The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 19, 1916, Page 4

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The Seattle Star [3:7 Entered at Seattle, Wash, Postoffion as second-class matter By mail, out of etty, one year, 01.00, 6 io per month up te # mow By carrier, clty, seesee MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES SOLD DAILY ce peenecepetene Food Hogs We Have Always With Us \ loaf of bread is worth the amount of good it will do the eater; a dozen ot eggs is worth the amount of nourishment it contains. Food values do not fluctuate, Only prices fluctuate. ’ f he loaf of bread for which you pay six cents now will do you no more good than that for which you paid five cents last month. P Butter for which you pay 53 cents a brick will butter no more bread than that for which you paid 25 cents last summer, ‘ : Yet there are people who contend there is no wrong in storing up food stuffs while there is plenty, and selling them at a high profit when famine stalks or threatens to stalk in the land! : Food hogs are not modern in development; they had them in the days of wise old Solomon. And in those days men who “cornered” provigions were cursed for their unrighteousness. ; Listen to Solomon, the maker of proverbs—you can find his words in the Bible; eleventh chapter of Proverbs, 26th verse: ' “He that withholdeth corn, the people shall curse him; but bless- : Perr) ing shall be upon the head of him that selleth it. Perhaps in Solomon's day, as in our own, the withholders of corn leaned k their fngers into the armholes of their gar Peer erst. Tet. 3 back in their easy chairs, stuc ter. But the! y there in the |~-bow in it you enll 1t?—copy, ye The dinis nO a . ~ H ace: se to c " ¢ here ould be copy yo id ments, and said to the cursing populace: : x at chair, “There 16] Tierly: and types! Bat you shall wall was ornd aut vicoh eutlus afc a . “What are you going to do about it? w my hat Tiogg Fn eg oe | very German pict up bis hat and : ; ; cre ' Dene a ‘ Nee eevee he plump, bare-armed P ne standing there. : crews ane jd stay on here Ike this? Oh, 1 From the moment IT rang th beta® chusked ey é chi j ow that Max is not @ poor man aw. Herr K Iby very dashing, mustached Ger.| (Continued From Our Last leew ae all very wel he t a rich man, elth ¢ I searcely had Dakola’s 1k See at ee ee — — . Our Littl. G h ave a large faith! And there © ¢ n to be : wishes KnOW®| strange and foreign to my 2 | It pays to read The Star's " e Grouches een ae wally larke educated, and besides, Max mar-|When he Interruy with @ Ire] and yet there was something bright | Classified Ad Page. E all love heroes. There is enough of the poet and the} 9a rag r a iny | vs Will | ried Norah O'Hara, not the whole | ¥4¥¢ ys 7 a be the | 224 comfortable about it 2 : : is ae awe cnxeees | Guin wey CMa ne I want to go to work ch od mu would be the) 1 felt that 1 was going to like it, |(- hereon actor in the average man, there is enough imagination, | . has am not a free un, but when I |1ady of why ¢ ter Doktor bas |aborigines and all. It is uncanny || Special Christmas Mitraction to enable him to put up a fair imitation of a hero whenever 9 ‘| en te ae vie S + tego | he ook on ngs Unit 1 Stat it i | MOORE TH E | the opportunity offers her well aga 1 will be well! to i A room ¥ ave | Von Gerhard has not behaved a , : + a nd my we od or you—aber ¥ r os did not see 4 We can all manage to meet failure, grief and death with in empty. Last A < Ay Th eenkon nies a nicely - a v0 bi 1 anti But we are very often cowards when we face the petty bres — 4 ‘fies y bowing my head on tho table yt ere | to if there was anything that | 4 f ? $| know and «iving way to a fit of w I tri not to look frightened, |» could do to make me comfort. “irritations of every day. And as these ills are of hourly oc-| WHY DON'T WE LOVE HER? currence, we are much less heroes in fact than we fancy our tia adie ae ‘selves. So it is a good plan, once in a while, to make a little! | per cheeks are just the nicest _ fecord of our ordinary grouches. pink, There's the getting-up grouch. Its causes are many, the} Blonde hair is on her head. eure is the same for all. It can be had before we leave our! | gue gor ait that | do not love "rooms—just a little deep breathing before the open window, This maiden fair and sweet Tor a cold plunge, will do the work. | Why not? Well, to the one * There's the grouch because the morning coffee is to who can tell, ei m saffan |. | Give an Alhambra seat Iweak or too strong. Well, most of us drink too much coffee,| ¢ _* pititemnenin webs o anyway | ade . There's the grouch because we have to stand up in the} Daily Cartoonet '@street car. But hanging onto a strap is excellent exercise, as ; ass 4 as a $2 massage, for that part of the population wi! THE RETURN OF WHISKERS Bits at work all day a There’s the grouch over our clothes—which are never ite good enough. We can never cure this by buying more ; T. woman can afford a chinchilla coat at $4,500 she covets ashamed of our mad craze for finery. There's the office grouch—which consists in trying to go Opposite to the course of business events. Just-average human] versity kilis harmony and co-operation in many an organ-| * ization. There's always some one above us or next us to be! jealous of. The cure for this is to remember that “he who would command must first learn to obey.” And if this kind f philosophy does not help, then the honest thing is to find another job. k ery morning we seize afresh upon all of our little pet) grouches as if they were novelties belonging to each one ex- Pelusively, and not ancient incumbrances which we should have discarded yesteryear. And perhaps we cannot cure « hn) wy ut ann i H rey tna Set hy is) selves altogether of the habit of getting grouchy about some-| a, ee | thing. But can we not prove ourselves extraordinary, al st Do You KNow — *hheroic, by getting rid of all these commonplace grouches and) 1 % tie custom to treat. me © © inventing a few brand new ones? | druggist 2, Hi Gill doesn't wear a pompa ye London editors say Bucharest’s fall was important | genre gg abo fekal _ chiefly because of its moral effect. Gee! has anybody [Grey's Eleg | over there got any morals left? | Mt Ra taller than Dr 'The Better Way Henry Collit cigar dealer al to two or three! Wife bu department store. country, will he given bonuses ¢ weeks wages for Christmas s : ] BROKEN TOYS At the same time, the Puget Sound Traction, Ligt How d'4 you and your mamma| enjoy Christmas? PRower Co. announced a raise of 1 cent per hour in Gages of its car men, amounting in all to $30,000. Another|, “We both had bard luck. I got Bimilar increase of wages will be made in July, it is declared | husnend aoe gp a pe ’ huaban iey were both broke More and more do the big corporations realize that their] inside of a week.” —Puck | Best guarantee of success is to make their employes satisfied antl; With the wages and working conditions “ae Pc ee ph eda Tho some may sneer at the 1-cent-an-hour increase by Positively his last the’ traction compa it is nevertheless a good sign. T America €orporation can yet re-establish itself in the estimation of tl appearence j | ith é 3 President and Mrs, Wilson have} 7 community and be regarded as an instrument of real service.|peen married a year today. We . — don't know whether that's a paper Now they're moving railways to France. Europe | Wedding or not, but the chances might as well get the railways. She's got all the butter (“'" Wilson will write a note any and eggs. za New York is closing its Sunday movies, and Con- YES y necticut is prosecuting a man for “blasphemy.” The dark- Drink i est hour comes just before the dawn. Gusto with it A tost will prove Life in Sing Sing for selling fake phonographs, is a | its remarkavio sentence just meted out by a New York judge. What |" will happen to sellers of “Hawaiian” records? oe Tee | used internally as directed in bool. 14 let packed in all original red cartons, , a given permanent and positive relie from indigestion, cas on the stom= a ach, lower bowel tro ‘antritie corated | catarrh of the stor atomach, sore thr puNnens, ptomaine poisoning similar alle ments, | For sale at all druggists Insist on Genuine in Red Cartons, will continue to pay 0 on Savings Deposits GUARDIAN Trust and Savings BANK Corner First Ave. at Columbia St. Seekers nese ees ee PAINLESS vey At Prices That Are Within Your Kench paAINLEss Sei grnene 0 Quality Bridge AUSTIN 3)" PAINLESS AUSTIN Dentint Third and Vike, botrance 1604 rd Ay, Open Sundays, 9:30 a tot p.m, for your conventen .ecnesanennenndienstesmitessceeiusenandememmmmensh imnmmenetumtetortpamenenseneummenmnoneneenin cmmemmeneeeaeemmeammnen nae anaes ine eumeaeaneneaa peerana atae aaesoas now ennsranens a (Continued from Our Last | ) Jenough. Norah, and Max and Mr.| those drives a | Well, come might ould pwould not have them raise their CHAPTER III Doctor Man, | am going away.” | Then Milwauke wh ed|not falter, 1 peere to the dinél eyebro at you, not for ; Dawn Develops a Heimweh Norah wunhg ab to face) M ond ‘orah I, ‘te mg Toot Marrie¢ i tr nea Pia . sl I urd trying t elon inte ne New " After New York—Milwauke The thunder of ' en pene seizing me, 1m Bol real Writer Lady in the bosom of | Dawn! Not New Laugh said Von Gerhard, | or at er o on fat especially when the I am afraid #0,” I answered, | quite composed! I give you blo am marrh ge: t t Jam before my winily ref to take one serlot But you have been working,”| tl tomorrow morning to stop ; wed. ian ly. Sever cara of newspaper | wailed Norah, “every morning.| laughing. At the end of that time Aig te ges Fn grind have taught me the fallacy of And 1 thought the book was com-| it will not seem quite amunir to : é did try write by the inspiration |ing on beautifull is no funny after one ha e pe! meth Buc there ts such a thing Oh, the book—tt Is too un 1 it for 1 ‘ te r, aod a8 4 train of thought, and mine 1 ertain. It will be months before hard did speak to No . aa ‘ constantly being derailed, and) the book is properly polished off.| berg of the Post. And J am to ge a frightful thing G tny feet: 1. ataped wrecked and pitehed about And then I may peddle it around | to Milwa next wee 1 wish | Th ery wan not OM! ike a silly creature, His voice was Scarcely am I settled in my for more months »; Lean't af-|that I were chummier th the |¢ even, b Ar n ey auiet aad conte cubby-hole, t me,|ford to trifle with uncertainties, | Irish saints, 1 need them now verestion ceased! The ¢ ee aie gairld oa © work A tory busy | And anyway, Dr. Von Gerhard will -- booming ¢ b ‘ a ‘ et that for a moment. Ing abou ain when Bia |tell you h ow wall and strong I am CHAPTER IV ch men! Immediately Idubbed! you are bound, hard and fast and i and peer ut yow, Here Dy tor ‘ . Stecped in Germen : c H tight. And you are for no man. " id Von Gerhard, in hin| adi ste | that ht find ad ‘ 'h| You are married as much tho Dawn, dear, I'm going to the liberate English, “since am at a li ” r ehead reature in the mad I uid that you | hotel from the court va make Frieda’s upstairs hould way that you |} The t as tiled | 2¢.® 4 © ab here working for you, ng the bathroom, so take 4 last about one year, in New | house s he house HOG | wa A t case be reve . bs ke « with G {vil engineers, me a DANE 3 red, je squint at the roast vow and ; : ge pets ere all placed at ¢ " : &¢ 4 Vhat utter bilther! scoffed, | Chanica He oO t t ges . a ' then, wi What utter blither!” J ffed ft he ( aks t e © roe Vhat do you mean!” I ered - turning to glare at Von Gerhard, | fessors from the German academy. | reg of A wall table ta I promiae, dreamily, my last type ll + The little: private hotel kept lta re « myself away indignant- jwritten sentence still running thru Jently,” ware oe OOOR | ie aa Mhant Tents were & 1 What right bave you to talk a t to the man who pulled| by Herr d Frau Knay never they disc ” "© rl A half hour elapses. : : It c ! bto me like this You know what | t from the edge of the, Would have found it myself Bae py eo and how t fas 1 assaile my nostrils a fearful be grave only six. months}|*48 Doetor Von Gerhard who had : wh ife haa been, and ho have mell of scorching. The roast! A|***) . . Knapfs, and who ar They @©€|tried to smile with my Hps and wild rush into the kitchen, I fling | “*° g he of high nding for-| stay yo a I thought same eo 7 ee Yawning fiddleaticks!” snapped » way for my coming he ae and are horribly oe “y NT decent ypen the oven door. The roast tn will find » unlih bY | you ah thought so, ah oe ha tr |) elegant There was nothing wat . “ig br t norany-colored and Kravyless ies ne exeont that I want.janything you have Py cad nkes fiftec Fong witha xcopt that “ 4 - is? ‘ne anak Ge ered I understand oe 1 I've loved 4 ie Se kf Pag other occupa ment ago. And stop | rose and nos Nn mind off t world, I'm | Matthews | ing Berctol {Old Plates relined and made National Painless Deatsis STAR—TUESDAY, DEC. 19, 1916. PAGE 4 TIEEISIETAAEAEIEREE MMM TTESTESSETESSSESRESSSESSERESSSSEESESSS MMIII IARA SAL IIT I LiL ies it tAAAAT ETE ES teed ERE e2t2tss sit s3Egasty | fetersrersgseseseeeeezests: pititeed ssnzanesasaethgsagss - — “Chvistoas Caro” “sT) AWN O’°H AR A” ig re oun u CHARLES DICKENS - ————— ii Thniinits hihinin 3 73 avivaediaanaaaiey | TyannnnanTeniaanadtintinieiaaninanaany | ATRETRYETE Breststs Firsrs SPRSvOOeTeTS STS TESESSii TMM Looe SSESSESSSSSESSS ESE SES rrrereritesstserttrvrtss over to the table and faced | think you will find material there d not #0 much for » The Von Gerba and followed him up to the “t ble wonderfully beautiful” room yf ny sald Max, at|™yY Joy I found it b flinged,|time that Ib with a great vault |,» * closet bristling with t had since ne eich as | had p lays of my tl Looks | which I decided to laugh, and the | @ry. an | answered the last his voice over t would he a le heap of comfort to me just situation was saved have f the fascination) Jt wan then that Von Gerhard | books |to nee y You are the nearest e office.” he said,| proposed the thing net 1 had f hardened | tning to Norah that there 1s in this his understanding way 1 t him in at onder | strange se dNINK | whole German town d goodness feve you have a helmwet for it Y ave done me t nor to| reoms, with f cold. | knows you're far from Irish.” n ” in thie Lt " P critical wor erefore! He came. Th weather had Heimwe That's the word,” 1! clave n Ernest Ve on my first day at Knapfs I went/ turned suddenly cold and he was had agreed. “Afte a heave . aaa kakd ahead down to di je eve ed coat with a an ‘ writ lor seven years . st. I shall « ome | auite cor and nec H looked = most and loved it a Will bo a new fvice—a thing | ally keep for | Knowle that of iar was handsome and blond and writer, at heart an asiona asions ean and that there was no flaw healthy at ast, until » New York to find in the fit of my skirt In the | have no idea how glad I * no ting out and took my | back m to see you,” I told him. “If you n the blood. r men at, steady ¢ | As Il opened t door ny room| had, you would have been here been known t for-|“Come to the be healthy, Ger |1 heard ind» of a violent al-| days ago. Aren't you rather Ill | tunes, to enter politics, write|man town called Milwaukee, an do ?| tercation in progr nstairs, I} mannered and neglectful, consider- books and become famous, but their) Ach, you may laugh. Hut there|leaned over the bal s and Iis-|ing that you » responsible for new renthined a 5 fthem,| you could live sanely, and work | tened The sounds rose and fell| my being here? and t smoky smell} not too hard And I—I will speak |and swelled and boomed “I did not know whether you, a of a newspaper offic sweet in their nostril Put, “Not yet,” Von was over of you. to Norberg, of the Post.| I ttp-toed down the stairs, altho! married woman, would care to have | And on Sundays, if you are good,|1 might have fallen down and land-|me here,” he said, in his composed jerhard had|1 may take you along the marvel-|ed with a thud without having|way, “In a place like this people naid, “unless you want to havelous lake drives {n. my Httle red| been heard. The din came from | are not always-kind enough to take ain this miserable business of |r nut, yes? Aber wunderbar,'the direction of the dining room.|the trouble to understand. And 1 jo $1.50; Bargain . Wed. best seats $1.00, he sick nerfs. Walt yet a few — so | have waited, saying nothing to Norah and Max. But I want to dat ¢ : a me for the no! and th rus he hard work for a glimpse o} oca room fust before when e lights are 1 a mo aze and the big presses ownstairs are thundering their « to hurry, and the men are a their with news that will be and finer as it passes 1 of Copyreaders’ and f the 80 order when the Modern Christmas Gifts Beauty, Usefulness and Permanence Electrical Household Appliances Guaranteed by Westinghouse, Hot Point, Universal and American SPECIAL | $4 Westinghouse Iron $2.95 $3.50 Hamilton Beach | Curling Iron $1.75 Electrical Cooking Demonstration Dec. 18 to 23, Inc. | SEE THE DISPLAY IN YOUR SALESROOM | ~ | 204 County-City Building — collar off from his great arms, hat wildly above his green gently ar is swearing ng cigaret cigaret, lighting each fresh one at the dying glow of the I 1 would give a year of my life to hear him a 1 don’t mind tellin’ you, Beatrice | Fairfax, that that w story you got on th ce. The othe a darn goo Millhaupt di lows haven't a word that isn’t rehash,” ‘ee I can understand the emotions of a broken-down war horse that is hitched to a vegetable wagon Tam going to Milwaukee to work! After New York—Milwaukee! Of course, Von G 1 is to} blame But IT think nm he sees the humor of it It was while he was down on one of his frequent over-Sunday visits that I exploded my bomb. It was, after dinner Saturday night and we | were all settled in the great] beamed living room, Sis at the| piano, and the two men smoking heir after-dinner cigars, ‘Norah, if you'll continue the slow music, I'll be much obliged The time has co the Walrus aid, to talk of many things,’ Don't be absurd id Norah er her shoulder, and went on playing. I never was more serious in my life. I've got to be. This but terfly existence | RELIABLE DENTISTRY We guarantee our work for 15 ears, We will examine your teeth and tell you just what they require, and what it will cost | Our prices are the lowest in Se attle for high-class work | gone on long Gold and Porcelain Crown Full Set of Teeth. ..8,00 ¢ S15) to a fit ke new Model L, $25.00 Model K, $35.00 Wourt pon Sundays, 9:30 w#.

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