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THE SEATTLE STAR- BY STAR PUBLISHING co, aan 1307-1909 Seventh Ave wit Syd | EVRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, 1/8 THE STAR—FRIDAY; MAY UPPLE’ACROBATS HAVE CLEVER ALLIGATOR ACT STAR DUST Josh Wise, A_Werd from 92 333333323 333335239 Another Saturday Sale of we © at Seaitie W cond-clace matter é | omens ee = G0 THROUGH ALL THE BAU BOSS THE BABY RIAN MOTIONS TRUE hi! eG ale TO LIFE Vie —— co Every woman knows that the surest and quickest w {| BY.DONNIK WHEELER, “Many a wn er) 6 making her best woman friend her worst enemy is to tel at They don't look much Hke alliga- | | ay .M . A in the te to th But! ‘ ’ friend how to take care her baby. Y yemoth t taalae tame te , i every grandmother will tell you, are especially sensitive upon pitat ifelike a i . wud you Will not have to atretoh your : this subject | imagination very far to fancy ther | As s editorial attempts to give mothers some advice | the real thing i As thi ’ { g La , il of baby training nay sll be admitted| 1 don't know whether you would | | o upon the subject of ba aining, it may as well be admit all it alligator impersonating or not D that it is written by an uncertain hand, guided to the task only | but Whatever it te that the Haytons ' By by. the desperate couraye of deep-seated conviction. Women] she re billed ot Paningns this ween fii readers who disagree with th utterance 1y be able to for-| These er contortioniets have a day oH - ¢) bran new ac u ste n . give on the ground that there are exceptions to the rule of | Din | A 18 Bae ae } R, h the ma o have Oie Pan iy Jad ‘ bad mothers nd of course they are the exceptions), and) ta habit nde of Delightfully creepy te the entrance rd t onl inks 7 Ows. bel anyway the editor is a man who only thinks he knows, | or the huge alligators from among | wi the t te é . * - the tall reeds at the back, and one} strikes he tes t mar *. holds his brea ey creep and] 4 w oar ¥ 4 The average young mother, through her great and nat-|/ reer ray os th re a i but f M wral love for her baby, permits it to play the tyrant over her, | atl the world Itke those horny ant When @ man han t = ther * ” o wak H ; mals whose aking until recently were | } It is a babe full of health and spirit, and it proposes to boss|™ . we sv a Fhe pe rs |e up 4 nkers BH the household. It knows what it wants and jt cries and) tho fair sex } 1; When you: man t € ' The stunta these stage alligators! tt » womat M beats its arms and scratches its mother’s face and pulls her] 4, ary” doctdediy boneationak and | enfe bet that he has never been inar £ edly #ennational, @ | Fed, * hair until it gets what it wants. When it gets what it wants | whe ’ tair hunt | | it wants more, and there is mofe yelling, more bea ; aiins| = i ; ard thelr akina n weh Kt scratching and pulling. Babies know that day is the time to] (that ts, the poewe 1¥ — S yy " a lad In fleshings, and twie mos | “had P sleep and night the time to play abroad. Instinctively they clad Inf oem ty alah ta } By (A hp are aware of the fact that it is much nicer to be carried than| It woukin't be a safe thing for any! ‘. " ¥ he id ing snakes Will you walk Inte to walk, and to be jiggled beats standing still ie dice be afraid ‘e ene _— sald the apid : . ‘ re. ~ nung ts But th * and ah Young mothers take the cares entailed by baby's willful ook, for 4 ora, while not being THE SAYTONS, WHO APPEAR IN A CLEVER ALLIGATOR to y “ee | actly shakes, are #0 nearly aki lo more at way," 14 ness lightly for a time. In the foolish idea that they are doing te th y eat the ont ‘ pb er SKETCH AT PANTAGES. sald the fy tt ents eweat ly : set i fone . ee a ae s ,| "Bo get up ta date and realize the |"? their “duty” they consent to pick the ball up from the fk It wouldn't be fair not to note the == ane soca 2 Set up bo ¢ aby alll " » the dim pes around the stage eou | The ne are said to have come @ times a minute for baby to throw down again, And if he peo alligator. In the dim light, jones around tt se Of course it} | Tho Baytons said to hay MO) Jonah was the original hoodeo. “ with the alligatora turning and/tan't a real alligator, It is a dach-/to this country from Russia, where Mh little dear is going to cry like that he'll get the other half of twisting It does not seem queer to| eund, who proceeds to drag his ide| they appeared before hin majesty The real Autocrat of the Break-| 1 ak ry Tal t 7 P h oi " 2 oul ve a And! "4 cotmen craw! slowly out after ht ff the stage and is given! theoxar, They are a clever three in| fest Table le the cook | the banana which, of course, he shouldn't have at all. of the swamp and follow the large! quite a bit of applay la swamp, to aay nothing of the dog.| qne man wilh n nervous wife these slave mothers will walk for miles, until their feet drag | ccmm yi fi a 4 Anas Sauk 6 burgiar alata iM from weariness, just to please the little scamp, who would be) better off if he were allowed to kick about on the bed, Sut there comes a time when these cares weigh on the foolishly indulgent mother. She finds wrinkles in her face| that should not be there. Her shoulders are drooping and she} is losing the great feminine asset—beauty. Can she stop now?) Not without heroic measures. She has trained her baby to willfulness. She has pampered him in his every whim. She} has all but spoiled his character. He has bossed so long that} he finds it hard to mind. And, what is gained? i ” . The so-called scientific method of baby training seems to he the sensible method. An infant is taught to sleep at night./ Of course there is a nerve-racking, heart-tearing night when he doesn't want to go to bed and cries his little head half off when, the light is turned down and he is left to have it out with him-| self. But he does not have to learn this lesson twice, and) ~ when it is all over once there is an end of it. When the baby » learns that he can have some things and other things he cannot have, he will be just as content as when he has learned that he can have everything he cries for. A baby can be trained ; easily enough if common sense is applied. The mother who permits her judgment to be overcome by her complete love and devotion is doing herself an injustice and her baby a harm . . . Anyhow, a man thinks that this is true. ‘The racing season has opened inj While the ball team ta out of town, New York, but inasmuch as there) municipal excitement t# kept high ‘afe no bookmakers, the improve-| by the newest athletic aport—gotting ' ment of tho breed is hardiy notice-/a grand jury. able. samnnenalg , Counciiman Way's charge of whitewash is too strong; kalsomin- ing or tinting would be more dis- creet. While they are as patriotic as the © average, the avlating Wright broth- | ers aren't in the flying business en- | tirely for their health. Walter Wellman ts again going to fly to the North Pole; that is, you must take Walter's word for it. Our future prosperity is as good assured. That hoary old pessl- mist, Jim Hill, can’t find anything to comptain about. Kermit i also a mighty hunter. Yesterday he killed a man cating giraffe at 30 paces, If any sultan or shah has a bun- die of trouble he would Itke to ex- change, Mayor Miller is the man to correspond with. For the time being, at least, vice is to be a transient in our city. _ Plerpont Morgan is coming to the > Pacific coast. Can it be that one} So far the straw hat Is about hold- of them has overlooked anything? | ing its own. _ HIGHBROW NURSERY LORE BY WOLDOW BOSTONBEANS. WEVERMORE STEAL PoRW WITHOUT THE BEANS TOM, TOM, THE PIPER'S SON, The consequences of reprehensible conduct upon the part of ‘Thomas, scapegrace offspring of a bucolic musician who enjoyed a I6cal preatige as sololat upon the flageolet, should serve as a deter rent to all who are prone to misconduct. Thomas, in a moment of weakness, pilfered a specimen of porcine Qnadruped, and with quickened pace departed from the immediate Vicinity of his depredation, A development of this criminal escapade Was the apprehension of Thomas and the infliction of corporal pun- ishment. The booty, soon as disengaged from its captor’s clutches, seampered off through the thoroughfare emitting plaintive cries in & high key, that must have been heartrending t even the most ¢al lous. Jt may be added that the demonstrations of a young porker un- der such trying circumstances form a very interesting psvchological study, | 1 $3.50, $41) #\ WHY, Health Culture, Author “Common Disorders,” wee THE PERFIDIOUS FRYING PAN, Why are fried foods considered * eee ee eee Te omploy Omly expert workmen, F = 1 lindigestibie? Because the fat {n *|) FEDERAL PAINT & WALL un! Fun! Fun whieh the frying t# done, no mat-| * AUTHOR'S FOREWORD. #8: PAPER Co, F tour Minstrels tonight, shot | ter of how good quality that fat if In these articles | shall try © 1814 Firet Av, | Theatre, "Third Ave. between Pi may be, forms a thin coating over} fo give you plein and prac # | and Union each particle of food so fried ed rer Roth Ph te what to #® aE Now, neither the digestivo flulds|® and how to use’ food so as ta | The Raven prescription service of the mouth nor those of the stom le Get from it the greatest pos #A barge assortment of popular hits! mpane that the doctor's skill In pre Jach ean act upon fat; and #0 the |® sible amount of health, #ERi de and 200-—tomorrow-—Satur, (2c (© most efficiently supple. | fatencrusted food canadt be digest: | > Re wtoul of both * May. mented by the druggist’s skill in| ed, It ts cind In & sort of armori® “{ have no ‘fads’ or icono: : C. 4. ROSE leompounding. RAVEN DRUG CO, of grease which renders it quite) clastic ideas to present—just # 1918 Becond Ave. 1416 Becond Av. impervious to the action of any dt \* plain common sense, | shail # Oo” geative fluid which ts Ikely to got |* no doubt say some things & 1 @) 0 MARTIN & ©O. GLOVES, at it for several hours after eat.) * Xai ve you will net RUFODURIT. i ay bh reasonably expeciag | Ot Beets Av. Som Saver Motel. ing } ght or wrong? Here's * 2 é Fats are digested only by a cer.) * the test! Follow my sugges # ON YOUR Savina, tain agent known as “stoapain,”|* tons for a fortnight and see.” | Yor particulars eve which tneets the food in the in-|* —W. R. G. LATSON, || Pumet Sound Savings & Loan Co, ‘* * 112 Columbia St testing, By the time the steapsin | gota into contact with the fat en veloped food, it has fermented—and | that’s Indigestion. Why are salted and “corned” | meats to be avoided? Because, in| the first place, they are usually | taken from an inferior part of an) tnferior—often diseased—animal; secondly, because the chemicals used to prevent the meat from undergolng chemical change outside the body will act within the body to prevent the chemical change known as digestion. Such fooda simply clog up and embarrass the delicate machinery of digestion, Why is meat of all kinds often denied to all those suffering from rheumatism? Because the disor. der known as rheamatiam is goth ing more nor leas than the effort of the system to got rid of a cer taln polson which has been deposit ed at the junction of some of the long bones of the body. This poison is produced In the bodies of all ani- mals—cows and sheep, as well as men. The meat you eat contains 4 certain amount of ft. The rheumatic individual has of ithis polson already quite too mach more than he can get rid of; and | when, in addition to his already ex loessive load, he adde the poison contained in the meat eaten, he morely makes matters worse—“adds | fuel to the fire,” The Woman's Foot inside of a pair of our new Tan Oxfords §if] will be a very attractive propo |§ sition In Foot Dressing. j The new shades in Tan Foot wear are handsome. There is a great variety of styles for your choosing. Plain or perforated toes and vamps, §) Cuban heels and a correct size and width for every foot, Besides our Tans, Jarge line of we are showing some features in Tans and colored Kid leathers that are hew this season, TURRELL’S | | | 903 BECOND AV, 1 and $5 | entirely ) WHYS «4 WHY NOTS' ZEALING Written Expressty for The Star By W. A, ©, LATBON, M, OD, Editer “Food Value of Meat,” | dishonest men There are a few | jail ner in poli who are neither fn ) | thes Thing ot « Time An |he ie abou [Be pationt » The trouble with a ready talker frequently le that he Is auch a poor quitter ‘The Social Seale Milliner’s Srrand Girt ‘The It's tow, but that fact fen't 9 as to get In out of the wet ut to make up for it} Jugend. | Hvery woman has a passion the bargain counter, and occasior ally she gets something she wants Ete, SEE OUR BARGAINS 6 Wall Paper Remnanta. You can sake « big saving on your spring poring by calling at our store. First Lawyor—1 asked the judge | to try one of my cigars. 4 Becond Lawyer-—1'lh bet he found | Mm guilty The Home of “PERFROTO"—best love in thie olty for Leta e pair, SRR EER eee _ SHAFER BROS.—Not Only nly Largest, } But Best. _ A Special yee of Men’s Sea eee There will be another remarkable offer- ing of Men’s Suits in the Shafer First Ave- nue store’ tomorrow. An exceptional opportunity to get fine, serviceable Suits in all the newer styles and fabrics at a price far less than any clothing judge would estimate, FIFTEEN HUNDRED SUITS, ALL SIZES, PLAIN AND FANCY SHAPED WORSTEDS, ON SALE*SATURDAY IN THE ARCADE ANNEX, FIRST AVENUE SIDE, At $15.00 Special Offering of Boys’ Suits at $3.50 Tomorrow In the Shafer Boys’ Store we shall offer tomorrow twen- ty-five hundred Suifs for Boys at this attractive price, Three Dol- lars and a Half. Included are Buster Brown Suits, Sailor Blouse Suits, Norfolk and Double-Breasted Suits, many of the latter with two pair of pants, All sizes from 3% to 6 and from 6 to 16. Very rare value at PTURVUREE RT Las eee “aar*] SHAFER BROS, ("2 Core e Corner First Ave. Arcade Annex University St. a decidedly good 40 inches long, button rts plain gored and in panel effect of fine worsteds, serges, and Bed 1s; self-striped or checked BROWN GRAY RESEDA TAN ROSE NAVY Values range to $45.00 each. They Striking Values in Women’s Suits $27.50 material 27,50 are u'll Tailoring, invest smart, right up to date, b find them very satistact i Single-breasted, s« warrant the belief that we'll sell fully as many as last Saturday. Then we broke our record for the number of suits sold in one day. A 25c Sale of Neckwear Comprising Every Style Stiff Eton Collars, Ascot Ti Kaney Lace Collars, Stiff Embroidered Colla: tor with Jabots, Rabats of Lawn, Rid k Lace and Net Bows, Chiffon Ruching »* of six lengths, Tourist Kuching box of six yards Special Tomorrow 25c A Splendid School Stocking 15c Children's seamless styles in a weight ribbed cotton, black or tans 15¢ a pair. Women's medium weight, hard-wearin Maco Cotton Hose, in all black, all tan, or blac with white feet. A regular 35c quality-25¢ a pair, medium Any size, Black or Tan Gauze Lisles having extra high spliced heels, double sole and toe, and wide garter top. Special value at 35¢ a pair, 3 pairs $1.00. Well Dressed? —no reason in the world why you shouldn’t wear good clothes, no matter how limited your income, for our liberal credit plan is at your disposal and you are heartily welcome to pay a little down and a little at a time for anything se- lected from our splendid showing of Men’s Ready-to-Wear Apparel. Such famous makes as ‘‘Bradbury System" and “Collegian” Clothes to select frorti—prices $18.00 to $40.00—no extra charge for credit. Store Open Till 10 Saturday Evening. lf Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. "Seattle's Reliable Credit House” For few amd Gegtl Mansage and Gpetlg fn Tmeluded. tn rental .} honr Patronage. —TOURIST BATHS —