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tant year whe hatched and sold 96, | 000 baby chicks, and this year the/a dollar aplece number will called ratsers. ‘and Mra, Tedrick Elizabeth Tedrick and her 96 point prize Black Orpington hen. Black Beauty. pay the high cost of ing. every| incubators that have $500 besides off| 5,000 eggs. your household clear . yard? ma, Bilizabet . mays beeause she does it. feet she has her dwel mien and lawn, berry|the business. vemetable garden, or * | of derives an annval in $s00 bow she does it: ‘vaiees “pedigreed” stuff. rt about the premises ex Pthe gasoline pump that trri has a pedigree. is bighly intensified. and University. Unites Ovrehestra. Tanabe by Competen Teachers. istmas rrier there is money to your fh the Bank for Savings. ‘& feserve fund with us | You will be pleased with | | } | |fully sclentifie arrangement rum higher, ‘This ts “eustom work” by chicken | Customers bring the exes does the hatch [apiece and five settings of eggs at Her basement is filled with @ capacity ot Mra. Tedrick spectalizes on Black) h Tedrick of Fruit-|Orpingtons and White Orpingtons, you can. She ought Golden Campines and Silver Cam-| business; or rather, it is because)», On| pines—all of which are chickens— of the chicken business, Mra Ted! and the most profitable breeds in| rick sells $40 worth of berries an- Blooded = Campine| rabbit | eges bring $5 to $15 a dosen and/ shade her chicken runs. And mode! chicken ranch, the hens are famous layers. | ington exes go from $3 to lyou | golden ogg hasn't got very much on) hare business seems (o be the only /has trusted man at the head of the| A BOY'S CHRISTMA these birds. tons sell for 36 cents a pound—10) Her pedigreed bucks bring as high) gq lecents more than ordina: i= Orp-| 35, #0 laid the) see the goose that In the market, Orping MME. CHANDON AND THE TWO PERFECT CLOCKS SHE TENDS BY WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD PARIS, Dec. 21.—It's a wontect ¥ which Paris keeps ite part of the world on time. | room in the | with ite vast concrete floor {never vibrates. Then ‘the clocks. sun and | great telescopes |tory domes are always pointing. | First, the basement observatory, that | there are mechanically perfect They are timed by the the stars, at which the in the observa there's great two Then there are the wires that pent to the wireless poles in the ob- servatory grounds. And, two miles| TRAVEL ON THE “MILWAUKEE” Seattle and Grays Harbor Trains leave Seattle 7:20 A. M. and 4:90 P. M. its regarding fares and train service, call on or address CITY TICKET OFFICE | Becond and Cherry, or Jackson Office. | St. Union Station Ticket science of astronomy. down among her clocks, in poetry. on which we live as much as I do {ticks off the last three seconds of THE STAR—SA Mra. Tedrick sells all her egge for that's because they are from pedigreed birds. Last year from four White Orp- ington hens and a cock, Mra, Ted. rick sold 76 chicks at a dollar CAPABLE GIRLS— | BUILD YOUR CHARACTER Dear Miss Grey: We are asking yo ing {t. Please anawei A.--if the boys can come into & week, and have a good time pla game; singing or fine thing. Hut to call, as young them and putting on “young lady” nothing of spooning, ie all wrong If you adopt the firat plan, do for*nd vice, night, But be boys, We are achool girls, and thin tion if we don't take it now,” they will respect ample, It lies with th If you can't gét over do with the boys ye little thin the idea “HEAD” DISCUSSION WAXES WARMER Dear Miss Grey mit me to answer Maid"? She thinks God made © great blunder if be placed man at the head. I think she bas not studied much in the greatest Book man has ever known, “Bachelor Maid,” please read the Sth chapter of Genesis and 1 Corin thians, 1 and 2, and if you will look, you will find many more. You ask me if Il have not studied the brute creation and found that the female is superior to the male? Tho dumb brute haw never fallen through transgression and had a curse set Most everything on the Tedtick/ upon them. The wife that fears = secondary to the chicken God and will take council from her band is superior to the man, and the man that is obedient to the law nuaily off vines that she planted to| jg” yeaa’; |# agperior to the The vege-|iaw; then obedience does not de tables that she has on her table] jase—it exalts. come from the patch that ts planted If the mother does not obey the for her chickens, The Helgian’ father, the children will not, God Will you per A Bachelor $10 a setting. Just figure owt what she could have done with a couple of thousand of these birds, ph and him the woman as a help | meet, and (he man who allows any oman: one to supersede him, betrays the |trust God has placed in him, and a |man who allows a “heady” wife to how [Ahab and the bel. thing that is decidedly a side lseu¢./tamtiy to ‘rain bis children heady” wife Read tt in L. Kings. A B, WHO THINKS, |_ A--Whea “A Bachelor Who | Thinks” and “A Bachelor Maia” and any other who wishes to dis cuss the “Head” of the family get through, | wilt add my mite, On | with the discussion! of Jeane NOTICE! “Merely Existing” and “A Lone some Girl.” send me your addresses and | will help you all I can. CYNTHIA GREY. SHALL | HURT HER TO HELP MYSELF? } Dear Mire Grey: 1 have been | going with a boy for quite a while, }but lately he haw quit me and bai | been going with a girl of queation- lable character, | am sure he does Rot know thie and I want to know if I should tell him to regain his | love. ROSE | A—No good will ever come from lxiving one of your own sex }knock. You are not responsible jfor the young man, but for your own character, which you will mar by trying to hurt another that you may gain. You will ne regain his love in that way. Just let the matter rest a while “OUR BABE” ANDO HER MOTHER ASK A CHRISTMAS MESSAGE Dear Mina Grey: 1 was married young to one of the best girls in San Francisco, After two yeare a babe came to bless us, We lived very happity for six years. Then trouble came, i was commanding a salary of away, there stands the Eiffel tower, 1,000 feet high, the tallest structure | on the star dn which we live. Huge | porcelain insulators, as big around as a soiall keg, hang out from the} top. of the tower, supporting the) wires of the most powerful wire- less station in the world. All this apparatus has cost over & miliiog dollars, and the etady and toil of many savanis and scientists. Its purpose tn to send out to} all the wireless stations the clock ticks of the 57th, 58th and 59th | seconds of every hour. Over half} the world {« supplied with time} correction from Parts. Here's the apparatus. Now, who does the job? Oh, only Mme. Chandon, And she? She is as pretty and vivacious little French woran | as all France affords. She's per.) haps just a little over half way| through the twenties. She likes! theatres and m and =the; PURCELL SAFE CO. Buclusive Brick, Lame, Gravel 6712 Green mv Coal and W Lake Boulevard “Yes,” she said, when I went “4 do love the stars, But it’s not the} romantic sentiment that you read| I love our own star The Linif@ and Cloth House, Button makers, cloth spongers, accordeon and knife pleaters. Wholesale and retail, 227-235 Lumber Exchang the others,” Then she showed me how, by the observatory apparatus, she Bidg, every daytime hour, by wireless, High grade Lumber, Lath, Shingles and De- tail Flooring and Finish- ing our specialties. | jover the sea to lonely ships: over Kurope, with its cities and mountains, giving the world the time by which people are married, buried, born or called into eternity. A MOTHER OF EIGHT DISCUSSES THE “HEAD” Dear Misa Grey May | be per. mitted to say a word to “A Baebelor Maid?” She calls our attention to the animal kingdom. How can} any one say the female is superior there? If our intelligent, 20th century woman would care for her owr off- spring, keep her own coat clean, stay in her own nest and aitend to her own business, as the females among the lower animals do, she would be respected by the male of her speci Man has resorted to brute force o gain the head of the family be- cause woman was incompetent and reagon failed. A MOTHER OF EIGHT, ite & Plumbing Original fire tox Hntng® and repaire x of Just Printers 1013 THIRD AVENUE MAIN 1043 IND. 5200 Phone Main 963. Eyres Transfer Co. Office 114 Jackson St. TURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1912. We are two girls, aged love with two boys who are brothers, whether it in proper for them to call and spend the evening with us, | As BOOM aK pd; latening to a da him will suffer the penalty of} « out | 14 and 16, and are in| We want your opinion as to ay we know you are capable of giv tle. J, AND 1 | e family circle, say, one evening | ne chess, checkers or sowie other food story read alov »)you girls primping to. bod keeping late hours, to Soe | aah for your parents, y or teach. | er, OF Myself, to way It shall be on@eVening a week, and not a study|9Ot mean that his wife should run apable of saying qiffetty to your friends You see, ket Best not to be up or have com:| pany school nights, for we may neverehbve a chance to get an educa-| she happens to walk a block or so You ean do a world of good, and even If a boy or two should aneer,| Words with a friend you, and some dag’ Wish they had followed your ex What you make of your life Wi Are “in love,” have nothing q to work some 200 miles distant from home, My wife refused to live there, but came and brought the baby to visit. In a moment of an ger, | told ber she should get a di voree, She took me at my word and got it. | |. Miss Grey, I never was so for anything in my life. She had no mother or father to ide her, That was our first and only quarrel, I gave up my position | jand left the country, but my heart has always been back there. I! have a letter this evening from our baby and her mother, asking for pardon and a Christmas | gram of forgiveness, Miss Grey, | }long for my baby. You may decide this, A LONESOME FATHER. |. A—You myst make your awn de- jolaton. Give the matter thought. {Listen for the “still, small voice,” and do what It dictates If you marry your former wife, never refer to the matter again. | Let the “dead past bury tts dead. sorry bene, PRESENT TO A MAN | Dear Miss Grey: Tam « boy and | would like you to tell me what kind of « present I could give my princi-| for Christmas present | SCHOOLRBOY A.—A paper weight, desk calen- dar or address book will be sult- able AM | SELFIS) | THIS MAN ABKS Dear Minn Grey: I have read a |number of articles in your paper about the relationship that should exist between boys and gira. Moat of them favor the idea of a girl having more than one boy ifriend. By boy friend, | mean one |who takes her to shows, parties, ete. Perhaps I'm narrow-mindtd, but} 1 am opposed to it, I've gone with | a number of girls, but I am not) loud or m I always act gen temanly. No girl has cause to jthink of me otherwise than a8 4 |g00d- companion, I show them a/ | good time and naturally like to feel | ithat it is my girl | am spending |my- money on. | may be selfiah, but I bate to think I am spending «| |poedty portion of my salary on a! |eirhon Sunday, whom Charlie takes | | Wednesday night and Pred on) night. A fellow naturally | Title Insurance lawyer's opinion of is merely declaratory he believes the | | Friday A titl what title i re- and | an no Such opinion moves clouds cures no objections ‘The lawyer's examina- tion is based upon matters as they appear of record, or as they, may appear from an abstract title purporting to show the material matters of record affecting the title His opinion is no curity against forgeries, undisclosed insanity or minority of the grantors; No security against un- lawful or fraudulent deliv- ery of deeds or fraud in procuring and recording deeds; No security against mis- statements of fact representation of facts ap- pearing in deeds or other instruments or proceed- ings. or mis- No security against the rights of unknown heirs or devisees or as to other un- disclosed and kindred fects in title, de In fact, it is no security at all, TITLE INSURANCE is the ONLY security You are entitled to it, dnd will get it if you insist upon it. re Washington Title Insurance Company “Under State Supervision.” likes to feel that when he does his best to show a girl a good, enjoy able time that she is doing her part by giving him preference over all} other lovers. Now, Miss Grey,| please advise me, am L right or wrong’ Am I narrow minded and ifish or has a fellow a right to pect to be the only one? Yours to be convineed A HAS BEEN, 4 right to expect to be the “only one” unless he is engaged or married, and then he should not be narrow Joes No man ha around with other men; but it does mean he should not be jealous if with a man or exchange a few but oltiah. You may not think so, your idea te narrow and A QUESTION WHICH DISGUSTS ME Dear Miss Grey: Tam a girl 15 yours of age and want to owk you! A question which disgusts me greatly | Do you think F am too big or old to get in the wood? I think #0, but my parents think not, Please give me your opinion, Thanking you, A GIRL. | 8.—I wish I were large for my age. A-~My dear girl, it does not lower you to bring in wood, but the spirit in which you are doing it does. The age bas nothing do with it You are just as good carrying in| wood as playing the plano, but ff, your father is a strong man o you) have a brother, they should sec to this part of the work. Personally, | would rather carry in wood, or split it, than to wash dinbes. Pp. a boy, am A CHRISTMAS GIFT } SUITABLE FOR YOUNG MAN. j Dear Misa Grey: Is tt right for a/ girl of 17 to give boys Christmas| presents? I do not care for these boys only a8 friends, and they are friends of} miy father, so I thought I ought to! give something. What would you| select for some simple little gifts?) They are boys of 23 to 25. BLUE EYES A—Certainly tt is all right to re member the youpg men with small } remembrances | if you can get a) “gift” copy of Kipling’s poem “If.”) it will be fine for each of them. If; not, you can have it printed and mounted on an art card, WHAT TO DO WITH ANNOUNCEMENT CARDS. Dear Mise Grey employer was mar city. He sent us an anno of his marriage, also a card giv-| ing the date when they will be at} home to callers, Should we send/ them present, and what would be suitable? Should we call on them? move in different society from) *, Would they care for our} cplit Would it be all right to call in the evening, as my husband works every day? They | TROUBL would be nice to the receipt of the pent by a gift in accordar your m a little pickle fork; but it is necessary They might be very pleased to have you call; but if you are con vineed they would not, simply en-| close a card of your husband's and ir own in an envelope and mail| them to the home address NINETEEN—BUT A It knowledge noun with ladle, or absolutely ac an | am no! NOT GROWN UP./' Dear Miss Grey: I am a girl of} 19. Very cute and pretty. | wear bangs and am a blond, and what way would you advise me to we my bair at a Christmas dinner’ What would you advise me to do! #0 as to make my eyebrows heavy and lashes long and curvey | BABY DOLL. A T am afraid you are not beautiful as you think or your lashes would be “long and curvey You might try putting them up on} kid rollers Bangs always as | ye remind us of a muley calf looking out under a brush heap. Braid your hair and wind {t around your head in a way to hide your disfigurement BETTER “BIDE A WEE.” Dear Miss Grey: [Tam a young }man of 19. I have been operating a motion picture machine for the last three years and am making $25 a week. Do you think | am fixed to get married yet, or should I wait until | am a few years old er? I am deadly in love with a girl and | know I love her. Please answer at once. CONSTANT READER A You might have an under standing with the girl that if neith er of you change your mind a Year from now, you will marry. In the meantime, treat her with the} utmost respect, and don't try to influence her with spooning “HASTE MAKES WASTE” EVEN IN LOVE AFFAIRS.) Dear Miss Grey: Tam a girl 15.| I have been keeping company with a nice boy He does not live in the same} town as I do, and promised he| would write to me and did so watil| the last week. I have not h from him or seen him. How can I get his friendship back? WORRIED A week is not such a long Wait awhile. A time. ht will discus pattle’s Invisible this sermon he will show the invisible, unappreciated and un recognized forces for good, the music of life and the chorus of righteousness. This sermon will show thi Seattle has things 1 by trying t and vic on at Ba will be given The chorus and quartet will sing five spectal anthems, lMveryhody invited to this Cree organ recital, All these rvices at Kirst Presbyterian Chureh, Seventh and Spring Streets | savings |his before marriage, _land died STAFF SPECIAL FROM SANTA CLAUS LAND; THE LATEST CHRISTMAS NEWS Correspondent of the Star Reports Top Factories Work- ing Overtime—So Much to Do That the Brownies Have to Help—Mrs. Santa Claus Herself Takes Charge of Candy Kitchen. SKETCHES MADE AT SANTA’'S HEADQUARTERS NOTE TO CHILOREN.—The Star has sent a reporter to Kriss Kringle Land, where Santa Claus lives, to get the very latest Christ news for its little readers. Every day, from now until Christm. The Star will print one of his dispatches, sent by wirele These news dispatches are for YOU, and grown-up people have no business reading them UNLESS they read them ALOUD to you. This is the first time that any newspaper has printed the REAL CHRISTMAS NEWS this way EDITOR. KRISS KRINGLE LAND, Dec. 19.—Ali the Santa Claus factories are working day and night, getting ready for the biggest Christmas since I was elected by the children to hold office for life. So heavy have the orders n coming in from the kiddies that today I had to call ig the Brownies to help out. The Brownles are making rag dolls and bew mittens for the poor children and little red automobiles and gold chains for the rich children. Dear me! It seems every year we make more and more of the rag dolls and mittens. Times have changed ince | was a young man. Why, the millionaire babies are even order- ing airships and stocks and bonds in big trusts as presents. We are all snowed in up bere in the Northland. The snow must be ten feet deep over the roof arly this morning I beard an awful noise out in the stables. I tunneled out through the snow, and what do you think! Guess! You give The remdeers were fightin One young reindeer claimed be was a bull moose, and the old s patters took a vote and decided he couldn't help haul the sleigh, as bull mooses weren't runing fast enough this year Mra. Santa Claus has charge of the kitchens where we are mak ing millions of popcorn balls and candy canes. Last year we'were away behind on orders, and #0, to avoid missing the poor children, # have appointed many representatives in every town to help me @lg tribute the goodies, If they call on you, it’s all right NOTICE TG READERS All letters cannot be an- ® swered in the paper, and many & are without name or address. ® A stamped, self-addressed en- & velope always brings a prompt & reply. CYNTHIA GREY. &*& * BEER REE REE ERE REM | HOMEY HINTS CURE FOR BURNS. . good dressing for 8 and sweet or parts. A bottle mixed, should always hand. A > n in it, should be ap-} burn, and on this a); pent cotton or clean me water in equal burn olive ofl of tt eady be kept cloth, dipped plied over layer of abe cloths: Dance at Dreamland tonight. ®° a BUCKSKIN POLISH. an buckskin shoes cents’ worth of whiting from druggist. Put a small quantity a dish with enough water to dilute} atil it is lke milk, Apply with} old tooth brush and let it dry s cheap and simple To cle get 5} the | in} Th WASH-DAY HINT Many housewtves will be ¢ that a of lemon, cut] thickly and the nd on it put into the when boiling lothes. them beau white maif in the} until are ready ad to k slice with b will Le iler mak it ly botler to be taken out IN DENTISTRY What the Success of a Den- tist Depends on By EDWIN J. BROWN, TIS First A When I bought ¢ Offices In the U ave. on July 15, there were than ‘three dentists ta did not say that Brow! last three months. Ti tising offices as ULTIVATE THRIFT. when there for children . it is to en Try getting them r pennies until they buy a hen, sell the} ges and put the money in the bank, Or, if they wish, another} hen may be purchased with their} This is meant for the who lives in a where backyard is big to keep a few chickens. are 80 pend Nowadays, many way money fooli courage thrift to save up t have enough to wise 2 Dentat Brow ok, 713 First place enough ebild who adver then, now. were’ knocking ether dentists jin erder to decoy the public to thell cobble shopa to be skinned, pull and (for their money). h et and better class contended | work oul Cynthia’s Answers to Many Questions ‘ of Dental that “high not be ¢ the prices charged,” and they were correct, un- 1894, fell on Saturday less I could get a large amount of for May 26. work to do. The rule had b the advertising dentists to their patients like a fox after chiglg- ens (be smart and get the moneg). GIVING A SQUARE DEAL PAYS. I made op my mir to live fp Seattie the remainder of my life and do my best, so that I could lo every person in the face—friend an foe alike. I knew I was not mart as some dentists, and I al ot figure only on making money. wanted to b enstul, of courses understand th and derstand now how @ dentist could be successful unless gave everybody @ square deal, knew that hundreds of peopl wanted dental work who could n pay high prices, and they neve) would come back ‘unless they good work and a square deal. THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS, I attended to my own busines: My prices were and are right, an }my work was and ts right prices brought the people, and |honest work and jmy patients with me, until today | require twelve dent Graham flour is made from a ter part of the wheat grain. No installment-plan company can remove the goods from yo ir home without a court decision. If a creditor can prove that the property in the wife's name was he can collect it for the husband's debts. | It is impossible to remove quick silver from # gold ring without the application of a jeweler’s polishing outfit, Better take it to a jeweler ol One should cash a check as soon as possible after receiving it, as there is no Jaw compelling a depos jtor to hold bis money tn the bank} until all his checks are cashed Regina Maria was an Irish nov-| elist and the author of “The Chil dren of the Abbey,” She wos born | in the south of Ireland about 1764 at Waterford, May 17 three extra hospital ro room for Indi for gentiomen and a special rtment for each branch of de try, and yet my prices are the lowp est ln the world and my work is a6 good as you can get in the worl because all materials are the bes and workmanship Is unexcelled, an this is the secret of my success, an any 4 ould do tt {f he would, 1 could and did do it, and the fact that right here in Seattle I have the st private dental practice in world is the proof of my serv. ice to the people, and I shall cons tinue to do In the future as T have tn the past, give a square deal im | Dentistry and guarantee my work ‘Edwin J. Brown, D.D.S. SEATTLE’S LEADIING DENTIST TIX First Ave—Union Block, One door South of the Postal Teles raph Building. ws untit 8 and Sundays people who work, 1845, not entitled to vote or hold government positions until after they have secured their full cit aship by getting their second papers, The first papers may be obtained any time after arrival; the second five after the first. CHRISTMAS ENTERTAINMENT Socialists of Ballard will give an entertainment on Christmas eve in McCabe hall for the benefit of poor] children, Music and acting will form the amusement Aliens MODERN elegantly furnished roome at lowest rates at Hotel Vir! ginus, Bighth and Virginia, near Westlake, Elliott 803, he Open ¢ anti 4 fo