on the cards by means of a megaphone. That the V\VWHPLVJRRGLVSURYHGE\WKHIDFWWKDWDWFORVH of the tea party, no mothers are left childless and no children motherless..." 7KH6XQERQQHW%DELHV²0ROO\DQG0D\²ZHUH popular at the turn of the twentieth century. (XODOLH2VJRRG*URYHU·VERRN The Sunbonnet Babies PrimerZDVWKHÀUVWFKLOGUHQ·VVFKRROERRN to use the same characters for the entire text. 3XEOLVKHGLQWKHVWRULHVZHUHSHQQHGE\ Eulalie, but Bertha L. Corbett created the colorful illustrations. Seizing upon their popularity, German porcelain factory, Royal Bayreuth, produced a line of dishware decorated with the Sunbonnet Babies going about their daily tasks Sunday through Saturday. During at least one of Joseph Horne's teas, WKHVRXYHQLUWHDFXSVDQGVDXFHUVSLFWXUHGWKH Sunbonnet Babies. Made by Royal Bayreuth, the backs of the cups bore the store's name and WKHQDPHRIWKHHYHQWEXWQRVSHFLÀF\HDU7KH end of World War I, though, found the Royal Bayreuth factory in ruins with the stone decals used to produce the Sunbonnet Babies dishware SUHVXPDEO\GHVWUR\HG+RZHYHUDVHDUFKLQWKH VRIWKH5R\DO%D\UHXWK$UFKLYHV\LHOGHGWKH stone decals remained remarkably intact. Pittsburgh's Joseph Horne Company presented its first doll tea in 1912. This illustrated advertisement for the Second Annual Dolls' Tea Party shows winsome little girls with souvenir teacups on the tables.http://ufdc.org