The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 20, 1919, Page 8

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By BETTY BRAINERD Tea for Mrs. Platt “Im honor of Mrs, Robert Treat ‘of Port who is the North nm chairman of the American tee for devastated France Winfield Smith was hostess at a ightful tea yesterday in the Lanal ‘of the Sunset club Bridge-Luncheon Mrs. T. A. Fransioli will give an “Yaformal luncheon tomorrow at her im honor of Mrs, Phillips Mor- of Tacoma. Mrs. Morrison ts from Tacoma to the Arthur d home at Gravely lake for summer, Twelve women, who ly composed a bridge club in times, will be the guests. eee for de-Elect In honor of their son's fiancee, Hawley Lassitte, Mr, and Mrs. H. Hainsworth will give a to 10 guests on Thursday eve . Lane Honored and Mra. C. H. Lilly enter at dinner at their home on evening for Miss May Lane, {Seattle | Elsewhere Dr, and Mra, A. 1, Bouffieur, who have been spending a month in Chi cago Minneapolis, returned home Sunday 1 An interesting letter received from | | George Ladd Munn, who is in Drew Mra. Kate Garnett Lassitte and lden, tells of his visite in Russian! daughter, Miss Hawley Lassitte, of and German prison camps. He says | Lom Angeles, arrived in town on Sat that the principal thoroughfares in| Urday to be the guests of Mr. and | Dresden have cannons placed on them | Mra. William H. Hainsworth until to fire on the mods in case they | the latter part of May. become unruly, The Saxony min-|sitte is enguged to Mr. ister of munitions was thrown into | Hainsworth, jr the Elbe river and while he! . : | was trying to escape. Mr. and Mrs | He saw Baroness Loehneywen, | leave today | hose husband was formerly consul | their home in Seattle, and who left after the war commenced, | An Italian colonel, a Russian col-| onel and an English captain are on the same staff with Mr. Munn, and they are doing splendid work for/ and two children, and Mra, Howard the Red Cross. Lewis, sr, have med trom @ ——— — two weeks’ outing at East Sound. supported by Miss a Cook and eee | Mrs. Frederick Bentley at the plano.) Mra, ©. 1, Tedford left Saturday ‘The following interesting program | for North Yakima to visit her daugh: has been arranged: | ter, Mra, Delbert Andrews. 1 eee William shot ©. Edward Turner Mr, Lawrence Endicott will leave on Friday for San Francisco. te ee Mr. and Mrs, Howard Lewis, Mr. (a) Dedteation Popper Mins Las | for California to make | pparainnato Saint-Hacos Sine Canfield. Mise Cook at the piano. " Jeading woman in “Going Up.” were placed for 10. eee / | Arioso—Vest! ta giubbe (from Macet™ lao (b) Allegre Debutante Set arya Suse et oe plane Helen Schwager entertained nt @ picnic on Sunday. Five ma motored to Green river, The were Miss Hortense Green, Ellen Messer, Miss Emily Je- Miss Phyllis Blake, Miss y Eyman, Miss Alico McDonald, Mary F. Blake, Mr. Gene ‘Mr. William MeMillan, Mr. Burnett, Mr. Bud Harkness, Hugh Whitelaw, Mr. Frank Mr. Donald McDonald, Mr. | i Stuart and Mr. Lewis Schwa-/ jr. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Messer, | im. Henry Riake and Mr. and Mrs. Schwager chaperoned these ne Couperin: Kreisier +. Coane ‘ Lie Popper Miss Canfield. } ¥ (a) Chanson and Para’ (>) Beherso | tc) Mariequin 1 (a) Passing Ty (Old Rngtish) Puree! “1 Bend My Heart Up Gena Hranscombe (>) Serenade, to Thee’ (e) Meart Throba’ (2) Uncle Rome. (eo) Mo! . Dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Turner | In honor of Mr. and Mra. C. Ed- of the subdebutante set. | Yard Turner, their son and daughter: ) a their return from the motor trip |! jaw, Mr. and Mrs. George 8. Tur- Cand Mrs. Messer served supper |¢F. entertained at dinner last night home. at their home. Hendei Sidney Homer veeee Toure | } I LEARN RESPECT Never had I known Lort mer to let his emotions go as he did jin that | cane. Daddy hour's discussion of Bob's There has been so much hye | terla about motherlove the past few to have forgot |ten the intensity of father-love, and it twn't fair, I thought, as I regard. Jed Daddy Lorimer's troubled face. I wondered If our present indifference to father-tove inn’t due to our mod jern tendency to over-praise all things feminine-—even maternal af fection years that we se ‘Three thousand years ago a great king wailed for his son, slain in bat | tle “Would God I had died for thee |O Absalom, my son, my son!” | Today every living father of soldier, dead over there, has echoed ‘that ery in hiv heart. But how sel dom do we refer to his sorrow, or balance it equal to the mother's! From Daddy Lorimer the war had taken one precious fon, a MAY 20, 1919. FOR FATHER-LOVE AS WELL AS MOTHER-LOVE. mendous paternal anxiety which jconstantly harassed the Hon, Jame », Lorimer Certainly Daddy didn't have to ut the price of shoes, nor co cream sodas, nor the| mndition of the woot mark: | . but not even his great | sul purchase © immunity from the great human griefs. I slipped my hand into his as we planned how to adjust the gears which controtied Bob's mental pro cesses, Presently I waa clinging to his hand tightly for quite another) réason. A queer hoarse murmur of ‘human volees swept up from th atreet and destroyed the quiet of the |hote! partor, It was a sound new }to me—and disturbing | Tommy got the meaning of it first ‘It's May Day, air! he exclaimed, It's a riot! flage | worry ab | | rushing to the window. There's a lot of red | there, sir™ In & moment we were all at the Renjie, the | window and I, at least, was quit?! these socalled “lovers r Mise Gre the girl who has no mind of her own, When a girl depends on her parents, and her friends to life mate for her, her mat reef and pound to pieces in a heavy nen, For your make, for ¢ y and the man's sake, nm until you love, and then you will find happi and money cannot buy you do not love it to eo: ainat the man, yourself and your It pays big to be honest EXPERIENCED. “mm € en and square. Advocates Airing of Ideals Dear Cynthia Grey: Well seems that “Sergt. RL. W.'n ters have evoked a modest show criticism, Personally, 1 find it v hard to pass by his impudent red fing without “rarin’” @ little, He mure has this jazz idea meamerizing hin every thought. Whassamatter, Sergeant? If you're eating some thing that doew't agree with you, change your diet. You seem to have the right idea about real music, but you remind me of a great mi of | ot \ mu aviator; and although it had spared | unable to distinguish friend from £00] wno enjoy it when they are comfort Rob's life twain it had cut his soul Jim Jr, had finished in his in the crowd which surged below. | We were no absorbed in watching | ably seated tm a concert hall, be | cause the enjoyment requires no in le I with to answer |and the wonderful men who ¢om- | orchestra, powed it flome who read this may think I am a professional musician and pow a little fanatical on the sub but such is not the case caune I never studied it cannot read a note, I do, howeve profess to know MUBIC when 1 ar it, ikewine JUNK. As “music meth the wild beast,” it might be effective! aibly ject have und , and a one any the world in going azy. I venture to may that is playing no small part in making it that way How the words to some of this stuff gets by the censor in kmyond me. The army has quite 4 reputa tion as a source of questionable songs, When in the army myself I heard songs and songs, but none of | them had very much on some of the filthy, suggestive stuff which is be ing published and sold by the mil “I Bay Bhe Does,” for in stance. And then, is there anything more disgusting than to see a bunch of full-grown men, known an a jazz lions Jame | going thru a lot of dlotle motions, the while screaming forth their ear-#plitting noise? I was disappointed to see you give I think what few REAL re there are should stand _ hoping and fighting forthe olition of the rotten trash rgeant. You're net ans, W. alone ™ Soldier Has His Brother Arrested Hammon Lucht was arrested Mon. day grand larceny warrant «worn to by his brother, August Lucht, just returned from oversea with the 348th field artillery, The warrant charges Hammon with steal ing $1,175 and clothes and tools worth $200 while August was away fighting the foe. Hammon exempil- fied his patriotiem by working as @ caulker in @ shipyard, The date of the preliminary hearing has not ye |been determined, and meanwhile alleced erring brother is held in of $1,500 ball. ; on a Do you want Mrs, T. A. Jones, who has been | dangerous career as an instructor of |the melee that neither Daddy nor [| tatiectual stimulus, which wears off | visiting her son and daughter-tn-/airplane pilots, still he staked his|thought of our own safety. law, Mr. and Mre, T. A. D, Jones, for several months, left Sunday for her home in Middletown, Ohio Mra, BE. M, Carr, who has been spending two weeks in Yakima, re turned home Thursday. oe. Mrs, Frank McDermott left Wed nesday for New York “6.0 Mrs. John Fay is spending sev | eral weeks with Mr. and Mra, Carl untry club. J. PR Justice are in North Yakima. Gould at the Co . Mr. and Mre. spending a week | . Mr. and Mra. Marry Krinke and Mr. and Mra, Theo Karle will motor to Everett tonight to attend « piano recital to be given by two puptia of Mr. Krinke at the Everett high school. The young lady pupils are, Misses Russell and Jorgenson, ee life daily as he toured the country making exhibition. flights for the Vietery loan opened & telegram nor answered a call on a longdistance phone with- out & conscious effort to be calm. He buried his fear in his heart— but it heavy weight carried by all fathers of fighting men. For many reasons other than his millions, Daddy stood high among the big men of the na- tion. He always wore 4 jovial mask in public, But as we talked about Rob, | eaw for the first time that Daddy was very far from being the happy, pleasureloving person the public considered him. And it struck me that I must be a girl of rather Imited capacity since I had failed to perceive the Daddy Lorimer never | made him understand the! as quickly as the effects of a Coca | Cola, when one gets out and rubs | clbown with the “cold, cruel | worrrld. ‘This life has no place for side. | line mpectators. It has no piace for | turning to Daddy. “I hated to bump | Dale souled Comseier ern Pharisees, | you that hard. air, but I seen it! who, ike mixers, gather the bent | med. That brick was somebody's | truits of their mental production, npliments to you as a well known | ang hide them carefully from the —— world, Ideals don't thrive in a dark én Phan Teeny Senet me and PUt! ened mind. They must be brought poe: into the sunlight of experience, “Now you stay here and watch the| wiere they are reflected - loving | young lady"—thus Tommy issued) thoughts and kind acta, Harmony in| orders to the millionaire otherwine expreaned in concordant thoughts she'll be down in that mob and may’ | Sof" acts, even aa much a# it In ex-| be in jail over night, as a lot o Bg | | pressed in blending tones. Well, pogod Jnnocent bystanders is bound) rgeant, universal thought never | advances thru the knocks of pensl- mists, but it advances in a«pite of But Suddenly | antde, | brick where thought for us pushed violently barely a second before a crashed through the glass Daddy's head had been “Excuse me, wir. sald Tommy, Tommy |we were (To be continued) 1 |them. ‘Therefore, don't put all your | beautiful ideals away in a hope l chest, where sometimes, In spite of the pungent oder of cedar, moths will corrupt. Open up, and give the | VA skin-health? If you are suffering from eczema or some similar distressing, embarrassing skin eruption, why don’t you get rid of it by using Resinol Ointment? Unless the trouble is due to some serious inter- nal disorder, it quickly yields to Resi- nol, and in most cases is easily healed byit. The first application usually stops itching and makes the skin fee! cooland comfortable. We recommend it with the utmost confidence because of its harmless ingredients. Aided by Resinol Soap it acts even more quickly. % esino Ointment and Retinol Soap alse help to clear away pimples. Sold by al! druqgters and deal- ere tn toilet goods. Tria) of each, tree. Dept. eee i ° Cross Jumble Shop , during the noon hour Red Cross Jumbie shop, Mrs. Nichols, contralto, will sing ind Mrs. Frank W. Goodhue wil! be tthe piano. Mrs. F. V. Brown will an hostess. eee o Recital advanced pupils of Mr. Dent. gave a piano recital last ‘at the Cornish School of Mu- ‘One of the features of the eve- ig was the selections given by two his blind pupils, who played with es | | Women’s | University Club | A matinee luncheon will be given |tomorrow at the Women's Univer jsity club. During its service Mrs. | John Wesley Dolby, vocalist, will | give selections, with Mra. Robert | Wyatt Sprague at the piano. The} | hostenses will be Mra. H. J. M. Baker jand Mrs. Howard ¥ | . 8 Studio Dinner and Musicale Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Rewell en- tertained with a studio dinner and | musicale Saturday evening in honor | of Mrs. William H. Seldon, jr., of De- troit. Mra. Seldon arrived in Seattle Friday and during her stay will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Stewart at their home, 1320 37th | Turenne and Mins Marguerite de Tu- | grave for several days, left Friday Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ausias de renne have gone to Vancouver, B. C., to meet their son and brother, Amoury, of the American Legion, Canadian Expeditionary Forces, who in expfected to arrive any day. Mr. de Turonne has seen three years of continuous fighting at the front. eee Misa Marguerite Hubbard, who has been the guest of Mra. L. H. Sea By EDMUND vening for her home in Oakland, Cal. She was accompanied by Mins Margaret Breck, who will return to her home in San Francisco, after a brief visit here. eee Mra. Vila M. Crosby has returned from Southern California, where she spent the winter, and is at home at Robindor wn Zaher di onciseness VANCE COOKL tAhat eam) sweet fragrance of their perfume to} & world that is always wanting it. | When you witness another jazzfest, | not what they do.” As a matter of | }fact, I ike dancing—love it. It |aeema to me to be the natural ex Pression of joyousness. However, everyone knows there t* a wrong and a right way of dancing, and one instinctively knows when that wrong thought is trying to take the Joy out of joyousness. “Then's the time” to «mile sweetly, and sdy, “Pardon me, but I'm rather tired—1 don't believe I'll finish thin one.” We all know that many deplorable conditions exist, and we also admit that these conditions have no legitl- mate place in public thought. So pubite thought is merely multiplied Private thought, so it merely sim- just, “Forgive them, for they know | - 3S, Resinol, Baltimore Md. place. Mrs. Seldon is touring the ‘West. and after visiting friends tn Seattle and Tacoma will spend some time in San Francisco and Southern California. Polybius Goes on Her Trial Trip Here} With Capt. “Buck” Bailey, vet- eran pilot, on the, bridge, the 9,600 ton steel steamship Polybtus, 46th product of the Skinner-Eddy yards, | successfully went thru her builders’ trials Monday. She will probably have her official shipping board trials Tuesday, after which she} will start loading cargo here for the food administration. CITY TO PROSECUTE CATERPILLAR ALLIES Property owners must keep their trees and shrubbery clear of cater- pillars, or lay themselves open to| the penalties of a city ordinance providing $100 maximum fine or 30 days tn jail for failure to do 80, according to Acting Mayor W. F. Lane, in a proclamation Tues- day. After Friday, “the . proper authorities will be directed to pro- coed against the owners of any| caterpiliar-infested premises.” ‘The Seattle symphony orchestra! will present its next evening re-| eital Thursday at Masonic temple aris Canfield, cellist,"and Mr.| auditorium, featuring the Dvorak ar Alexander, tyric tenor, will be|"From the New World” symphony. soloists at the Sunset club tomor-| Mr. Albany Ritchie appears as so- f afternoon, May 21, at 3 o'clock, joist. TAKE” ASPIRIN WAS TALGUM The New York health authorities had Brook- sentenced to the penitentiary for selling throughout United States millions of “Taleum powder” tablets as Aspirin Tablets. ith will? entertain in her luncheon. ‘They are: Mr. and Mrs. Fagan, Mr. and Mrs. John Powell, Judge and Mrs. George Major and Mrs. Louis Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gates, and Mrs. A. W. Leonard, Judge Mrs. F. V. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. . F. Bickel, Mr. and Mrs. M. 8. in, Capt. and Mrs. Miller Mr. and Mrs. H. A. M. , Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Winders, Mr. R. H. Radiker. ay oe wicale at Sunset Club Don't ask for Aspirin Tablets—Always say, “Bayer.” n’t buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer package! = . Always say, “Give me genuine | ‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’” Insist | you want only the Bayer package | with the “Bayer Cross” on the| package and on the tablets. The genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” have been ‘proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, pothache, farache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Colds, | 5 Influenzal Colds, Joint Pains, Neuritis. Proper in every “Bayer” package. American owned! ft 12 tablete—Bottles of 24—Botties of 100—Also Capsules. te the trode mark of Boyer Manufacture of Monenceticacidenter of Salicylicacié Lue the Hotel Sorrento. CLUBS FOR WEDNESDAY Wooderaft Thimble Club Seattle Wooderaft Thimble club will give a card party In ite club. rooms in the Arcade building at 215 p. m. Tonia Club Tona club will meet at the Masonic temple at 2p. Auxiliary Bikur Chotum Women's auxiliary to Congregation Bikur Cholum will meet in the vee try room of the synagogue at 3 p.m. Faholo Club Social Socia! meeting of the Faholo club in the clubrooms of the Y. W. C. A. at 4p. m Lady Eagles Lady Fagien club at Foresters’ hall for luncheon at 1 p. m. Women of Mooscheart legion at Moose temple at & p.m. Cards Eastern Star Lorraine chapter, No. 6, 0. 8., will hold a rummage sale at the Westlake market, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 22, 23 and 24. Art Department of West Side Improvement Club The art department of the West Side Women’s Improvement will meet at the West Seattle high 1 | school, 4075 W. Seventh et. at % p.{ ORCHESTRA | | HH JOHN SPARGUR, Conductor. MASONIC TEMPLE AUDITORIUM Thursday Evening, May 22 m. A stereopticon review of “Amer can Art” will be given by Mrs. Kath- erine D. Baker, Progressive Thought Club Progressive Thought club meets at 1:30 o'clock at the Federation club- | house. Mre. John Trumbull will speak on “Legislation.” An execu- tive meeting is set for 12:30 p. m, Signal Corps Acxiilary The Signal meet at the Armory at 8 p.m. A full attendance Is requested, as plans are to be completed for the party on | May 24. Seattle Council and Narcissa B. Whitman Royal League Seattle council, No. 294, and Nar. cissa B. Whitman, No. 311, Royal League, will hold a basket social and beauty contest. John McCormack Is me Record Maker Kecently John McCormack, the fa- mous tenor who sings here Monday, met Ty Cobb, the famous ball player. The two were tickled to death to meet one another, Particularly did John MeCormack bestow praises upon the famous Ty. “You're a wonderful man, Ty, to keep up your record of hitting and running the way you do, year after year,” stated McCormack, “Is that so?” fired back Ty, “I've got nothing on you. I've got about 30 of your records in my home.” The Edmonds city council has in- dorsed a plan to purchase the pri vate gravity water system which supplies the town from the Yout estate for $25,000, A special elec tion will be held soon to determine how much will be expended in im- proving the system. Corps auxiliary wit! | Characterises our every transact! methods in and our eu | accorded every cour- |] teay Consistent with busi- |] Bees Judgment. Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited. Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE, AND FIKB ST. mers down to an individual problem When we hit upon our own solution, | the beat thing we can do is to apply it for others, when they need it. Buck up, Sergeant. buck up. j OPTIMISTIC 20. For Abolition of Jazzy Ragtime Dear Mies Grey: A word, please, to “Hergt. R. L. W." Altho I did not see your original letter on jazz, Sergeant, I did see the last one, and can honestly say that is the best article I have ever |Woman Finds Remedy = | Worth Fabulous Fortune som ine nsnsece 1 tor one. aaree with you absolutely. “I wouldn't take a million doliars | taken much interest in the dancing for the good Mayr’s Wonderful Rem. | itself, I do not know a great deal ledy has done for me. I have fin-| about It, and am not in a position to \ighed the course and can may I am/ argue, but I am quite familiar with entirely cured of very revere indi.| rage and jazz as “music,” and I gestion, bloating and colic attacks | could never think of a word con- I suffered from for many years,.”|temptible enough to express my dis It ix a simple, harmless preparation | gust for it. To call it junk and | that removes the catarrhal mucus | trash is tame. “MUSICAL SWILL from the intestinal tract and allays| FOR INTELLECTUAL SWINE TO | the inflammation which causes | FEED ON" is, I think, a fair defini- practically stomech, liver and in-|tion. Like yourself, I think music testinal ailments, including appendi.|is the greatest of all arts, and one citi, One dose will convince or | of the greatest blessings of mankind, money refunded.—Rartell's Five/if not the greatest. To blare forth Dgug Stores and druggists every.| this other NOISY ROT and call it) | where.—Advertisement. music is an insult to music itself, | | AT 8:30 Full Symphon the New Bruch. (First time Seats at Sherman & 75e to | SEATTLE SYMPHONY club | Program, featuring “From orld,” No. 5, E Minor, by Dvorak. “Scotch Fantasie,” for violin and orchestra, MR. ALBANY RITCHIE Soloist. “Shepherd’s Hey” (first time in Seattle), by Granger. Music Pupils With Credentials, Half Price War Tax Costs Absorbed by the Orchestra Society. SHARP in Seattle.) Clay’s Music Store, $2.00. Write for Cook Book COAL WILL NOT BE CHEAPER BUY NOW WINGATE FURNACE CARBONADO LUMP The only coal screened at the bunkers. Renton Lump Nat Black Diamond Mixed Steam | New Castle Lamp Nut | New Castle Pea Grand Ridge ae Tono Lump yn . Mine Run. Deliveries All Parts of the City. SERVICE OUR MOTTO CARBONADO COAL SALES CO. Phone Elliott 337 Phone Elliott 337 Bunkers 167 Connecticut St. Also University District © BL, id pee ees Crescent Mfg. Co., Seattle, Wash,

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