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+35 ( FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, Cynthia Grey Wife Jealous of Hand- some Husband; Asks How She May ° Over- come It Dear Miss Grey: confess It at once. jealous of my T may as well I am desperately husband. He is good Jooking, attractive to women, and I real think he enjoys making me miserabdia, He insists that he cares | only for me, and I know he does but his attentions to other women cause me to suffer agonies, Can't [ contro! this feeling in any way? It seems that I have honestly tried, Miss Grey, because I at least have} sense enough to realize that it is marring the happiness in our home, and all my life I have planned for a bappy home wilt do whatever you my, if it is within my power. EDNA. Jealousy is a disease of the mind that must be eradicated by love, hon- esty, faithfulness and @ in conduct. Jealousy is also a primé tive emotion that isn’t easily con- trolied by judgment, Keep your jealous feelings down at any cost, that is, don’t betray any evidences of them You give your husband a great deal of power when you let him see that you are jealous. He prodadiy enjoys rousing your Jealousy—it flatters his vanity. Try this plan: Be just as attractive as you can in every way, doth to your husband and your friends. Don't deliberately set about to make your husdand jealous, but show him that you, too, can attract other people. You'll find tess cause for jealousy. eee Requests Poetry Dear Miss Grey: WIN you please Publish the enclosed first verse of the old song, named. “The White Captive.” with the request that if any one of your numerous sub scribers has the song, they will be so kind as to send it to you for publi cation in The Star, and oblige sev-| @ral friends that want to get it? “At the foot of the hemlock, the wid game was flung, Above from its branches, the rude armor hung. From battle and plunder the war riors were seen A light on their features, a brand in the gicam.” Tf any of the readers have this poem and will be kind enough to send me a copy, I shail be glad to print & eee Query About Eugene V. Debs Dear Miss Grey: What ts Eu- gene V. Debs’ native state and the state In which he votes? ANXIOUS TO KNOW. He waa born at Terre Haute, In- diana, November 5, 1855. His home and place of voting has been Terre Haute He was sentenced to prison and began serving his term April 13, 1919; consequently did not vote im the last election eee Information About Naturalization Dear Miss Grey: Is there a law which can prevent me from becom- ing at naturalized citizen of tne United States after having claimed exemption from the draft during the war on grounds of being a friendly alien? 8. T. The naturalization bureau states that the matter rests entirely with the judge before whom you will ap- pear for your final papers. cee Number of Boats on Ohio River Dear Miss Grey: About how many steamboats are there on the Ohio river? 8. D. The Steamboat Inspection Service says there are approximately 193 at the present time. The number varies, eee Date of Capture Of Confederate General Dear Miss Grey: Where was General Morgan captured? L. J. The Confederate general, John H. Morgan, was captured at a place) three miles south of New Lisbon, Ohio, while on a cavalry raiding ex- pedition. He wps confined in a peni- tentiary from which he escaped, No- wember, 186%. In September, 1564, he was surprised in the night at) Greenville, Tenn., and was killed. eee How to Take Steps to Bar Publication in Mail Dear Miss Grey: Where is t Proper place to start an investig: tion to bar a publication from the U, 8. mails? AM. T. The postmaster general is charged with the execution of the law as to the mailability of postal matter. Ad- dreas your complaint to the Solicitor for the Postoffice Department, Washington, D. C. cee How to Determine if Fish Is Fresh Dear Mise Grey: How can I tell whether fish are fresh? HOUSEWIFE. In selecting fish, choose only those in which the eve is full and prom inent, the flesh thick and firm, the scales bright and the fins stiff. cee Lost Army Discharge Paper Dear Miss Grey: How can I grt a duplicate of my discharge trom the army? I have lost mine. EX-SOLDIER. The war department says it ia im- possible to give a copy of a diacharge | certificate, as no duplicates are re- tained, but a certificate in place of | @ discharge certificate may be ob- tained. Write to the Adjutant Gen- eral of the Army, War Department, who will send you the proper blank | to be filled out oe Confederate Soldier's Widow Doesn't Receive Government Pension Dear Miss Gi of a confede sion from the y: Can the widow government? wIinow. No, but she may obtain a pension from the state from which her hus-| band served in the confederate army. | For Good Apple Pie go to Baldt —Adverusement, when I wedded. 1) te soldier get a pen-| jhe had tor 1921. The Wreckers Piéids Lynde” (Copyright, 1920, by mer's Gone (Continued From Yesterday) At this the boss went a step farther, eaying: “He does, indeed, Upton, TI happen to know the young woman.” That was when Mr, Van Britt fired his own little bomb-shell, do 1." he answered quietly. “But you sald you had forgotten | her name" | “So I have—her married name: |And what's more, on forgetting it.” mean to keep | the | ‘There was no mistake about boss’ frown this time. hat won't do, Upton,” he said kind of warningly “It will do well enough for the Present. I'd marry her tomorrow Graham, if she were free, and there | were no obstacles, Unhappily, there are two—besides the small legal diffi culty; she doesn't care for my mon: | jey—having a little of her own; and she happens to be in love with the other fellow.” I guces the boss was remember ing what Mrs. Sheila had told him in that confidence before the back parlor fire, about its being all off} [between her and Collingwood, for he said: “I think you are mistaken to that last.” vo, I'm not mistaken, But that's neither here nor there, Net ther you nor I can send Colling-| wood to the penitentiary—that's a cinch. Wherefore, I'm advising you | to quit, walk out, jump the job." | At that the boex took a fresh brace, righting his swing chair with | & snap. “You know very little about me Upton, if you think I'm going to throw up my hands now, when the real pinch has come, A while back | T might have done it, but now I'll fight until I'm permanently killed I have a scheme—if it could only be worked. But it can't be worked fon a rising market. I* suppose you {have seen the morning's quotations By some trick or other Dunton [people are boosting the stock again It went up three points yesterday.” Mr. Van Britt grinned. “They're discounting the effect of this little political deal—which will at least rope your reform scheme down, if| it doesn't do anything else. What you need t# a good, old fashioned cataclysm of some sort; something {that would fairly knock the tar out of P. & L. securities an send them skittering down the toboggan slide iN apite of anything Breekenridge could do to stop them down to where they could be safely and profitably picked up by the dear public Unfortunately, those things don’t happen outside of the story, books. If they did, if the earthquake should happen along our way just now, I don’t know but I'd be disloyal enongh to get out and help it shake things, up a bit." | After Mr. Van Britt had gone. }the boss put in the remainder of [the day like a werkingman, skip [ping the noon luncheon as he some |times did when the work drive was extra heavy. Meanwhile, as you'd suppose, rumor was plentifully busy, on the railroad, and also in town, | By noon it was well understood that there had been a radical change in the management of C. 8. & W and that there was going to be a general strike in answer to the slashing cut in wages. I slipped up-town to get a bite while Fred May was spelling me at the dicta tion desk, and I heard some of the talk. It was pretty straight, most of it—which shows how useless it ls to try te keep any business s¢ creta, nowadays. For example: The three men at my table in the Bullard grill.room they didn’t know me or who 1| was—knew that a council of war had been called in the railroad headquarters, and that Ripley had been pulled in by wire from Lester: | burg, and that we were rushing| around hurriedly to provide storage | room for the wheat shippers in case of a tie-up, and that we were ar ranging to distribute railroad com pany coal in case the tieup should bring on a fuel famine—knew ail | these things and talked about them.) They were factt, as far as they went—these things. The bows hadn't been idle during the forenoon, and} he kept up the drive straight thru} |t@ quitting time. Word was brought | im during the afternoon by Tarbell |that the Hatch people were wiring | jthe Kansas City and Omaha em-| ployment agencies and placing hur-| ry orders for strikebreakers. The boss’ answer to this was a peremp. | tory wire to our passenger ag at both points to make no rate con-| cessions whatever, of any kind, for| the transportation of laborers der contract. It was a shrew: knock. Labor of that kind is| nt tle mighty hard to move unless it can get free transportation or a low of fare, and I could see that Mr. Norcross was hoping to keep the strikebreakers away When six o'clock came, the boss asked May to stay and keep the} ¢ open while I could go down. | stairs and get my dinner in the sta tion restaurant, and he went off up- town—to the club, I suppose. After I'd had my bite, I let May go Everything was moving along all right, so far as anybody could, see. We had five extra foe! trains load jing at the company’s chutes at Coalville, and the dispatcher was instructed to work them out on the line during the night, distributing them to the towns that had report ed shortages: ey were not to be er to the regular coal |turned o' ards; they held were to be side-tracked for emergencies. $ back about gave him my were going on later Mr. Cantrell oreross came et ock and I report of how thing A little |dropped in, and there the situation, y to develop. was was a quiet and what The Moun taineer editor given all the | the big one about h death grip on us, and in turn Mr. Cantrell promised the help of his paper to the last ditch—tho, had no idea of how ditch was going to} a lot of filing and index- | and I kept at work while} they were talking, wondering all the time if the yuld venture )» tell the editor about the depth of | “last He didn't I wees he thought he wouldn't until talk about lit was like except one urse, he lacep that last be. I had bows w |that diteh.” (Continued Tomorrow) [STAR WANT. ADS , BRING... RESULTS lips fics sna Gity Slt co lees sss sia he od ob al sag tas coisa eae tea TTL BTAR DOINGS OF THE DUFFS “TOM, WHILE You’RE AT Your Desk 1 WISH You WOULD WRITE ME A CHECK FoR 50% - THERE ARE SOme THINGS | NEED By ALLMAN ——— America Is First, Helen TOM, WHAT Are . Ov DOING P WELL HAVE ‘TO CALL THIS OFF FOR A WHILE: } WHAT ARE You “TALKING ABouT TOM, YOU ARE A PERFECT HUSBAND! | THANK You so much! HEN! war's THIS? LET ME WAVE THAT CHECK AMwuTe! INCOME “TAK RETURN THAT 4 | DISCOVERED Some - FORGOT ALL ABI WELL “746, Do You WAAT To Go ovT ITO “UE OCEANF DONT SCREAM So TAS WATS THES {es le es We ona 0-OOOUS TAKE MEW ( out pop_Ms ‘roo SEE+ISNT “MIS Alice Now? OW MOMs DOP GOING 10 “TAKE” MC fe me OTTO AUTO Rev! HEY! « GET THAT PIPE AWAY FROM THAT Gas! CALM YSELF+ TT-DUST WENT ONE OF THESE DAYS « JUST Look WHAT WAPPENED JAKE VOOTZ NESTERDAY! “To SEE Wow MUCH GAS WAS WW “THE “TANK, =~ | THATD BE ABOUT | | “THE LAST THING | JAKE WOULD EVER of) BETTY AND HER BEAU Pion Pool | Page 284 NOT TO BE BEATEN “Vivtan and es ee a an Indian come very near tuncheon, and Vivian was being | getting drowned. very polite about the mimon, be} “The Indian threw his spear KS]| ADVENTURES 2S OF afte Tt TWINS “THE cause she was a guest. When at and stuck it into a big lvely sal | home she always said she didn't | Uke salmon af all, and couldn't mon, I guess he w pecially lively and big, too, because when I'M THE KID THAT BRINGS YER PAPER AN’ BvS COoMG T’ COLLEK eat It. he got to the end of the rope he FISH AND THE “Vivian said: ‘Peggy, do you just kept on Jumping and he gave know how the Indians used to|one jerk so hard that he jerked catch fish? "What is spearing ‘em? Peggy | They speared them.’| the Indian off che platform into the water, wanted to know. “Why, they built “Rut the Indian was game, platforms out tn the river by | papa mld: he put one arm around sticking poles up between the/| the pole as he fell in, and with the other he held onto the struggling fish. “The fish flopped and jumped, swam deep in the water and leaped rocks and laying boards across them. “ "Then they would be right out And they long spears with sharp over the water, see? into the alr. like wine The Indian held on points of stone or tron tled on with | ein dpath and yelled Sey help, His partner came running THIS TIME, MY Cav, tM PAX tN Nou RIGHT UP HERE ON THE FP BUT AFTER THIS, IF WE HAVE TO FoR OUR PAPER OUT IN THE IN THE SNOW AS USUAL, THEN straps of buckskin. | up and took the rope. Then the “"Then they tied a long rope to Indian climbed out of the water the spear so that the fish could A huge eagle appeared, and grabbing a twin in each great land tege ey landed the fist Pr i tire himself out a little before the | "4 tomether they landed the fish. T) 14, flew toward the land, screaming wickedly. “‘Papa says the Indians still Indians began to pull him in | catch ealinoe, atid that they au BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | The pelican was getting quite hun THROW THE MONGY OUT THERE Once when papa wan watching | ; (Copyright, 1921, A) gry, and as, of course, he was not AND You CAN HAVG AS MUCH FUN some Indians fishing that way | Pend largely on it for their winter The Fairy Queen was right when | #/lowed to swallow Nancy and Nick, As WE tave ! NoW RUN A Gown at the Columbia river, he" ment.” she told the twins that the Bobadil | jj ‘ae, p ase ‘fish dein be than AND Gop GBLSSs You! ns HOP TW yy JI would be after them harder than human nature, or I mean pelican na __ | ever. ture, could endure; he forgot himself When the pelican, who was carry. | completely ing them tn his bill-pouch toward the Kefore the twins had the least idea | shore from way out in the ocean, | of what had happened, they found came quite close to land, he com. | themselves falling straight towards the waves letely forgot the Queen's warning he had told him to carry the chil-! But before they touched the water, dren safely, and to keep his bill a wonderful thing occurred, ‘The fish closed tight. Whether it was because disappeared, and a huge eagle ap his journey was so nearly over, or peared at the same instant in the air because the wicked Jinn began to get beside t m. He grabbe a twin in in his work a in, I'm not sure, but each great clay and flew towards a fish appeared on top of the water, the land, flapping his great wings, directly below where the pelican was and screaming wickedly, told to do, the ed ‘ontinued flying | Ul the clouds we flying, and there was trouble at But instead of dropping them tn a/ toward the top of a high mountain, | twins could no longer see the once Hafe place ax the pelican had been|Up he flew, onward and upward, un- | beneath. THE BOOK OF MARTHA CONFESSIONS OF A BRIDE... “I'll get my lawyers to attend to) stairs. I surmise what she was up| talk to the effect of her selfishness % se in the morning!” Daddy |to and so I wasn’t at all surprised] “Lock her up! Yest Lock her up!|her husband's condition, became serious at Just.) when she did not appearyat the din-| Tell her we'll ball her out tomorrow, | Her folly made me furious. f “Retter get down to my office at 11) ner table. But nobody else guessed, | maybe . that Ann never could write @ sharp, young lady!" fer Ann ts seldom prompt at dinner,| Daddy was still laughing when’ he | because she never could feel Now isn’t it just Ifke you mon to| Neither etiquet nor consideration for | rejoined us. nor greatly, ignore a woman's rights! I protest-| others ever made her on time to a “Ann has found a fall, aN right!*| In the morning, Martha Palmer ed. “Martha Palmer undertook | meal, Therefore nobody commented | he said. Onee more Ann scored with | ranged . matters in a way to Th e - G Ann’s case, and now you're proceed: | on her absence—not even Jim, When | the men Daddy Lorimer's approval. ‘The ing as if she hadn't! Why, Martha| the butler handed him a note, he| 1 was simply furfous with her, not | sode retained its importance, to en It Is enuine would have had Ann bailed out and | turned it over to his father, who read| because of the scandal, but on only because it started my dei A “ ‘7 the case all settled up with that de-|it aloud, very solemnly, count of her husband’s health, Jim’s | brother-in-law in a rapid declingss Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, | patiment store, only Ann insisted on| “I've ‘surrendered myself to the|nerves were ina bad way. knew! Ann herself became more 0 C etti Z j iri cri staying in jail all night! Ann was| law," Ann's letter began, “I've gone | he wouldn't sleep a wink that night and headstrong than ever, More you ae not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by | so obstin to find a jail since my own has{|I almost hoped that mice and rats |once I wanted to warn her that § physicians for 21 years and proved safe by millions. | Ybetinate! finished the bebe| burned down! I couldn't cheat the| would frighten his selfish little in-| would soon 2 widow, gleefully. | courts! sides, when will I ever|genue wife half to death eaters se Continued) Accept only an “unbroken package” of “Bayer Tablets of Sure—Marte can do it! I'll tatk| have a chance like this to get ideas | morning POL RPI PIE T ee I} Rap te ns to her. now—and tell her what | for my big play?” Not every one would have blamed | NS | Aspirin,” which contains proper directions for Colds, rym sor |want! ‘Thus Daddy permitted us| The note was signed “Pearl| Ann, Many girls would have envied PRUISES-<PR Pain, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neur -umbago. | women to manage in our own way!| Blanchard.” Jher, for she was the embodiment of | 4 8 He went over to the phone and Moth.| Once more Ann's __trickiness| modern ideas about individualism. | cold clothe—thea @npiy= Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few conte—Larger packages, er Lorimer switched the conversa-| amused Daddy and Bob. Their mer-| She shaped her career to suit herself, Aapirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacoticactdoster of Salleyiicacid | tion to talk about growing hyacinths | riment was interrupted by a phone|at any cost to anybody! She was so | 1 for Daddy. He from an|set in her purpose to express ras djoining room, so in glass bowls, Presently I saw Ann spoke loudly - ie, PO Million Jara Used slip away that we/in art, to write the great American fe