Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
area the man whose “yes” or “no” anys —— sett stam ." NorsoME ALLE |what you can or what you cannot es fon NOW BEING CLEARED | do in Washington ITO! BUILDING IN B te CAP) ; Mrs, Wilson has declared that BELOW, ALLEY | ine horrible alley stu t Was aw a bd ty ington MUS eg per cS AS Ig D sonally st . . mr SA 0. C, July 3 neg oes Mack Math an White House touring car & tp under the portico of the) Mik” na Uauae alley wp ‘mansion. The first lady | “Goat” alley ‘and “Tincup” alley land, Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, Were all visited into the automobile Washingt alley slums her were Mra. Ja are on the inside elty blocks mother of Gifford-Pinchot; Outside, on ALL FOUR SIDES EP. Bicknell, Wife of the Red facing the atreets, are good houses ofa Mrs. Archibald Hop: stores, handsome — bulldings—tr gociety | woman of Washing. some cases ch rehea and magnitl My) gan of cent mansions—but Inside the a pay? blocks found narrow alleys A ride through beautiful Reck ned with tumbledown, dirty, dark park? : ises in which men, women and ption at some foreign em-|¢ sty ip yon A thin woman holding a tiny t in her a8 sat on her door 4 inepection --gag 3 . tAND Reg step, watching the party without the ceding. | interest ath t eding al reeding, _ of you have a new baby she was asked. he answered, weart- peautiful, Washing ye tall aan wee pian gy “thal ly, ey Vm sorry, | wish it | nson ol ntu was a boy.” ae congressional commit-| ——+ y . — of the District ot Columbia There are at 114,000 childrer Needs 14 and 16 er In the factories * of New York State Attention ee F. Qne thousand fami ml {s one of the few proved by cooking easerts that can be none is more de this pudding. If made Baking Powder, the pastr ¢ light and porous, ¢ a have a slow oven at tl time to rise and you EDMUNDS, OFT. D. , ao Leary Bids Usbes’ ae’ Suits “Made to Order with K ¢ $25.00 and $28.00 end workmansh!p guaranteed, ie Ladies’ Tailor Suit Shop |‘°./""°, recipe a (40 Lomber Exchange Building aw. |letous thar will want ! again as long as the ast K C Cherry Pudding. once it again an cherries By Mrs. |Editor of the School Magazine. cups sifted pastry level teaspoonfuls KC |Powder t e aepoontul cup McKenzie Boston Hill, Cooking Janet flour; 2 Baking DAL. AR. CLARK, D. DO. 8. Heed, Honest Dentistry The care with which I conduct , will appeal to the most and the word “Painiess” is | part of our work in the true ghotce, ¢ a, eprink with a ilt- of the word. salt or add bite of butter; turn Remember, I have cut the price | the soft dough over the cherries and dentistry in two. Regular $10 |bake about thirty minutes, or steam r extra heavy $10/ [2° hour. Turn from the dish to/ Otis ge the cherries uppermost. . sauce oF with a cup 0 gherries, cooked tender In =| | | Sift together, three time: ar, bal powder and salt work In the butter, Beat the add the milk, and atir is ingredients. Butter china baking dish, ha Serve Avritten guarantee given with a by Mra Strawhe: a Cakes and other deocarts. that wil you to make the most of fresh Dental Offices [tip u Pas fi Clark, D. D. 8, Manager | fu" while Bex. arn, im sensen.| 106 Third Av, N. W. Cor. Union one certificate | from cent can| This Ad With You! Sagues Mtg Go, Chicn -camine | | =e | | | odern Woodmen « America| at Fortuna Park Take Yesler Way Car ng mea hard s mtast and 960 { being | 7 yeaid see Sveaborg Temperance “<7 Society Special “ at Atlanta Park Take Madison Cable Car 1 Knights of Columbus | | er can compel my wife and 1 to) Have the luncheon, simple rather|flags tled on one end are distrib: | live at my home and work for him,|than elaborate, If fou have blue/uted among the guests, Those| The souvenirs ate imitation be if we ean go to another elty and|and white tableware, it will be an|matching ribbons are partners, — |cangon-crackers, each favor con | t Wi ld ‘vork. and he not be able to compel /easy matter to carry out the color] Tie a large bow of red, white aining something that is espe ' a 1dawoo ar us to return? NO LAWYER. — | seheme blue tarlatan to each chair, The|{clally suitable for the recipient. If cored Take Yesler Way Car || ql | hood and will advise me woman {s to be cor ~é THE STAR—THURSDAY, JULY 1913, WIFE OF PRESIDENT WAGES WAR ON CAPITAL SLUMS sHE TAKES CONGRESSMAN ON A VISIT TO THE FILTHY ALLEYS OF WASHINGTON, WHERE 373 BABIES DIE OUT OF EVERY 1,000 BORN “Why? “Because a girl can't grow up good in an alley.” Mra, Wilson found a large family washing hanging out to dry actss one ond of the alley, flapping back and forth directly over a huge pile of garba from whieh rose a awarm of Mic The washing of prac Ny all the welltodo people of Washing ton fs done by women who live In b alleys,” Mrs. Hopkins — ox plained to he Heaven alone knows what disease germs are take en up by the clothin After visiting the second alley, Chairman Johnson turned to Mra, Wilson and sald Mrs, Wilson, I've seen enough, T am convinced, 1 will agree to | anything you want done. He asked how many human bee | ings lived in these Sixteen alley slumea, thousand,” Mrs. Hop: J 10,000 are negroes and 6,000 whites.” “And she a : “The death rate for babi under one year In the alleys is 373 for each 1,000, while out- side it is 188 for each thou nawered DOES IMMORALITY, OR MORALITY, BEST FIT FOR MOTHERHOOD? Dear Miss Grey | would like your advice on the following prob- lem. I intend getting married, and, not belng prompted entirely by elfish motives, but largely by the hope of seeing normal, hearty and happy children grow Into useful man and womanhood, | face the sert ous question, and wil! choose between two girls, One of them {ts a normal young woman fn every way, but has not been virtuous. She shows no physteal {Il effects, and, being Intell! geet, has ascertained that most women (some of her intimate friends) bhi are t married until ut 26, pay the price of having subdued their natural instincts, and never normal women, and, even though maternity com to them long-subdued instinct never awakens Because of these things, the young woman foels justified in her so.) called {mmorality The other girl has different tdeas, and as a resuit has been Irre-| proachable in her morals. I bave known her {nttmately for two years, Qod am eure she cares a great deal for me. We have talked quite plainly on what fits or unfits a woman for motherhood, and I have every reason to believe that, should we marry, she would be in the passive condition that means Incomplete womanhood. From physicians T get a vartety of opinions; from standard medical and surgical works I am led to believe that my highly intellectual and virtuous woman friend has done herself an irrepaggble wrong by her virtuous life. Surely, you have mod sa of things so important to woman- ring {n mind that neither myself nor the usidered, but the hope for normal children. Present ustify that hope WM. D. —Your problem is one of today, and greatly concerns local and national soc! Your motive is of the highest, but good in- om sites ag Nesp Mie judgment and enlightened under. a Far be it from me to say that a woman who has gone wrong Children Play Adam and Eve in Streets of City In the eyes of the world is unfit for motherhood, She is often more fit than the woman who h in weakened by protecting sl and does not know the meaning of temptation. Yes, | have thought much on thie subject, and have modern views, also the sanction of medical opinion of high class when | ELLENSBURG, July 3.—(Sp!.) Unclad, with the exception of a bair ribbon and a gold ring, the b-yearold daughter cf J. E. Wilson, together with the 4-year conditions surely $7,000 WORTH OF DIAMONDS GONE say that marriage based on the continual strengthening of mind, lifting one above the physical, not only tends to the greatest hap- pinese, but produces the healthiest, cleverest and most normal children. | beg of you not to think your wife, or yourself, should not be Polies are baffled in the attempt | to trace the mysterious loss of! about $7,000 worth of diamonds by Kasse! Gottstein, widow of the considered, Each owes to himself the utmost consideration In his 2 4 cw. W { El. | millionaire founder of the M. @ K je dally waik. . Rye" beside the banks of Wilson | the a. po by ee ag we: he busi- | sewed on her dress. fact that THE DANCE HALL Your help will count tn the mat. |] creek, iB the heart of the busi: | Note nor tears, appear on the OF TODAY dress precludes the suspicion that ac J ougall 7 fouthwick Ja connection with JAIMIE MoCREELRY @ CO, New York m, dally AEOOND AV. and PIKE ST. Store open from 8 a, m to op r STORE CLOSED ALL DAY FRIDAY JULY FOURTH The MacDougall-Southwick Co. Second Avenue and Ptke Street THERE ARE SEVEN AGES OF LOVE, SAYS CYNTHIA GREY, KNOWN BY VARIOUS NAMES By “Cynthia "Grey. obey” from the Englich mar e their v ! en-who going to omit the f the militant suffr So they a riage service Or, the dispatches ay antthe-vote WILL compromise if t car the objectionable word” inserted in the groom's responses Women, in ge have not a fine sense of WORD-VALUES, and #0, Whether they win, compromise or lose, the suffragists will, by their activity, accomplish o: th’ They will get that word “obey” 80 well defined that every rywhere, will know what {t means. e suffragists would stop their mill- IMPORTANT WORD attached y nice if get a REALLY Then it would be tating | enough to to ITS exact meaning. see ts spread the meaning of “LOVE” we can, if we know how, tell a substitutes for “love,” that I would like to see those suffri abroad in the world, For now, thov woman's age very closely by the word she does not help us at all to know what she actually MEANS by it! When a girl writes me a request for advice and says that she is “infatuated,” SHE IS UNDER tVENTEEN. She means to describe the supreme love of a long life, a love incomprebensible, immeasur- able, etc. And she hates you honestly when you tell her that her fa vorite verb implies a love which is temporary! “I care a great deal for him.” That's TWENTY! She admits just that much and no more. She is always the pas- sive recipient of man’s devotion, expectant, but not too obviously anx- jous for it. The item she will not confess to in her love is the very high value she sets on her own pretty self TWENTY-FOUR becomes intense 1 adore him,” she writes. If |they quarrel, she knows she is to biame. Were he to die, she would immolate herself like an In n widow on his funeral pyre. She ideal- izes him. She would care for him like a mother, even to the darning lot his socks. loving a man means spoiling him. returned more than one dia- “Does he really love me?” To Twenty-four, But TWE) “SEVEN has probably mond ring, and she no longer flatters man. she inquires. Love is skeptical at Twenty-seven. THIRTY seldom asks questions about heart affairs. I have often wondered why. I believe it 1s because all the married Thirties are ter, but the decision ties with the judge. The children were watched by a large crowd. When Rogers ap- peared, he found his son busily engaged in splashing water against the Wilson girl, who had been seated in the mud He hastily gathered his son's clothes and dressed the boy, He at- tempted to do the same for the little girl, but a woman in the Dear Miss Grey: I read the article published a ft wr hen ago 3 regard to the “purity dance” one the dance halls has adopted. I must igo PY Agee ed say I hope not only man will ac-| oe gh M pn Bit. yn girls 4 D men cept ft, but that he will have the Assistance of the Divine Power, for | much older than ourselves, and most dance halls as they are today| Y*"t Your advice, They want us to are hell holes. Please excuse this | 9 thelr room and have a hottle pression, but {t ts the only Inn-|Of beer, saying it will do us no | guage strong enough to express tt.|>@Fm. Wo love them, Miss Grey, I am about 20 yoars of age and|/®24 want to know {f it would be have been visiting dance halis for/Ti#ht or not. They have promised 12 years, and know there ie no good |*© Marry us, Thank you In advance. | it was work of pickpockets, Mrs. Gottstein lives with her son-in-law, Arthur Bastheim, 1223 2ist av. N. Pension Will Help a Lot Here PORTLAND, July 3.—A deplor- able state of affairs is revealed to- day through an Investigation of the eligibility of Mra. Bertha Kosch-| crowd was called upon for assist ance. Pick Woman as in them. I don’t mean to say all! M. AND D. rr i are bad who attend, but I do say A—if witz to receive a widow's pension, | you want to spend that a girl who enters one alone d f when it was found she wus the years of your life regretting, Head o Schools mother of six children, ranging must have great will power to over-| come the temptations offered Thank God, I have never insulted a girl in my 12 years of real ex- a but I know , beg may never take piace, or if it | does, will likely epell the same A.—I am giad to know that, | #0, V. an tee ned you net told | Small brimstone word of four me | fear | may have been in- see Gas eta, eee clined to think you rather en | @ sake of your own happiness, Joyed the “hell holes” from Gon't do it. Tell your mothers your statement of the number | of this, or if you have none, tell of years you frequented them. ae ieee os co know. There are dance halls unfit Sat cc cae me ee for anyone to enter, and dances jon’t om your purity while unfit to view. You see, it’s thie | _al way: Our dane just as our clothes, our ces and even our bodies, are an expression of our thought. Don’t misunder- stand me. Young people do not understand this, or they would not follow ( a flock of sheep) the vulgar expre: some vulgar mind that has in- vented this very thing to make money out of thelr youthful In- experience. On the other hand, there are decent places of amusement where the chaperon is wel- comed and the young people freed from all criticism by her presence. The dance in Itself has be used at times a n act of worship and there is no reason why it should not be pre- served as an artistic expression of grace and beauty. suffering, a hell-on-earth, by all means accept the base invita tion, sugar coated by the flimey promise of a marri » whieh from 3 to 16 years, none of whom! July 3—The has ever attended school a single| day. The family came to Portland two years ago, from a homestead in Washingte The husband died | & year ago. + Mrs. Koschwitz was granted a} pension of $30 a month and ar! rangements are belng made to/ | place the children tn schools, There are 160,000 teachers in| Germany, only 29,000 being women. The salaries are from $300 to $950 LA GRANDE, Or., | first woman to hold office In this county, Mre. F. 8. Ivanhoe, has been appointed superintendent of achools, to succeed E. FE. Bragg democratic postoffice olntee The women voters of La Grande are elated over the recognition accorg- ed them, 1 should worry, | should chant, 1 should marry a militant. MARGARET BE. GRAFTON, 11, 6250 Broadway. LINCOLN PENNIES WORSE THAN SKELETON. Dear Miss Grey: A friend of mine told me she had read an article in the paper some time ago in which you sald a Lincoln penny with initials on it ts worth §2. I have four. Will you tell me con- cerning them? Thanks. A. D. A-—It must be almost a year since | unfortunately Ini in my column a few lin the value of the Lincoln penny. It has pursued me ever since. I think a family skeleton would be preferable, and know that a “bad, bad past” could not haunt me as have the gaunt features of our first martyred president. | refer you to the publio library, from whence | obtained my information, The lady at the first desk will refer you to a department, and the depart- ment will furnish the address you wish, Surely there can be no difficulty; colored ribbons, The ices can belittle dye, Blue bachelor buttons in planning a party to celetwate| molded in hill shape with cherries|can be substituted for the carna- BETTER TO KNOW LAW the Fourth of July, The patriotic/and small flags on the top, Cakes |tions. BEFORE MARRIAGE colors lend such a gay and festive| frosted in‘red and white and or-| The shades on the Colonial} Dear Miss Grey: 1 am married|air to the occasion, little prepara-|namented with little flags add to|candlo sticks are decorated with| but not of age. My wife 1s of age.| tion is required to decorate a table,| the effect, limitation fire ckers tied with| I have como to ask ff there is a/combining the patriotic fdea with| Different lengths of red, white|blue ribbons, The same idea is| ried out {n the place cards, On h card is a patrietiq.quotation and blue narrow ribbons with little |c Jaw In this state by which my fath-| the artistic some humorous The salad can be served in large| table pictured had a table cloth and|you can think of relating to the} | tomatoes decorated with white rad-| napkins of decorative erepe paper. |or original novelty ishes, The sandwicRes can be|A charming centerpiece is of red |person it 1s intended for, it will add| A.—In a case such as you quote It lies with the court to render judgment according to very content with their new little families, and all the unmarried Thir- ties are ambitiously making their reputations in business. If Thirty does query, she says: “He is perfectly respectable, and his salary is so-and-so. But do you think I can get along with his mother?” The practical element is strong in the love of Thirty. THIRTY-FIVE says “love” unashamedly, but says it only once, as if it were not a cheap word, to be used carelessly to a stranger. Of course, no woman ever falls in love after she is thirty-five. Convention does not permit it. She must cherish the dream of her past, even unto keeping her HEART SACRED TO THE MAN-WHO- But all ages ask: “What is love?” I DON'T KNOW. But I am going to tell you what “the seven ages of love” seem to me to be. I am going to write it in seven chapters. Then, when you have read them, see if you can figure out what LOVE really is. I am sure if you, or the English militants, or any one else, can, we will not have to worry about “obey,” or any other word in the dic. onary! . geles, whose wife was among the victims. SUES FOR $10,000 LONG BEACH, July 3.—The first damage sult against the city as the result of the approach to the mu- Law says you must not shoot: Firecrackers over two inches long. |nicipal auditorium collapse, two ha. crackers. months ago, When 39 persons were Torpedoes. : killed is on file today. Claim for Bombs. damages of $10,000 is made on the Revolvers. city by George Chafor of Los An-| i WE OFFER THE SERVICES OF AN EX-GOVERN- MENT PHYSICIAN FREE The Doctor is a member of the firm who conduct the Brendel Drug Co. 117 YESLER WAY. First CUT RATE PRESCRIPTION ISTS Prescriptions Compounded by an Expert Graduate Phar- macist at Less Cost to You Than Elsewhere. LOOK FOR THE YELLOW FRONT. A small payment 40" n and a little aan month pays for it. WAAK-BAKER PIANO CO., INC. 1406 FIRST AVE. Sole Agents for Ivers & Pond and Hallet & Davis Pianos. Between Ave. and Occidental Ave. A Good New Piano for “U. S. Government Inspected Meats” PACKING HOUSE MARKETS Closed Friday Fourth of July Watch Friday’s Star for our big Saturday Meat Specials. PUGET MARKET COMPANY'S BIG WHITE MARKET, Old Pike Market. SNYDER'S MARKET, New Corner Market Your money returned ff any sales we make are not as represented wrapped in red, white and blue) and white and blue carnations, The |merriment and help to start a facts. Whether or not» your |Ussue paper aud tied with tri- | carnations are Unted blue with algeneral flow of conversation, father has been dependent on