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4 Set oie } | PAGE 6 THI TTLE STAR I EPT 19 waren mmmaana Vous = - ——__—___—_—_—— 5, | -— . — ——- a { , r , r - OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS]! Og Fash; 1 Bs é 1 . Z] 1¢ 04) 2 The Seattle Star patios Pe RAMEE? KES La nite ARS —— — SY ( ASNLONEC yrever Poona mer —=! 2 By Mrs, Walter Ferguson a ~ f Serpetee dk 1207-09 Seventh Ave, Seattle, Wash Pudiiehing On, Fy ty GT ae / : F ; , Mire fae esd Unites | _ Ouman, Micoll @ Ruthman, Special” Mepreestatives gan vranstene | veces eases WHOOH! OOH! twant \ [Boer cooKs fists 7 oe Prose Gervien | $f ue ae i here pir | some Booy | FREE LIFE, AN’ LAD His LT | . ost tate i en sere © meine | “HROWED A 1 WANT FRESH PIPE on TH’ | : z cond clase matter at Seatthe, Wn, under act of Maren 8, 187%. | CIGARETE BUTT || AIR, AN LSIGH)| Limgercer? | Heink beloved song | INTO A RUBBER! | FER A HEATAY |) Cyeece ans - : He'll Be Lucky weakly up to the altar, borne down by a Boory ER \ WHIFF © wy ’ | TH’ winds A WHY FELLOWS, \ ute are go “ XPLAINING the “marriz vacation” sense of the responsibility he is assuming. DROPPED A STOCKYARDS! BLOM Tis, THESE ARE THE \ 4 . . ae ews Fe sh * h es Winif But the bride! Gaily she recites the words MATCH ON A ee f 4 ire Hea Ai HE Tih , ‘ at r iden, age Lg The Va and when she comes to “obey” she slips POOCOLE Dou. | 7 Wi ‘| VER { BEeT ] ay : ad rm but te a er i Mr. Vi: Me lam whee her tongue in her cheek and ripples that (Oem 58 sD os. 7 || MPoRTED / " ay a ! tly catinfactory to'me but ase lord of | off along with the others. She doesn't fs) We ) Y n served. > ay: fectly eae pa " a thin hdly | take it any more seriously than half the : F ; os the eae ate a age be br vt ary Bee cal population takes the 18th amendment! d vn A ver = . bes mn a aa “ the If, as so many brides assume, the word ing f : ren Rbe ds pe th eS Sin the hen- | doesn’t mean anything, it ought to come y ~ same as to lore St ee ae Mr V — out of the marriage service, If it does a cid tow, idee Se ve al yard, b& furt 7 ¥ rd oh B at “7 } mean anything, the scholars of the church had th fling ra 7 ; : i rer: , r i after th ave nibbl . . z : a ees he carole fia inde er should amend the service to include a defi- after they have nibbled at th patinan 0 meek ‘a ould be pe 2 en- r t adve marth fi , will le pat truth ‘ h teel in finding worms, crumbs, corn and nition cf oy i nha ta he such and calling Mrs, Brahma to hurry | Only 80 bottles of Nquor found on the flagship always known, tha | and take a look at them before he grabbed them up himself. His husbandly warning rang out promptly every time a crow flew overhead. He would mount the top rail of the fence and proclaim his pride of | family 40 times a day. Yet, when he stuck | his beak into wife’s art of laying eggs or in brooding chicks, or so lorded it on the roost that Mrs. Brahma couldn't get a toehold for 15 minutes running, he be- came good cause for any respectable hen loyal to her own artistic temperament to demand a “marriage vacation,” or thing equally as good. Indeed, foolish is the man who would lord the roost in these times when woman has set out to lady the roost, both ways, going and coming; and, if Valentino gets out of it with a mere vacation, his case will be an anomaly, pretty considerably. “and Obey!” ‘ee question of whether or not the bride should mise to obey the groom, as prescri’ in the marriage ritual of the Episcopal church, is up for re-agi- tation. Just when it was generally be- lieved that the word was on its way out, prominent persons in the church are ris- ing to insist that it shall remain. To help along the discussion, here's a thought: Suppose these church leaders who be- lieve that brides should continue to prom- ise obedience, supply a definition of the word “obey.” Everybody has heard at least one bride remark laughingly, when the question was raised, “Oh, that doesn’t Mean anything!” But the word must Mean something. The bride becomes a mother and she makes it mean something in the case of her children. If it means something else in her relationship to her husband, she should be frank about it at the outset and not fool the poor goof into believing that if ever he should under- | take to give her an order she would obey it. There is a certain amount of deceit and unfairness about this business. Many a chap would never get married if there wasn’t held out the prospect of bossing somebody else. Every man wants to be a boss and most of them never rise to any position of authority outside their families. If their wives, who appreciate their wisdom and know there is sound reasoning behind every command, won't obey them, what is to be expected of the children? Husbands are not being obeyed; there is no question about that. You've only to observe the number of heads that are bobbed, after the lord and master’s foot has been put down firmly against it, to appreciate the truth of this. It’s all wrong. The groom ee some- wobbles in A contagious disease. It wants you to know that in get mahogany | any question of fact or in- | A. There are 10-——Ruth Finney, losis by breathing in or swal A. Mezico grows white mahog | formation by writing Tho Seat- | | Ruth Kieinsberger, Winifred Malion, lowing the germs which cause any. The tree attains a height of | te Star Question Editor, 1322 | | Cora Rigby, Catherine J. Hackett,| that dinease. It is practically from 50 to 75 feet and a diameter! |. york ave, Washington, | | Flora: G. Orr, Mrs. George F. Rich. never inherited. Children of of four feet. Dark mahogany, | D. C, and inclosing 2 cents in| ards, Dorothy Shumate, Mary Har-| consumptive parents sometimes which is used most gencrally for | loose stamps for reply. No| |ris, May F. Jefferson. | become tuberculous because fine cabinet work, is grown in Cen- | medical, legal or marital ad- | tral America, Cuba, Jamaica and! | vice, Personal replies, confi- | | other islands of the West Indice. | | dential. All letters must 2 | s * ON ea | see Mr. Fixit of The St Q Does it ever get too cold to|&- r. 1X0 0 e ar snow? lof the former city t# the modern Answers to Your Questions ? | of the San Francisco Yacht club? seasickness! Why, it was for Boy’s Room NE might write a book on “Why Boys Leave Home,” with the first chapter devoted to “Boy’s Bedroom,” and promote the making of manly men. What do you think of this, from a great daily news- paper, but probably written by a spinster aged approximately 49 years or more: “T’'ve just seen the cleverest boy's bed room. Side draperies, bedspread and table cover heavy unbleached Turkish toweling which had motifs done in brown and tan French knots to adorn them. Narrow bor- der for the curtains and tablecloth and larger ones for the bed. The glass cur- tains ecru net and the walls a deep creamy tan with a sort of allover design in the paper that combined tan, blue and rose in the formation.” | The writer probably overlooked the lace pillowslips, with Louis XIV. “motifs,” the yawning bathtub with pink designs, the Oriental rug, the perfumed soap and the half-dozen toothbrushes, but they must all have been in the tout ensemble of that boy's glorified bedroom. They all go with the makings of a sissy boy, which will be the fate of that boy, unless the Lord inter- | feres or the boy perishes thru too much | | nagging. } Really, there is no more important room | in a home than boy’s bedroom. It should be his room, in an almost unlimited sense of the word. His character may, in large degree, be shaped in it, Daughter has her room. Mother’s room is sacred. But boy should have his own place in which to work on his ideals, think his thoughts and talk with his God, as he pleases, Put before boy, in his room, fancy “motifs,” designs and the blues and roses, and you are apt to get a boy with a superficial view of life values, just as that fellow of the old Bible story got calves of a certain color by keeping certain reeds and rushes before the eyes of their mothers. Usually, habits of orderliness and clean- | liness must be impressed upon boy and, usually, boy will appreciate comforts, but, when you go much further than this, you risk killing or crippling the boy that is in boy, in a place and in a time that should be his; you risk turning him from the substantial you risk suppression of growth of solids in him that he will need when unadorned temptations and such | “motifs” as worldly greed and selfishness contront him on every hand. Better paper boy’s room with designs of dogs, deer, hammer, saw and ship, rather than with foreign “motifs” in blue and rose, and | 100 per cent American crash will wipe him | just as dry as an unbleached Turkish | “motif.” | 2 2 A. The saying, “Its too cold to|town of Hillah, 60 miles south of snow,” has a scientific foundation in| Bagdad. the fact that cold air can contain} ped bd but little moisture, according Actence Service. Sometimes, ever, it anows hard when the lower to air is extremely cold. This ia when|dent of the United States seven house daily while the membera the air above is much warmer and| years, five months and 18 days. of the family are away at | is rising over the cold air near| Cardi ed work? R. B, | the ground, as over an obstruc-| Q Who wrote the “Song of the No doubt proper provisions | thon. | Three Friends,” and what period of | | American : cat. If you have reason to be- fent city of Babylon| deal? Neve they are allowed to suffer, oe ieee Maihabited? F | A. “The Bong of the Three pails 3 fished nee A. Babylon, the ancient capital of | Friends,” “The Song of Hugh Glass”) sane goctoty, Garfield 2100 | the Babylonia-Chaldean empire, s|ond “The Song of the Indian ye no fonger inhabited. Near the site| Wars,” by John G, Nethardt, are rs Fic? At tha Babb of some of the buildings on Seventh : ratives dealing with the fur trade| (10° there ta all kinds of rub- A THOUGHT Jera of the trana-Missourt regton of| isn. 17 they ever get a fire ——$—<—$<—____——___J | fhe United States. While cach poem! in there it will consume the For wo brought nothing into | 27/4 with a complete episode in 1 block. Can anything be doner | ROTA dint {E Ig, cotain we self, together they form an epic| LB. ean carry nothing out—I, Tim. |"/7attve covering this pertod, The fire marshal has promised 67-8, to give this attention. : err Q. How many women newspaper chopra) correspondents are there in Wash- representing out-of. HAT is true plenty, not to |ington, D. C, have, but not to want riches —St. Chrysostom. CP Ea Mr. Fiat: Am fond of horaa- ice mother to father, ‘Your sult is a fright. It looks like you slept back riding, dut-J can not afe in a rainstorm last night.” Then father replies, “Get the iron ford to pay the regular price from the shelf, I'll save me some coin, ‘cause I'll preas It myself.” charged at the riding ®tablee ‘The Sron sizzles hot, while the troning board's net, and dad starts to I could pay no more than 75 Press with a cloth that {# wot. He's having his troubles and frets,«| oents an hour for a gentle, goodness knows, He wishes the tailor was fixin' hia clothes go@@ traveling horse, Can you ‘The trousers are spread where th® crease used to be, and the fron find one for mer nu dyst enlarges the bag A@ the knee, Poor dad tw convinced that he'a Mr. Fixit does not own even Wine to his stuff, but he preanes right over the dust in the cuff. n hobby horse, but if any one And then comes the portion that gets father's gont afienty in pressin’ the coat. The shoulders are waggin', the back's requires, he will be glad to pass ut of lindd) When pop's half wi thru, he exclaims, “Not for mine,” the news along. And then does the missus rush in to hin ald, She grabs up the iron “@- and proceeds, unafral’, How easy he'# stumped, tho how hard a man Mr, Flatt A man han built mrives, Bay, what would men do if it weren't for their wives? a new house next door to me, ACopyright, 1926, for The Seattle Star) 7 ads alee rod Q. How long was how-|\ dent of the United States? | A. Theodore Roosevelt was prest- | history | poema which form a series of nar- town newspapers and entitled to ait in the reporters’ toosevelt presi Mr. Fixit: What could be | done with a family that leaves | the cat and dog locked in the | are made for the dog and the does the poem | Mr. Flatt: When the city twater department installed the gnllerios of the| /4rg¢ water mains on Twentieth | av@., this spring, the steam shovel in digging up the street tore up the curbing and left the metal frame aticking out over the street. Can you get them to refinish it? Mra. W. The street department will wive this attention and see that the necessa repairs are made, There's trouble has such a horse as B, Hf, and between the houses he haa Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles, if They Are of Public Interest TURKISH ATROCITIES. Tuberculosis Often Can Be Cured BY DR HUGH 8, CUMMING | Surgeon General, United States Public Health servieo ESPITE tho educati onal campaigns that have been ied on during the past fow years to spread know! edge concern ing the nature car widely house with one, and preven the consum ear tag tabereu er of formed of th so strong As a result, ferers from this thru again ming and prove to be o to no th Jincane chances Neglect their ot useful citizens ly & menace 9 A substantial por 0 omtriken eon the a time when people are most free from While tuberculosis is most in young adult life, it may éccur at any age. Tuber culosin may attack any part of the body and one form of it | may occur in many organs of the body at the name time and in such cases the patient may dio of general tuberculosis. How ever, the form in which the disease moat commonly occurs is tuberculosis of the lungs this article the United States Public Health service wishes to leave with you « very brief measage. It wants you to know that tuberculosis raised the grade, and in .the back, also. During thia last rain, his property drained down | on my property almost to tho | basement door. Does the law compel him to put a drain tin | on his side at his expense? MRE. J. H.C. If your neighbor has changed the natural grade of the lots | it Is | hin business to protect your property eee Mr. Flatt: Could you get them to install clectrio bella in the old atreet cara? It 4s often | difficult to get off a loaded car at the proper atreet. Mra. 8. It would be an expensive job | to install buzzera in the oldcars, | All new cars havo them. Make it a practice to start for the | exit of a londed car a block be fore reaching your street. oes ‘ Mr. Fixit: What should de fone to a neighbor who habitu- alley piles manure in the alley, making it disagrecabla for those Main 4049, | Wa ante partment Mr. Fiat: sin years old garnisheeing the A collection agency {a trying that, and 4a also adding fees and intoreat to the original bil Reader. If there was a note of other written evidence of tho debt It would be outlawed aftor Years. If Mt Jn your donire pily what yousthinie justly duo, regardless of the date Can a doctor pill be collected by wife's wages? alx to concn oee.) | © PugetSountl Power & Lighit ' 1312 Fourth Aye, the doctor and make such set- tlement with her, ; who go in and out? There ts | plenty of apace off the alley. | Report it to the health de- beat all fads ue to seek adva e4ucation, choosing and careers, and men knowing them | pats — 7 SCIENCE ll HOW BEES TALK eee E PE J Ke bees t d glass the thru the glass and under « large magnifying glass, a great many new facts | have been learned about bees In one instanos, a maze of cor- ridors was built up. A bee slowly found its way thru this labyrinth and discovered nearby flowers. The bee then returned to the colony and led the work ers to the flowers The commt bees in of how e with each other question Bi TUESDAY, If no you And of a f 1 instances has been a sp al object of study by Dr German SEPT, 1 rous He believes tha by ist this not 1 or v As many authorities ed to show, but by the fly. He says the bee or by that a agnet When about to And It make you a host of pollen, the friends. flight that tke you be you are | ting figure nd honest | it has discovered a source 4 of outdoor sports. | of food or honey, it commu And excel tn athlet | cates this to er bees by a Y 41 lead a | short flight that describes cir- 1 morning sun And the girls of today t of the pen jon of the wom- an ego. Tho pris 1 always long for and praise freedom and wings; those who roam fartherest come some Gay to realize best the sweet content of sheltered ways, The reaction from Mbertyecek ing mothers will be stay-at-home grand-daughters. ———— WHAT FOLKS SAY REV. JOHN K pastor, St. Louls three great {| fn modern c press and mon guided more or MILLER, who lead life are bound The girl who If to and doesn’t do any! strenuous than wield a lipstick, will never attain more beauty than a drug store can furnish.” The RANGE WITH THE CLOCK, the WHITE ENAMEL COOKING TOP, the sheet aluminum oven door-lining and all the other latest WESTING- HOUSE improvements. (The older JUNIOR CABI- NET is offered for $104.10 cash or $112 on install- ments; and the ALL-WHITE is slightly more than the purchase price given below.) Perfect time and heat control, compact oven and surface units—yet lots of room for cooking good things to eat. 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CREDIT’ ALLOWANCE of §7.50 on tho purchase of an Electric Water CREDIT ALLOW any other currentusing device in our g this Sale — your AUTOMATIC NCE of $7.50 on Company 2012 Vernon Place ROO is RRR a eo en eon eee k me