The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 28, 1909, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Member of the Untte: ' Press, P iy by The Star Pal AN EDITORIAL BY A WOMAN BY DOROTHY DALE. Every woman and most n who read this bit of sentiment THE STAR—TURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1909, THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE [ BALI LARGE Ons) Tailored Suits Our assortment is Tweeds, Homespuns, Cheviots and French uperb — Broads ‘gonals, Wig all of the } class tailoring and the very newest of shading, | 4 i | | D } c Serges 1 i just come out of Wisconsin will amile a little indulgently | Jacket lengths are from 42 to nehes, some with tee § i] panel back, double-breasted tras thers ase te Then they'll stop a minute to think of—oh, well, to think of the fitting back, single-breasted straight front : hey'd tallored, tlt fitting. A iio models tg . everybod s of sometime though they'd] ed, om mong the now effects things that everybody thinks of sometimes, even thoug long fever dew! collar, the onic re nce scorn to show it apd back The new skirts have the long yoke The story was dated at Nunah, Wis, It read some with ffont pandia, others oke a front. The leafing colors are neal wk “The wedding on the spot, where they met when the grooth French Wige, carob, coal dust, mu ve gr brows, saved the life of the bride will culminate the romance of Chag || be Gehurty of this city and Amy Johnson of Salt Lake City An Exclusive Model in a Raisin Broadelah wt The two were guests at the’ same hotel in the earthquake fy Stinch length Cont ha» the French back, with up “ " : he } . 5 acres dor seams, a velvet notched sha olla and district of San Francisco. The man heard the woman scream below the waist line, fastening with one large braided, as the hotel walls fell and fire crept near, He rescued her, and ~ | #ide the the flounce effect; finisbed in pointy ayd . “Yow, Wthel can make « dollar gollll huttons in self colort This has a seif edlore her letter of thanks, when she learned his name, led to the sec turtiet that any woman 1 oes | — $a oat hp Bs. Mo hes a sede eae od meeting. | “Hh® talked o taftcab @river invo the box pleated effect falling to the hem : cured a . = ya little? [accepting @ Aoliar for « five-mnite | Now, don't you find your reel smiling and lingering a little trip Her. York fvening tele A Seal Brown Broadcloth, Semi-Filting If you don’t, you belong to the scoffers, and there's no hope for | Two buttons, double-breasted front, wide pleated Bak them io ee a ee oh ees H collar and cufte of black motre; all seams teal , A , it i ; | barrow black pipings, Front and back pane ‘ames Of course, this man and woman do what would be practical: | The Lecturer (during lncture) } geutachn tedih Gil Gamer auutache buntens ly impossible for the majority. The fact that they go to the} sea pectaciie that one never fore{[y Kilted aides, panel front, with black ache valde en G ey first looked into each other's eyes, to} | got | > sapatingys Dara ger mpesea Hiuniind htt Aas odt? dint Prices Range at $42.50, $47.50, $55, $65 and Opty say those “I wills,” is carrying sentiment farther than most] Out where I can get a pair of them. |i A new Tine-of Gtrect Dresses in Sornee Pruneliag, é could afford to. But the distance covered or the romance of the Lae Soeegs, Soracetina, mine<<nee Wide-Wale Cheviot, and Bre ‘ott sone are plas : 3 place are not the important things in this case The fine thing RRR ps i rg A rimme hers with Prices trom | about it is that they were willing to let their feelings mana “——. i} Black Moire Silk Dresses, kilted skirt, broade ‘cloth trimmed H the affair at all pittome, folke, te born lucky,” ; Tore 2 thing his brill Hing born wif plein common sense is one } There is only one thing in this brillis ng a » wif § | B, ddi Is | i} pa A ft ‘en Washington Star 4 progress sadder than the way people marry. That is the | pior edding Specia portant Lace( ‘ Be chal | Te lead « virruoun life is pleasant | Third Floor { people do after they are married manus. eis sual aiatitn Monnet : Everything is patterned on the business wotld. Its hurry | ighwrully rude of him to throw a/fl more bedding. We can supply i : |ietwe wt a re t * 4 and brusqueness are stamped even on the wedding ceremony. rea 4 ‘ the eats things | won Bo ae at prices that will | i i whie aye ougt o vered |i pI ] Most of the marriages now, statistics show, are made in places jin persor Hitustrated Bite. i) COMFORTS , no nearer heaven than the dull back offices of the nearest church e boss ed me in conmult || wosthe wee an, poiomrncy Bet r - lay,” declared the office boy.|f | ered both pect 25 ; 7 or justice's court. twat rT il Double bed wine, extra value “ohne vr Then after the schedule-time ceremony, what Too ften] ) mertner y who wie tow | Dias tea aan ae Last ay We just an endless scheme of schedule-time kisses and work and wieville Courter-Journal i} tilled : $2.85 | prices on Orlental Rag 2 ii Double bed size, cotton, heavy: de) , - a loss of liberty, with never a little | hope, but the [if . y ®y your inspection of 4 worry and deprivation and loss o' ert) . | f the gods (i satin border $2.50 | strong line. spontaneous gift or pretty compliment or impulsive caress | =. ~~ MATTRESS SPECIALS envionment thrown in to cheer and brighten the way. And as if this w “| PORK CHOPS HE P PRETTY I 2% cottan filling, A. C. A. tick not enough, another schedule-time set of misunderstandings and | L iii int 98 ts... S195 disputes and explanations crop out till finally explanations no NE Ww L oO VE PLA Y SUCCEED tick, 45 Ibs $9.75 Linwer eubleln |] Hemmed Soft Crochet Bed- ages ag . eC Ne saute med | Brown—Yee. I'm acquainted with |f spreads, extra value... 81.00 And all for the want of a daily expression of the sentiment jl your wife, old man. I knew her be Fringed, cut corners, cro. ; } sen / {ments when an embassy comes) fore you married her chat that was there at the start. If it wasn't there, there should have from Herzogovina. Then with; Smith—Ab, that’s where yc naa} . 81.75 } " the advantage of me—1 didn't Scalloped corners, crochet heen no start Trainer's aid and © couple of hur Aig « , ts : dreds of thousands of dollars from | '“"* 2.25 When others see fault of line or coloring a woman lo others see only aggressiveness and dandyism, he is strong tight sentiment has made each what the other saw For sentiment, after all, is the blessed pair of ¢ tacles colored deep a beautiful rose with the first flush of | Those who look through them see things rose colored ett others see only common gray But that doesn’t mean the by the scoffers. One of them wrote some lines about the pen-and-ink de- votion of the Italian poet Petrarch for Laura, a woman of his time, which he intended to be illuminating This is what he wrote: a man looks at a woman and sees only beauty where | , She is beautiful. And when $s at a man and sees pronto and fineness where | The ' j : | | at | | And what looks rose is rose sickly sentimentality attacked They were. “Think you if Laura had been Petrarch’s wife, He would have written sonnets to her all his life?” Of course he wouldn’t have. And no one would have better pleased than Laura herself at the omission i Love can't be written. Jt has to be lived. It's the living of it that gives rise to that perfect understanding that has no need of explanations and back talk. The love that throbs cheek ‘gainst cheek is too big to be mapped out and carpentered into a 14-line ballad. Its silence been MORE, THE EXILED KING, IN CLIMAX OF THE PLAY, ELSIE FERGUSON, AS THE EXILED QUEEN, AND FRANK GIL- tells a story more eloquent than all of the words written or|¢!TTLE QUEEN.” spoken could ever do. | It says: “I know things I know there were mistakes. I know I have done things that I ought not to ‘ have done and left undone what should have been accomplished. | “But those are the things of today, and today will not be every day, while this, dear, is of today and tomorrow and all the todays and tomorrows that yet shall be.” Just a little more sentiment, that’s what the world needs i Just a little more loving thought expressed in trivial attentions. | 4 Just a little more care to keep the rose-colored sp love's first blush bright for every Just a little less stress on the value of iron and steel and dinner parties and fine raiment, and a little more on the worth of flesh and blood. ve gone awry tacles of Newspapers that fake Cook North {will power, but that isn’t the Pole pictures should remember that | easiest way there were but three in the party | . and that it takes at least one per-| If the Georgetown council had son to hold the camera. | prohinitea Hquor ing to women a ‘The dismissal of Mr. Bouillon sti tana aed te ee feast leaves several little details of the | ‘ building permit graft to be eluet- | dated | Of course some day Mr. Bouillon i | may have a pubiie office that won't} There ix a possibility that Ander-|be at the disposition of peevish ir son got that permit through sheer! dividual | j ferred to a safety razor by many | for securing a close shave. | INSANITY: That from which our | | ancestors never suffered unless we| | get into trouble. DUKE: A member of the debility. | (Latest version.) } HIGH AUTHORITY: Person whe | i@ always anonymous when quoted | in foreign dispatch: AUTOMOBILE: In the shop today and there tomorro: repaint | PONTED PARAGRAPHS, | INSURGENT: Republican con-| !f 4 girl really means what she gressman who has landed on a soft | "8". She looks it spot in the solidarity of the party. The best complexions do not at EXPLORER: One who rapidly be- | '"*°t the mgst attention comes ex-explorer. | Some engagements end happily MEXICO: A republic where the| *"4 some end In marriage second ano third syliables of the| At some stage of the game every| word don’t count. STORK: A modern ornitholigical man poses as his own hero. Time waits for no man, but the} cast. | musical conductor can beat it ' NEAR RELATION: One who| G@mbling has taught many a won't loosen, oung man how he couldn't make mone FIRE ESCAPE: Device never as used for the purpose by a fire. For nearly thre weeks after his marriage the average man is firmly ANTI-TRUST LAW: A statute evaded by the anti-law trusts. AEROPLANE: convinced that he drew the prize in the matrimental Chicago News capital | | lottery.— | Something pre- Y W. G. SHEPHERD. € rary THE ARTLESS ANSWER [wonts Nenad ANY MORE THAT CRIPPLE i PLEASE WEP = ive LosY’ IGHT OF” Him Too’ “BUCH A . because Cosaca alwaya calls Lauman the king and queen regain ¢ Moough to Ge om With. soft and good tb throne and i o . He © i at not see 4 at ow | ‘ ° y Fe niggas 3 ona fat onl es t | postal gathering test week. “Liebert a All Feather Pillows, guarant | i a 4 are really mar Why wae that | | ried for love, after all Lisheth-- We I had ao littte ) I Duck ass — ve es $1.00 | | Elsie Ferguson, who is Alina Vie. | ""j2°71"" ¢ me own last week, str. | roll apsingsy = eo b }torla, the queen, and Frank Gil. | that er “oil eens See, anes $1.85 | jmore, who is Btophen, are mplendid | | “Eisbeth—On the back of me neck | COLONIAL GLASS love-makers, He is handsome and" pers Malt Holiday. 1) Heise Colonial ‘vable Tumblers the tn beautifal Cantions Confeexton i set of 6 the |. Bat Pollock is a poor play. writer Pm setting painfully |] Colonial Sugar and Crean " ' (1 this in his best. He treats Traine joorge Washington ini . Set 45¢ | . See our itso ahabbfly, for instance—-Trainer, who that has been there ff S4nch Colonial Berry and Salad | Sle Desk Lampe jSolizes Anna Victoria and who helt f"Teart sco anything | onsen’ op B5¢ | $10.00, $12.50, ed both exiles At the end be that Hi Colonial Water Bottle at...75¢ | Reading Lampe ssid alee Denier aor ete & ane yg ES A fj Thin Blown Table Tumblers, | | “Well, there's always another ¢ i et at (ber dosca 45¢ | Hall Lamps gf: |The pain dies away, after a time “ry ’ ° to |and leaves only a «weet memory week Spokane Chronicle 1 had another girl, on but she got Feotiah Quesiten. married, too. Am 1 Trainer wouldn t have been @ very good sweetheart, new York critics nity eck aoe think Chrontete. ” . nies IN LITTLE OLD NEW YORK | BY NORMAN. NEW YORK, Sept §.~-Since|been brought up from the Cunard Wm. Loeb, Jr. became collector of | docks. The two women were tired the t of New York, @ number ont with running around, and were | of small smuggling attempts have | sweltering in heavy shipboard cloth-| been detected, and the would-be/tng. They were told that the stores! amugglers have been severely pun-| closed at 4:30, and worrted greatly ished, Thefdentally, and as a mere until ‘the trunks arrived, shortly | aide issue of this law enforcement, after 3:30. The inspector in charge | hundreds of honest and aitable | offered to let them take away two} persons have been and are being| trunks, putting in them such cloth noyed, humiliated and insulted | Ing as they needed for immediate Loeb'’s sleuthe. The pockets of use Unfortunately, the maid’ with eturning male tourists are search Mise Ward was not the one who a as though they were under ar- had packed the trunks fn London, rest, and women are pawed over | and all the trunks had to be opened manner that drives some and others to tears in a to find the things desired. When wrath the Inspector saw all the tills being t those most angered by these !ifted ont of all the trunks, ings agree that the fault lies cided to ma not with the customs employes, but and did his inapection then, by running a little over with the syst The men are office hours, He found that the dec. willing enough to be decent and|laration had been correct, and ex reasonable, but are compelled to amined for himself the two worn | treat every passenger as a suspect. | Stage gowns ed smuggler. Take the case of! At 5 o'clock tne trunks were Fannie Ward, for Instance, She closed up, and Miss Ward arranged jis an American actress who married | for the transfer to her hotel. She an Englishman, has a home in Eng-| bad hardly gotten out of the door land, and Js now, under the law, when she was called back and in an Engiishw n. She came over|formed that the jaw department NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—The de-| Anna Victoria “your grace” and al Uetous odor of pork chops, fried on| W8Y* Kisses the hand which she the stage about 10 o'clock every|TeRally extends to him. Finally ening 4 make a Hroad-| Anna Victoria dismisses Mary, be way suc Such a Little | Cause there fs no more money, and Queen 4 does her own cooking Channing Pollock wrote the play.|_ All thin time Anna Victoria ts His bebe line is betrothed to otephen IL, king of He's going to # fast he} Bosnia. it is a political engage can't see the scenery.” ment to unite the two countries Credit Mr. Pollock ends, how.| The two have met only once and ver, with that line and the pork | Were chaperoned by a regiment of chop stunt. Yet his atory-material Officials, One day when Anna is wae fine. it reas Mite this: cooking—ahe wears her coronation The young queen of Herzogovina, | f0W8 in the kitchen because she exiled with her prime minister | has no other—in waiks the debonatr Cosaca, nes to wew York and| king of Bosnia, deposed and exiled, moves into a flat in Harlem. On| ‘0° the way over she tet Robt, Trainer,| He hasn't any money, either, and a young American businessman,| Trainer gets jot for king and who often calls on her in the flat.) queen in the office of Adolph Lav He breezes in nightly, with flow-|man, millionaire beef packer ers and candy, and does not know| Thera’s a pretty tight race, at | that his poor little friend is almost |thia time, between Stephe and penniless; in fact, he doesn't even| Robt. Trainer for Anna Victoria's know she's # real queen, though,| favor. One day Stephen is arrested lover like, he constantly calle t for having a bill which was stolen |new play in which she will soon on telephone and advised that one from the office. He didn't steal it, | appear the baggage must be held, as it con The landiord of the flat can't un-| but behaves so bravely, according Mixes Ward arrived on the Lusi-| ined theatrical costumes. This| derstand why Anna Victoria should | to Pollock, that Anna Victoria falls | tania, bringing 13 trunks. She made |™OVe was based on the fact that a live, without a chaperon, in the|in love with him lher declaration. She was asked i¢|COUple of the trunks were marked | aame flat with tHe fine, dignified| But Stephen is now up against|sne had any theatrical costun theater.” Then ensued a long te old Cosaca; and Mary e hired | it and his landlord is about to put/ ang replied that she had two, both | Phone wrangle. Collector Loeb was rl, concludes that the pair are! him and Cosaca out of their apart-|Gf which she had worn in. this appealed to in person over |country last year, tll they were ng distance telephone, the threadbare. She was told that she |'rnks were released, and reached might leave her keys with her maid |'%¢ hotel at 7 in the eve | and g0 éo her hotel + Miss Ward went to bed as soon} | | customs officials, and was very glad recently to ) rehearsals for a/ Of the customs had just called up the She had been standing two hours watting on the |## she got to the hotel after he strenuous day. She had spent about |$20 in taxicab fares and other penses. She offered no complaint agatnst any offictal with whom she had come in contact. She sald she had been most courteously treated, of this permission ‘Two hours later the maid arrived at the hotel empty-handed, and bearing @ receipt for the luggage, | which had been sent to the eustoms 4 jbut it did seem to her that there |wtorehouse, Miss Ward was to £0| was something wrong in the’ sys down there in the morning. Mean: | tum time, she and the maid had not a nightrobe, a toothbrush nor any thing except the clothes they stood REFLECTIONS oF A BACHELOR, in Friday morning Mise W ard and When a girl won't let a man kiss her she really means tt the maid went to the customs store if it's her pratser's office they learned for the | tograph of an actress he never saw first time that the baggage had not | to keep on his bureau he de-| ex-| |ff] Satin finish, “|| Boys’ Cleahing on Third iw We can outfit suas boy well, at moderate prices, ormation and i Citeek . Room, — ia floor, rear. | Tasty Togs for “Taft We have them—distincti so in evel ticular, and for every occasion. Septemberd all Seattle will be out in its glory to honor president priate? If it will pay you to inspect our fashionable ing, either in the Style, expert workmanship and tion of prices are prevalent throughout. ely oc Is your apparel appr Ladies’ or Men's quality, Take Adusabaie of Oa Credit Plan Try it at once—it is absolutely free. Mit for you to accumulate enough ready casi properly outfit yourself, let us help you. ra! about it. Pass EasternOutfi itting 1332-34 Second Ave. “Seattle's Reliable Credit Hout" | / | | house. From there they were sent | brother, to the collector's office. At the eol-| ‘Tho aatisfactory thing about re _ % doer core sn (isenenn ‘Ath lector’s office they were referred | form is if you are doing it to some- itains ome TIME ‘Gant to a deputy, who told them an in-| body olse. senve Beattie 6:40" teseit Sone eas ee volee would have. to be prepared There's hardly any visit so en-| $28, "St m, | steamer on and sent back to the customs store: | joyable as when you know you'll] ug: house. Miss Ward got a customs |have to do it again PS oe iy wueeealemaitivpioy tepaed | ratte Betfeee roker, again swore to what sho " - out Notice. had sworn to the day before, and |,, lt 80 uatural for a irl to flirt ie ede Mire S| PANS Bee received at the collector's office |tMat when she's doing it,she acts 8, bias, Bae pm) conden betwaee the necessary papers tal he taken:|/ust ap !f ehe wore saying hor cate-) "Bests See ot renseet Messk | tare os, seth hin® a ; Maio si0t, 908 back to the gustoms storehouse, | * : There they vere Referred to the ap.| An ambition Is what a man thinks EVERETT AND EDO i pralser's office, and when they |he could do to benefit the world MBALS found {t the appraiser had gono to|® mission ts what he tries to do} prea F) iti melt lunch, which was no wonder, as |to support his family > 3 . it was past noon | A man ds naturally such a devil i Returning at 2:30 to the ap-/ of a fellow that he will buy the pho Steamors ClYy apn Colmal aim $908.

Other pages from this issue: