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NORTHWEST MENERKR OF TR scRIrrs Telearagh News LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS. Service of the United Press A: Entered at the postoffion, Senttl clans mm Tubiished by second Who Handles Family Income? HOULD a man and his wife have equal access family cash box? If they have a bank account should both have the checking privilege? Or should the man the wife) handle all the money? intere Though reams have been written on this subject, its would be glad to he femains inexhaustible and The Star from its readers on what their experience has been st | ™ [ OUTBURSTS OF EVERET RUE 4 | , sh pro-| Ff y We know a man—a good man, he ig ably a high pre » fessional job—who takes his pay envelope home every Sat Mrday night and hands every penny of it over to his wife, only a small allowance for his personal need He just knows he isn't so he seeks the greatest efficienc | feceiving back © He isn’t henpecked, either. Seger and that his wife is P In many cases it is the Allowance while he handles the remainder peets her to keep an which is wise, omy. But he, Curate and detailed tome which he manages? man who gives the wife Usually does in turn, render to her an equally a iM a partnership both should be informed * You undoubtedly have a rule in this matter, Won't you tell us about it? = PIECE A on the vaudeville boards: Mra. Minnie Bond ‘ vs. U. S. Senator Gore. Minnie says he seized her, in her room at Washington. He says ashe seized him. And the matter cannot be compromised by agreeing that they seized each other. A little wild weet _& music by he orchestra, please. he Making of New Ones eg Mass., East of the manner in which it welcomed to citizensh!p naturalized foreigners. Instead of merely handing certificates its of the United States government, the factory city thought ‘ fed with great display ‘ So to the high school they were sent. Patriotic exercises w st naged were made, songs were sung, and the band played. the new citizens were given the glad hand tn a real pla Spencer And “amid a solemn hush" led each man with a certificate. How beautif How grand! How Inspiring! id foreigners alike. the celebration was about. with their pay check. It didn't make any di at ity to man be alleviated! FLIRTATION [8 the subdti out alarming him, of flatteri an Eastern writer. We'd fri where we have lady-cops in pi art of charming a man with. im without frightening, says en the life out of him in Seattle, in clothes. ork, Play, Love ing, meorog er and development of existence, writes Dr. Richa in his new book, “What Men Live By.” “Without them lapse into animalism, or below it.” he says. element should enter into all affection, and even the clasp should always be a pleasure. and other toilers with a great deal of pleasure. Im their hearty clasp thera was evidence of friendship and sincert and with them any life is successful, in spite of failures. get that kind of a grip in a high-sassiety handshake, With the tips of your fingers. i play is often witnessing a sensual drama, and the! ¢ human interest as {s their ice. Cabo' right. work, no matter what, hearty and healthful play and amuseme lasting loves and friendships to make reai life, KENNEDY, NEW YORK state treasurer and suicide, Is said to have been “conscientious, averse to publicity, keenly sensi- tive,” and somewhat connected with Tammany. No wonder his brains gave way. An Old-Time Editorial ensues. If justice is not impartially administered, the people w not be able to distinguish what is right and what ts wrong, and they fail to make such distinction, there can be no stable government. The foregoing is not our editorial expression. Confucius, 500 years before Christ. SLOW TIMES In Texas! H dates for governor, and three of t! only 13 democratic candi. e strict prohibitionists. MAYBE THE kaiser will relieve Woodrow of the worry over Mexico. a man a fixe he ex account of the household expenditures since it insures system and promotes econ accounting of the part of the family ir Yet it is a poor rule which doesn’t work both ways; and based on) where, several hundred years ago, women were burn witches, has sprung {nto the limelight of publicity on ao 50 new ip to the men who had qualified In accordance with the Teaeire make a greater impression on them if the presentation was ac the clerk of the court pre And then they probably hurried the men out of the high school to/ he irvation wages are being paid to natural-born and | These new citizens must have But now they have the right to vote, and what a fine thing to vote, | what 1 fine thing {t would have been, if, while the band was pis they could have been made to feel convinced that, through this nat-! tion cf eligible men, the voting power of the great mass of work: | ts is being increased, so that in time, through the ballot, man’s inhu pp EAL LIFE demands work, ptay and lore, If tt means the nourish. | ‘es, we've grabbed the hands of miners, sallors, plumbers, carpen. ble. And it is by those things that existence is made pleas- @ «4.8 You'll when ‘ got to hold your mitt just above the eyes and wag it back and th three—or Is it four?—times, holding a fish-like fin in a flabby grasp In that set the work is not hard enough to work up a good appetite, love as devoid} It takes good, F THE law fails to protect the weak from the strong, then anarchy It was got off by Governments have been proving, for nearly 2,500 years, that Confucius knew what he was talking about.| y 1 KUBBERING DOTS! GIVS THE INJURED MAN Some CHANCE FoR HIS Kiee! FRESH 4IR If ‘@ rey ot o> | if. ’ rd | ar thing queer about them alt It seeme theyre always broke. P. 3.—"Gosh, only two bits last me until Saturday,” ity “Didn't I your mother just going across lots as I came ap | }fromt steps, Jimmy?” asked Mrs./ Busybody as the small boy's head came into view around the corner] , of the partially opened door. fez, of r _ said honest Jimmy j tat on Firet av when do you think she! to be Dr. BE. J. Brown or hie « 14 like to ant BEWARE of th ON FIRST AVENUE People come to my “Well, will be back, my dear? wait if you think she won't be so hief who steals | very long.” ie MT 'O rick ott my reputa- “Well, ma'am,” said the cheer | ful Jimmy, “she said as she would 713 First Ave. Union Block be back directly you left.” eee Naturally Mrs. Dashaway—Old bachelors! seem to know a lot about women. | « Singleton ~~ Naturally; otherwise ts often than one by other h You see, I make they wouldn't be old bachelors oot Pd wnke & Colle Ai | your Genta! work | it And He Did | When you come to my offices be| When Shimmerpate arrived nd sen my picture tn my sign home an hour later than usual he| of the bullding: {t's | Was nibbling @ dove | ke the one tn this advertise 1 stopped in a concert hall for] fow moments,” he observed. “The ment. Reware of fake Dr. Rrowns. la h | asic ree more w. COWIN 1. GROWN, D. D. 5. | better, we Blame {t on the Senttle’s Lending Dentist Louls Post-Dispatch ore 713 First Avenue Pat and Danny were amoking a| i: COUNT FIFTY! NO RHEUMATIC PAIN; spot” and relief comes lumbago, backache a instantly. | neuralgia, “Bt. Jacobs Oll” conquers pain. It | sprains. Subscribe for The Star | If you want a paper that is working for your interests and fighting your battles, fill out the following coupon and mail it to The Star office: Seattle Star— Gentlemen: Kindly have your paper delivered to me at the following address until I order it dis continued. { By carrier in Seattle, 25c per month. 35c per month in advance. RUB SORE, STIFF, ages y, thoughtfully Ol had bin aoe ACHING JOINTS | in-one ‘hoonderd. folghts an’ wus "How — Hav. iver licked Ww. | ?” qn ed | Get a small trial bottle of old-|!s, s harmioss rheumatism aoe raed pail ng BA nt Ow © fave i which never int PI time, penetrating “St. not burn or bitaver, the Pow on |ued | Danny a ne eee Paid So Much th Jacobs Oil.” Limber up! Quit complaining: | wauctgicat eae | ° |) Get a small trial bottle of “St. Ja | THE WHITE WING on Savings it cobs Of” from any drug store, and | Thay A nies MB 1H Rheumatism ts “pain only.” in just a moment you'll be free) ii, exee ane tetas tor ‘beehs Many people have asked Not one case in fifty requires in-|from rheumatic pain, soreness and us how we have been | | ternal treatment. Stop drugging! stiffness. Don't suffer! Rellet | . | P E “A 1 Rub soothing, penetrating “St. Ja-|and a cure await you. “St. Jacobs able to pay 6 and 7 per cobs O11” directly upon the “tender | Otl" ts Just a4 good for sciatica cent in dividends to our | [friendly pipe and telling past ex | per fences. “Up until tin years ago,” related nd tke ightning | clothes from head to| | members. We have done | it BECAUSE | call him White] afl our earn Guess the P, 8. stands for | pavement sweeper. | | He—You have made a fool of me | She—Well, ff I didn't, some oth | Jer girl would “fe ‘This institu always 4 carefully conservatively i] “You are the biggest lar id a woman that case Call and investigate our | plan for savings. A de-| posit of $1 or more will make you a member. Puget Sound Savings & Bie quietly “Mal mat” sobbed Willle, “do my eara belong to my neck or my ‘Why, what's the matter?” was! Cyr | the temportzing reply l A t' “Woll, you told Mary to wash Oan Association my face, and she's washing my “A Mutual Savings Soctety.” | ears, too!” Katablished 19 Ce ee Gettihg a Rest Captured Pickpocket missus I shan't be home | Bull! Tell the| to supper, | oe | Fond Mother—All of this beauti- }ful silk dress, Johnny, came from a poor Insignificant worm Johnny—Yes, | know, ® mamma. Papa is the worm, isn’t he? J. Colkett 4 Anderson Maxwell E. W. Campbella. F J. A. Soderberg J. W. 222 Pike St. Prince three se EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR _, STAR CORRESPONDENT IN MEXICO BUNKS WITH GEN. VILLA What Manner of Man Is This ‘Murdering Bandit? A Good Scout, Says Durborough HO! HO! LISTEN! PAPA IS SON'S BROTUER-IN-LAW is a born general and never gives Ee te ina ia MA en that he | 7 , P y all his time with Gen. Villa's | WERLIN, Germany, Feb, 23. can ride better than any man in his He early fell into the ndon for ame The latter ts the the prince's second marriage, In Januas ried an elder sister of bis own step mother, PEN CHAPLAIN DIES WALLA WALLA, Feb, 25.—Rev SIAND BACK, Wdward Barber, chaplain at the YOu GANC OF state prison, ia dead today of septic poisoning, He leaves a wife and EASY 10 DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR You can Bring Back Color and Lustre with Sage Tea When you darken your halr with Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can dampen 4 sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, | p taking one smal) strand at a time. | ¢ By morning al! gray hair disappears, and, two, your hair becomes beautifully «| Garkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also discover dandruff is gone \""a hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no din |e ie 2 sign of old ag | we all desire a youthful tive appearance, get busy a! after with W Hlucher wellknown nobleman and descend nt of the Prussian hero of Water oo, who has | prothe jaw 0 ci 5 att brother-in-law of his own won thelr unanimous admiretion. ar the ‘cdvier, Darnereaene ryeth's Sage and Sulphur and' gotten to be a joke among his off! |look years younger. PHON necting with all 4 RATES "7 wy « Jeach other without an Interpreter. | @ Villa is a far greater man than mont people think, He |e deep, very modest, always on the alert, and is ree d by all who know him, He NOTE—W. H Durborough, staff photographer and corresponden’ of The Star, who has been sending splendid pictures and vivid stories from EDITOR'S army. good graces of the rebel gen- eral, who helped him In his work and befriended him In army, rope a steer quick conceded to be the bes Mexico, His men, cowboy peons and e yon Wablstatt, a made his home in We were lying around camp one morning after breakfast, just before the battle of Tierra Blanca, when Villa noticed three o. his troopers trying to rope a steer, The steer wan 4 bad actor and the men missed |nim several times, write from Mexico a series of on “Campaigning ‘With the accompanying story being the first.) only child of ry, 1918, his son mar! 2 one only 10 days old Our Staff Pho tographer, Durborough, Shaking Hands With Gen. Villa Du ing a marathon over the hills for By W. H. borough ‘ months, you get the habit of figur- (Staff Photographer of The Star.) | no aid during th ing on what a real bed feels like, and just how much food you could nd Sulphur : Villa called for his horse, mount ed, and I never saw such riding as next few minutes tell, because {t's done so naturally, CHIFUAHUA, Mex, Feb. 16. He had that steer tied fn a knot the so evenly, Pi ring thin mixture, My friend G “rancisco Villa is | first throw of the rope, As the ant-| consume if you were set down in & |though, at home {is mussy 1) a remarkable yw in many ways,| mal crumpled up and fell | ap,|real eat house, troublesome. For 50 cents 1 I have had a good chance to|a wild yell went up: “Viva Well, Villa came back in a few buy at any drug store the re study him in his different mooda| One night, after a hard day in| and remarked: | “This one alled “Wyeth's Sage and|and phases during the last few | the saddie, | dragged myself over to will be on the federals. his camp to get a Httle Then he uncovered a case of When he saw me he smiled and | cha aaid ‘My boy, tals Is a pre’ ntty | iced chicken and exp t hard life for you, and I wish I could | had found it in a bunch of stuff cap- English language, and is too sensi-| give you better quarters than slee: few days before from the tive to attempt to use the few|ing under a greasewood bush. But/ words he knows, He has very good it is hard going now for all of us. control over Spanish for a man that|You walt here for me and T will bas but Httle education. |treat you to something real.” Since I have been campaigning} 1 could hardly imagine anything with his army, I have tried tn varl-/that would cheer me up that night, ous ways to make him talk English, | for 1 am free to tell you that after for my Spanish in as bad as bis leeping on the ground rolled up in| gilsh, but nothing doing. It blanket, night after night, and eat-| |ing nothing but frijole, tortillas and to | tre h killed beef that had been do- ir Remedy.” You just) months. One peculiar trait is that he will attempt to talk English. In he knows very little of the another application or 1 had to stick a cactus thorn into myself to see if I was awake, for at that particular part of the coun- try champagne was worth a thou- sand dollars a bottle, or so. He could have kept it all for him- self if he had wanted, but he ts a | good scout, and if yo& give him a | square dea! he will go you one bet ter every time. and as ttfac. once ha. core—we two trying to talk Half Price for Nearly Eve in the Burnett Jeirelry Store This is the conclusion of the Burnett business and offers an opportunity to invest in solid gold jewelry, precious stones and costly wares at prices never before known in the history of the trade. ouee ONE-THIRD OFF ry ys HALF PRICE . HALF PRICE .HALF PRICE Continuing tomorrow morning at_9 o'clock the balance of the Burnett stock of paced will be sold at half price, the only exceptions being unmounted dia- monds, diamond solitaire rings, a few pieces of solid silver and a few watches. | ALL SOLID GOLD WATCHES............- ALL DIAMOND-SET BROOCHES..... ALL DIAMOND-SET BRACELETS ... ALL SOLID GOLD MESH BAGS ALL SOLID GOLD FOBS.......... -HALF PRICE ALL LAVALLIERES, SOLID GOLD ..HALF PRICE ALL DIAMOND LAVALLIERES ............66 ce eeeeeees ONE-THIRD OFF ALL SOLID SILVER AT...........ccsececeee wy: e ONE-THIRD OFF Tea Sets, Coffees, Trays, Plates, Sandwich Trays and in fact dozens of pieces of solid silver, all at one-third less than the original price. ALL GOLD FILLED WATCHES. £2.00. .cccccee soecscorcs ONE-THIRD OFF * ALL GOLD FILLED BRACELETS.......... ee ee -HALF PRICE ALL GOLD FILLED CHAINS... 00.5.0... . ccs ccesceeenss . HALF PRICE ALL GOLD FILLED LOCKETS . HALF PRICE ALL SOLID GOLD RINGS -HALF PRICE ..HALF PRICE ‘HALF PRICE GERMAN SILVER MESH BAGS STERLING SILVER MESH BAGS. ALL SILVER PLATED HOLLOW WARE AT. -HALF PRICE Tea Sets, Coffee Sets, Trays, Casseroles, Sandwich Plates, Sugars and Creamers and doxens of pieces of highest grade plated ware, all at half the original prices. ALL PLATED AND SOLID SILVER TOILET SETS, MANICURE SETS AT..... HALF PRICE ALL CUT GLASS AT.. HALF PRICE Bowls, Nappies, Vases, Platters, Fern Dishes, Water Pitch- ers, De canta rs, etc., all at half the original prices. ALL CLOCKS—EIGHT-DAY AND ONE-DAY, ALARMS, shiver ETC., ALL AT . HALF PRICE RR pas The foregoing is merely a brief pyre of the stock. The More Certified reader can depend on finding all the old price tags intact— | nota figure has been changed. This is the conclusion of the BEE. Advertising | Burnett sale. It means that everything will be.closed out. — ’ I suggest that you come early before the best articles are gone. T he ‘ale opens as stated, at 9 o'clock, and continues each day until the stock is sold out. GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE, Advertising Agent. BURNETT BROS. 909 SECOND AVENUE, NEAR MADISON Burke Building Burke Building ~~ Te es Le ey: ee ne