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THE SEATTLE STAR, 1907-1309 Seventh Ave EVIRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Ratered at the Pow ml 2p a Ae second clase mation F OREGON FULTON O For the sake of public decency and that the Taft admin-}the same time most democratic (stration may not start out with a distinctively vile stench of its own, we hope that there is President Tait is going to appoint Fulton of Oregon to the} Although — French | by | birth, federal! bench. This man Fulton was repudiated by his own party and all Because of his record in politics and out of politics, a democrat sits in the United States senate, elected)!» nortty from a republican state by a republican legislature. fulton to the United States beach no foundation for the report that parties in Oregon. To elevate Charles W would be a positive insult to every patriot who believes in Roosevelt policies or Roosevelt honesty of administration, and cause every law breaking grabber, from one end of the country to the other, to snort with amusement and take a new hold of public belor There's only one reason for Fulton's being put on the fed-} eral bench, and it is a dirty one. He's a backer of Frank Hitch-| cock, who sent bulldozers to Oregon to defeat the people's will and make infamous liars and traitors of legislators during the! Voting for United States senator last January couraging to the common people and tough on the honorable judiciary of the nation should Taft pay any cabinet member's little political debts by elevation to the federal bench of men like Fulton, “Phe people of Fulton's own state killed and buried him, and not even President Taft can resurrect that corpse without cre- ating a stench that will stick to his clothes for all time. GE CUT-UP ENLISTS TO ROUND UP A MARAUDER zarre Taste in Horsefiesh H county Barns, By Gum! ED SCHAFFER. REWARD! eee Some Miscreant With Been Raiding the =F a g5 8 g i f : HY nt rl ra H li Chicory County has found a loose horse shoe and brought fieation. Say, wi judge Skoover's|' worth a horsefiesh, one that can't shoes before worth following up. j stranger with a white nag was seen was don passing through Poderstow: some thonght it might have been | safe BY T.8.A and | plug w od TO THIS BOAST een ey “My father's much @ go of feller. dat ma has t ter make both ends meet!” . take In sewin’ ! Lombard, Franco-American musi: | olan, composer, author and finan leler, whe won a fortune tm Wall jat nd then salled away, te carry Jing out the most unique and at NBW YORK, March 10.—-Loule Servants treated as m Favorite maxim: 1 sake, system of education for his eight children that in being practiond in the world today Lombard came to the United to care for money States penniless at the age of 14. | His wealth f# now eatin $15,000,000, He lives as a grand aeigneur on the top of a plateau’ n Italy * Lombard married an Amerioan woman, the daughter of ‘ihow. Alten, who built the Missourt Pa cific railroad hoy have etght children. The eldest son and two daughters have come to America to complete the education, started wnder their father's peculiar ays tem | Living in a princely litte do jmatn of thelr own, with scores of servants, horses, automobiles and | all the accompaniments of wealth, | the young Lombards are made to} understand. from the — beginning | | thetr responsibility to humanity | as a whole, They are brought up to expect nothing from him or| jfrom the world that they do not} joarn | eee eee ee eeeeeee Lombard belleves that the As his children show ability to} earn and preserve money, so, in that proportion, will he give oF jeave them money, This principle jbe bas ground into them from) infancy / | From the time they are able to talk he gives them money for servicers they render to their mother and to him, to the little ones pennies and increasing the amounts as they grow older and | heir services become more val} uable i To Weach them the value of money, | . he fines them when they are| naughty, a regular seale of fines | LOuIe LOMBARD. this he says ie a thoasand times closet? Never! All barbarous and more beneficial than any other certain to coarsen & child, to de of punishment, for tt hurts |stroy its fine sensitiveness, pride, it brings them to Lombard seoffs at the bigher edu svnse of their responatbility re of most women in so far as it effectually than many spankings. | pretends to make them man's equal His discipline, Lombard says, is tntetluctually, He bas dealt with nothing but the eye and @ firm | this subject in an emphatic man. word ner in one of bis early books, “The The birch, the ruler, the dark | Observations of « Bachelor,” | Oererere BY STUART B. STONE. { Young Kirkwood had achieved | just three lines in his blank verse! tragedy, “Analucta.” when be stail ed. Analucta—the proud, sternly enunciating Analucla, who was to/ atartio the crities and cause stald business men to stand in line for hope of obtaining 0 re i aheaA—had obstinately re~| Ve | Finding the thing hopeless, Pitty | Kirkwood shoved hia chair back and stepped to the win when « clear ano caught and held Bim with) rtieh Little song 1 do not know the price of wheat nor how many million pounds the | wun will weigh } 1 care not about the age of Ann: I onty dream of Lois in negtiges. “By George!” muttered young Kirkwood. “A girl with @ volce fit for my stubborn Lady Analucts singing a silly enough to be truly popular } He craned his neck far out the) window and almost it agninet the red-brown by ote lady—for the windows were very near together “Pardon”—stammered Mr woud. Pardon” —«tarmmered the girl As the young man drew back. red and finstered, he saw that the girh shook with laughter. Then inapira- tion struck him good and hard. if popular songa” you ever in WhRaS THAT TENDER STHAA Kirk- your life!” He pulled the table to the window and wrote rapidly on the first os of paper his hand found. € b | ner of the table Analucta at im anctent unapproachableness, and Kirkwood flipped her off upon the floor, He was penciling. in perfect rhythm, in dalicious sentiment, tn} the quainiest humor, the words of @ song-—a song destined posibly to be less popular than the “headed eae nae irs doggete! ditty. but a song far, Se nearly. erary jar better. It was about & S8UCY single persun who ever lived as & red-haired tady and the cheer and “permapent” in the room, got mat- the glee ane brought when she ried Three years te "was the peeped from her window tn negtiges. home of young As he wrote he looked out of the Of marrying when window from time to time, and he ea fe noticed on each occasion that the | 7 he remembered the} s watching him. She ap-| fq, , velama Be replaced, all the other horses In| sorrel hadn't been shod in two|Seured to sudy. min unconnciovaly, | {a'r jay influence country being worth something. years and had dished hoofs resem- @ catch the thief we're go | bling sleigh runners. bim for lunacy. Bibb On the strength of the vigilance he had a clew, for displayed by the boys, the Rangers the galloping of hoofs last are going to give an oyster supper Now, if he had heard the ‘and hope to raise funds for « pair |, ng of a horse, his clew might of nickel-plated handcuffs. it’s certainly high time something for if old Judge Skoover's taken, nobody's horse ts ‘ May Influence om Was that of & wid o the wife of a fine look and she was performing some actic with hands which he was unab to make out When he had written two stanzas and a chorus, Kirkwood stepped to the piano. ie hed the thing all ind and the melted tancounly, It w ngaging little air, and as sang the words in his * When the window, The girl] y called young Kirkwood it Wha your name Weil anid the girl, a Dit env barrassed * eee THE BLIND EMPEROR “I beg your par he explain ° mem oy Gant weer to report you for| Teere’e @ strange ol4 legend suxpected embeasiement or for not| which says that once there was a son your French | very kind, just, Roman mperor ot in I've written a who was so very unfortunate ae to pted the girl. “t/ lose his eyesight. Shut your eyes and i'm much|and imagine how hard it would be to always bave darkness around you Well, this story says that the om | peror felt very badly that he could | Bot see, for he foared that :his peo pped back to jot! ple might suffer because he could but the girl thrust | not watch over them any more, So out at him re.” she he hung a bell in his palace and om using you to @d-lhaq « law made that anyone who had @ wrong to be righted must pull in the trappings | the rope with his own hands and of a Greek wrestior in a painting of | thus ring the bell, When it rang a an ancient amphitheatre judge went down and heard the You never knew,” suggested the | complaint and righted the wrong gil, “thal you were @ pertpct, rein Now, a serpent made its home un carnated Grecian athlete?” on Gee, ba cas ane anenee ae | Well, no,” stammered Kirdwood, OCF The be ye and Hatened ow “You're ideal for that part yn. | its little serpents th: One nice }tinued the girl, “and I'm glad 1) day it led its bables ouTMde for the |moved I've been looking for | fresh air, and while the serpent wa ® to complete that pleture| gone a big toad came and deckdaa 17, | mon to make its home there. When tht It I know the A BC of must oc now the A BC OF muste serpent came back he could. not Ficiaed drive away the tend. So he cotiéd firet name to «o| te have two eyHab’ said the girl, dimpling, vantage Kirk into hy that song of mine.” sald Kirkw I'm more pleased that you've come bis tall about the bell rope and than T can say rang the bell of justiee. Down at {t wan but a fow months later, the judge, but saw nobody. Again jwith the royalties from “Annyce at\ the serp rang the bell in the ae vaste oteht tances ot | Reh apes same way, This time the Judge bbtainod for the pleture “A. Weentice looked about very carefully and of Athens,” that the creators of song |8&W the serpent and the toad @me and 1 became one. Mr, and went back to the blind emperor Mrs. Philip Kirkwood have an odd and told him about it scrap of paper framed and hung up ory ole said the Be ree Tine some: Te te. the Sitess | pores hat the toad is in. the Lady Anulucia, which dross thal wrong. Go and drive out the Rid young writer to a window one day |@nd let the serpent have his own in despair. home again.’ = me THE STAR--WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, i009. REARS HIS CHILDREN TO BE DEMOCRATIC, RESOURCEFUL REAR Re HOW LOMBARD REARS HIS CHILDREN, Pay for services; cash fines for The birch, the ruler and the dark closet barred Hear and speak five langanges from Infancy bers of the ty is the beat policy delinquenctes Children realize uncertainty of any Inheritance Will share in $16,000,000 estate Olris taught household duties: object of mating them good wives and mothers man who negt to make bis children useful gitizens commits ¢ tw the obliga Settee eeeeeeeeee | ee ee Hie girls are the principal ot t of making of | | ot them.”--How hold In every governesses nurves of different gon simultancounty re four or five yeurs old they have unconactously Invente all they know of the different lan guages in their little minds, and at 10 there is not one of them who ts t able to speak Hngll Italian aod German hear five langy Their knowledge acquired through | thelr association with their govern sand nurses of different nation alities has beer they have the in now study ing to become neor fn Cincinnati His father placed him in an elec trteal shop Hke the other workmen, and he ia shown no more regard than the others All Lombard's stand that they are not to be pam pered. His household is democratte and it te bis aim to bring children it explains why one of his little | be either @ queen or a nursery gov POPSESOSES OH COCO HSS ESESSS SS OSOSSS AN ART EXCHANGE | 3 QUTBURST OF EVERETT TRUE POSSESS OSES SSS HSCOED “home wite J man is afraid of the bachelor A friend's faults should be known | but not abborred,-Portueene Karlio--What tv a millinery open- | ng, pa | Lie bain of two we in wiich » man has to see what | Bt. Joseph Nown-Prens Freud requires delay and inter vais of gulll.—Taeitus od a man to show you how My boss shows me he won't let me eland Les There te no windom like frank-| J Messenger Boy--Does yer bows ob Jeet to yer pu * cigarets Naw, he telle me to Hoy An’ when te dat? y-When bis ereditors | 3 ate due. He wants ‘em to think he is out. —Chicage News A bird in « cage ts not half a bird. Boecher George, George! Our sloped with the chauf Arent — heavy who's going to drive fice this morning ?—Cleveland Lead Nature never did betray the heart that loved ber.—French. don before you are n Never amt p necneed 45 Did you hear those ers crowing this morn nar m earth they ember, dear, morning, early, and you crowed about It for a week? Yonkers Statesman uP robar sf wk MAVENT @OT ANY. THING 1 INE NOUSE SNARP ANOUEN 10 CUT IT, AnD ACHING MO0UT Tait SORT OF THING BON'T ofan TO bY ANY GOOD So TRY A 4ITTLE BSIIFT BIT CTUNG j Balt Lake City man. Then the widow of « well known became the tenant of the raom. sammer she went to California and yr any weddin bother their netghbors whistiing the wedding mat Mine Rose.-There goss Mr aid you break your eng: mont with jim? I discovered that he hadn't @ scent ant make happiness unhappiness. — w York Press. pe a spade jaren't room towards emperor's be going to dri but the emperor sald no. Tt will do me no harm, because I have been Just to it what it will do.” At that the serpent glided up to the bed and laid a pre which it carried in ite emperor's eyes. ped out and no one saw ft again Hut the legend says that no sooner lain on the emperor's | kept full of oil, but when not in use Jother man fn his kingdom Mayistrate—-You are charged with lottering, Ha anything to may n your own Prisoner—~i am a poet, your hon or, and Magistrate (interrupting) ~~ Oh well, 1 add anything to your sentence on that account. Heing « poet Is not # crime, and I'm will you time enough to 4 © down the mistortu he « in whieh to do bus- When [am behind the door home I am safe from the world” He has been. as can be prov: on by many & reporter, who tried to interview him th at night ‘he beet the reporter « the arin from the botier ted the reporter out to th world and « het y editor Mut the other day, according to Mr. Mitt" bution approach - The man fe here to put tn “ said the butter promptly wilburwright nted no tetephone, he said. telephone. He re company Wo aneume th hone, “Why didn " he demanded convicted ed beneath @ide't. “HI butler oaimty was wanted by the serve told ‘tm you didn't desi bot that we it Mr He twiddied hie thn the mal confronted with the certaint servants strike, he weakened. “Put it in, then.” he said, aod with « re turn of courage, growled at the but- ver bothered by it 7 bowed in meek~ Shoop pastured on bilisides are at night a year for the to heal up te found in all mill ponds » at least 50 years old. Sunflower seeds will attract rate where toasted cheese will fail i iting its food at night a rab aveln 10 miles. xo will become quiet a fiddle go boy of 10 or 12 yours in doting his playing on Saturdays. | ie worse off than | GR AT h 1908, 1 die so soon, and yet I die To win the crown of life; And mine—how soon the victory; How brief my hour of strife. A Sale of New Spring Skirts Spend $5.00 and Save From $5.00 to $10.00 There are some $8.50 Skirt but we’re taking it for granted you'll come while the $10.00, $12.50 and $15.00 ones still offer wide choice in models, materials and cloth, workman ship and styles will satisfy you splendid qualities for this low price ..$5.00 coloring. We know. that Unsurpassed Hosiery for Boys and Girls at 15c and 25c 5¢ A PAIR—Firm, Fine Ribbed Black Stockings, with long, elastic lees; a veritable Baillargeon auality for the price. AT 25¢ A PAIR toe; absolutely fast black over fifteen years, Satin Taffeta Ribbons For Millinery Uses Special at 25¢ a Yard White Crochet Bedspreads Satin-Finished Marseilles $ ather Pillows, good quality, a pi J.A. Baillargeon& Co Second and Spring St. eee eee cee in the collection, Hosiery of the Best Egvp tian Cotton, made with triple knees, heel and We assure you that nowhere in this country can you obtain better values. Any size, 51% to 10. AT 25¢ A PAIR—Our Famous Bicycle Hose for Boys; the kind that has “made good” for MEMORY OF LITTLE ===EARL COOK==== in memory of little Kart Cook, f years old, who died February 22. at 623 West Fifty-second st, Seattle When to my grave you come, deat parents, now a0 sad, Your faith and hope must stronger grow, Your trusting hdarte more «iad: For just beyond the grave I'll wait To gtect you at the Goiden Gate. From shortened pain to lasting joys Deat! welcome summons calis, Ken now, upon my listening ear Angelic music falta, Dear friends, whose lingering gaze I meet, As here in death I lie, Learn ‘The one important task of life, That, when you too are called to go, Death may not have a single throe. PUZZLE G Very good, sir testa, THINGS SELDOM HEARD oF, | 52 letters regarding the fifth puzzle. | peli the name of a Mont dogs get their full growth in] Two sent in “classified advertise-|in the political world of me your. ments” Puzzle Editor, The Star: Address . TTL aue tanter than a boy |My answer to the fifth puzzle is REFLBOTION ily anyt 8 nothing | f | way a girl bantat where she} thinks the bean poles in the family | Every man is conceited enough to gh to think he tai time a mai argain jt's b dauant he was smart Ry le the other feljo . Wompy can't think of a joo fo te POGN abot her husben can about how he probably ate his ohtidre wt ovostok Hiram, wax flowers won't you be mine? 1 it fools ike my heart ts exclaimed Mandy, ap T reckon I'll have to. your heart le coming but we have been courting of the sofa springs ‘The bow! of the lamp should be the wick should be turned low to keep the oil from coring out on Che burner, The burners should be cleansed occa- sionally by boiling them for half an hour in a strong solution of Gold Dust washing powder. Wipe on @ cloth and they will be asgood as new. To clean the chimneys, wash them in warm water to which has been added & teaspoonful of Gold Dust Cymer: wider and wipe dry on a soft towel; old newspaper. Lamp chim e ie if they are pul poliah with fie waver until cold ag That Well-Dressed Feeling Is If You Wear “Bradbury System Clothes” —they are the Best Men’s Clothes Made Yet, and we'll be glad of a chance to prove it to you, before you buy. We are showing the new Spring Models, in prices ranging from $18.00 to $42.50—you are welcome to open an account—pay a little down and a little at a time—for the clothes you select. Eastern Outfitting Co. (Incorporated) 1332-34 Second Av. you the “How” to die; nt VESSING There is certainly an energetic, postoffice. Others asked for tips. ‘ory one of you bunch of guessers In The Star's con-|! can only say this: The “ad” ip In this morning's mail were /J¥8%t 9D of the ordi; |first letters of the tilt “stoma but were slightly off. One) States. writes thai he pored over the ad . Now all get bu ’ wild animal ts its) vertising page until after midnight) ay. This te not ae hard as it seems. Send in your and then wrote his letter. saying|swers, as many as you @esite. bet a he was hard at it, and took it to the| PUZZLE EDITOR. 209 Union St. “Seattle's Reliable Credit House’