her 40 boarders. George st., New Brunswick, N. J.,/“I just wanted you to have a look will be assisted by the whole town| at the fine babies,” she explained. to celebrate her 100th birthday to-| morrow, She attributes her lougey-| Girl Life Saver Gets Medal ity and good health to these rules: From Canadian Society “Never worry; forget nerves; trust} Miss Sarah Lane, at elaborate ex in God. ercises in the high school at | Schenectady, N. Y., was presented Got $38,000 Alimony Because with a medal on behalf of the Ca Her Past Was Told in Court | nadian Royal Humane society, The Mrs. Vivian Kellogg, wife of a) honor was in recognition of her he medicine manufacturer of | roism August 8 last, when she saved wae granted a divorce and! Miss Eliza Knapp from drowning. nd Detre MARRIAGE MONTHS According to old superstition the marriage month has an inf! ence on the future of wedded| serene future to ite brides. couples. Here is the table as given: | / October brides will reap a harvest January brides are likely to be-| of tove and plenty. come widows early, November brides will be happy, February brides will have very/and those who, according to the happy married lives, myme; marry “in will probably mak@| cheer,” will find that “ road. burns brighter fi GAN have jive GI cctoeeee are lucky In find. ing a real friend in their husbands. | September brings a smooth and , 21 years old, for more than a year lived in a caye May brides will entertain many|at Riverside, near Stamford, Conn strangers. and terrorized the inhabitants by dune brides will find life a long|his wild ways. Finally he was honeymoon. tracked to his retreat, captured and duly brides have bittersweet‘ sentenced to four months in jail jan adult? By doing so you will/a day, plenty of fresh alr and sun- greatly benefit 8.G.C. |abine. ‘The best resutts aro obtained by taking large injections twice a day Kind Doctor: Please tell me at of warm water, or better, water/ what age a baby can be put into \containing vinegar, salt or glycer-|the bath. I have had no experience tne. The injections sometimes have |and will be grateful for your ad- to be kept ap for weeks. view. Thanking you, I am MRS. JOHN B. | Dear Doctor: My baby is now 11/ months old, I could only nerse ber strength of the child Then 1 raised her on infant food! bath after the cord has healed, and condensed milk, and now she| which is about the 10th or 12th day. |\e-weak and pale, her mouth bleeds | Before that time a daily sponge of very often, her knees swell abd are | the body with tepid water will suf- painful, and her nose bleeds. Please |fice, In delicate babies, olling of tell me what ia the trouble and/the body with warm olive oi! will what I can do for her. Thanking} keep the baby clean, is very bene you, I am, ~ MRS. J.B, | ficial, and will avoid shock of the | 1 would judge that this is a case of scurvy, which i# a common con- dition In babies raised on proprie- tary infant food. Good results are often obtained by simply changing the diet to good cow's milk, ST ee ee A LETTER FROM “THE LITTLE TOWN NEAR SEATTLE” Dear Miss Grey; 1 want to thank you, the dear little girl who sent the dollar bill and the ladies who sent me the things for my baby. It helps me so much, Gratefully yours, MONA. eeeeeeee ee tte beeeeeee ee te REEMA AE RR HER Quickest, Surest Cough Remedy Ever Used Stops Even Whooping Cough Quick- ly. A Family Supply for $0c. Money Refunded If tt Fails. Tf someone in your family has an obstinate, deep-reated cou g h—even whooping cough—which has yicided siowly to treatment, buy a 80 cent bottle of Pinex and w: that cough money back prompt- reument A 50 cent bottle of Pinex, when mixed with home-made sugar syry makes «full pint—a family supply— the most effective cough remeay that money can buy, at a saving of $2 Gives instant relief and will usually wipe out a bad cough in 24 hours or Hasily prepared in five minutes rections in package. Pinex Cough Syrup has a pleasant taste—children take it willing!: It stimulates the appetite and is slightly faxative—-both good featores. Splendid for croup, hoarweness, throat tickle, incipient lung troubles, and a prompt, successful remedy for whooping cough Pinex is a special and highly concen trated compound of Norway White Pine extract, and is rich in guaiacol and other elements which are so hen). ing to the membranes, Simply mix it Ghd sugar syrup or st honey, iva pint bottle, and it in ready for uso, Uped in more homes in the U. 8. and any other © ne will c@ the sme reaulte, The genuine ranteed to give absolute sath or money refunded, Gert narantee ix wrapped in each pack Your druggiat has Pinex of will t for you. Tf no to ‘The i 0, Wt. Wayne, ine Pinex 18 fully guarantee’ by mare tell Drug Co. (disteibuters), Seattle. | —— This depends on the vitality and | A moder-/ for one mouth, as 1 had no purse. | ately strong baby can have a tub/ If you have not the ready cash, we will arrange terms to suit your convenience. =x == New York Outfitting Co. 825 THIRD AVE. | COR. MARION STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Soyer’s Paper Bag Cookery Cuts Cost of Living We will feed 40 people ev- ery day this week for le each. Come and see how we do it. Serving hours 11-2 and 6-7; 30. Eniddate Cafeteria 3rd and James Special | Just Out Winchester Automatic Shotguns $3 angie WILTS CO. Ave. INCREASE IN Interest Rate On Savings Jan. 1, 1912 190 2/70 The Bank For Savings Capital $400,000.00 Our experience shows us that we can safely pay a higher rate of interest and make more liberal terms to our depositors. TIME CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT 3 mos,, 3 per cent—6 mos., 4 per cent—12 mos., 414 per cent PIKE STREET AND THIRD AVENUE