The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 13, 1909, Page 4

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THE STAR--SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1908 LOVE FOR DOLLIES ~*~ AS OLD AS HISTORY : THE SEATTLE STAR ~ A COMMON AMERICAN TRAGEDY. BY STAR PUBLISHING co. uy 19071908 Seventh Ave, UB c o EVIRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. wonton baeiouensthalivnmnae atceoee deanna Eoeera at CAN ANY DAME IN SEATTLE ; THE HARD BISCUIT VS, DOMESTIC TRANQUILLITY | BOAST A LINEAGE LIKE THIS? ‘The dolly, madame, that your little girl received from Santa Claus on Christmas day, belong to the oldest family tn the world Its direct ancestors dwelt in Bgypt, long before the birth of the Christ child, Indeed, one of its gront, great, great, greatest grand parents lived 4,000 yearn t e Ch a family tree much more oxte than any of the Vanderbilta, Astors, etc., could boast of. Not only that, but Ittle dolly has kin all over the world. In the hottest part of Africa, in the frozen wastes of the Kxkimo land, ip the far South Sea islands, there you will find cousins and aunts of your baby’s dolly “T have two daug both know how to coo! a at the head of a great business institution and whose home is 8 in California iters, not yet in their teens, and they] * boasts a proud father, a man who is] | “My wife and I are going to make it safe for our girls to} marry poor men. I hope to leave my children well provided for when I die, but that is always uncertain, If our girls can} e0ok they are practically independent of property inheritance They are certain Caen ee en ane ALL ABOUT DOLLS. doll, also swathed tn e—T've jus ured ow th Vents de’ dite tke to love” her| When a mother sits in the Htving | mumm arma room contentedly watching her Jit Other explorers, digging into the non ke ® » find husbands, and they will be cherished] , Hhe—How? \tle girl playing with a doll, mother-| ruins of Herenlaneum, found the: by their husbands, for the wife who knows how to cook rarely | pallt—Hhe broke them off trying to ling it can sm childish things to it,| figure of @ little girl, tightly fails to find domestic happines Kansas City y lhe is merely doing what mothers |ing her doll in her 4 ie have done as far back as authenic! Nor are the little girts the ont Everything else being equal,” this thinking father con-| at danage 0 A minerty father maketh an ox 5 travagant s0n.--Chicago News | history is able to trace. ones who love dolls. Big giriy) tam tinued, “we will prefer to have our daught marfy poor men For dolls are as universal as|have sat on gilded thrones ag ‘ y It has been our observation that the poor boy makes the best the paiitical ret a mothere and their little girls mighty queens, he ° made cotlee = ce ae ervatic a na the | The selentific men who ke to|tions of them. ‘The unfortunats ‘ 4 husband. He shows his strength and coura when he con Phey ain't ng such thi find grave reasons and assign big) Mary Stuart, Queen of Seots, J ms tracts the great responsibility of taking a wile. He looks upon| Pics “ere counts, ‘couse, memes to thisgn Gate thet Golis| brongnt 8 whole [nt of Freee aa Iter maryied ene’ o” theme had their origin in ecclesiaats | no good.” —Catholic Standard and | retigious matters, The ordinary |of Kr Times | common sense mamma or papa in| also co ected dolls. “Thove t# comparatively little real|content to believe that the Ittle| Queen Victoria, of England, who anid the food expert girl who hugs a doll {s simply show: | died only a few years ago, left over enqwored Colonel }ing = part of the spirit with which | 100 dolls as relics of her lonely well, "when f lived in a pront or, with her, and “Good Queen Bega? land, who had Mary killed, his wife as an actual life partner. He appreciates her effort to do her share. If she can't cook, she is a failure at the start That's sound sense, isn’t it? Fortunate Such parents! Fortunate boys to have in prospect such wive i was |nome day, after a happy marriage, childhood, and Carme Sylva, *. . * | ny she will hug her first-born live Queen of Roumania, has 1,300 dolls, od like whisky were representing every country im thee nothers anc hers, especiall the cities, eed Nee hs. dolly ’ How many mothers and fathers, especially of the cities, are Shing ne le OIE | - much concerned about their daughters’ education in the domes PEE pg sryone knows that to & obild the| And just as dolls are very, 9 without being good for any ti¢ arts? Some, but not many. The daughters of the rich are New York Press doll is often alive, if the child has) old, so are the plays in which € imagination enough. The Japs have | take the part of people. The Pu ef that dolls are dead unt!!| and Judy show you sometimes aap are owned by someone and|at oldfashioned country faire ed along from generation to| merely the modern child of the meration. As one little Jap girl | pet plays that w seen thou: inclined to elevate their eyebrows at pots and kettles. Poor girls pass from grammar school into the shop or office. Many of the latter follow, in later life, the natural domestic tendency Doctor,” growled the pationt, “it that $hoe tn a bie charge of mine t jdidn't take you over = half a minyte | “My dear sir.” replied the fe ll ai ie lar weed > im India and G: and learn how to cook, but too many h ype to marry a man who | mous epecialion, “in jearning _ to] enid Every doll comes to life if| of yee * ago in India resee i I |perform that operation in # half| you love it enough. and Rome. will be able to employ a cook or pay board for two Is it not a fact that the marriage contract, in spirit if not in oan eee puppets! Even death does not part| these and voy A ethos ne Te | — peecinaneii | |them. Bespectacied men prying into | dolis into one big bo letter, calls upon the bride to make a good home for the bread-| neved the secrets of the past, delving into|by some of the prettiest colored “It ie a short step from the quarrel over a tough steak to jealous suspicion, and a shorter step |...’ onal < - 4 plates ever. It is called “The Doll from jealousy to the divorce court.”—ee today's editor ’ lthe tombs of old Pryptian kings | plates r - - angry beeause|who reigned before Moses wans| Book,” and ts published by Outing’ FROM MARS eleven |” And how children have Joved the| Laura B. Starr has gathered aif eyes as yours.” —Huc Winner? But girls rush complacently into ma riage, with fu knowledge of the tact that they are unprepared to accept tl share of the responsibility, They pri lfound in the bullrashes, find little | Publishing company, New York jmummies of tiny brown Egyptian|city. So pretty are the pictures |bables. And beside them, within | that each child who sees them will | you asked ced at once to make test-| ing tubes of their husbands’ stomachs, while practicing the} guile fooling makes *leayy reach of the pitiful, cold, | want to send to China and to Russia teally difficult art of cooking. is i Ps asslek Goorta , ae baby fingers, they find a baby’s|and Spain for some new dollies. . | Me Visite the Earth as a Special Correspondent and Makes Wiraiens t " c 4s +B ioc “se What does the world say of a man who « facts to per-| Observations in Hie Notebook. ie |™=""ND THEY SAY THE ENGLI6H HAVE NO HUMOR! form a service and fails to make good his contract? He is rated puneannnaencemensie ' The 4 &% irresponsible. He forterts his contract. He is embarrassed] , ' ROUGH GRO before the business world. VEGETABLE GROWIN, SAW LARGE amera but It re e minds me of « sad currence thi at | beteli friend of mine whil: Who i that __Then, how about the woman who fails to comply with the mg con ads 7949 Sone) | mast Ararqing. im diay. te wee tn | tte oy with, a Spirit of her marriage contract? Of course, sentiment may p i ¥ JENA: OF ART -BRUTE'S | ed Voouvine nothing would | (ron: Te? . BEING, ous m but @ near view of the tect her. She will take the macadamized biscuits from the oven BIPECTION, CAUSED DERTN OF EARTH» 4 i? fo the very Tus io 904 sell and fall upon her husband's neck and weep, And he will say,| BRUTE, ALTER WHICH EARTH BEINGS vee spo during the first year, anyway: “Cheer up, honey; we really B&CANE FAST FRIENDS. didn’t want biscuits for breakfast anyway.” But will he think that? Will he not think: You are fallir ytutty % What! Been : eon man. ga are down on your contract. Your mother either failed to properly | |you eames Oe false |? imiaht eal har advise you or you were incapable of learning. I provide for you, | | <Bpcheeg” sald. the ‘eotomn man, | statesmen ra but you fail to provide for me. It is unfair the man And yor Fou ont remem: | Method. Can any wife afford to have such a thought in her hus-| Jotherieiag ot the globe tut set | nat, Sule ver I sina tor the com: band’s mind? Can any mother, loving her daughter, afford to PTs dass Sant ditines toto tow Pgh i po cp lmmarrt | have a son-in-law harbor such criticism? | or ort at the next Sase-tnee yee, ge ‘The way to prevent such disaster—for such it is almost cer =o (aad tain to be—is for mothers to educate their girls practically Harry—1 hear that They send their boys out to learn arts and trades that will be! "Phomas--1 don't care n-| tt you waar tet useful. They cram their daughters with knowledge of doubt ee ey pee 70 | Strnie a ful use. { Mate (ot ‘iets ak <oteiiiee the Ore Tee ietamtine ta the! Almost every girl, at some time in her life, has an oppor Pesaink Tceft $2 cat Wet one plum- | "Hot Scotch tunity to learn how to cook. To neglect that opportunity, or to nme La Mt mawet save] paw shirk it, is to pile up probable future regret | —_ — Madam to nn ptong : “ Ag It is a short step from the first quarrel over a tou th steak Forty an who Cyieel if the dog ” F moinher beget rx nd he ian't one of the rea to jealous suspicion, and a shorter step from jealousy to the di wrinkies than either.—J Ke a! AT A MA vorce court. se cca seg A BUNCH OF GIDDY YOUNG THINGS . . . “Marry a poor man,” the California father advises. He h as} &@ good argument. We would say, however: Marry the man|™ ” you love, rich or poor, but be prepared to make a comfortabk home for him and know your business he knows his, i et “INTIMATE CORRESPONDENC GARVIN’S CORNER | BY RATH BY THE REVEREND JOSEPH L. GARVIN Mamma: Whateher cryin’ fer? Jokn Down't like this kike. Mamma: Then don't eat it, silly. Jobn: I ‘ave eat it.—-The Sketch PUZZLE GUESSIN Puzzle Editor, The Star: PASTOR OF FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH March # muceseded ¥en | Roosevelt as prosident of the t States? Taft, you say. Wrong. leg, and Robt. Bacon succeeded Rovsevett dlecoy ‘erhaps you think this t* a joke. = more aken in your life. PokINE. Tam telling you the goupel truth between hoon and AN HONEST INVESTIGATION old the bey to Imes helps. The investigation ning. Hut he honest man does no harm, If t? et & bite to eat. you take pride in the welfare of Se attic, study the methods of the ¢ Ry Organization Learn the facts before you give. God be praised for the big-hearted people. Their #ym- thier are east moved It is no Yet sober rea " “Are these our seats, girls?” Tee-hee! 1 bid to sit next to Alyce. Crowd in, Alyce.” “Oh, who'll hold my program while I find my gum?” Address “Goodness! | haven't a program. Boy, a program. Thank you HOO wee kindly, Did you see the look he gave uw ‘Oh, Bernt find the musica numbers for me,” 1 just wish you'd look at that het-r! No, farther ove My answer to the fifth puzzle is .............006 with re during that quarter of the salmon-colored foulard silk waist. I bet she's been to a hair ia ‘ co asked: “If & man} A - dresser's nts \ , seeinin , Siemaieaiah 1-0 re stery i and constitutionally | Why, I know her. When puffs were in style she wore twice |, Th? fifth and last puxsle seems adults, although the for the. that much on her head.” jto have taken the faney of hun-|@re not so few ete Giggle, gigale. giggle dreds, for thiv morning there had ‘B® Contest closes ie Searching question We al) have been taken in o'clock. Monday the fifth roll been over 8,000 answers received. honor will be printed, and on Among the guessers are many day the names of those TT Taig dees & Gente, waldaeel ttata'te tena majority of the answers are from wards. PUZZLE EDITOR, ‘Oh, Agnes has the toothache. Does it hurt, dearie?’ ‘Oh, girls, what's Sh-b-h, Agnes. in every word you say is Unie. he name of thin play?” here's a fat man right behind who's taking Rot conflict with the adv Vestignte what a mans needs are. Don't be stingy, a den't be food tan. was not Howard Taft until 15 0 That was the t clocks of the national ob- and jikewise even by the A blonde young man shout 20) years old walked into atudy th other day. He wore glasses, w well dressed and taiked in «@ vob amiled for a snow ap- | Of Vie fluod tide, nd it was with the! jon | thet sounded like « violin string k. By some oversight no] THE MAN WHO WAS PRESIDENT 1 seo Harry! | see Harry! } Bithout any resin upon it. He was aken the precaution t ao FOR 15 MINUTES. “Where? Why, he's up in the balcony | to be “caught and squeesed” by clr handa of the official much to elicit the confidence of 1 double dare you to wave at him, Alyce, Look, he's looking.” | ’ « ° 5] cumstances. Many a decent man. or GOS those who are expecting fine things Dear me, and I'm wearing my second best waist. What'll be an has had this experience. His 1 automatic opera- | trom his administration. Those} think? was affecting mag. fandamont 1D yy Bey thisl who love T. K. most do not invar- He’a smiling. “Isn't he smiling, Berenice? ack, Sone Y. Lo lth ona i" ly appr ot bh pon mite Yes, he's smiling. I wonder why he isn't at work. Maybe he's F from Callta Robt. Bacor ten ban ea ‘a te »| been discharged Dines ik as President Bacon! rae in kicking out the Roosevett | ‘Oh, -how nice! Now we can meet him at the rink. Is that the Ae “od reason overture?” word is due Henry B. F / . ‘ bmn eet P Pvc On the Don't whisper, Bella; the curtain is up, Let's not remove our 0, coa 5, a S, oes " dry road along Sted in| Bate j : : “é ; " m the capito Yes, don't let's. Oh, no, let's do. Shall we d F h aeioh a font he is) Mm de eh mt Bo Sha war and Furnishings wtigate your the inauguration day, Vor RATH through the seat! w was clean and dry, in spite your pardon, mister; it wa den ure . a worst blizzard in 20 years.| LAROKNY ON THE HIGH SAS. tate Ginnie vi Wt was acotdental, assure you Mactarland arose a mn the morn-| A Irishman, ar eel aiggle gle. | I wrote « note ur blew on and ue te . A getting an Tie passage to Amebt “4 Oh, airis, DO shut up! | company that t Dow't make ergency force of snow shavelars aheteaptaln of a Mi (They do, but not right away.) | et et woe the seh-wagon men, he aeee . y Be. help Hin Diizzerd Ry 16 rok ” ee aD. the moratag the wan clean and By Hon, Wm. H. Atwell, Past Exalted Ruler, Dallas Lod "i i i nd pa ir m f and ¥ 4) ge of Elks. A re « oe r : ¢ : “ yo Mn OD OF NATIONS and families el ut e wn an a itt e at a me . ted. by ena Jallinger a few mn hott me to hold hi the woman Thou tly the hand of | wavest me to Prices Right—Quality Right Eastern Outfitting Co. sity the wenate wasl’ This angered the wife, Cloanse my heart of all se ste @ pmall quen Sorthepe bie Ere crets and sin, that T may be . get even worthy of her dear com, om | ae |man was c ship | ey Admiral Sperry, who did guch| bucket and brush, » huge wave Keep me maniy, frank time, wa hour for the world, said something to a) "ths ‘Irishman was an intelieted and ever mindful of ister and made f at home friend of mine about Mr. N and cunning owe ship of all our earthly ‘pos was a young man re who will presently abin rapped senatons Basser, had the Knglish walk « f the y. said Permit me toh talked in the upper register uccessful that J a 3 ax afl the time been connec ei," weld the captain, wa she may have comforts and con- (Incorporated) My Young may a4, He was making “ye an tn te haw taken hold of | IDE What wa what's the veniences; and grant that there friend Major has been in Seattic 1 vo4 deal,” said one the work with the grasp and abiitty| aaa ; is may be no difficulty in itfe's walk 232.. i y years. In 15 years 4 man. learn hie. trie poke up| that Newberry has, 1 except no sec~|witn came avowed this sae that our combined strength may 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. something about how to help peo aS Le spoke UP \retary of the navy. And I can say|made me git a ricommendntioniania not ove **Seattle’s pa ple and to discriminate the npibater jady dimn ‘cor | tide now that he le.going out. when | at seit eefosnannne He : attle’s Reliable Credit House way that Rev. Major| tind your ideal I could not have said it before.” “7 did,” sald the captain, ‘wiiit of | t wlory of our united liv and in bie, | I will,” said the young man con oe? it det 0 that’ Wuclines | may | never be blind to her beauty | ee ~ = hia | fidentiy, “and I'm going to wait un-| Now if President Taft will recall} See 7 a be an} and virty | hie ltl f find her before I marry. [the Honorable Bob Wynne, United | #4008 and Fe oot allie | Bring our existence into a com DOWNING, HOPKINS & RYER, Inc, = States consul to La ( plete nd © us the BROK BR in in! WANT—To soll your furniture. | gon wiitelnw Tera r= the |, Trigmpen. | ee eee ane" vatnanl iiis''s Stocks, Bonds, Grain He decided to investigate and | See page 6 #9°| ailninter to Great Britain, he will do] bucket « Library WM. H. ATWELL. prewonce. j om Pre Mbusouted Tar tas sol

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