The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 31, 1915, Page 4

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STAR—FRIDAY, DEC THE SEATTLE STAR ‘A Married Man’s WHO WOULDN'T Be — Troubles WILBUR is Sore WHY So Previst [MEMBER OF SCHIPYS NORTHWEST LrAGuE oF NEWwetarnns WILBUR 2 EVERY TIME THEY Have || AS THE Dickens _ raph News Service of the Untied Press Assoctation COMPANY POR DINNER. BECAUSE WE HAS Wa ftive ae Second Matter, V HAVE ‘To WAIT UNTIL. To Warr — per month up mon; & mom $1.00; year #350 ‘THE SECOND TABLE Published Datly be oe Star tin at tee o408, Private We meant to use these two pictures to illus LITTLE pete wer SMM Y voNes trate a nice little New Year fable. ; N A man photographer took the pictures. He ae yout the m s side. So he took e Bia vat mpd tenn, | ic eo : appene the an, r Then am sd a woman on The Hoop. Star's staff to y to go with the pic- tures. And she the woman?” Then we noticed for said, “ t what became of the first time that SHE a > sequel Just as if it not . “ had been out of the sequel. Just a Sea GORAIDE ava: Rumia, discovered by con-| he leas she did star H 1 synagogue to} matter in the least if t V : Spavaiie sinner Why this omission of half of a perfectly good yen of American Paper Co plot? ployers at But-| HABIT OF MIND! accept the world as HIS « bit of mind to And WOMAN'S Man's h club of South ana downs’ give comedy 31, he Is¢ AND SCVERAL OTHER : ARTICLES, THE NAMES OF WHICH — E ARE NOT KNOWN, NOR THEIR habit of mind to let him be greed) a evenings of IT’S A MIGHTY BAD HABIT, BOTH _ | 4s eisuters rts, whores ne| | Drea Let’s break it. ic Of course, these p stories which he who rt en aun in re of Forret-Me A ‘SOON 1 Diller, owt YOU CAN GET IT IN or of the A PILL A by the discovery of a French which all liquors may be soltd! SING A SONG OF ENNUI see another Eastland dis- school DAller h diay {ation Thurs . which myn it closed Wednes may reor on FOOT rset « 77? fast No, elr,” Humphreys’ Seventy-seven simo accents. Wit this year 1916 Secasiokd ter? Another Pez other subway crash? Anot caust like that in Brook abody boom True n his most fortis tory F4? other Pittsburg blaze w hen gir Is are da hed to bits on the pavements because they can’t reach the fire “I'm TRUE. Perrume VEST. 1915. PAGE 4, - {LL HAVE TOM TALK To _— [A eccor \I sacvar ION ARMY £ CISTEN—- THIS Is EVERETT SEND YOUR WAGON ae | CHEER UP MY BoY,YouiLGeT| | | NOUR EATS IN DUE i FRE aao = ESEMRERE Outbursts of Everett True tt By Allman TIME — We’'LL B® A LITTLE CROWDED ; TONIGHT AND some Boo HAS J To WAIT rad | Aup YouRE YoU HAVE | KHow THAT, BUT THE THING THAT | |GETS MY GOAT IS T HAVE. To wart ALWAYS KICKIN” BECAUSE ee APPETITE ' (UL TURN BY ALLOWING sak Bat ‘THE WATER To RON ON WIS HOOP AND FREEZE, HE MAKES A NIETY “ts ub buT THIS STICK Dear Miss Grey: The letter of “& Mother,” concerning the “Con. fessions of a Wife,” has made me feel | should give my experience. | are past 60 and my business in | life has taken me Into many hor Closet doors have many times swung far enough ajar for me to Glimpse the “skeleton.” There are more Dicks than people like “A Mother” think; many times it is | Mra. Dick, tho not as often as Dick | himself Margle Is right to bide her time, and not to fly Into temper and “face him to it.” It will be a far more effective lesson to Dick to let him expose himself, and while she waits she can get her own poise, get her own ship steady on the waves. | knew intimately three just such cases as this of Dick and Margle. One of the men had a bided her time in patie able to save him to his better self, for surely every one has that. .As yet, Dick has yielded to his weaker seif. The Dick | knew came out of t all, thru the course Margie took, a real man, helping many another to avold the Shoals that so nearly made shipwreck of him, and | know mo happier couple than they are and they have celebrated their thirtieth wedding anniversary. Another of the cases, the man had not as yet really gone wrong He was in the rapids, fast going to ward the falls, and his wife's hand but she did and others say Mar gie should do, which was the fatal last push over. Our Christ said He that is forgiven much loveth much.” It is wrong in our philosophie cand was could have saved him, as “A Mother” of life, in showing a trait, to clase It asam trait or a woman-trait, In. stead aying, the “men,” or the “wor or “so! It should be @ women.” “some men” ed Everett For Grip, Influenza, not going te set kled pie tonight Me for the hay at 10 p. m. and no bromo Seltzer in the morning.” The ease of ietering escapes? Oh, yes, we about catastrophes. We were all tired of hearing New Year's. We're always tired of hearing < things. That's why about them, A ,DRY NOTE h economy ts we have them. “The old year and the new year And one goes back to God again, meet And one stays on for joy or pain.” ret , aah . ‘ casey les you aks, Tin |neesor addi, puis ‘: e ery drink ' MOST READY FOR U. S. CASH |ing of @ Cold, a chill, a shiver, las He FrROM the standpoint of t fe facto govern- Rms Gane Gain n was a success trom the | ment of Mexico, as \ is of thi untry 1 sneeze, ha ; asey decided he the outlook.is very re . Men familiar with nd influenss, i of pa a sign r . the Mex ch h the ernal th, = e sensions which of revolutions | tumpnrerst ttomeo. Medicine « chat! Do you think Tim which has converted Mexico into a y Gives a shave with every | a land of famine _ : — drink? and rapine, have steadfa a last ing peace could not be t it by a blood- Do You Want to less victory; they have lower classes of Mexico must first have ! of fighting; Own Your Home? ie vi : “its mil on Asap Are oe ets It is estimated that yi ere A eople woul ye CO er npr onyiedl deren a to dwell at peace with one angiien 43 per cent _of a eae : Carranza’s esent advantage certainly has American families have been achieved by the shedding of blood put part of their sav- For the time, at least, much of the ings into their own Mexico has had enough of war and i homes. samealtiag to welcome peace. Before M ) rece iffi- A savings bank ac- || >. a PURI ALD ey to harbor cele . ; count is the beginning }| ° Fallon of whisky. One drink in force the measures tha wi ¢ ship hopes and plans, | serroes were Killed and two white harmony. From our standpoint par \ foe.e foundation of |I|™ inded ticular time is most propitious. some real money is as will not vise Amer tas Mexico is a wonderfully pro- necessary in building a “Ae ae Sonia lific in opportunity Amazing may home as the stone or London Tires, be brought about by foreign « Th at apit pease foundation |} ‘+ command of must come from America. lan 1 and Ger under the house itself. ; command o nag hitherto the most potent factors in develop- il ing Mexico’s natural resource > practically eli Deposits received up eh ae iste d, for the time being, by V Japan will to and including Janu- mi : = be the only formidable competitor of the United + ary 8th will receive in- at a \ States in the commercial conquest of Mexico. We terest at 4 per cent Beith to teres have the inside track. By Seeking to honestly de- from January Ist. City of ' ba velop, not merely exploit for illegitimate profit, the (hola Plate agen tremendous opportunities afforded, American cap- DEXTER HORTON te Excelaior ital can work real miracles in the land of “manana TRUST AND SAVINGS r during the next decade. BANK if you have a BROOMD ANY CHERRY vacant Want Ad rent it!) room or house, let a Star If the grass grows in Janiveer, It grows the worse for’t all the year.” ' ma says to mrs will give fire depar air con prog 15 a has got a g onduct tme last nu a FIREMEN’S BAND TO PLAY OLD YEAR OUT battle nt's after ram n WANT MUSIC MADE A MAJOR COURSE Washington }tion high Mayor inmate move aft e associate “Eva” scores the women for dress. Two-thirds of the women dress sensibly. Why should the follies of the one-third be made as characteristic of all women? To say that men are after the thrills and will not settle down in the content of love is not true. it s true of some men, and in a cer. tain class it is true of most of the men: but it is a libel to say it is a characteristic of men A dear old couple near me who have lived n happy content or 67 years, say there Is something in finitely better and re satisfying t than the thrills—an understood comradeship, the peace of content in each other. Their lives have not been sunshiny ones, elther, but unusually stormy and tempestuous Their tender concern of each oth er is beautiful to see No, “A Mother,” It Is not best to always “have it out at once.” ! know a mother who saved her daughter by the course Margie is taking, with Dick, the man she loves. “Love suffereth long and is kind People sald this mother was handling her daughter with gloves and she should give her “what's what,” instead. The girl, who is a lovely woman now, said to me the other day, “It was mamma's watch ful waiting that saved me.” I came to suspicion that she knew all and to see that all her loving tact was revealing to me the sure destruc Margie who} born.” As | read the letters to Miss Grey, | see how each writer writes out his experience—“Miss Eighteen” out of hers, “A Mother” out of hers, anu now | am writing out of mine. | felt a sympathy for “A Son.” No doubt he has a lovely mother, his comrade and friend, and nat- urally he would Judge all other mothers by his own and resent the idea that any one should refuse to live with her. | am training my son to be a good husband and father, and | tell him It is wrong for a man to ask his wife to live with his people; some other way can usually be prov My mother-in-law lived with 16 years, and | never had a more congenial person about me. We each had too much self-respect for sharp words or quarrels, yet the fact was, neither of us had a home where we could work out our Ins dividual ideas of a home; we had to compromise so much, My children have to fight tendencies and traits they need not have had to, but for the nerve strain | had to endure previous to their birth. Some complain about the story “Confessions of a Wife” getting along so slowly—“getting nowhere,” as some impatient one put it. It is the haif-teaspoonful doses that we get of it each day that makes it seem slow. Think of reading a rgeat book In that way! Yet ea day's portion contains a defin point if one reads with seeing ey: instead of haSte to see how it is coming out. It is a good story for those who need it, and will do good. PAST SIXTY. Q—! went with a girl for two years and then asked her to be my wife, She said “Yes,” but her par- ents wouldn't give their consent, as the girl was under age. So we ran away and got married any way. Now her mother has taken her away from me and says | cannot see her, or even write to her, until she Is of age. What shall | do about it? ALR. A—If ¥ marriage has been cording to a recent decision, you are It would be n the counsel nble attorney. ANDY WANTS HIS DICE DOUGH BACK Andrew Peterson wants back $70 dice with John M. d he has filed suit and named Chief of murderer of ed ning years R. Char neriff Hodge to 50 CENTS Boys’, Girls’ and Children’s HATS KAVANAGH'S First and Union. tion | was heading for. Any other 1008 First, at Madison. way would nax® made me stub Against Ask For sia” HORLICK'S Get the Well-Known Round Package THE ORIGINAL + Caution at thelr those high leally bent ou in addition r studic at the & me tim ed that nt bev a a gre frre ED MARCO PACINE,WIB,U.3-A> agi MALTED MILK Made in the largest, best equipped and sanitary Malted Milk plant in the world We do not make“milk products” — Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, ete. 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